6.13.2020 – contextualise

contextualise
sequencer algorithm
seismogram data

I would have bet my best friend’s last dollar that no one, and I mean NO one could use the words in my haiku for today in a single, grammatical sentence.

Never the less, that is where I came across these words.

In one single, grammatical sentence, in the article, “Scientists Detect Surprise Structures Wrapped Around Earth’s Core.” by Michelle Starr on the website, Sciencealert.com.

The article is about how scientists realized they can use data from earthquakes to map the interior of the earth.

Geologist Vedran Lekić of the University of Maryland is quoted as saying, “This is really exciting, because it shows how the Sequencer algorithm can help us to contextualise seismogram data across the globe in a way we couldn’t before.”

Side note, not only does spell check throw out contextualise and seismogram, it also questions the name of the geologist.

But that’s science.

If you don’t have a word, you can create one.

I remember once being in the newsroom at WZZM13 in Grand Rapids, Michigan and Meteoroligist and good friend (we had often been confused for each other but that’s another story) George Lessens walked in.

From across the newsroom I yelled out, “George! Derrechio? Tornadic? You guys make all that stuff up!”

The entire newsroom broke up laughing, including George.

He also never denied it.

The Sequencer algorithm can help us to contextualise seismogram data across the globe in a way we couldn’t before.

What a marvelous phrase.

I am in awe.

But what does it mean?

THAT IS THE BEST PART!

The article goes on to state, “The overall findings suggest that Earth’s guts are rather more blobby than we suspected”

Blobby guts!

Me and old mother Earth.

Synergy!

Blobby guts!

I am at the same time one and at peace with my planet.

6.8.2020 – Many divisions

Many divisions
does the pope have? They are there …
though you don’t see them

At the Big Three Conference in Tehran in November, 1943, Winston Churchill, Joseph Stalin and Franklin Roosevelt met to discuss plans for operations in World War 2.

Winston Churchill mentioned to Joseph Stalin that the views of the Pope might also be considered.

Stalin looked at Churchill and says something along the lines of, “How many divisions does the Pope have?”

For the most part, the story ends there.

A show stopper of a comment to be sure.

We recently relocated and once again I had to pack and unpack my books.

Whenever this happens I run across old favorites that I haven’t opened in years and before I know it is hours later and few books have been put away.

I came across my copy of “The Fringes of Power.”

The edited diary of Winston Churchill’s Principle Private Secretary (PPS), John Colville.

Colville was 1st assigned to the Prime Minister’s Office under Neville Chamberlain.

He would continue in this office through both of Mr. Churchill’s terms as Prime Minister.

And he, illegally, kept this diary.

I first came across this book at the Creston Branch Library on the North End of Grand Rapids, Michigan.

I lived in the neighborhood of the library in an apartment with no air conditioning.

Often on hot summer nights I would walk down to the library to read.

For some reason, I could always count on the library’s copy of this book to be there.

It is one of those books that you could just open anywhere and read.

Somewhere along the line I picked up my own copy.

Maybe at a Library book sale.

I always have stayed on the war years for the most part.

I remember reading that Mr. Churchill was asked once if he could, what year would he like to live through again?

Without hesitation, Mr. Churchill responded, “1940! Decisions had to made every day!”

But this night I got into the pages about the 1950’s.

I was reading how Mr. Churchill had arranged to be in the United States in January 1953 so he could meet with both President Truman and a week later, President Eisenhower.

Colville recorded how on the night of January 8th, there was a dinner at the White House

Colville writes, “There was some talk about Stalin. Truman recalled how at Potsdam he had discovered that the vodka Stalin drank for toasts was really weak white wine, and how when W.S.C had said that the Pope would dislike something, Stalin answered …”

I was happy to be able to finish the quote, “How many divisions has the Pope.”

It is a famous quote.

Unexpectedly, Colville’s diary entry continued.

