Archive for the ‘mental filing cabinet’ Category

on Orpheus and patience

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

I’ve not studied these poems, the Sonnets to Orpheus. Not in any official way, I have just read them. And I have no literary criticism of worth (Rilke didn’t believe in the worth of literary criticism anyway), or at least I have none that would be wholly approved of by the academics. I just know when an image appeals to me. And these images appeal to me. The particular things that strike a chord with me in this particular poem are the first stanza and the first sentence of the final stanza.

Sonnets to Orpheus Part 2, XII by Rainer Maria Rilke

Want the change. Be inspired by the flame
where everything shines as it disappears.
The artist, when sketching, loves nothing so much
as the curve of the body as it turns away.

What locks itself in sameness has congealed.
Is it safer to be gray and numb?
What turns hard becomes rigid
and is easily shattered.

Pour yourself out like a fountain.
Flow into the knowledge that what you are seeking
finishes often at the start, and, with ending, begins.

Every happiness is the child of a separation
it did not think it could survive. And Daphne, becoming a laurel,
dares you to become the wind.

Do you know the story of Orpheus? At least skim through the link if you don’t (don’t bother looking it up on wikipedia, it’s too cold, academic and detached) and try to imagine the utter despair of winning back your love, your life, from the grip of Hades then losing everything in an instant through the accident of your own impatient desires, because you couldn’t wait.

There is much more than a lesson in romance here. I suppose it applies to all the passions of our lives. We try too hard, we can’t wait, we grasp . . . and we lose.

The first stanza is full of the depth of loss. But within that an urging to find some kind of beauty and inspiration through it.

The artist, when sketching, loves nothing so much
as the curve of the body as it turns away.

“as it turns away.”

Then in the last verse with:

Every happiness is the child of a separation
it did not think it could survive.

Is this a line of hope in the midst of utter tragedy?

Want the change.”

“What locks itself in sameness has congealed.”

“Flow into the knowledge that what you are seeking
finishes often at the start, and, with ending, begins.”

Maybe it’s just me.

the butt-ends of my days and ways. . .

Monday, December 14th, 2009

And I have known them all already, known them all. . .
Have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons,
I have measured out my life with coffee spoons,
I know the voices dying with a dying fall
Beneath the music from a farther room.
So how should I presume?

And I have known the eyes already, known them all _
The eyes that fix you in a formulated phrase,
And when I am formulated, sprawlling on a pin,
When I am pinned and wriggling on the wall,
Then how should I begin
To spit out all the butt-ends of my days and ways?
And how should I presume?

the urge for going — joni mitchell

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

“awoke today and found the frost perched on the town
It hovered in a frozen sky, then it gobbled summer down
When the sun turns traitor cold
and all the trees are shivering in a naked row
I get the urge for going but I never seem to go

I get the urge for going
When the meadow grass is turning brown
Summertime is falling down and winter is closing in

Now the warriors of winter they gave a cold triumphant shout
And all that stays is dying, all that lives is getting out
See the geese in chevron flight flapping and a-racing on before the snow
They’ve got the urge for going, and they’ve got the wings so they can go

They get the urge for going
When the meadow grass is turning brown
Summertime is falling down and winter is closing in

I’ll ply the fire with kindling now, I’ll pull the blankets up to my chin
I’ll lock the vagrant winter out and bolt my wandering in
I’d like to call back summertime and have her stay for just another month or so
But she’s got the urge for going and I guess she’ll have to go

She gets the urge for going when the meadow grass is turning brown
And all her empire’s falling down”

dad

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

I found out this morning that my friend’s dad died.

When did my father die? I can’t remember anymore. Was it the 3rd or the 9th of October? I remember the year, at least, 1997. Twelve years ago, not quite 2 months after my wedding, which he couldn’t attend.

It’s all a blur. The wedding, the new house and the landlord’s cat, dad’s death, visas, immigration, the funeral and the three months living with my mother, sister and husband all together afterwards, the unemployment, the lost university course, the relapses, the wheelchair, the steroids and anti-depressants, the generous gift from an anonymous stranger so I could get afford my visa and return to my new home. It all seems so distant and like it happened to somebody else. And the strongest memory of the day that he died is is not of the phone call but of our friends M and J buying us fish and chips so we didn’t have to cook.

