Mediocre in its simple signification I do not despise at all. And one certainly does not rise above that mark by despising what is mediocre. In my opinion one must begin by at least having some respect for the mediocre and know that it already means something, and that it is only reached through great difficulty.
–Vincent van Gogh
Category Archives: Humanities
The Day After Tomorrow & Memeishness
Time feels compressed to me. Saturday felt like Sunday all day. Thankfully it wasn’t; I still have time to prepare. I’m leaving to fly east — to Syracuse, New York — the day after tomorrow. It’s not that I have immense work to do… just packing and watering the gardens really well. But I’m volunteering on Monday, and then suddenly it will be Tuesday, and I’ll have to catch a noon flight. Get this: I’ll land at midnight. Of course, there’s a three-hour time shift in there, but still, it will be a long journey. I’ll be there one week, so posting will be spotty, if at all.
However, I plan to take lots of pictures, so I’ll have some new material to share.
I spent this evening culling about three dozen books, mostly fiction, from my bookshelves. They’ve been very tight and getting more so. Since I rarely re-read fiction, I targeted those. I’ve emailed close friends and family to offer free reads. I’ll post whatever titles they don’t want so that other readers have a chance. Kat did this awhile back, and I benefited!
That cup of coffee I had at Barnes & Noble this evening after dinner probably wasn’t a wise decision. I’m wide awake now. But I didn’t buy any books (yay self- discipline!). I’ve enough in queue to last me awhile.
Below are a couple of memes I did for fun. One is the Friday Random Ten (a couple of days late, ah well) where you set your music player to “shuffle” then list the last ten songs you heard. The other is a cooking quiz that I found in my blog meanders — can’t remember where.
Continue reading
Room to Play
| Room to Play
It sits on the nightstand, a A black butterfly clip divides past But it is too small for secrets, it |
Rhyme and Reason
Stella and I share the sofa, basking in the last afternoon sun. She’s a dirty-rotten blanket stealer, splayed across the gold chenille throw I bought with wedding gift money. (It’s not cold enough to fight her for it.) As I attempt to gather my mind into a semblance of consciousness, she stares intently at the ceiling. A medium-sized spider has toured the living room this afternoon, staying out of our reach. If it continues in its current direction, it will be directly over my head in about 12 inches. And it best just continue onward.
A few nights ago I turned on the bedroom light only to find a slightly larger than medium spider situated right next to the switchplate. (I really should develop a sizing system for them, like what exists for eggs and olives.) Interesting noises escape me during this encounters. A passerby would probably think an exorcism was occurring. I turned around for a minute to tell my husband to come see. By the time he did (I was searching for a tissue), he said it had crawled into the bureau drawer. I sighed and decided to pretend it didn’t exist.
But that’s not what I intended to write about. No, I was going to tell you how I recently read two marvelous and catalytic books. About poetry. Now, don’t go rolling your eyes and retreating. Read a little further; you might learn something. The first book is one I bought last fall and immediately ignored: The Poet’s Companion: A Guide to the Pleasure of Writing Poetry. It drew me because it promised to decipher the process for me. When I’ve written poetry, it’s been intuitive. I couldn’t have explained why I arranged my lines and stanzas a certain way or identified anything other than a pure rhyme. Someone recently used the word enjambment at the online writing workshop I joined. This book explained what that meant.
The authors, Kim Addonizio and Dorianne Laux, present their material in a friendly, informal way. They begin not with technicalities, but with content, exploring subjects for writing, such as the family, death, grief, the shadow in us, poetry of place, poetry as a form of witnessing. In this way the reader understands she has plenty of material available for shaping. The next section focuses on craft, which is where I learned terms and definitions. They start with basics: images, simile and metaphor, voice and style. Then they move to meter, rhyme, and form; I now understand the great variety of rhyming one can use. I know the structure of a sonnet — that in fact there are three types: Petrarchan, Shakespearean, and Spenserian. (Who would have thought?) The section also explained the forms of villanelle, pantoum, and sestina, which provide the challenge of formal structure (i.e., certain words in specific places, use of repetition, stanza arrangement). The last section of the book covered writer’s block, self-doubt, and getting published. Best of all, most chapters provide about a dozen suggestions for inspiring one’s muse.
