How to Make a Bouquet Last
I made a bouquet without ribbon
formed only by the weight and pressure of the flowers
and my hands
Naturally it came apart
and this is how I sent it to you
I scattered the flowers so you would not find them
too quickly
Some of the flowers I cast out as ideas
Those won’t come to you for years
Heavy medallions of Queen Anne’s lace
peppery breath of marigolds
May you never find them all
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
The Whole Damn Tape
The Whole Damn Tape
Moth I let you out
and you fly right back in
I wring my memory
to see when I told you about
this household being moth-friendly
Oh for the days when rewinding
made a sound
the longest zipper unzipping
a bee against a screen
I find the scene I need at the beginning of the tape
Scene one: I hold open the door
to the night air
And in the second scene
there’s that window
that will not close
Scene five
Scene twelve
Scene thirty-eight
The tape is labeled
Moth Home Movies
Moth I let you out
and you fly right back in
I wring my memory
to see when I told you about
this household being moth-friendly
Oh for the days when rewinding
made a sound
the longest zipper unzipping
a bee against a screen
I find the scene I need at the beginning of the tape
Scene one: I hold open the door
to the night air
And in the second scene
there’s that window
that will not close
Scene five
Scene twelve
Scene thirty-eight
The tape is labeled
Moth Home Movies
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Frosted Window
Frosted Window
Honeycombed peach and deep pink and red
and celery green and Kermit green.
This frosted window in my shower
is one talented abstractionist
inspired by what,
some red brick and brick painted beige and a tree.
Look how I am moved to pick up language parts
in praise of this illusion.
Whatever pleases us in looking at it
we scurry to paint.
Let go of what you see a little but still look,
and oh
why does this make beauty.
Honeycombed peach and deep pink and red
and celery green and Kermit green.
This frosted window in my shower
is one talented abstractionist
inspired by what,
some red brick and brick painted beige and a tree.
Look how I am moved to pick up language parts
in praise of this illusion.
Whatever pleases us in looking at it
we scurry to paint.
Let go of what you see a little but still look,
and oh
why does this make beauty.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Some Fantasy This Is
Some Fantasy This Is
I.
The trees of your old house
follow you to your new one
moving only when attention
and eye flit away
II.
You are handed off
like a baton
instead of
batted between places
III.
There is a pantry
There is a wine cellar
The beloved place
has been preserved for you
to taste again
I.
The trees of your old house
follow you to your new one
moving only when attention
and eye flit away
II.
You are handed off
like a baton
instead of
batted between places
III.
There is a pantry
There is a wine cellar
The beloved place
has been preserved for you
to taste again
Friday, July 25, 2014
Waiting on My Bookshelf...
Currently on my shelf (in a semi-dark living room--pardon the flash!):
- The Small Blades Hurt, Erica Dawson
- My One Square Inch of Alaska, Sharon Short
- All the Light We Cannot See, Anthony Doerr (I like that this title is the one is reflecting the flash most--rather fitting!)
- Until I Find You, John Irving
Hope you have a lovely weekend of reading, or seeing friends and family, or taking it easy!
