July 15

The pick-up truck waltz.

Three reasons.

A couple of noisy readers have complained that there seems to be a lot more weather reporting on the news.

They're right. Some would say Mark Twain, with his observation Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it, should get a mention here, since TV news talking heads just talk, and don't do anything.

There are three likely reasons:

There is more big weather affecting more people. You'll notice that news people always mention how many people are affected by the rain, snow, fire or hurricane. So 117 mill is better than 78 mill, especially where potential viewers are concerned.

Two: the weather doesn't threaten to haul people into court, sue, or generally complain about unfair coverage. So it's a safe target, usually providing lots of visuals.

Three: 'better' (or at least more) technology. We've got satellites, radar, infrared, precision measuring, and an infinity of cameras to detail what's going on. You've got footage, you use it.

Bonus: the weathadoodles get to trot out their 'voice of doom be very afraid' voices. Unless you're right in the eye of the storm or have affected friends, it doesn't mean any more for you than the ad for the drug that cures a disease you don't have that it precedes.


<1>Serendipity.

I enjoy chance occurrences of delight and unintended meaning. This headline from MSN Qualifies: Lindsey Graham’s legacy and a new dinosaur discovery: Morning rundown.


In passing.

R.I.P. Bonnie Tyler. She may have had only one big hit, a sort of of anthemic song, but she put it all out there in her singing.


Apologies.

I was intending to attach a bonus piece on language to this week's post, but as I was reading it, I found it failed the Elle Woods test. As you recall, in the trial scene, the prosecuting attorney interrupts Elle with:

Objection, why is this relevant?
Elle: Oh, I have a point, I promise.
The Honorable Marina R. Bickford: Then make it.

Elle then goes on to win acquittal. Unlike Elle, I found I didn't have a point. So back to the shop for tuning and revision.


Something you have to read.

You can add Billy Collins to the list of 'writers I hate' because they write something delightful/insightful (,desightful?), but while I'm reading, I think 'I can't do that, will never do that, will never approach doing that even if I have a rocket powered sled.'

Why Billy? Mostly because of this poem, which neatly encapsulates the life of every English major Boomer ever.

That's why Billy Collins is a Poet Laureate.

At the same time, I feel bad for succeeding generations of students who didn't get to experience Dick & Jane as a critical part of their upbringing.


The double-edged blade.

I attended an 'open mic' the other night, populated mostly by poets. It was a small group, with only five other audience members/participants. I had a chance to watch people as they went to the stage, read, and return. I don't know if I was the best reader with the strongest material, but I more than held my own.

But part of the 'entertainment,' at least for me, is sussing out the people as they walked to and from the stage. More to the point, I wondered how participants viewed themselves as they performed.

I will admit the question is somewhat self-serving. I know that I am no longer walking as confidently and as steadily as I did even a year ago. But has that freezing of joints obliterated other parts of my aura, of my presence or personality? Just because my knees don't work doesn't mean my brain is fried.

I guess what I'm sort of asking for is what Robert Burns asked for in To A Louse, On Seeing One on a Lady's Bonnet at Church.

O wad some Power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as ithers see us!
It wad frae mony a blunder free us

No matter how much it doesn't matter, we do form opinions of others based strictly on physical characteristics. In this case, as soon as the other poets started speaking, they revealed dimensions not visible.

In the meanwhile, though, I know I've recently added a couple of clicks on the ol' 'growing old' meter. There's a general slowdown, it takes a little longer to get up from a chair, and the floor is a little further away if I drop something. My mental self-image hasn't quite caught up, though.

I wonder what it will take to update the self-perception.

Oddly enough, The Picture of Dorian Gray, which I just finished reading and has been useful in a number of conversations, kind of fits into this whole thought process, what with the main storyline about trying to deny or hide what we really are.


Words, English. Meaning, unknown.

An advertisement for a hotel proclaims that it is the sanctuary of artistic energy.


Just a funny line.

At least, I thought so. From The Hill: Others settled on 'demonic possession,' which in internet discourse is considered the moderate position.


Nicknames

This post may be a re-cycle, casting, or thinking of the answers I have already given to the question, ' what's in a name?'

My sister was always the more daring sibling, feeling free, among other things, to call our mother 'Margaret.' I was able to master 'Mom' but went no further. She herself never tried to go for a nickname or pet name 1that I know of).

That's because she was always Margaret, just as her sisters were Mary and Kathleen. Only her father and brother escaped, both going by Jack (which, by the way, I was never Jack. Too many Jacks in the family).

It's not like there aren't a lot of 'Margaret' options. One website claims there are over 200 nicknames for Margaret.

That's a lot of choices to make. But I wonder if Mom would be Mom if the world knew her as Maggie. or Meg. Or Peggy. Or Daisy. Or Garet. Would she be less precise? Or less stiff?

We'll never know, especially not even how different out lives would be if Mom went by Peggy.


With deepest regret.

It is with a great sense of loss and profoundest sorrow that we announce that after 22 years of mostly good and faithful service, we are giving up our home telephone, aka 'landline,' aka 'copper wire' telephone. It has, over the course of its life, provided fax services, a safe and secure means of communication during power outages, and a buffer against people intent on hacking cell services. Of course, that was a long time ago, in the days before our cable/telephone provider so ungraciously pushed us into VOIP services, which provides us none of the benefits we previously enjoyed, and why we had the landline in the first place.

We apologize to the seemingly hundreds of families living in small towns across Virginia and the United States whose meager sustenance was provided by breadwinners who depended upon making 'spam' calls to our landline. We wish you success in your future endeavors, as we, too, charge into the future, untethered by copper lines. We wish we could provide our cell numbers (disclosure: no, we really don't), but since you never left a message with a callback number, well, we can't.

Bon voyage!


Popcorn ceilings.

When I was a kid, we had popcorn ceilings in the house. On the one hand, they struck us as a little weird, since the walls were flat-finished and the ceilings bumpy, but no matter.

On the other hand, popcorn ceilings were a bonus for dreamers. Sometimes I'd be in bed looking up at the ceiling. If the light was just right, shapes would emerge, like animals, faces, or somethings that I couldn't identify but were definitely a shape.

I have no idea why I'm mentioning this. Maybe I feel bad for young dreamers who now have one less source of inspiration to be churned for creative output.


Last chance to get early-order tickets for The Muse Writer's Conference, Aug 29-30.

word of the week

bariatrics

poetry recent augie sez

Quoted.


What was it
I wanted to tell you?
I forgot. That’s how
everything goes now,
all of the time.


--Rita Dove