The other book I read was Poemcrazy: Freeing Your Life With Words, by Susan Goldsmith Wooldridge. It caught my eye as I browsed B&N with my mother-in-law; I sat down to read a few pages and was hooked. Wooldridge writes autobiographically, bringing the reader in touch with how poetry infiltrates ordinary life. The chapters are short, like journal entries, and most provide ideas for practice. The book truly focuses more on freeing oneself to write rather than on technicality. She encourages wordplay. One exercise (which I’ve done) directs the writer to look at an object nearby, to scrutinize and describe it in detail. Then one is to imagine it as a being with a message and to contemplate what that message might be. These impressions are written down as well. But it’s not a poem yet. The exercise is the generation of material. This is what I found freeing. I made notes and returned to it a day later, approaching it as I do a collage — intuitively shaping the poem without analysis. Then I left it alone and returned a few hours later, where I proceeded to read it aloud to analyze the words for how well they conveyed meaning and for rhythm. Time passed without my notice, and I was content.
From both books I created a “muse list” — a collection of exercises for practice and play. It is extensive; not much overlap exists between the books. I now have 163 prompts, cut into slips and placed in a plastic box, from which to randomly select ideas.
What I need to do, though, to increase my understanding, is start reading poems. I have a number of volumes, much of it modern poetry, which I prefer. Poetry can be accessible. The problem, I think, is that we are such a speed-oriented, driven people that we are put off by the effort. Poetry asks for meditation, for time, for expanded thinking — and to be read aloud. I will give these.
A Look of Human Eyes
If there is a look of human eyes that tells of perpetual loneliness, so there is also the familiar look that is the sign of perpetual crowds.
–Alice Meynell
Excursion
| Excursion
Saturday wakes to the scent blacktop roses bowing to the hum of the Farmerās Market, seekers and idlers with her as if they were treasure. people nibble nuts, savor honey, –Kathryn Harper |
When In Public
When in public poetry should take off its clothes and wave to the nearest person in sight; it should be seen in the company of thieves and lovers rather than that of journalists and publishers. On sighting mathematicians it should unhook the algebra from their minds and replace it with poetry; on sighting poets it should unhook poetry from their minds and replace it with algebra; it should fall in love with children and woo them with fairytales; it should wait on the landing for 2 years for all its mates to come home then go outside and find them all dead. When the electricity fails it should wear dark glasses and pretend to be blind. It should guide all those who are safe into the middle of busy roads and leave them there. It should scatter woodworm into the bedrooms of all peg-legged men not being afraid to hurt the innocent or make such differences. It should shout EVIL! EVIL! from the roofs of the world’s stock exchanges. It should not pretend to be a clerk or a librarian. It should be kind, it is the eventual sameness of contradictions. It should never weep until it is alone and then only after it has covered the mirrors and sealed up the cracks. Poetry should seek out pale and lyrical couples and wander with them into stables, neglected bedrooms and engineless cars for a final Good Time. It should enter burning factories too late to save anyone. It should pay no attention to its real name. Poetry should be seen lying by the side of road accidents, hissing from unlit gasrings. It should scrawl the nymphomaniac’s secret on her teacher’s blackboard; offer her a worm saying: Inside this is a tiny apple. Poetry should play hopscotch in the 6pm streets and look for jinks in other people’s dustbins. At dawn it should leave the bedroom and catch the first bus home to its wife. At dusk it should chat up a girl nobody wants. It should be seen standing on the ledge of a skyscraper, on a bridge with a brick tied around its heart. It is the monster hiding in a child’s dark room, it is the scar on a beautiful man’s face. It is the last blade of grass being picked from the city park.
Compassion
Anger is not compassion and compassion is not a well-phrased blog post.
–Natalie d’Arbeloff, Blaugustine
Perhaps I should take heed.
Far and Wide
Susan at Easy Bake Coven writes that some North Carolina gas stations are tapped out. Katrina created problems with the state gas pipeline. The media proclaims the dire economic consequences this country will likely experience for some time. [Update, 12:20 a.m. Thu.: The above information is apparently rooted in rumor. See Snopes.com for clarification on gas price and supply rumors.]
Fran at Sacred Ordinary points to an article on BeliefNet that asks the question, Did God Send the Hurricane?. The article examines the question from both the liberal and conservative view: Mother Earth is communicating her pain and we are paying for our environmental disregard vs. the Apocalypse has started and God is punishing America for its sins.
