Previsione : After the Day of Shadows 02/03/2012
When we leave, what stays what goes, light shrinks shadow grows and in the travelled space, stars and something else, like god uncorrected unprotected in between, without Add Comment Inside the fog 01/03/2012
_ I watch as a woman lifts her right hand to her nose. At first, I think she thumbs her nose at the yachts, but when I look closely, I see she breathes, deeply slowly through one nostril at a time, drawing the fog into her body until her left leg lifts from the ground and floats like a sail behind her. When she drops her hand, her leg falls down. A pigeon flies up. _ At the outdoor faucet, nearest to the beach another woman stands barefoot, her trousers rolled. She turns the faucet until the water runs strong, then leans into the stream, splashes water to her face, pulls back, allows the water to flow away, soak the sand. She stands back, bows quickly three times to the empty faucet. She doesn’t turn away, doesn't scrub her feet. _ A third woman at the edge of the bay keeps her back to the fog but leans down to fan piled bird seed into the air. A near-by clustered fist of pigeons expands across the green, chasing the seed. I go home. Pusuit of Happiness 11/15/2011
Yesterday, Occupy: Oakland was cleared away. Today, high above the street camped in a tree, one person Zachary Running Wolf, remains . . . But what else remains floating around the plaza, the city, the nation? All the difficulties, all the unfairness, the inequities, the misery. Do something, Washington D.C. Start by revising the tax code so that richest 1% and the corporations pay their fair share, forgive student loans, fund public education, ensure health care for all. Stop pandering to corporations and the insurance industry. Regulate the insurance industry. Cap corporate salaries. Start thinking sanely and compassionately about the health, education, and welfare of all Americans. Two Ends of One Day In pre-dawn hours, in creased blue light, lodgers at the Occupy: Oakland site are swept away, the tents removed. Police wearing gloves collect supplies, now classed as trash, toss it all in garbage trucks. Midday, my dog eyes red squirrels chittering in cork trees. I keep my eyes focused on the farthest shore, my heart on sea birds atop the air, wanting to erase the pain lodged inside of knowing. When home again, I try for hours to tape together a book that opens with a raid of a homeless encampment beneath a bridge, the shooting death of a giant iguana chained to a cinderblock under a tree, unable to run away. My dog chewed the book while I was out. I hadn’t finished reading. I can rescue most of it but twenty pages – no doubt the hinge that swings the story out and in – are gone, digested I’m sure. If I continue reading, I will be guessing, walking around that gaping hole. I put aside the tape and go outside to the slant sun, work an hour or so in the back garden, quiet now in dim November days, cooler, damper. I trim the thick-stemmed top-heavy stick collards, fill the dog-dug hole in the strawberry bed, drag the trimmings to the compost heap, and then drive again to the shore to walk as the sun veils the mountains in glow shell pink, skins the sea to raw electric blue tipped with gold. I return, driving past the muddied plaza, the erased camp, the gathering crowds, and sit with others in a room high above the street, speaking of war and books and dream. Gunshots below interrupt, then brittle lights and sirens. I step outside and find myself standing on a frail place, knowing if I take one more step, the earth will break and I will fall not to the ground but upward into the dark outside the stars. Mirroring 11/08/2011
On strange still mornings when the air is crisply clear, the world turns upside down. Here, Oakland's corporate towers, wavering on their watery foundations. The Legacy of Pirates A boy gets shot, doesn’t even make the news. That’s how bad things are. He didn’t die, so no one needs to know except those who know, those who watched the men in blue, bemused and on their knees, brushing detail from the street, those who saw the yellow bands of tape, stretched from the wrought iron fence beside the church to the public school gate. Church and State meet as police set metal moons to orbit the two square yards between cars where the boy fell. They work in silence. The only noise the click of cameras, taking pictures no one sees. Today, I put some tinned fish and crackers into a bag, drove to the beach with my dog Earnest who knows nothing of guns, who ran and ran until his feet ceased to touch the ground. That flight could be so easy made me