I think he had already died to me, when his brain became too damaged to know anyone, remember or understand anything. He wouldn’t have known if I had managed to fly back before he died. I tried, but I didn’t make it. And he wouldn’t have known. The last time I had seen him was at the airport nearly a year before when I had to turn my back and walk away from him, wondering if that was the last time. I hardly knew how soon.

I walked myself down the aisle when I married. He wasn’t there, he was too ill, though I barely knew how ill. I had always said that it was either both my parents or me alone. So as it was, it was me alone, sobbing to Pachelbel’s Canon, part because at that stage of my new illness I was overwhelmed to be walking at all, and part because of an immigrant’s overwhelming experience of the simultaneous experiences of the joy of marital gain and the grief of homeland loss. And I knew he would die. . . though not so quickly. I knew I was leaving and losing everybody for good. . . though not that it would become so irreversible and sealed by so many deaths and changes. So I sobbed the whole way, clumsily knocking pew ends off with my massive bouquet of sunflowers.

I never really held the anniversary of his death, and so I don’t remember the date. I’m sure it was early October. I have a feeling he died on the 3rd and the funeral was the 9th. The time that reminds me of his death every year is not October, but actually in June when all of the shops start advertising for Father’s Day. People in the country where I now live scoff at the holiday as a fake capitalist construct by Hallmark, but it meant something to my dad. It took me many years to pass a shop in early June and stop thinking “Oh, I need to get a card for dad. Oh, I can’t.”

He just missed his 80th birthday, and his 25th wedding anniversary with my mom. That was 12 years ago, so that means that this month, had he lived, he would have been 92. wow. His birthday was at the end of October, either on Halloween or the day before, I never remembered. I just knew how much he hated Halloween. Not because of his birthday or for any principle or religious reason. . . it was just one of the many things in life that annoyed him.

Like the NASDAQ. He just hated the sound of it. He was obsessed with the news, but complained each and every time he heard a financial report, because he hated the pronunciation and the sound of the NASDAQ. Which I only mention at all to demonstrate that he was a strange man with many quirks. I inherited many of his quirks. I am bound by so many of them. We are so subject to what our parents give us, for good or for ill.

Dad was born in 1917. Which meant I had a somewhat different kind of upbringing for someone born in the mid 70s. The early 20th century in my home country (any country), was a very different world to the one I was born into, and he struggled to parent a child in the late 20th century. He saw so much. His brothers fought in WWII (one died in the Philippines), he was medically discharged with a diagnosis of schizophrenia (or at least I was told once). He was in the army air corps, he ran his own garage, he kept and remodeled classic cars, he drag raced other drivers on the highway, he snored loudly, he was in a country band that played on the radio in the 1930s, he got thrown out of university for walking a girl home and standing on her porch, he was reinstated and became an engineer, he started his own gym/training centre in his 70s, he had been electrocuted so many times that when he tried to teach me to use a compass, the needle would point to him, not north, he would come looking for me at 3 am when I was 18 and out with my boyfriend, telling me to come home, or else, and when that little girl of his came home a few years later from a foreign land and could no longer walk or pick things up or write or see and could not even lie in bed at night for the raw, heavy pain of the sheets on her legs, he stayed up all night and let her cry. So much happened to and around him. I can hardly blame him for the things he got wrong.

I have not been to his grave since the day of his funeral (now that was a strange experience! The service was run jointly between my mother’s Evangelical minister, my sister’s high Anglo-Catholic, gay priest and a an old friend of my father’s, a man who had spent time in jail for militia involvement and tax evasion as he believed the money belonged to God and not Cesar!). My mother has moved on and can’t go back. I wanted to go there when I recently travelled to the homeland, but there was no one to take me, and I never dared ask anyone. There were too many memories to drag anyone through.

Dad didn’t want me to go, but he knew he couldn’t/shouldn’t stop me. And now, just as I never knew my grandfather, my daughter will never know hers. I wonder if he had lived, if I would have stayed here, in my chosenland quite as long.

