1.24.2024 – may the Lord bless the

may the Lord bless the
man who invented noble sleep
and was never told

Adapted from the poem, Glad to Sleep by Julius C. Wright in the 1906 book, Poetic Diamonds.

God bless the man who invented noble sleep
Bless his noble eye
Bless him that he didn’t keep
His wonderful invention, nor try

May the Lord bless him; yes, I say,
Lord, bless his soul
Invented almost the greatest thing
And was never told

Mr. Wright identified himself as, “A Youth of Twenty Years, Who Never Spent a Day in College.

And he wrote in the preface to Poetic Diamonds:

 Whether or not the contents of this little volume will suit you I can’t tell. But I have put forth my best efforts to compose something to please everybody — 

 The Saint and the sinner, 
 The looser and the winner, 
 The great and the small. 
 The low and the tall. 

 So I have pulled wide the throttle to let it go, and ask you to keep your eyes upon the rails that it may be widely and publicly circulated. And I truly hope that it will find a useful field of labor instead of filling an early grave in the cemetery of forgetfulness. 

The poem took me as I had a late late late night the other and as I learned in college, it was the day after an ‘all-nighter’ that killed me, it was the day after the day after that I was a zombie.

But last night I had a noble sleep.

A sleep so tired that I didn’t dream.

Just a noble sleep.

Then that last paragraph I quoted from the preface.

 So I have pulled wide the throttle to let it go, and ask you to keep your eyes upon the rails that it may be widely and publicly circulated. And I truly hope that it will find a useful field of labor instead of filling an early grave in the cemetery of forgetfulness. 

I find it hard to get my arms around that I have been writing these haiku now for five years.

I started in January of 2019 after a morning of mindless commuting in Atlanta when I started to take note of odd combinations of words as I listened to books on tape and looked at the signs and advertising on my way downtown.

My admin page says I have made 1,786 posts and used 741,983 words (I know I copy and paste often so I cannot say I have written 741,983 words).

This is all a bit much and a bit nutz at the same time but the drinking song from La Traviata is playing on the radio just now so as I good Roman, I will take that for a positive omen.

 I have pulled wide the throttle to let it go, and ask you to keep your eyes upon the rails that it may be widely and publicly circulated.

And I truly hope that it will find a useful field of labor instead of filling an early grave in the cemetery of forgetfulness. 

1.22-2024 – one day will explain

one day will explain
how and why she morphed into
a total crackpot

Adapted from the article, Cheney Exposes Stefanik’s Deleted Statement on Jan. 6 Riot as GOP’s Stance Shifts Story by Jacob Miller at Trendy Digests | Your Daily Dose of Trending Topics.

Cheney recently took to social media to share a statement made by Stefanik on January 6, 2021, condemning the Capitol rioters, a statement which has since been scrubbed from Stefanik’s official website. “I’m told that, in response to my prior tweet, @EliseStefanik deleted her 1/6/21 statement,” Cheney wrote, “that those who stormed the Capitol ‘must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.’”

In her original condemnation, Stefanik said, “I fully condemn the dangerous violence and destruction that occurred today at the United States Capitol,” further stating that “violence in any form is absolutely unacceptable and anti-American. The perpetrators of this un-American violence and destruction must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Cheney continued by questioning Stefanik’s integrity, “One day [Stefanik] will have to explain how and why she morphed into a total crackpot. History, and our children, deserve to know.” The tension between Cheney and Stefanik encapsulates the Republican Party’s struggle with the legacy of January 6. While Cheney has committed herself to preventing Trump’s return to power, Stefanik has embraced the former president’s narrative, describing the Department of Justice’s probe into the riot as “baseless witch hunt investigations.” Stefanik’s defense of those convicted in relation to the riot, including referring to them as “hostages,” stands in stark contrast to her earlier stance.

1.19.2024 – timeless wisdom … I

timeless wisdom … I
hold your broken heart knowing
one day you’ll hold mine

And each person who encountered someone in pain would look into their eyes and inquire: “What happened to you? Why does your heart ache?”