laugh, grateful for the earth the sea the sky the sun the speed the blue. Had to get away. Glad I did. Had no clue I was near collapse. Now I’m home, drinking mint tea with honey, listening to the radio spit words too bitter too cruel to be true homeland security strategy death threat espionage war guns battle theft. Earnest is deep asleep, his head on my feet, dreaming no doubt of grey seabirds, white flash as they swoop up and up and up, blinking into all that blue as he charges madly into the sky. Legs folded to his belly, he rests on air, but without wings, he falls to earth and barks. We saw elk, he and I, young ones, brand-new, grazing near the lighthouse. We sat inside the car, its motor growling but they didn’t sprint long-legged up the slope. They shifted aside, looked with tender eyes, stepped before us with gracious dignity. Fearless. No men with guns. No enemies. Down below the cliffs, sea lions on the beach just up from the sea. One still slicky wet, was singing. October Rose 10/21/2011
After the earthquake This body folded in creases belongs to mirrors. They protect him, kill her bury her arms beneath the Mary Todd Lincoln rose empty for seasons of bloom. Familiar with winter and the illustrated history of men with substitute faces, she is removed. In the dark, she writes: Picasso had his monkey his masks to remind him he could no longer dance. She has; the other body—in pieces, without blood, attached to light and the hardship of bone. When she breathes, she tastes words. When she moves, she separates. *** Ghosts in pursuit I breathe the fog, drink my tea dressed up with honey and milk. My hands are locked to a minor key. Who will play the piano behind the window, adorned with ice blue silk and an October rose, floating free in a crystal vase? Trap me in drifts of pretty, run me up or run me down, but play me a song before dragging me out to gray. *** BeeAware 09/24/2011
Bees and arctic ice are our canaries in the coalmine. I was on Mandela Parkway today, walking in the central divide, and this extraordinary mural caught my eye. I always notice bees, and these bees are exquisitely painted, alive and humming beside a beautiful enigmatic signature, crowded with human faces that come and go. Sometimes, I find eyes staring out at me, mouths open and close. These, I think, are the human bees that have swarmed from the hive behind, a back-lit pyramid towards which fly the winged bees, allied insects of the Melliferous or honey gathering division of the Aculeate (or sting-bearing) Hymenoptera. In the upper right and left hand corners of the painting, words are printed: BEE AWARE CONNECTED Save the honey bees WORLDS I loved this bee-thronged lotus bloom, wished it had been a bee warm afternoon, but the day was grey and cool, a wan afternoon fading into evening, dying into night. Nonetheless, standing in front of the painting, I feel as if I am flying to the light. I only hope my wings don't melt. I thought of a poem I wrote a while back. ![]() Bee Aware Listening Before the end, bees disappear and mosquitoes and love bugs but gray-haired couples push twins in three-wheeled strollers with room to jog behind. There are many sunny days. No rain. But there is wind. Then towns disappear and cows lodge in trees stripped of leaves. Small children dance nightly in circles, palms locked on naked thighs, mouse ears pressed to crescent moons. Birds sing past midnight. At one a.m. meadowlarks, at three anemic crows, by five sparrows. Across the sea, a soldier fires his last bullet into a bleached skull too large to be human. The sound is immense, greater than stars or sea waves. ![]() connected worlds Some years ago, I was driving across the country and decided to stop at Carlsbad Caverns. As I had only been to one other cave – Onandaga Cave in Missouri – I had some idea what a spectacular cave might be like, but I was ill-prepared for the magnificence and holiness I discovered within the earth at Carlsbad, 750 ft. below cactus studded ground. Rather than take the elevator, I decided to walk into the caverns along the mile-long concrete pathway that wound slowly downward to the main cavern, and I was glad for that decision. As if acting as guards, cave swallows flew anxiously about the entrance, looking much like disoriented bees removed from their hive. Their backs flashed orange as they swooped up, then down, drawing invisible nets across the mouth of the cave. I acknowledged their greeting and ignored their warnings as I walked into the dim interior of the cave, feeling as if I were entering an abandoned hive, occupied by honeyed ghosts. The cavern was not brightly