Definition #321 West Coast Kavi

West Coast Kavi

                                                                                  West Coast Kavi

California’s

Kavi; South Africa’s son

to D C’s toddler!

Definition #320 Ingenuity

Oliver's Painting

Oliver’s Painting

Oliver9-10-15

“Nana, I’m going

to lock your car” challenges

tricky Oliver.

Definition #319 Weird Poet

Edith Sitwell

Edith Sitwell

Sitwell said: “I am not an eccentric.

It’s just that I am more alive than most people.

I am an unpopular electric eel in a pool of catfish.”

Sitwell’s best-known work is Façade, a series of poems that she set to music — each poem was meant to be read in a specific rhythm. The composer William Walton wrote the music and conducted a live orchestra during the performance. All the audience could see was a curtain painted like a huge face, with a hole in the center for a mouth. Sitwell sat behind the hole, reciting her words through a megaphone. The first London performance of Façade went so badly that an old woman in the audience waited outside the curtain afterward to hit Sitwell with an umbrella; Noel Coward walked out; and Virginia Woolf didn’t understand the poetry. Woolf wrote: “So I judged yesterday in the Aeolian Hall, listening, in a dazed way, to Edith Sitwell vociferating through the megaphone. […] I should be describing Edith Sitwell’s poems, but I kept saying to myself ‘I don’t really understand … I don’t really admire.’” When Sitwell performed Façade in New York more than 20 years later, it was extremely popular.

Definition #318 Honor

Quenby, Mike, Annika

Quenby, Mike, Annika for their 7th Wedding Anniversary

School Prayer

by Diane Ackerman

In the name of the daybreak
and the eyelids of morning
and the wayfaring moon
and the night when it departs,

I swear I will not dishonor
my soul with hatred,
but offer myself humbly
as a guardian of nature,
as a healer of misery,
as a messenger of wonder,
as an architect of peace.

In the name of the sun and its mirrors
and the day that embraces it
and the cloud veils drawn over it
and the uttermost night
and the male and the female
and the plants bursting with seed
and the crowning seasons
of the firefly and the apple,

I will honor all life
—wherever and in whatever form
it may dwell—on Earth my home,
and in the mansions of the stars.

“School Prayer” by Diane Ackerman from I Praise My Destroyer. © Vintage Books, 2000. Reprinted with permission.

Definition #318 Sounds of Silence 3

Annika Wild Eyed

Annika Wild Eyed

http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=lyrics+for+the+sounds+of+silence&FORM=VIRE1#view=detail&mid=E197BE280F43482EA6A8E197BE280F43482EA6A8

The Sound of Silence (Overdubbed Version)

By Simon & Garfunkel
Hello darkness, my old friend,
I’ve come to talk with you again,
Because a vision softly creeping,
Left its seeds while I was sleeping,
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence.

In restless dreams I walk alone
Narrow streets of cobblestone,
‘Neath the halo of a street lamp,
I turned my collar to the cold and damp
When my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
That split the night
And touched the sound of silence.

And in the naked light I saw
Ten thousand people, maybe more.
People talking without speaking,
People hearing without listening,
People writing songs that voices never share
And no one dared
Disturb the sound of silence.

“Fools” said I,”You do not know
Silence like a cancer grows.
Hear my words that I might teach you,
Take my arms that I might reach you.”
But my words like silent raindrops fell,
And echoed
In the wells of silence

And the people bowed and prayed
To the neon god they made.
And the sign flashed out its warning,
In the words that it was forming.
And the signs said, ‘The words of the prophets are written on the subway walls
And tenement halls.
And whisper’d in the sounds of silence.

© SIMON, PAUL
For non-commercial use only.
© Universal Music Publishing Group
For non-commercial use only.
Data from: LyricFind

Definition #317 Sounds of Silence 2

illustration by Sevada Gregoryan

illustration by Sevada Gregoryan

Don Watches Jeanne Recover

It’s August and I crept into my foot bones to point them forward.
The tendons had to stretch to match. Had to listen to them scream.
Tissue let go.Unwound from ligaments like tassels, disinherited.