“W[inston] said he remembered replying that the fact they could not be measured in military terms did not mean they did not exist.”

I had not heard of Mr. Churchill’s response.

He certainly gave as good as he got.

They are words for people today who use the name of God in vain.

I am not talking about people who cuss, though taking the name of God of vain has come to mean that in some circles.

The 3rd of the 10 commandments states, “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain” (Exodus 20:7) in the King James English.

The New International Verison of the Bible puts it , “You shall not misuse the name of the Lord your God,”

In vain,

Do not misuse.

Carelessly, thoughtlessly, irreverently, silly banter and make empty promise are all terms used for this verse in other English translations.

Reminds me of someone.

Someone who should know better thought I doubt it sometimes.

Someone who uses the Bible and the Lord’s name pretty carelessly.

Someone who needs to be reminded that if you cannot measure his power in military means, it does not mean its not there.

That someone would do well to be aware of that power.

3.12.2020 – found thoughts to exchange

found thoughts to exchange
discreet, trusty witnesses
of a mystery

Search for someone to talk to continues.

Someone who with whom to exchange thoughts.

A discreet witness.

A trusty witness.

A discreet and trusty friend.

Some one not to whom you can share in a mystery.

The mystery is the friendship.

They mystery is where to find this friend.

Mr. Sandburg writes, “The moon is a friend for the lonesome to talk with.”

I don’t want to talk to the moon.

I want to talk to a friend.

Mr. Sandburg continues, “The moon is at once easy and costly, cheap and priceless.
The price of the moon runs beyond all adding machine numbers.

I counter, “A friend is at once easy and costly, cheap and priceless.
The price of a friend runs beyond all adding machine numbers.”

I read and re-read Mr. Sanburg’s poem looking for clues.

I am slugged in the stomach by the line, “We shall always be interfering with each other, forever be arguing.”

Yet maybe the clue is here, “The price of the moon is an orange and a few kind words.

A few kind words.

A few kind words that then lead to thoughts to exchange.

Discover again discreet, trusty witnesses.

Uncover again the mystery of being a friend.

Moonlight and Maggots by Carl Sandburg

The moonlight filters on the prairie.
The land takes back an old companion.
The young corn seems pleased with a visit.
In Illinois, in Iowa, this moontime is on.
A bongo looks out and talks about the look of the moon
As if always a bongo must talk somewhat so in moontime –
The moon is a milk-white love promise,
A present for the young corn to remember.
A caress for silk-brown tassels to come.
Spring moon to autumn moon measures one harvest.
All almanacs are merely so many moon numbers.
A house dizzy with decimal points and trick figures
And a belfry at the top of the world for sleep songs
And a home for lonesome goats to go to –


Like now, like always, the bongo takes up a moon theme –
There is no end to the ancient kit-kats inhabiting the moon:
Jack and the beanstalk and Jacob’s ladder helped them up,
Cats and sheep, the albatross, the phoenix and the dodo-bird,
They are all living on the moon for the sake of the bongo –
Castles on the moon, mansions, shacks and shanties, ramshackle
Huts of tarpaper and tincans, grand real estate properties
Where magnificent rats eat tunnels in colossal cheeses,
Where the rainbow chasers take the seven prisms apart
And put them together again and are paid in moon money –
The flying dutchman, paul bunyan, saint paul, john bunyan,
The little jackass who coughs gold pieces when you say bricklebrit –
They are all there on the moon and the rent not paid
And the roof leaking and the taxes delinquent –
Like now, like always, the bongo jabbers of the moon,
Of cowsheds, railroad tracks, corn rows and cornfield corners
Finding the filter of the moon an old friend –
Look at it – cries the bongo – have a look! have a look!

