10.30.23 – gift of hope remained

gift of hope remained
through his misfortunes his hope
was proximity

The gift of hope had remained with Pat through his misfortunes–and the valuable alloy of his hope was proximity.

Above all things one must stick around, one must be there when the glazed, tired mind of the producer grappled with the question ‘Who?’

So presently Pat wandered out of the drug-store, and crossed the street to the lot that was home.

From The Complete Pat Hobby Stories: Pat Hobby and Orson Welles by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Esquire Magazine, May, 1940.

I so so so want this news cycle to end.

There is a name of a person in the news I would pay cash money to never hear again.

There is a story told during the era of FDR of a rich man who arrived at his office everyday, got out of his limo and bought a paper from the nearest paper boy, looked at the headlines and handed it back.

What are you looking for Mister?” asked the paperboy one day.

An obituary,” said the rich man.

But Mister,” said the paperboy, “Obits aren’t on the front page!

The one I am waiting for will be.

I am slowly becoming hardened to the fact that I may not live to see a resolution of this news cycle in my favor.

But the alloy of my hope is proximity.

Above ALL THINGS one must stick around.

One must be there.

I tell my kids (quoting Jim Harrison though they don’t know it) that the list of folks who get fired for being late to work is as long as my arm.

STICK AROUND.

BE THERE.

As the State of South Carolina license plates say, While I Breathe, I Hope!

‘Scuse me while I run out and buy a paper.

10.27.2023 – fantasies drawn more

fantasies drawn more
real says a lot about what
going on in his head

I allowed myself to get excited when I saw that there was an upcoming article to be published in the New Yorker titled, Life after Calvin.

It was reported to be look at the life of Bill Watterson in one of the few interviews the artist/writer/creator has granted since he stopped creating the Calvin and Hobbs comic strip.

I love Calvin and Hobbs or at least I really enjoy.

Much of it, for me, can be seen as biography.

Much of what Calvin thought, says and does sounds very familiar to me.

With much interest, I have been waiting for this article.

So it is here.

And I have read it.

And …

I am not sure what I wanted it to say.

But it sure didn’t say much.

I think the writer got one or two quotes and fleshed out a New Yorker profile.

I am reminded of something Jim Harrison said about giving interviews.

Mr. Harrison remarked that he could get through any interview by repeating any question back as a statement.

He didn’t have to think much.

And the writer was able to prove all their preconceived notions.

The was one take away thought, but it seems to have been said in some other interview.

The writer, one Rivka Galchen, writes, “Watterson has said, of the illustrations in “Calvin and Hobbes,” “One of the jokes I really like is that the fantasies are drawn more realistically than reality, since that says a lot about what’s going on in Calvin’s head.” Only one reality in “Calvin and Hobbes” is drawn with a level of detail comparable to the scenes of Calvin’s imagination: the natural world. The woods, the streams, the snowy hills the friends career off—the natural world is a space as enchanted and real as Hobbes himself.

the fantasies are drawn more realistically than reality, since that says a lot about what’s going on in Calvin’s head.

I like that.

I like that as I think I live that way to this day.

So I can find affirmation of my lifestyle.

As for Mr. Watterson?

In this article, I think there are more quotes from Calvin or Hobbs than from Mr. Watterson.

Maybe the title should have been, Life after Bill.

9.12.2023 – its own nodule

its own nodule
of permanent rage at the
root of consciousness

The death of his sister at nineteen in an auto crash with his father was still unacceptable fifty years later.

It had created its own nodule of permanent rage at the roots of his consciousness. It was ultimately the cause of his becoming a writer.

If this can happen to those you love you may as well follow your heart’s wishes in your time on earth.

So writes Jim Harrison in short story The Ancient Minstrel published in the book by the same name, The Ancient Minstrel, Grove Press: (2017).

created its own nodule of permanent rage at the roots of his consciousness may be one of the most honest lines of words in the English language.

So many of us have a nodule of permanent rage at the roots of our consciousness.

But how many of us can pin the source of the rage down.

Mr. Thoreau described it as a life of quiet desperation.

But Mr. Thurber pointed out that most of us live lives of noisy desperation as well.

Enraged, infuriated, beside himself, seeing red and thinking black, creating its own nodule of permanent rage at the roots of his consciousness.

The Grizzly and the Gadgets

A grizzly bear who had been on a bender for several weeks following a Christmas party in his home at which his brother-in-law had set the Christmas tree on fire, his children had driven the family car through the front door and out the back, and all the attractive female bears had gone into hibernation before sunset returned home prepared to forgive, and live and let live. He found, to his mild annoyance, that the doorbell had been replaced by an ornamental knocker. When he lifted the knocker, he was startled to hear it play two bars of “Silent Night.”

When nobody answered his knock, he turned the doorknob, which said “Happy New Year” in a metallic voice, and a two-tone gong rang “Hello” somewhere deep within the house.

