Archive for January, 2011

I’m a prisoner of news cycle & the Arizona tragedy. Blame the inflammatory rhetoric of recent yrs. And schizo white supremicists of course. 8 Jan

I threw my back out carrying a microwave to the trunk of my car to return it and get a new one. Hope my microwave karma improves soon. 8 Jan

I’m reading the Sveti Petko section of The Historian now. Must listen to the Bulgarian Women’s Choir very soon. 7 Jan

Dear Johnny Weir, darling, I was never in any doubt. 6 Jan

Jan Brewer’s Death Panel has killed another poor person. 6 Jan

Eat, Pray, Love is a REALLY twerpy book. There, I’ve said it. 6 Jan

I am not perfect, alas. But that’s okay. Note to self: remind yourself of this frequently. 4 Jan

Justice Antonin Scalia: “The Constitution doesn’t protect against discrimination based on gender or sex.” http://tinyurl.com/2cj44lh 4 Jan

RIP to Honey West—Anne Francis. 3 Jan

RIP Pete Postlethwaite. 3 Jan

I got nothing. 2 Jan

Happy New Year, everyone! Managed to stay up till midnight (barely) but we toasted the year in with Martinelli’s. I had quite a sugar buzz. 1 Jan

Maybe I can finally finish Kostova’s Historian in 2011. Still only 3/4 through. Loved every minute but my concentration has been bad. 1 Jan

Been away from the internet except in dribs since 12/22. If I need to know something assume I don’t know because I can’t possibly catch up. 1 Jan

Happy New Year to everyone. Smoke ’em if you got ’em. 31 Dec

Wow, has my attitude about…like, everything changed in the last month. 31 Dec

America is obsessed with germs. We’ve become a nation of Howard Hugheses. Fetch me my kleenex box shoes. 29 Dec

I have been searching for a certain poem for decades, ever since an English professor read it aloud in class in a freshman English class. He also handed out mimeographs of it (yes, I am old), but it was spread over two pages (though not a long poem, the print was BIG). Somehow, though I loved this poem with much loveness, I lost the second page and the last two stanzas. I only discovered this several years after the class when the poem came to mind and I went looking.

“No problem,” thinks I, “since the first page has the name of the poem and the poet. Love Poem by J. F. Nims should not be so hard to find.”

This was before the worldwide web, children, back in those misty days of low tech information retrieval. I went to the library and looked for a book of poetry by Nims. They had none. I even tried at the UCLA Research Library when I was there doing research for something else. They had a book! Alas, not the one containing Love Poem.

A few years later, once the internet really got cranking, I looked for Love Poem by J. F. Nims. Nothing. Oh, there were references to Mr. Nims (he edited Poetry magazine), but nothing on this poem. As if the poem never existed. But I remembered it, and I still had that pathetic half of a mimeographed poem. Periodically, when I thought of it, I’d put Mr. Nims’s name into Google. Still no Love Poem. I was not obsessive in my search, even if a bit obsessed.

And then today, I thought of the first line of the poem, the line that had remained with me all these years: “My clumsiest dear, whose hands shipwreck vases…” So I plugged that into Google. And, lo, there it was! On Poemfinder.com! I had tried poem finder before, I’m sure of it, but clearly it must have been before June 9, 2009.

I’m not ashamed to say that I got misty-eyed when I read the complete poem once more. Maybe I should be, but I’m not. After all these years, I still love it. After all this build up, I hope it doesn’t disappoint you.  Love Poem by J. F. Nims:

(more…)

Random quote of the day:

“Jealousy is all the fun you think they had.”

—Erica Jong, Fear of Flying

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

I realized that I never did finish posting my pictures from England, 2004. I hadn’t scanned them all, you see. I bought a nice scanner with the idea of gradually converting my vast library of photographs taken with my Canon AE-1, but it’s been a little (a lot) more gradual than I’d visualized.

So here’s my pictures of our visit to Avebury.  You can view the entire mindbogglingly big set here.

lynn and avebury ghosts

I didn’t get many pictures of Avebury this trip. In fact, the three on this page are it. I took a couple of rolls on a previous trip, but this day the rain poured down (ah, spring in England)—hence the “ghosts” surrounding Lynn. We spent a lot of time in various gift shops, the museum, and the cafeteria, where I had a wonderful vegetable hash and hot tea that took the chill off. That meal was the highlight of the day and I still remember how good it tasted after being so thoroughly drenched and chilled to the bone.

