Understand the balance between allure and caution…
09 Mar 2024 Leave a comment
in Poetry Tags: a symbol of destruction, allure, BALANCE, caution, could cause heartbreak, could lead to your demise, life, love, love that's hypnotic, nature, navigate thru the tumultuous seas of love, relationships, siren's call, the deep waters of your past, the seductive nature of our passion

The Siren
“Our love was alluring and sometimes perilous, like the siren’s call that tempts sailors to rocky shores. Learn from its seductive lessons, understanding the balance between allure and caution. The siren, a symbol of irresistible attraction and danger, mirrors the captivating yet seductive nature of our passion.”
When you draw the Siren card, it signifies a powerful message from a past romantic relationship that was enchantingly enticing but potentially dangerous. This card speaks about love that’s hypnotic and captivating but can also be risky or damaging. The Siren commands your awareness, with an invitation to delve into the deep waters of your past romantic experiences, providing valuable insights that are essential for your future love life.
The Siren can symbolize a relationship that was both passionate and volatile in nature. These types of relationships often teach us the most valuable lessons about how we love and what we are willing to endure for that love. Like the alluring yet dangerous Siren in the sea, this past love might have been enchanting and irresistible, but it may have also led you astray from your path, causing hardship or even heartbreak.
This card indicates that your past experiences can offer important insights and lessons for your future relationships. The Siren’s music is captivating, but it may also lead a ship to its demise. Similarly, your previous relationship may have been electrifying yet damaging, and it’s time for you to decode its melody. This card encourages you to seek and understand the lessons behind the alluring yet perilous love that the Siren represents.
A mesmerizing Siren in her exquisite splendor sits on a rock, her mermaid tail gently touching the cerulean water, a distant ship navigates the stormy waters in the background, symbolizing the turmoil past love has left in its wake. She strums her harp, and though the tune is captivating, it has the potential to steer you off course. The Siren isn’t only a symbol of temptation and allure but a call to exercise caution and discernment in love.
This past love had a kind of luminous intensity, the kind that drags you in and holds you spellbound. Meanwhile, the Siren’s allure can also serve as a warning sign of uncharted territory ahead, symbolizing the volatile aspects of this relationship. It tells the tale of a love that was dazzling and exhilarating, however, it might have led you towards uncertain and unmapped waters.
Listen To The Song Of Your Past
The card asks you to tune into the songs of your past. What melodies are still resounding in your heart from this relationship? What verses of love and loss still echo in your mind? Which chords hit you the hardest, the sweet prefatory notes or the discordant hues of its finale? Looking back on this relationship with a clear and grounded perspective can offer you the insight needed for navigating future relationships.
Think about these questions when you draw the Siren card. Is there a past love that still plays songs in your heart? What lesson did you learn from that relationship? What are the enchanting yet potentially dangerous aspects of love that the story of the Siren is cautioning you about? How can you integrate these lessons into your present and future relationships?
Interpreting The Siren Card For Your Present
The Siren card has appeared to signal that it’s time for you to listen to the echoes of your past relationships that still reverberate within your heart. It might be painful, but it’s crucial to assimilate these lessons into your current love-related experiences. If there’s one message that the Siren carries, it is that the allure of past love serves as a valuable lesson for the present. It stands as a beautiful but hazardous melody in your heart — appreciable, but something to approach with caution. Understand its tune and use it as a guide as you navigate through the tumultuous seas of love in your life.
NYC’s upper east side has inherited a giant owl…
08 Feb 2024 Leave a comment
in Poetry Tags: adventurist heroes, animals, birds, eats rats, nature, need each other, owl, owls, six foot wingspan