Thursday, July 24, 2014
What Did We Learn
What Did We Learn
The orange tree dropped all its oranges
around us as we spoke
bushel after bushel thudding onto the grass
Then the ground began to peel up
worms and beetles afloat
in air and drifting
And oh the lightning unfurling from the grass
But between us
we felt no terror
and didn’t startle
so the oranges rested
and the worms fell back down in sheets
and the grass shook off the lightning
The orange tree dropped all its oranges
around us as we spoke
bushel after bushel thudding onto the grass
Then the ground began to peel up
worms and beetles afloat
in air and drifting
And oh the lightning unfurling from the grass
But between us
we felt no terror
and didn’t startle
so the oranges rested
and the worms fell back down in sheets
and the grass shook off the lightning
Wednesday, July 23, 2014
If Someone Is Beautiful Surely This Is an Accident
If Someone Is Beautiful Surely This Is an Accident
Coincidence of bone and skin
parent and posture
and scooting-over cloud
letting light fall over a person
and traffic forcing them to wait
to go to the other side of the street
and year it is now and year
in which another child shoved
their young self onto the sidewalk
earning the little glistening
scar above the mouth
a seam’s stitch poking out
Coincidence of bone and skin
parent and posture
and scooting-over cloud
letting light fall over a person
and traffic forcing them to wait
to go to the other side of the street
and year it is now and year
in which another child shoved
their young self onto the sidewalk
earning the little glistening
scar above the mouth
a seam’s stitch poking out
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Kept Landscape
Kept Landscape
The woods were quiet at first
with snow and the trees were without
blossom
No one noticed the landscape within you
even as the seasons fluttered
and rattled
and reached tendrils up your throat
and maybe a bird came out
with some snow when you coughed
Now that the woods have found your voice
you keep exposing
us to all that has been at work on you
The woods were quiet at first
with snow and the trees were without
blossom
No one noticed the landscape within you
even as the seasons fluttered
and rattled
and reached tendrils up your throat
and maybe a bird came out
with some snow when you coughed
Now that the woods have found your voice
you keep exposing
us to all that has been at work on you
Monday, July 21, 2014
The Storialist Turns Six!
Today, The Storialist is a kindergartener!
Six years of posting every weekday on this site. Sometimes it feels easy, sometimes it feels like a chore, sometimes it feels rejuvenating, sometimes it feels frustrating, and sometimes it feels comforting.
I’m always wondering--what is it I’m doing here? It’s my practice, my way of not squirming out of doing what I value. It allows me to both make space for and more fully incorporate writing in my daily life (even when it feels impossible).
More and more, what I do in writing feels like this scene. (I know it might seem absurd; hear me out!).
Paul Rudd cracks me up in this scene (from Forgetting Sarah Marshall). He’s teaching Jason Segel’s character to surf (well, supposedly). His lesson is such a non-lesson: “Don’t do anything, don’t TRY to surf. Don’t do it. The less you do, the more you do.”
It’s ridiculous and horrible advice masquerading as a sort of faux mystical, Yoda-esque method (and it is hilarious). But it’s somehow also pretty accurate in terms of describing what I try to learn in writing.
It’s not that I want to “do less” or not put forth effort. For me, it's a real balance between doing too much (intervening too much in the poem)/not enough (not carrying the idea/words far enough). I’ve learned that I need to beware of overcooking a poem....so much of writing is learning how to let it go where it wants to go, not censoring it or holding it back prematurely. This is really difficult. It involves trust, and also a certain detachment from how I want the poem to turn out (this is the "doing less" part, maybe). I don’t think this is true for all writers or artists, but for me, it all starts with deciding: today I’m going to write, and maybe it will fail, or maybe part of it will be okay. But all of this is of value.
As Paul Rudd’s surfing lesson ends, he says, enthusiastically, “YEAH! That wasn’t quite it, but we’re going to figure it out out there--c’mon, let’s go surfing.” We’ll figure it out out there, maybe, and if we don’t, we’re still figuring it out.
Undoubtedly, this year will bring new things in terms of writing--hopefully, more reviews, interviews, essays, collaborations, and experiments!
Thank you so much for reading, sharing, inspiring. I so value and appreciate everyone I've connected with through writing and blogging.
Let’s go surfing!
Previous anniversaries:
July 2008
July 2009
July 2010
July 2011
July 2012
July 2013
Six years of posting every weekday on this site. Sometimes it feels easy, sometimes it feels like a chore, sometimes it feels rejuvenating, sometimes it feels frustrating, and sometimes it feels comforting.
I’m always wondering--what is it I’m doing here? It’s my practice, my way of not squirming out of doing what I value. It allows me to both make space for and more fully incorporate writing in my daily life (even when it feels impossible).
More and more, what I do in writing feels like this scene. (I know it might seem absurd; hear me out!).
Paul Rudd cracks me up in this scene (from Forgetting Sarah Marshall). He’s teaching Jason Segel’s character to surf (well, supposedly). His lesson is such a non-lesson: “Don’t do anything, don’t TRY to surf. Don’t do it. The less you do, the more you do.”
