Wednesday, November 20, 2024

November 20: "The Unfortunate Traveler," Vacation, Art

This is not going to be an angry post about the Felon in Chief.  Nor is it going to be about MAGA-hat-wearing mouth breathers.  I figure everyone needs a vacation from that circus.  (This statement doesn't mean, however, I will give up voicing my constant shock and disappointment over his idiotic cabinet appointments and outright lies.)

Billy Collins visits France . . . 

The Unfortunate Traveler

by: Billy Collins

Because I was off to France, I packed 
my camera along with my shaving kit, 
some colorful boxer shorts, and a sweater with a zipper, 

but every time I tried to take a picture 
of a bridge, a famous plaza,
or the bronze equestrian statue of a general, 

there was a woman standing in front of me 
taking a picture of the very same thing, 
or the odd pedestrian blocked my view, 

someone or something always getting between me 
and the flying buttress, the river boat, 
a bright cafĂ© awning, an unexpected pillar. 

So into the little door of the lens 
came not the kiosk or the altarpiece. 
No fresco or baptistry slipped by the quick shutter. 

Instead, my memories of that glorious summer 
of my youth are awakened now, 
like an ember fanned into brightness, 

by a shoulder, the back of a raincoat, 
a wide hat or towering hairdo— 
lost time miraculously recovered 

by the buttons on a gendarme’s coat 
and my favorite, 
the palm of that vigilant guard at the Louvre.



I hosted a concert at the library this evening.  A good musician friend of mine gathered three of his friends and put on a show.  I wasn't sure how many people to expect, since it was the middle of the week and the weather turned cold and rainy after dark.  (By the way, it's now snowing in my neck of the woods.)  

Well, I guess a lot of people needed a vacation from the insanity of the Felon in Chief, too.  Over 90 people attended.  We all sat, listened, sang along, whistled, clapped.  Just what the doctor ordered.

It was good medicine--the kind that may just get us through the next four or so years.  

Because that's what art can do--lift you up, make you feel less alone or scared or angry or sad.  Art brings people together--whether its music or words or painting or acting or telling jokes or juggling cotton balls.  Art doesn't care about what color your skin is, who you love, how you worship, or where you're from.

All that matters is that you're a human being with a beating heart.

Saint Marty was filled with hope this evening.



Tuesday, November 19, 2024

November 19: "Promenade," Bigfoot Poem, Normal

I don't mind being strange.  Don't mind if people stare at me because I'm being too loud or too friendly or too anything.  I've never really been the posterchild for "normal."  Instead, I write poems about cryptids and immortal jellyfish.  

Billy Collins takes his bird for a walk . . . 

Promenade

by: Billy Collins

As much as these erratic clouds keep sweeping
this way and that over the roof 
of this blue house bordered by hedges and fruit trees,

and as much as the world continues to run
in all directions with its head in its hands,
there is one particular robin who appears

every morning on a section of lawn
by the front door with such regularity
he could be a lighthouse keeper or a clock maker.

He could be Immanuel Kant were he not so small
and feathered, whom the citizens set their watches by
a he walked through town with his hair curled.

It takes a lot to startle this bird--
only a hand clap will make him rise
to one of the low branches of the nearby apple tree.

So I am wondering if he would allow me
to slip a small collar around his neck
and take him for a walk, first around the house

then later, when more trust has been gained,
into town where we would pass the locals 
with their children and orthodox dogs in tow,

and I would hold the robin lightly by a string
as we waited to cross the street, then he would hop
off the curb and off we would go

not caring about what people were saying
even when we stopped at a store front
to admire our strange reflections in the window.



I really don't know what "normal" is.  Some people think voting for a convicted felon to be President of the United States is normal.  Or appointing a person who was investigated for sex trafficking to be Attorney General.  Normal is in the eyes of the beholder.

I am sitting in my living room at the moment.  The Christmas tree is glowing in the corner.  Everyone else has gone to bed.  It's raining, and the trees are gauzed with fog.  It's been a day fraught with meetings and grading and teaching.  I haven't really had any downtime until now.  

All that is normal for me.

So is writing a Bigfoot poem.  Putting up Christmas decorations the day after Halloween.  Getting up at 5 a.m. to catch the livestreamed announcement of the winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature.  Watching the same movie every night for three months straight.  Eating warm tapioca pudding.

This weekend, I ran into an acquaintance I hadn't seen in several years. I made an off-handed comment to her about the last couple weeks being particularly difficult for a lot of people.  My acquaintance looked genuinely confused.  When I mentioned the election, she smiled and said, "I think you and I are on opposite sides on that, but that doesn't mean we can't be friends."

I agree with my acquaintance.  I can still be friends with people who hold different political and social ideals.  My father was a lifelong Republican and member of the John Birch Society.  We couldn't have been more different, and yet we still loved each other.  (That doesn't mean we got along 100% of the time.  Ours was problematic relationship.)

Here are some other things that SHOULD be normal in the United States:  kindness, compassion, acceptance, charity, tolerance, respect, courtesy, equality, love.  Unfortunately, over half the people in this "Christian" country think otherwise.  Hate has become as normal as grass or snow.  One way or the other, you're eventually going to step in it.  