lit, but there was enough light to allow me to see both the delicate and the stalwart formations. In deep recesses, a lacework honeycomb of soda straws and tiny columns created miniature fairy kingdoms and in the great vast hall of the main cavern, huge stalagmites glowing honey gold rose majestically toward the ceiling hundreds of feet above. Along the walls cascades of “draperies,” rock folded gently as if it were fabric, and waterfalls of shiny frozen calcite acted as curtains, separating this magic world from the more mundane layers of sturdy mountain rock. I stood alone, hearing only the buzz of my own body, and felt again as if I had entered a hive, once pliable and free, now stolid and stone, yet the deeper I went into the cavern, the more protected I felt, wrapped in the embrace of a dimensional and palpable silence. I could feel the earth breathing, and every honeyed exhalation spread evenly on my skin, clearing pores and feeding bones; every inhalation pulled me to the heart of the hive. Several times, I was so overwhelmed that I could only sit and breathe. When I finally came once again into the sun, late late in the afternoon, I was so disoriented I checked into the motel at the entrance to the park—reasonable rates—and return to the edge of the cave, my frozen hive, to wait for sunset when 300,000 bats would spiral out of the cave and fly off in all directions in search of insects. When these tiny Mexican free-tail bats, so small they curl easily into a film canister, exit the cave, they swarm and spiral like bees, wings whirring in unison, slowly gaining altitude until they finally rise above the lip of the cliff and head in various directions toward the near-by rivers. At first, like bees, they form their own river, but as these are bats, that river soon breaks into islands, and the smaller bands of bats fly off in separate directions—some going south, others west, and a few adventurers flying north. None fly east towards the dry desert. Like bees, they search fecundity. Connected worlds. ![]() Save the Honeybees Marketplace On a dusty street, an agave blooms with tiny clustered flowers, twenty feet above sidewalks of ash brushed sand littered with crumpled petals brown rosy marked by black. Bumbles come and go. I’m glad to see those bees. I’ve worried lately about the absence of wasps and houseflies. A white-ribbed sky turns and twists, a map of delta flats at low tide where seabirds catch the wind. Their flight and earth spin provide us rest blue shade at the edge of empty beaches near jungle terraces marked by restless jazz. I sort photos of circuses and clowns. In exchange for food, I give up speech. Diversion 09/23/2011
Last evening after dark Earnest went onto the backyard to sniff around, and suddenly he was wildly barking – a sharp officious bark reserved for intruders. I went to see what was up, and saw him pounce on a critter hiding under the foxglove, shake it rapidly twice, and toss it high into the air – something I have seen him do with my shoes, only this was a live critter. Well, alive no longer. I turned on the backyard lights and went closer so I might see what he had captured such ferocity and speed. Curled on the grass, limp and quite dead, was a half-grown possum. I am not a fan of possums, but seeing this young creature dead on the grass wrenched my heart. Earnest was still barking wildly and poking the body with his nose. I did not want him to tear the body limb from limb, and not knowing just how far his instincts might push him, I feared he might. I went back into the house, got the leash, then pulled him gently from his prey and led him unwilling and still barking up the stairs into the house. Then, I wrapped the dead possum, lifted it from the grass, and carried it to a curbside trashcan awaiting an early morning pickup. My next job was to clean the dirt and blood from Earnest’s face. He was still quite agitated, but settled down when I spoke quietly and firmly to him. He sat still, as he has been conditioned to do, and allowed me to clean him up, which I did with warm water, wet towels and then with pre-moistened paper wipes. As I gently scrubbed away the dirt and death from his face, I thought about the instinct that had prompted him to pounce. He has not been trained as a hunter. Not in this life. He came to live with me when he was still a puppy after spending the first months of his life living quietly in a SoCal apartment, much loved by the man who had had him since birth, so loved that when that man realized that the rigors of his job would keep him from giving this little dog the attention he felt the pup deserved, he