Rehab stepped into my home to point me forward. I became nurse, nutritionist, therapist, patient patient. Rolled on a walker, stairways with a cane, ice packs, foot elevated higher than heart. Unwound to go potty, cook, clean, eat, drink, go potty. Sanitize air, floors, counters, furniture. Go potty, wash and keep foot dry. Go potty.

Pointed my foot forward. Stitches removed. Pins remain for 6 weeks. No breaking. Walk only on heel! To potty.

Treat rash, keep blood thin, schedule meds, supplements, hydrate, go potty.

No driving ’til pins are removed. Go potty using heel only. Pointed pins pierce linens, dressing, socks, carpet, and furniture. Ping! Ping! Swivel! Ouch!

Take time to mend, bend to change, point forward. Balance with gravity. The toilet honors gravity and centers me when I go potty, over and over and over.

Definition #316 Sounds of Silence

Illustration by Sevada Gregoian

Illustration by Sevada Gregoian

Andrew van der Merwe shared berlin-artparasites’s photo.

I can relate to this. The things that snap you out of depression are often simple pleasures and beauties. It’s partly how I make sense of the idea that God is love.

berlin-artparasites
The morning after I killed myself, I woke up.

I made myself breakfast in bed. I added salt and pepper to my eggs and used my toast for a cheese and bacon sandwich. I squeezed a grapefruit into a juice glass. I scraped the ashes from the frying pan and rinsed the butter off the counter. I washed the dishes and folded the towels.

The morning after I killed myself, I fell in love. Not with the boy down the street or the middle school principal. Not with the everyday jogger or the grocer who always left the avocados out of the bag. I fell in love with my mother and the way she sat on the floor of my room holding each rock from my collection in her palms until they grew dark with sweat. I fell in love with my father down at the river as he placed my note into a bottle and sent it into the current. With my brother who once believed in unicorns but who now sat in his desk at school trying desperately to believe I still existed.

The morning after I killed myself, I walked the dog. I watched the way her tail twitched when a bird flew by or how her pace quickened at the sight of a cat. I saw the empty space in her eyes when she reached a stick and turned around to greet me so we could play catch but saw nothing but sky in my place. I stood by as strangers stroked her muzzle and she wilted beneath their touch like she did once for mine.

The morning after I killed myself, I went back to the neighbors’ yard where I left my footprints in concrete as a two year old and examined how they were already fading. I picked a few daylilies and pulled a few weeds and watched the elderly woman through her window as she read the paper with the news of my death. I saw her husband spit tobacco into the kitchen sink and bring her her daily medication.

The morning after I killed myself, I watched the sun come up. Each orange tree opened like a hand and the kid down the street pointed out a single red cloud to his mother.

The morning after I killed myself, I went back to that body in the morgue and tried to talk some sense into her. I told her about the avocados and the stepping stones, the river and her parents. I told her about the sunsets and the dog and the beach.

The morning after I killed myself, I tried to unkill myself, but couldn’t finish what I started. —Meggie Royer

‪#‎PoetryIsNotDead‬

painting by Adam Tan

Definition #315 Calligraphy

Calligraphy The Seventh Martial Art

Calligraphy
The Seventh Martial Art

hold breathe-zing brush-stroke

lift-drop  push-pull  graphic dance:

descenders drop down

to view a wonderful video posted by Ewan Clayton go to:

http://j-laf.org/letterarts/english.html

Definition #314 Under water swimming

 “All good writing is swimming under water and holding your breath.” —F. Scott Fitzgerald

“All good writing is swimming under water and holding your breath.” —F. Scott Fitzgerald

About the evolution of the brain

and the development of consciousness in humans,

he wrote:

“For the first time in 4 billion years a living creature had contemplated himself

and heard with a sudden, unaccountable loneliness, the whisper of wind in the night reeds”

Loren Eiseley

Definition #313 Walker

Here's what happens when walker is worn on feet!!!

Here’s what happens when walker is worn on feet!!!

wheels on feet rotate round

aloft-afloat-airbourne-a-

rena senorita

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