The great debate continues over Flaco the eagle-owl spotted recently flying around our home on New York’s Upper West Side, a year after he got loose from the Central Park Zoo: should he continue to roam the city freely, feeding on rats, or should he be put back in captivity for his own welfare?
He’s a big bird, six-foot wingspan, bright orange eyes, and he’s gained a considerable fan base, most of whom are rooting for him to be free. Some renowned owlologists, however, feel the bird is in danger, primarily from rat poison but also from vehicular birdicide, and needs to be rescued from his urban habit
Apparently Flaco is roaming the city widely, in search of a mate, which he is extremely unlikely to find in Manhattan, even if he turns out to be gay. There was a female eagle-owl, Gladys, at a zoo in Minnesota but she escaped and was run over by a truck. Eurasian eagle-owls (Bubo bubo) are found in Russia and Asia, not migratory to a great extent; Flaco was hatched at a bird center in North Carolina 14 years ago. Life expectancy is 20 years but eagle-owls can live much longer in captivity, 30, perhaps more, and there’s the question: a short life of adventure or a long, pleasant life in captivity.
I voted for captivity 30 years ago when I met my Gladys and I’m quite happy with it, so I vote for female eagle-owls, Flo, Mavis, Delores, Maureen, to be flown in from Asia and tethered in the Park where Flaco can spot them, and when he dives in to select a mate, the orni-cops can jump in and seize him in flagrante delicto.
The Times published a video of Flaco, the day after his escape, huddled by Fifth Avenue, freaked out by the P.D. lights flashing and the zoo people hovering, looking at a small cage set on the sidewalk with a dead rat inside it, door open, beckoning, but Flaco declined to be trapped. He took off, figured out how to hunt, found good perches and safe corners to sleep in, and became a New York celebrity. New Yorkers have a romantic streak that admires the vagabond adventurer and the rebel. I got over that romantic streak when I saw dozens of adventurous heroes die in middle age from drugs and alcohol, bad habits, and invincible stupidity.
I’ve now been free of my Gladys for several weeks and I admit that freedom has its benefits. Nobody has said to me, “You’re spilling that coffee” or “You missed the toilet again” or “Turn down the flame, you’re spattering grease all over the kitchen” or “Don’t put so much detergent in the washer, you’ll have soap flowing all over the floor” but on the other hand, had she been here, she’d have told me, “Wear a mask when you’re in a crowd of people, there’s a terrible bug going around” and I might’ve done it but instead I went out, a free man, and freely inhaled viral droplets, and caught influenza B and spent the next ten days as a man of 98, a prisoner in a gulag of self-inflicted misery.
I miss her. I miss her casual hand on my shoulder in passing that says so much. I can put my hand on my shoulder but not in passing and it isn’t the same. We need to take care of each other. I need my editors and my colleagues to do the heavy lifting so I can have fun at work. My Gladys loves her family and her fellow string players in the orchestra and especially her Estonian stand partner. In a few days I’ll go to Florida and sing Van Morrison and Greg Brown and Iris DeMent in duet with Aoife and Christine. An old friend of mine is recovering from spinal fusion surgery at a hospital in Minnesota, in the ICU under the watchful care of truly dedicated doctors and nurses. My daughter lives in a tangle of friends and chums and BFFs who all look after each other. Knowing this helps me sleep at night.
We can get along without Wi-Fi and cellphones and streaming video, but we can’t get along without each other. Come back to the zoo, Flaco. You’re a celebrity, people want to look at you, accept your role in the world. You’ll enjoy a long, pleasant life there along with the penguins and the primates. You lunch on one sick rat and you’re a goner and the whole city will go into mourning. Come home.
written by Garrison Keillor Feb 7th and posted here because I collect owls, love and know NYC and have a huge love for Don Smith, my partner!
those winter stories…
03 Dec 2023 Leave a comment
in Poetry Tags: blog, blogging, nature, rva, sunday-stills, winter

“Those Winter Sundays,” by Robert Hayden,
from Angel of Ascent (Liveright).
Sundays too my father got up early
and put his clothes on in the blueblack cold,
then with cracked hands that ached
from labor in the weekday weather made
banked fires blaze. No one ever thanked him.
I’d wake and hear the cold splintering, breaking.
When the rooms were warm, he’d call,
and slowly I would rise and dress,
fearing the chronic angers of that house,
Speaking indifferently to him,
who had driven out the cold
and polished my good shoes as well.
What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?
When I grew to womanhood I learned how my love kept me warm.
JP
all rights
12/3/23
Definition #223 Reality
27 May 2015 2 Comments
in reality Tags: Calligraphy, fertile, fly like seeds, John Stevens, nature, Nature's Flourishes, real spores, reality, seeking roots, the last word, verdant
Nature’s flourishes
fly like seeds, seeking roots, spores
real, verdant, fertile.
Pouch
03 Dec 2013 Leave a comment
in Family, Uncategorized Tags: forest road, Ghent, hand, nature, pouch, rickshaw run, uncle
Pattern #31Bosk
13 Sep 2013 1 Comment
in Family, Uncategorized Tags: bascage, bosk, bosquet, bushes, busk-bush, environment, grove, nature, pattern, plantation picture, plants, science, shrubs, small wood, thicket, trees
busk bush-a small wood
thicket of bushes bosquet,
boscage, grove, shrubs, trees!
plantation picture!
Pattern #25 Cross
05 Sep 2013 Leave a comment
in Family Tags: community, cross, dimensions, divine, earthly, inspiration, nature, nevermore, pattern, pierce, right angles, separate, spirituality
Patterns #3 Horizon
09 Aug 2013 Leave a comment
in Uncategorized Tags: attitudes, becalm, environment, eyes, horizon, latitudes, nature, patterns, pulse, science, threads