looked for another home with someone who had time to share with his beloved dog. That someone was me. Earnest has always been a peaceful and affectionate dog, responsive and aware, ready and willing to learn all that is necessary to live in a human household. He has become a dear friend, and I have always appreciated and encouraged his peaceful nature, praising him when he greets others with friendliness, hugging him when he offers kind kisses to other dogs. Then suddenly, with stunning swiftness, he kills another creature. As I picked up that limp body, noticing the pink padded possum toes, the closed eyes beside a razor sharp nose, the strange grey fur interrupted by coarser longer hairs, I thought about the power of instinct, what it is to have a directive to kill bred in the bone. Scottish terriers, a breed that has its origins in the 15th or 16th century, were bred to kill vermin on farms and to drag rabbits, foxes, otters, and badgers from their dens. They were bred to kill. Even today, as a breed, Scottish terriers are known to be extraordinarily territorial, feisty, and rugged, ready to race wildly over rugged terrain – a reputation shared even by those who spend their days frolicking about fenced backyards, avoiding flowerbeds. No one mentions ‘killer instinct’ when talking about pets. Looking down on the dead possum, I couldn’t help but think that such centuries-old breeding still influences modern dogs who have never seen a moor or been on a foxhunt, and that thought sobered me. Of course, I don’t want my beloved dog killing small creatures. I did not let him worry the carcass. I removed the body as quickly as possible. But as I have had other dogs in my life who also exhibited as suddenly and as powerfully such instinctual behaviors, I am not one to deny the power of instinct. I once shared my house with an even-tempered and quite distinguished English bulldog, also adopted, born and raised in NYC. He was a tender soul, gentle with kids, kind to cats, but when confronted by a wayward bull who had broken through a fence, he did just what bulldogs had been bred to do. Barking wildly, he raced under this enormous animal, grabbed hold of the loose neck skin, and while expertly avoiding rampaging hoofs, this pussycat of a dog managed to direct the bull out of the yard and back onto the high desert. After my dog moved adroitly aside, the bull took off at a gallop -- with my sweet Teddybear in hot pursuit, nipping at its heels. Watching him ‘at work,’ one would think such expert maneuvering was trained behavior, but he had never seen any bovine creature except from the window of a car. I certainly never expected such skilled rodeo dancing from this sedentary dog whose major physical activity up to that point had been ball-chasing and then only for brief intervals. He preferred lying quietly, watching the sun move across the floor. Give him a rawhide bone to chew and he was a happy camper. Such behaviors as herding bulls or ferreting out and killing small animals may have been originally learned centuries ago by ancestors, but when these contemporary city-bred dogs exhibit such behaviors, one thinks instinct. B.F Skinner believed that all behavior is learned behavior, but seeing such sudden eruption of instinctual behavior, one has to wonder. Both the dogs I describe are domestic dogs, raised as pets, but belong to breeds that had hunting and herding traits selected centuries ago. Familiar only with city streets, Teddy, the bulldog, was seven-years-old when he first encountered that bull in Colorado. Earnest, my young terrier, has not been raised or encouraged to go after small animals. Both can be described as house pets, comfortable lying for hours on their mats, accustomed to eating meals provided twice a day, yet both exhibited unexpected behaviors certainly not learned in their lifetimes. These very specific and distinctive behaviors seem instinctual, bred in the bone. I wonder, if dogs are born with an instinctual knowledge of behaviors learned in another age, and if that instinctual knowledge is at times so powerful it overwhelms more contemporary conditioning, what does that mean? What about humans? What powerful yet unrecognized instincts overwhelm us? Is war, for example, conditioned or instinctual behavior? If we were to recognize it as instinct born in an era with rules and circumstances that no longer apply in the contemporary world, might we more easily eliminate it? Humans are animals who learned centuries ago that their survival might depend on guarding territory and energy stores, but does such behavior fit in today’s world where cooperation is needed