The desperate wish for meaning drives humans to believe odd things. Why anthropomorphize the earth? Why try to put a limiting concept such as God on the universe? (If there is a God, whatever humans conceive cannot match what such a Being really Is. Some people try to accommodate this by believing in many gods and goddesses that represent the facets of the divine. Even so, these are merely symbols of the indescribable.) What happened was a natural event. Disasters have occurred for millenia, much longer than human life has existed. The hurricane may in part be due to global warming, something humankind has generated; the impact it has had on New Orleans is surely due to our manipulation of the land, which made the city vulnerable. This situation is dire, tragic, daunting. Now let’s spend less time examining our collective navel about why and start activating ourselves to help the victims. If you need motivation, listen to this radio essay by Andrei Codrescu, an immigrant poet who has called New Orleans home for 20 years.
International Blog Day
In an effort to expand my playground and encounter the joy of discovery, I’m participating in International Blog Day. Writer Nir Ofir noticed that the date looked an awful lot like the word blog, at least the way he and millions of other non-Americans write it: 3108 —> Blog. Okay, maybe a bit of a stretch, but an original idea. So today, 8/31, is a day to share new blog gems.
- One Word: a Perioperative nurse in Boston, MA, “wanted to write 52 essays, one a week for a year.” The essays reminisce about her childhood and contemplate topics such as chaos, suffering, words, joy, color, her search for meaning, and her experience of her body. She also includes photos. I sense we are similar in age, and I enjoy her voice.
- Dakota: this blog has one aim — to present photos, links, and poetry. It does not distract itself with links to other blogs. It simply is. What I find most fascinating are the poems in which some words are links. It provides another dimension to the poem.
- Book of Kells: Kelli Russell Agodon is a Washington state poet. Her blog features snippets about her life as a poet, links to poetry-related and literary news, and an extensive list of poetry bloggers. She also practices gratitude and occasionally posts a “gratitude list,” something I do in my private journal.
- Surrender, Dorothy: the only description in her “About Me” section is a quote: “A poet should be as sensitive as an aching tooth.” –Anna Swir She posts her poems and writes about the writing life, as well as the human life as experienced by a writer. She also once feared spiders and now takes extra care to be kind to them, a transformation I understand.
- Land Mammal: The subtitle is “Feeding the Beast.” Written by Anne Haines, I was drawn to the blog because she describes herself in a way I connect with: “Mid-forties… poet-librarygirl-nerd.” And she has two cats! The blog features her poetry.
My interests lean toward a certain writing genre these days. Even if you don’t read poetry, take a peek at these blogs. Not all the posts are poems or about poetry. These are women with strong voices and rich inner lives.
Tag: BlogDay2005
Website: Blogday.org
Beginnings
The memoir group I established met tonight for the first time. A total of four women, we make an intimate group. Before the meeting, we were completely unknown to each other (they’d replied to my invitation on Craigslist). Thus, founding such a circle is an adventure, at least with regard to personality. As it turned out, two of the women were acquainted from another group! The energy among us thrummed; we each told why we were there and a little about ourselves, and we talked about the way we’d like to group to operate. These are smart women, as well as genuine and warm. I’m motivated to write, now. Our next meeting is in two weeks.
And then there is my knitting goal. The reason I haven’t started learning is that I want to take a class. However, my schedule doesn’t work with what they’re offering until October. I could sit down with the book, and I will. But Commuknity is thriving. I am drawn there and eager with anticipation. I want to go to the knitting circle or the KnitLit discussion, but since I lack basic skills, I feel I can’t yet. Perhaps that’s silly.
I have plenty to keep me occupied, however. My potted plants have become listless; they need larger homes, and weeds have overrun the garden. There’s a canvas waiting to be collaged. I owe some effort and time to the writing forum in the form of critique. I joined last week and feel overwhelmed with the amount of activity there. With company, I haven’t had time to explore, so settling in there is foremost on my mind. Oh, and one last thing. I had coffee with TC, a friend from my job. To our mutual pleasure, we discovered that we both enjoy collaging, tarot meditation, and writing. So Monday we have a creative date; she’s coming over for tea, talk, and to page through magazines for images.
The Letter and The Spirit
Religious laws, in all the major traditions, have both a letter and a spirit. As I understand the words and example of Jesus, the spirit of a law is all-important, whereas the letter, while useful in conjunction with spirit, becomes lifeless and deadly without it. In accord with this distinction, a yearning to worship in wilderness or beside rivers, rather than in churches, could legitimately be called evangelical. Jesus himself began his mission after forty days and nights in wilderness. According to the same letter vs. spirit distinction, the law-heavy literalism of many so-called evangelicals is not evangelical at all: “evangel” means “the gospels”; the essence of the gospels is Jesus; and literalism is not something that Jesus personified or taught.