It’s ridiculous and horrible advice masquerading as a sort of faux mystical, Yoda-esque method (and it is hilarious). But it’s somehow also pretty accurate in terms of describing what I try to learn in writing.
It’s not that I want to “do less” or not put forth effort. For me, it's a real balance between doing too much (intervening too much in the poem)/not enough (not carrying the idea/words far enough). I’ve learned that I need to beware of overcooking a poem....so much of writing is learning how to let it go where it wants to go, not censoring it or holding it back prematurely. This is really difficult. It involves trust, and also a certain detachment from how I want the poem to turn out (this is the "doing less" part, maybe). I don’t think this is true for all writers or artists, but for me, it all starts with deciding: today I’m going to write, and maybe it will fail, or maybe part of it will be okay. But all of this is of value.
As Paul Rudd’s surfing lesson ends, he says, enthusiastically, “YEAH! That wasn’t quite it, but we’re going to figure it out out there--c’mon, let’s go surfing.” We’ll figure it out out there, maybe, and if we don’t, we’re still figuring it out.
Undoubtedly, this year will bring new things in terms of writing--hopefully, more reviews, interviews, essays, collaborations, and experiments!
Thank you so much for reading, sharing, inspiring. I so value and appreciate everyone I've connected with through writing and blogging.
Let’s go surfing!
Previous anniversaries:
July 2008
July 2009
July 2010
July 2011
July 2012
July 2013
Shade Plant
Shade Plant
After centuries of surviving with low light
a plant begins to eat shadows
without complaint
then savors every variation of darkness
An oriole hopping from branch to fence
[a dumpling]
A leaf-heavy branch shifting only slightly
[bread]
Slender telephone wire
[wine]
What refuses to be known
to you through light
remember that this can make a fine meal
After centuries of surviving with low light
a plant begins to eat shadows
without complaint
then savors every variation of darkness
An oriole hopping from branch to fence
[a dumpling]
A leaf-heavy branch shifting only slightly
[bread]
Slender telephone wire
[wine]
What refuses to be known
to you through light
remember that this can make a fine meal
Friday, July 18, 2014
Walking It Off
The restorative, creativity-boosting powers of taking a walk are well-noted (here's Maira Kalman on Brain Pickings about walks, and here's some recent research reported by the APA). As a non-sporty, fairly non-competitive person, I love a good walk. And if my work is feeling stale or off, going for a walk immediately helps.
We recently moved to a new neighborhood, and it's interesting to me how quickly we find our landmarks, our visual treats on our territory. I mean the small, odd details that make us feel that a place is ours: the miniature porch swing that hangs from the branches of a neighbor's tree (I'll get a picture of this sometime!), the bay window where a black and white cat is always perched, the bricks in the street and sidewalk that seem so thoughtfully placed when we look at them closely.
Walkers of the world, unite! What's your favorite place to walk? And what activities
do you prescribe yourself when you need a creative break?
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Refreshments
Refreshments
Maybe I can offer you pictures of snow
because it is hot
That feels nice, doesn’t it
Have my hand
which is always cool
Together we can go gape at the bashed-in church
its front door closed so modestly
even though its body has been opened to the air
For dessert,
a photograph of lavender and magenta smoke
in the forest
Maybe I can offer you pictures of snow
because it is hot
That feels nice, doesn’t it
Have my hand
which is always cool
Together we can go gape at the bashed-in church
its front door closed so modestly
even though its body has been opened to the air
For dessert,
a photograph of lavender and magenta smoke
in the forest
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
It Isn’t Magic Just Science
It Isn’t Magic Just Science
If you gather the nothingness for long enough
something will emerge from it
I told that molecule about the other molecule
looking at her
and that is how they fell in love
If you are alive
or you were at one point
you are a matchmaker
If you gather the nothingness for long enough
something will emerge from it
I told that molecule about the other molecule
looking at her
and that is how they fell in love
If you are alive
or you were at one point
you are a matchmaker
Friday, July 11, 2014
Paging Columbus--Kate Greenstreet, Aaron Poochigian, Jonterri Gadson
One of the joys of running Paging Columbus is getting to edit and revisit videos from all the readers over the years. It's amazing to see all of the different styles, cadences, and voices.