for the survival both of human culture and the planet? If instinctual behaviors of dogs can be diminished and discouraged – and they can be – so then can the instinctual behaviors of humans, but first we may have to first admit we have these behaviors, negative and positive, bred in the bone, that we are not blank slates at birth, that our past touches, trains, and tames our future. * * * * Diversion Let us think again of Titian, explain the exact nature of this fixation. Shepherds, naked in winter drunk on curves. Okay, it’s imprudent to wait for God and diamonds never burn. Discontent makes a shambles of chronology of topology of psychology. She came for asylum, became skeletal, blind at dawn, pummeled by odor balsam rain stone. ---from: drawing breath Facing the Street 09/13/2011
Even now, thirty-three years after dancing 'The World's Largest Painting' onto the surface of a silent highway that had once hummed with traffic, I still love street art -- on the street, above the street, beside the street. Walking about my West Oakland neighborhood, I am interested in the number of portraits, many of women, that find their way onto the street. ![]() Stop the Madness And few, if any, of those portraits are profiles. These folk have eyes wide open and look squarely at the passers-by, without smiling. Colors are bold; lines simple and direct, message clear. We are watching you. Eyes on the street. This portrait, painted on a turquoise ground is tacked to a piece weather-worn particle board that seals a window or some other point of entry. The portrait is not at eye-level -- I had to crouch down to take this picture -- but it stabs out at the street with a ferocity both tender and pure. You can't miss it. Around the corner and down the block, this gentle portrait is also painted on board that is then affixed to the exterior of an entrance door. No attempt was made to alter the graffiti scrawled surface of the door before tacking the serene portrait to the center panel of the door, but the walls on either side of the door have been painted an off-white. Someone, perhaps the same person who painted the portrait, has posted a hand-written sign, aimed at reaching more casual graffiti writers: Please don't bomb our neighborhood. They'll bulldoze our buildings If you want to survive, don't toss trash. Life is hard. Make art. I love the power of this young girl's gaze and I like how she rises like a wind above the layered 'tags' that cover the door. That scribble beneath is sand beneath her feet' it shifts and breathes. A serious painting on a serious street. This much larger portrait, spray painted on the wooden slats slipped into a 8' high chain-link fence, gazes seductively at those who pass, her ruby lips and blushed lips drawing the gaze away from the bullets strung across her chest. She may be looking slightly askance but there is no question that she knows exactly where you are and who you are. Make no mistake; she sees you with greater clarity than you see her. She is the guardian angel of the street, but if she is an angel, she is an angel of both creation and destruction. She knows how to fly and how to burn. She is paradise on edge. PARADISE HAS TEETH Two Norfolk pines catch x-rayed sun as angled blades pinned to branches still wet with rain: the morning keeps its threat of storm. Eve sits, relieved of passion. She lights a candle, then lays the match on On lava stone, watches it burn to red, then to black. Thunder rolls. She’s been misled-- Here’s the question: Why didn’t she catch on? Her solitude is remarkable: ice cold, fragile, electric blue. She finds need dissolved beneath her tongue. She’s been deceived-- redesigned by archangels who first twice refused the logic of her words, then turned aside. When rescued from flames, she still burns. What's up Front 09/04/2011
Early Sunday morning is a great time to walk on Los Angeles' midcity streets. The sun is breathing but not yet with any sort of ferocity, and the sidewalks are relatively empty. No speeding cars. No rumbling trucks. The stores are shuttered; even the sidewalk cafes have yet to open their doors, and other than me and my little Earnest, only a few energetic joggers are out and about. Earnest runs happily about, sniffing amongst the roots of an overgrown ficus tree, and I look carefully at the window displays of the storefronts we pass. A gallery off 3rd Street displays products suitable for scrubbing out all of last night's angst and tomorrow's anxiety. Recipe for Restoration Pour a bit of Voila at the edge of the remembered rub into crevices of the forgotten wait until sun dissolves to gold all dark