Well, what of it? comes the poohpooh –
Always the bongo isa little loony – comes the poohpooh,
The bongo is a poor fish and a long ways from home.
Be like me; be an egg, a hardboiled egg, a pachyderm
Practical as a buzzsaw and a hippopotamus put together.
Get the facts and no monkeybusiness what I mean.
The moon is a dead cinder, a ball of death, a globe of doom.
Long ago it died of lost motion, maggots masticated the surface of it
And the maggots languished, turned ice, froze on and took a free ride.
Now the sun shines on the maggots and the maggots make the moonlight.
The moon is a cadaver and a dusty mummy and a damned rotten investment.
The moon is a liability loaded up with frozen assets and worthless paper.
Only the lamb, the sucker, the come-on, the little lost boy, has time for the moon.

Well – says the bongo – you got a good argument.
I am a little lost boy and a long ways from home.
I am a sap, a pathetic fish, a nitwit and a lot more and worse you couldn’t think of.
Nevertheless and notwithstanding and letting all you say be granted and acknowledged
The moon is a silver silhouette and a singing stalactite.
The moon is a bringer of fool’s gold and fine phantoms.
On the heaving restless sea or the fixed and fastened land
The moon is a friend for the lonesome to talk with.
The moon is at once easy and costly, cheap and priceless.
The price of the moon runs beyond all adding machine numbers
Summer moonmusic drops down adagio sostenuto whathaveyou.
Winter moonmusic practices the mind of man for a long trip.
The price of the moon is an orange and a few kind words.
Nobody on the moon says, I been thrown out of better places than this.
No one on the moon has ever died of arithmetic and hard words.
No one on the moon would skin a louse to sell the hide.
The moon is a pocket luckpiece for circus riders, for acrobats on the flying rings, for wild animal tamers.
I can look up at the moon and take it or leave.
The moon coaxes me: Be at home wherever you are.
I can let the moon laugh me to sleep for nothing.
I can put a piece of the moon in my pocket for tomorrow.
I can holler my name at the moon and the moon hollers back my name.
When I get confidential with the moon and tell secrets
The moon is a sphinx and a repository under oath.

Yes Mister poohpooh
I am a poor nut, just another of God’s mistakes.
You are the tough bimbo, hard as nails, yeah.
You know enough to come in when it rains.
You know the way to the post office and I have to ask.
They fool you the first time but never the second.
Thrown into the river you always come up with a fish.
You are a diller a dollar, I am a ten o’clock scholar.
You know the portent of the axiom: Them as has gits.
You devised that abracadabra: Get all you can keep all you get.

We shall always be interfering with each other, forever be arguing –

you for the maggots, me for the moon.
Over our bones, cleaned by the final maggots as we lie recumbent, perfectly forgetful, beautifully ignorant –
There will settle over our grave illustrious tombs
On nights when the air is clear as a bell
And the dust and fog are shoveled off on the wind –
There will sink over our empty epitaphs
a shiver of moonshafts
a line of moonslants.

3.9.2020 – joy in the morning

joy in the morning
before beginning of time
his own purpose, grace

My day started with news of the birth of my grand daughter, Lenox Jean.

My wife had spent the night at the hospital and was there for the birth at about 5:30 this morning.

When she got home she was shining with love and excitement.

Joy exuded from every part of her being.

She told the story of how the night wore on.

How my daughter did.

What the Doctor said.

What the Nurse said.

How long it took.

Then the moment when Lenox arrived.

How big she is.

How long she is.

Thinking back over history, how many times have these stories been told.

The story line is pretty much the same.

Recently the long awaited mystery of boy or girl has been taken out of the chapter headings and relegated to a sort of preface.

Used to be this was the part of the story everyone was waiting for.

Now we get the statistical data and the stories.

And start to look ahead.

Lots of blank pages yet to filled with words and thoughts and acts.

I am reminded of the verse from the Bible that says;

“He has saved us and called us to a holy life—not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace.
This grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time.” (2 Timothy 1:9 NIV)

Before the beginning of time.

Grace was given us.

Regardless of how the pages get filled.

Not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace.

Joy in that thought.

Joy that comes in the morning.