He called to his mate, who was always the first to lay the old aside, as well as the first by whom the new was tried, and got no answer. This was because the walls of his house had been soundproofed by a soundproofer who had soundproofed them so well nobody could hear anybody say anything six feet away. Inside the living room the grizzly bear turned on the light switch, and the lights went on all right, but the turning of the switch had also released an odor of pine cones, which this particular bear had always found offensive. The head of the house, now becoming almost as angry as he had been on Christmas Day, sank into an easy chair and began bouncing up and down and up and down, for it was a brand-new contraption called “Sitpretty” which made you bounce up and down and up and down when you sat on it. Now thoroughly exasperated, the bear jumped up from the chair and began searching for a cigarette. He found a cigarette box, a new-fangled cigarette box he had never seen before, which was made of metal and plastic in the shape of a castle, complete with portal and drawbridge and tower. The trouble was that the bear couldn’t get the thing open. Then he made out, in tiny raised letters on the portal, a legend in rhyme: “You can have a cigarette on me If you can find the castle key.” The bear could not find the castle key, and he threw the trick cigarette box through a windowpane out into the front yard, letting in a blast of cold air, and he howled when it hit the back of his neck. He was a little mollified when he found that he had a cigar in his pocket, but no matches, and so he began looking around the living room for a matchbox. At last he saw one on a shelf. There were matches in it, all right, but no scratching surface on which to scratch them. On the bottom of the box, however, there was a neat legend explaining this lack. The message on the box read: “Safety safety matches are doubly safe because there is no dangerous dangerous sandpaper surface to scratch them on. Strike them on a windowpane or on the seat of your pants.”

Enraged, infuriated, beside himself, seeing red and thinking black, the grizzly bear began taking the living room apart. He pounded the matchbox into splinters, knocked over lamps, pulled pictures off the wall, threw rugs out of the broken window, swept vases and a clock off the mantelpiece, and overturned chairs and tables, growling and howling and roaring, shouting and bawling and cursing, until his wife was aroused from a deep dream of marrying a panda, neighbors appeared from blocks around, and the attractive female bears who had gone into hibernation began coming out of it to see what was going on.

The bear, deaf to the pleas of his mate, heedless of his neighbors’ advice, and unafraid of the police, kicked over whatever was still standing in the house, and went roaring away for good, taking the most attractive of the attractive female bears, one named Honey, with him.

MORAL: Nowadays most men lead lives of noisy desperation.

From Further Fables for Our Time by James Thurber (Illustrated by the Author) First published in Great Britain 1956, by Hamish Hamilton Ltd, 90 Great Russell Street London W.C.1.

9.5.2023 – take various paths

take various paths
sky is door never closed
sun moon aren’t doorknobs

I’m trying to create an option for all
these doors in life. You’re inside
or out, outside or in. Of late, doors
have failed us more than the two-party system
or marriages comprising only one person.
We’ve been fooled into thousands of dualisms
which the Buddha says is a bad idea.
Nature has portals rather than doors.
There are two vast cottonwoods near a creek
and when I walk between them I shiver.
Winding through my field of seventy-seven
large white pine stumps from about 1903
I take various paths depending on spirit.
The sky is a door never closed to us.
The sun and moon aren’t doorknobs.
Dersu Uzala slept outside for forty-five years.
When he finally moved inside he died.

Doors by Jim Harrison.

I drove out to my workplace for the first time in a month due to construction on the workplace.

The last time I drove, I drove my car into the rising sun.

Today, I drove in the dark.

I take various paths to work as the light changes as the Earth tips.

The path is the same but at least seems different.

And I always end up in the same place.

8.26.2023 – night and day sometimes

night and day sometimes
we live without noticing
or overtrying

Based on the poem Carpe Diem by Jim Harrison

Night and day
seize the day, also the night —
a handful of water to grasp.
The moon shines off the mountain
snow where grizzlies look for a place
for the winter’s sleep and birth.
I just ate the year’s last tomato
in the year’s fatal whirl.
This is mid-October, apple time.
I picked them for years.
One Mcintosh yielded sixty bushels.
It was the birth of love that year.
Sometimes we live without noticing it.
Overtrying makes it harder.
I fell down through the tree grabbing
branches to slow the fall, got the afternoon off.
We drove her aqua Ford convertible into the country
with a sack of red apples. It was a perfect
day with her sun-brown legs and we threw ourselves
into the future together seizing the day.
Fifty years later we hold each other looking
out the windows at birds, making dinner,
a life to live day after day, a life of
dogs and children and the far wide country
out by rivers, rumpled by mountains.
So far the days keep coming.
Seize the day gently as if you loved her.

Carpe Diem” by Jim Harrison from Dead Man’s Float, (Copper Canyon Press, 2016)

I enjoy this poem. 

Carpe Diem.

Or Seize the Day or more accurately Seize the Present!

And why?

Quam minimum credula postero.

For tomorrow, a new day comes.

Sunset on the May River from the bluff in Bluffton, SC 8/26/2023