shadow sprayed down first by Despair dug deeper with a wash of Dread left to rust by ruin. What is gone returns. If the nouveau cleaning products prompted me to write silly verses in response to such a 'clean' display of grey, the whimsy of the Let's Go Fishing window, with its neon color and collaged imagery of nostalgia made me want to dance. Despair-Dread-Voila seemed a tad too intentional and a wee bit too serious to be viewed as anything but fashionable art by the likes of me, but the casual happiness of the flat-painted pines and swimming butterflies of Let's go Fishing (for compliments!), a commercial window display not meant as art, made me laugh and made me think in more interesting directions than did the fine art designed to trigger thoughtful response. I ended thinking more kindly of the cardboard cut-out with her inner tube than of the carefully positioned revisions of commonplace cleaning products. That rubber ducky scrubbed the cobwebs from my mind. And then I found this glass-walled column, a window made square and tall, next to a closed door with only a small sign entrance to the back. On the other side of the door, a more traditional store window papered from the inside and blank to the street. Inside the glass-walled column a pile of worn ballet shoes with one checkered slip-on shoe nestled happily on top. No explanation. Keep dancing. Dance until the toes of your shoes are soiled and the soles worn through. Dance. Moments 08/18/2011
Walking with a dog is different than walking with another person. Walk alongside a human friend and generally you will find yourself buried in conversation, walking along at a fast pace, enjoying the sun and wind but perhaps missing small details as the landscape floods by in a swift blur. Such a walk invigorates the body, warms the spirit. It;s good for you; no question. The physical heart beats rapidly, blood flows; it’s good exercise, but walk with a dog, the pace slows, the sky settles, the land leaps up, and suddenly the world has a sharper focus. The familiar becomes the strange. What was yesterday just the Church of Light with its crown of spiky thorns, an Oakland landmark more at home with its towering glass faced neighbors suddenly becomes a part of the lake, an earth fountain allied to the waterspout before it, spilling light on all who pass. You can, of course, walk rapidly and determinedly with a dog. Why not? They will trot happily along with you as you jog because they like to please, but if left to their own devices, they’ll stop every fifteen feet to examine a tree stump or a light post. Dogs walk for pleasure not for 'health'; when they run they prefer to run full out, and when they walk they explore every inch of the path. Following scent trails, they bury their noses for many long minutes in mysterious odors trapped in grasses or hidden beneath bushes, and if there’s no enticing aroma nearby, they’ll bark at squirrels, leap at birds, and pause to greet any passing dog. I have learned to appreciate my own little dog's active engagement with the world. My preferred method of walking with Earnest-the-Importance-of-Being-Earnest is to stop when he stops. Then, when he is busy analyzing some stain on a tree stump, I breathe and look about, find my moment while he finds his. His curiosity permits mine. While he is earnestly seeking, I can be honestly looking. It works. Light posts are always good stopping places for dogs . . . and for people too. The first pole that captured Earnest's attention captured mine. I had to laugh at what I found there, and that laugh soon suffused to a warmth that felt like happiness. Life's Hard, Make art. So says the winged angel with his crown of lights and his body of focus, arrows to the ground Look down, look down to earth. When I did looked down, I noticed the tiny white daisies that cover the lawn at this time of year, and the red-painted bolts securing the light pole to its concrete foundation. I wondered about the person who had sat on the ground near the daisies, watching the geese on the lake while painting each bolt with great care. I should imagine she (and it was a 'she,' I'm think . . . do men carry nail polish in pockets?) used the entire bottle of fir-engine red nailpolish to paint the two red bolts. She must have; the other bolts were rusted grey. How long did it take? I love this piece of art created by at least five anonymous artists collaborating with one another at different moments on different days. Community birthing. Our world is our art. Our life our brush. Life's Hard, Make Art. |
















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