Here are a few that I've watched again recently...hope you enjoy! (Click on each name to visit that poet's site.)
Kate Greenstreet
Aaron Poochigian
Jonterri Gadson
Here are a few that I've watched again recently...hope you enjoy! (Click on each name to visit that poet's site.)
Kate Greenstreet
Aaron Poochigian
Jonterri Gadson
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Here’s the Deal
Here’s the Deal
You may have a body, but only
in combination
meaning the old pieces of it twined
to the raft it has become
as well as what is currently lifted or scarred
The way this works
is both shoulders at a time
No singular elegant leg
without the community of flesh it is nestled against
You may have a body, but only
in combination
meaning the old pieces of it twined
to the raft it has become
as well as what is currently lifted or scarred
The way this works
is both shoulders at a time
No singular elegant leg
without the community of flesh it is nestled against
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Consolation
Consolation
In the dream I console someone with this phrase: Remember, nothing
is permanent, even life. I stole this sentence from a clerk at Target
one evening last December when each register had a line of gift-
seeking humans. Has it been crazy, I asked it with sympathy because
maybe I could help by using a nice voice.
Yes, but it’s ok, the cashier told me, and then, without intensity, Nothing
is permanent. Even life.
It was funny in one of my favorite ways for things to be funny,
in that it was cousins with sadness.
In the dream I console someone with this phrase: Remember, nothing
is permanent, even life. I stole this sentence from a clerk at Target
one evening last December when each register had a line of gift-
seeking humans. Has it been crazy, I asked it with sympathy because
maybe I could help by using a nice voice.
Yes, but it’s ok, the cashier told me, and then, without intensity, Nothing
is permanent. Even life.
It was funny in one of my favorite ways for things to be funny,
in that it was cousins with sadness.
Monday, July 7, 2014
With Every Step, a Fresh Place
With Every Step, a Fresh Place
Patch of water I remember
who held the light
in moon-rough pockets
we will meet again
never
It is your fault
and it is my fault
Maybe we are looking at this
incorrectly
All water is water
so we have re-encountered one another
in sips and showers
Rain along my scalp
Snow furring my pant hem
and meeting my ankle
That ocean over there
That ocean over here
You can’t deny
the resemblance
Patch of water I remember
who held the light
in moon-rough pockets
we will meet again
never
It is your fault
and it is my fault
Maybe we are looking at this
incorrectly
All water is water
so we have re-encountered one another
in sips and showers
Rain along my scalp
Snow furring my pant hem
and meeting my ankle
That ocean over there
That ocean over here
You can’t deny
the resemblance
Friday, July 4, 2014
Bookmarks Links/Bedside Table
Currently reading and enjoying:
Happy weekend, friends!
- Really intriguing article in the New Scientist, "Mindscapes: The woman who gets lost in her own home" on "developmental topographical disorientation."
- An article about a beautiful looking new game, Lumino City (thanks to my pal Clive for the recommendation!).
- On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic, the Souvenir, the Collection by Susan Stewart.
Happy weekend, friends!
Thursday, July 3, 2014
I Can’t Tell You That, But
I Can’t Tell You That, But
What I can tell you
is that the white begonia
is reaching
but not for you
The flower knows
that the beloved is always near
or soon to return
When the light is back
the flower says
There will never be enough of you
for me to hold
What I can tell you
is that the white begonia
is reaching
but not for you
The flower knows
that the beloved is always near
or soon to return
When the light is back
the flower says
There will never be enough of you
for me to hold
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Nocturnal
Nocturnal
This is the lit-up house atop its dark cellar
and both depend on the other
to get seen Here is the park at night
alive and adding to the quiet
Here is the house closing its mouth around
the light
These are cats agreeing to sleep
and the humans floating
on the ponds of their beds
and this is the day slipping away from itself
without desperation
This is the lit-up house atop its dark cellar
and both depend on the other
to get seen Here is the park at night
alive and adding to the quiet
Here is the house closing its mouth around
the light
These are cats agreeing to sleep
and the humans floating
on the ponds of their beds
and this is the day slipping away from itself
without desperation
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