“My father died,” a person might say. “There are so many things I never got to say to him.” Or perhaps: “My partner left. I was completely blindsided.” Or: “My child is sick. We’re awaiting the test results.”

Those who walked from the right would offer a blessing: “May the Holy One comfort you,” they would say. “You are not alone.” And then they would continue to walk until the next person approached.

This timeless wisdom speaks to what it means to be human in a world of pain. This year, you walk the path of the anguished. Perhaps next year, it will be me. I hold your broken heart knowing that one day you will hold mine.

This timeless wisdom speaks to what it means to be human in a world of pain. This year, you walk the path of the anguished. Perhaps next year, it will be me.

From Two Lessons From an Ancient Text That Changed My Life by Sharon Brous in the New York Times Op/Ed on January 19, 2024. Rabbi Brous is the founding and senior rabbi of Ikar, a Jewish community based in Los Angeles, and the author of “The Amen Effect.”

Rabbi Brous ends with this:

Small, tender gestures remind us that we are not helpless, even in the face of grave human suffering. We maintain the ability, even in the dark of night, to find our way to one another. We need this, especially now.

We desperately need a spiritual rewiring in our time.

1.18.2024 – day I ‘cultivate’

day I ‘cultivate’
books … day I’ll know I’ve truly
failed as a human

As soon as I saw the headline, Do You Have ‘Bookshelf Wealth’?, in the New York Times, I said to myself, don’t read it.

It will just … well I didn’t know for sure what it would do but I knew it would do something to me.

In the end, it gave me hope.

It was an article that dealt with the reaction of book people to people who decorate with books and book shelves and book cases.

Here is the gist of it:

Kailee Blalock, an interior designer in San Diego, posted a video to TikTok last month that sought to define bookshelf wealth and school viewers in achieving the aesthetic in their own homes.

“These aren’t display books,” Ms. Blalock, 26, cautions in the video, which has been viewed over 1.3 million times. “These are books that have actually been curated and read.”

This literary look, she went on to say, goes well with pictures hung willy-nilly on the walls, sometimes even partly blocking the shelves, as well as mismatched fabric patterns and a bit of clutter.

In an interview, Ms. Blalock expanded on her advice. “I think to really achieve the look and the lifestyle, someone has to be an avid reader and has to appreciate the act of collecting things, especially art and sculpture,” she said.

Though Ms. Blalock did not originate the term “bookshelf wealth,” her video has spurred plenty of online discussion. “The day I ‘cultivate’ books instead of buying what I like to read is the day I’ll know I’ve truly failed as a human,” one user commented. Others remarked how bookshelf wealth was less about reading and more about regular old wealth.

Breana Newton, a legal coordinator in Princeton, N.J., who posts regularly about books on TikTok, was one of the people who responded to Ms. Blalock’s video. “I am going to show you bookshelf wealth,” Ms. Newton, 33, says in a video of her own. “Ready?”

She then gives viewers a brief tour of her home, showing books everywhere — on shelves, in overflow piles here and there, and strewed across the bed. Absent is the sense that the rooms have been staged, or that the books were bought with the consideration of how they would look on Instagram.

Been through this discussion before.

I am reminded of the artist played by Max von Sydow in the movie, ‘Hannah and Her Sisters”.

His character, a struggling artist, throws a rock star prospective client out of his gallery when the rock star asks, ‘What do you got that would go with a red ottoman?’

I always end up with the self graded quiz on CLASS in the book, CLASS, by Paul Fussell.

Mr. Fussell writes:

Bookcase(s) partially filled with books – add 5
Any old leather bindings more than 75 years old – add 6
Bookcase(s) filled with books – add 7
Overflow books stacked on floor, chairs, ETC – add 6

The reported comment, “The day I ‘cultivate’ books instead of buying what I like to read is the day I’ll know I’ve truly failed as a human,” warmed me all over.

So long as buying the books someone wants to read is a sign of being human, I feel that we still got a chance.