Nor need one be a Christian for the word “evangelical” to apply: if your words or deeds harmonize with the example of Jesus, you are evangelical in spirit whether you claim to be or not. When the non-Christian Ambrose Bierce, for instance, wrote, “War is the means by which Americans learn geography,” there was acid dripping almost visibly from his pen. His words, however, are aimed at the same anti-war end as the gospel statements “Love thine enemies” and “Love thy neighbor as thyself.” And “Blessed are the peacemakers.” Bierce’s wit is in this sense evangelical whether he likes it or not. …
To refer to peregrinating Celtic monks and fundamentalist lobbyists, Origen and Oral Roberts, the Desert Fathers and Tim La Haye, Jerry Falwell and Dante, St. Francis and the TV “prosperity gospel” hucksters, Lady Julian of Norwich and Tammy Faye Baker, or John of the Cross and George W. Bush all as Christian stretches the word so thin its meaning vanishes. The term “carbon-based life-form” is as informative. Though it may shock those who equate fundamentalism and Christianity, ninety years ago the term “fundamentalist” did not exist. The term was coined by an American Protestant splinter-group which, in 1920, proclaimed that adhering to “the literal inerrancy of the Bible” was the true Christian faith. The current size of this group does not change the aberrance of its stance: deification of the mere words of the Bible, in light of every scripture-based wisdom tradition including Christianity’s two-thousand-year-old own, is not just naiveté: it is idolatry.
This, in all sincerity, is why fundamentalists need connections to, and the compassion of, those who are no such thing. How can those lost in literalism save one another? As Max Weber once put it: “We [Christians] are building an iron cage, and we’re inside of it, and we’re closing the door. And the handle is on the outside.”
–David James Duncan
This was excerpted from an essay featured at Bruderhof; a longer version was published in the July/August 2005 issue of Orion. What Duncan wrote resonated deeply. I would like to read more.
To Live With Grace
To live with the conscious knowledge of the shadow of uncertainty, with the knowledge that disaster or tragedy could strike at any time; to be afraid and to know and acknowledge your fear, and still to live creatively and with unstinting love: that is to live with grace.
–Peter Abrahams
Asynchronous
While it’s been lovely having company, showing my mother-in-law the sights and a peek into our lives, I dearly need my routine again. I am an introvert. Anytime I doubt this I need only to have extended, face-to-face contact with a person; I wilt. I need expanses of solitude. I do enjoy particular people, but as a whole, I’m not fond of the teaming masses. (I’ve spent the past week trying unsuccessfully to convey my sense of the world to an extrovert. Extroverts mistake being personable for being social.)
Another insight was refreshed for me as well. I would be well-advised to select a small range of activities and dedicate my efforts to them. I want to arrest my tendency to dabble and buy how-to books. Shallow interest, combined with insecurity about being a novice, hinders involvement. Since I have insomnia tonight, I’ve spent time prioritizing what matters to me, so I can use my time more fully. They fall into three general categories: creativity, community, and health.
Creativity encompasses writing, reading, collage art, photography, gardening, and learning to knit. Community includes volunteer work, church, nurturing budding friendships here, and tending my long-distance relationships. Health pertains to exercising daily in some fashion, participating in walkathons, and eating well. Even this is a sizable list, when one also factors in the time I want to spend with my husband, as well as time and energy consumed by mundane duties.
I like schedules — as long as I create them for myself. I find it motivating to book appointments for the priorities I mentioned. The calendar reflects my commitment to follow through even if no one else will participate. Julia Cameron writes about making an “artist’s date” with oneself. One can also make a date to exercise or to follow-up on a phone call or email from a friend. (In fact, my ten-year correspondence with a friend flourished because I made notes of points needing response and dedicated a couple hours every Saturday morning to write.)
This week’s visit full of conversations about interests and goals has triggered the second insight regarding intention, concentration, and movement into life, rather than darting over it. One can so easily talk about what one wants to do, but discussion can and does become a means of avoidance. My Wise Self implores me to remember the values I hold dear: express, discover, renew, create. Okay, I say to my dear self, this post was an effort to jump-start my life. And now I am ready to sleep.
Love Of Other People
Personal almsgiving and the most wide-ranging social work are equally justifiable and necessary. The way to God lies through love of other people and there is no other way.
–Mother Maria of Paris