Buckle up, disciples.  It's gonna be a bumpy four years.

Saint Marty may make drinking a glass of wine every night his new normal.





Monday, November 18, 2024

November 18: "Lesson for the Day," Orange Pancake, Laughter and Beauty

So, it was a long day, and I needed a laugh tonight.

Billy Collins made me laugh with this poem . . .

Lesson for the Day

by: Billy Collins

I didn't know Marianne Moore
had written a little ode to a steam roller
until this morning.  She has it walking
back and forth over the particles it has crushed.
She must have watched a lot of cartoons.
She also compares it to a butterfly unflatteringly.

I like it better when she speaks to a snail.
It's pleasurable to picture her in a garden
bending forward in her dated black clothes
and her tilted black triangle of a hate,
as she seriously addresses the fellow curled in its shell.

But when I see her standing before the big drum
of a steam roller and saying not very nice things,
only one eventuality every comes to mind,
for I, too, am a serious student of cartoons.

And no one wants to avoid seeing
a flattened Marianne Moore hanging out to dry
on a clothesline or propped up
as a display in a store window more than I.



It's a surreal image, right out of a Road Runner cartoon--Wile E. Coyote falling victim to one of his traps and being flattened by a boulder or anvil.  It happens over and over.  I used to watch those Looney Tunes religiously every Saturday morning with a bowl of Lucky Charms in my lap.

So a flattened Marianne Moore hanging on a clothesline is pretty dang funny to me.  Sure, I know those cartoons are incredibly violent and have fallen out of parental favor, but I literally grew up with them.  They defined my childhood.  

Tonight, upon reading the above poem, I thought about other people I'd like to see flattened by a steam roller.  Of course, the top of that list is the Felon in Chief.  I'd love to see him reduced to a two-dimensional orange pancake.  (Don't misinterpret what I'm saying.  I am not advocating violence against the man.  I just find pleasure in picturing him as a crepe.)  

Sometimes, I have to embrace the absurd in order to cope with a world that seems to be falling apart.  I also embrace beauty, and, now that the holiday season is fast approaching, all I have to do is go for a walk to find it.  Tonight I noticed a beautiful light display across from my daughter's apartment, and it was a blessing.

Laughter and beauty.  That's all Saint Marty has to offer tonight.



Sunday, November 17, 2024

November 17: "Report from the Subtropics," Up North, Humility

Days and nights are definitely getting cooler in my neck of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  Most mornings, there's a rime of frost on the grass and rooftops.  At dusk, when the sun disappears, breath fogs the air.  And retirees fly to the subtropics for the winter.

Billy Collins has a close encounter with birds with long, white necks . . .

Report from the Subtropics

by: Billy Collins

For one thing, there’s no more snow
to watch from an evening window,
and no armfuls of logs to carry into the house
so cumbersome you have to touch the latch with an elbow,

and once inside, no iron stove like an old woman
waiting to devour her early dinner of wood.

No hexagrams of frost to study
on the cold glass pages of the bathroom.

No black sweater to pull over my head
while I wait for the coffee to brew.

Instead, I walk around in children’s clothes—
shorts and a tee shirt with the name of a band
lettered on the front, announcing me to nobody.

The sun never fails to arrive early
and refuses to leave the party
even after I go from room to room,
turning out all the lights, and making a face.

And the birds with those long white necks?
All they do is swivel their heads
keeping an eye on me as I walk along,
as if they all knew my password
and the name of the little town where I was born.



I've only traveled to the subtropics a handful of times for the winter, and only for a couple weeks at most.  Yes, I walked around in shorts and tee shirt in January, like a little kid on a summer day, and, indeed, there were birds with long, white necks watching me like grandparents, knowing every one of my moves before I made them

But I'm not in the subtropics now, nor do I have any plans to travel to the subtropics any time soon.  So this blog post is my report from Up North.  (And when I use the term "Up North," I'm not talking about anywhere below the Mackinac Bridge.  If you don't know what over 300 inches of snow looks like, you are not Up North.)

I took my puppy for several long walks today, and I went grocery shopping.  This evening, I facilitated a Zoom poetry workshop.  It was one of those nights where nothing seemed to click with me.  Writing was a struggle.  Before I read aloud what I managed to scribble in my journal, I invoked the spirit of my good friend, Helen.  I said, "I give myself permission to write absolute shit."

After I finished reading my efforts, one of the other poets at the workshop said, "That wasn't shit."

Perhaps I was being too hard on myself.  I do that frequently.  However, I come from a family of nine kids, and my parents taught me the value of hard work.  I was never allowed to be on a pedestal for very long.  Somebody always came along and kicked it out from underneath me.  Translation:  you're no better than anyone else.

Humility is an important virtue.  In fact, I would venture to say that it's one of the most important qualities a person can acquire.  I don't like people who have high opinions of themselves.  (Working in the arts, I've met a few megalomaniacs.)  Instead, I prefer kind people.  Generous people.  People who go out of their ways to make the world a better place.

Tonight, I was surrounded, virtually, by kind and generous people.  We laughed, told stories, wrote poems, and held each other up in love.  And it was really good.

That's Saint Marty's report from Up North today.