At least we didn’t have to pay for parking. A gentleman who had purchased an all-day parking ticket decided it was too rainy to be worth it and gave it to us instead.  Bonny gentleman!

Ann, who had gone off for a few days to visit a friend elsewhere, didn’t say so but I’m sure she thought our drenching was no better than we deserved for sneaking off to Avebury without her.

the sheltering of the lambs

The spring lambs sheltering against one of the great stones. They were smarter than we were, but poor Lynn had never been to Avebury so we gave it a game try. She didn’t get to see much and almost got ran over by a git in a speeding roadster.

me, avebury

I’m glad I chose such a wide stone to rest against. In case you can’t tell, my jeans from the coat hem down are absolutely saturated.

Random quote of the day:

“Solitude is better than a bad companion.”

—Muhammad Shems Al-Deen

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

freya

I was into a goddess phase for awhile. Empowerment, all that jazz. My personal belief structure has broadened since then, become (I hope) more nuanced and more inclusive. I no longer feel the need to make it a goddess vs. god universe. I like to joke that I worship the Holy Hermaphrodite, but that ain’t much of a joke. We’re all part of the same creation, yin and yang. We need to cut each other some slack.

I acquired this statue of Freya during that goddess phase, but mostly I wanted it because of that face. Who could resist it? She has such an open and serene expression that it makes me happy just to look at her. Surrounded by her gigantic necklace, Brísingamen, her hands folded meekly, you’d never know she was such a kickass female—a war goddess. That appealed to me, too, at the time. It still does to a certain extent, but what also appeals to me about Freya are her other associations with love and fertility, and her personal longing for love. Her husband, Odr, was frequently absent, you see, and she cried huge tears of red gold for him. Which proves yet again that no matter how strong and powerful we are, we can still be laid low by love.

If we’re lucky. The capacity to love is a blessing. Being laid low by it is a symptom of how open our hearts are. I was looking hard for love when I acquired this statue of Freya, a perpetual search back then. She resided in my bedroom in my old apartment, standing atop a cabinet my father made for me to hold my huge collection of earrings. Given her Brísingamen, it seemed an appropriate place for her.

Am I still looking for love? Not in the same way I was back then. I am not so particular about the kind of love I receive, not looking only for a mate. Love of any kind is a blessing, and the fires that drove me to find a partner are banked low these days. I wouldn’t turn it down if it came my way, but I don’t feel the need to seek it. Things change. Fires of all kinds renew. Phoenixes rise from ashes, and so might my quest, but mostly I’m glad not to be consumed with it anymore.

Some years after buying the Freya statue I decided that my mythic world might be a little unbalanced and (since my pocketbook was not as challenged) I also acquired Freyr, Freya’s brother and lover. Very phallic, but that’s another post. Freya seemed much happier having him around and so was I. We please our goddesses as we please ourselves.

I have lost touch with many aspects of my sacred journey, my mystical journey into the dark heart of myself and out the other side into the light. I hope to journey back there, to that rediscovered country, and settle myself in the now instead of the hoped-for future and much-regretted past. These things in my room are merely touchstones, aspects of a more profound reality inside my own heart and soul. Looking at them fresh again, remembering why they were important in the first place, is part of the journey back to that forgotten land. Renewal waits around the next turn in the road.

*Inspired by Xavier de Maistre’s book of the same name, I will be journeying around my sitting room/writing room as the mood strikes me and reflecting on the larger life meanings of the things I find there. The things themselves are not important—they are just objects—but hopefully those remembrances and reflections will be of interest. Another irregular series that I will probably keep up with . . . irregularly.

Random quote of the day:

“The mystic truth is the whole truth.”

—P. L. Travers

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

“You will produce things of beauty, hold them up and open your hands, letting the wind carry them where she will.”

I don’t know about the beauty part, but I am considering the other part.  How did the stars know???

is up at my website.

I was overcome by a mood of whimsy this month which I really should have tried harder to suppress, but…what the hell?

Random quote of the day:

“We make a living by what we get; we make a life by what we give.”

—attributed to Winston Churchill

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.