I wonder what a person is willing to give up for their family. He gave up so much. Family was everything. It was the only thing.

And I still left. Sorry dad.

Baaa Ba Ba Ba

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

Had to share this. Dee shared this earlier and I just love it! Have been very interested in the mind recently and how it works in relation to all sorts of things anyway, and the fact that this happened so easily and naturally with no rehersal with, I assume, an audience full of people who generally didn’t know each other shows me that there is some comment thread among us all, really.

Of course, yes, you can make all kinds of excuses about cultural expectations and how those present were probably all of a similar mindset but . . . just watch it and don’t look for the holes. ok?

(I had a choir master do this kind of thing once, and it’s surprising how easy it is to follow.)

Burnt Norton

Friday, July 31st, 2009

“Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden.”

t.s. eliot

a fair reminder

Friday, July 17th, 2009

“One’s life has value so long as one attributes value to the life of others, by means of love, friendship, indignation and compassion. ” – Simone De Beauvoir

I have realised recently that I might start to like myself better, if I started to like other people better.

Act your age!

Monday, July 6th, 2009

I’ve had insomnia since I was 18. It’s been much better this past year, but worse in the mornings lately, and so this morning. I’ve been waking up at sometime between 3.30 and 4.30, lying awake worrying about my role in all of the calamaties of the universe until about 6.45, then falling asleep and being woken up by the alarm at 7, then lying in bed, sometimes falling back to sleep again until 8 or 8.15, by which time, I really should have been awake.

Anyway, in one of those falling asleep bits this morning I dreamed bitty dreams. I don’t often dream. It takes deep sleep to dream, which I don’t often manage. But usually when I have a dream, it’s longish, and with some kind of scenerio, as I assume most people’s dream’s are. But this morning, I just remember seeing my mother who pointed and said, more or less,

“Act your age! You’re not 3, you’re 33!”

And that was it. I woke up and needed a cup of tea.

But she’s right, you know? And I think it sunk in. I’ll try harder, mom. . . and the rest of you. Sorry.

disclaimer, or, why blog?

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

I fear I may have given some of you a skewed impression.

An impression that what you read or see here is a picture of “me“. And whereas that is not untrue, it’s not completely accurate either. It is, it isn’t. You decide.

This blog is a reflection, a dark mirror, an impression of a carved relief, a place to store the tapes that run through my head, especially in the mornings and especially as of late, to allow for a less noisy approach to my day. It is a place to leave it, so that I stop carrying it, hearing it.

That’s all.

And you may or may not have an out of focus picture. It is all true (I would never offer you lies, my reader, only truth), but it may or may not be fact. Because this photographer can only take and present these pictures in whatever way she chooses. You, reader, will take from them what you will. The viewer always does.

dusty worn out libraries

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

haven’t been able to write much today. lots to say, three entries begun, just can’t seem to complete them right now.

I run to where you will not be
Amongst the shelves of poetry
The dusty worn out libraries
That live inside my mind

I’m here but hope you will not see
I hide from you and look for me
Where silence and the voice agree
For once I understand

Have been scouring my old writing books, notepads and journals, and the journey has been facinating. Perhaps I’ll find a starting point? Perhaps I kept them to begin with because I used to think that there was something there worth not throwing out. I’ve thrown so much out.

I don’t mind looking back. Sometimes I find it more hopeful than looking forward.

Sestina (by burntsienna)

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

It was seven years ago, that in
Looking for that lighthouse near the cafe called The Rock,
In Devon or Cornwall (I always forget
Which it was) I slipped into a silence.
It didn’t just happen, but slowly rose
To my side and took my hand.

Stunned, I didn’t hear when asked to hand
The waitress the leftover cup which, like me, now had nothing in.
And clumsy, not thinking, knocked over the vase of roses,
Felt my heart sink like a rock,
Or like the sound of angry cursing in a room of proper silence.
Those feelings one tries to forget.

And I did forget,
Seven years ago, looking away from the task at hand
I once more took my old friend, Silence,
With me to the water’s edge, hoping that the tide was in,
And at the shore picked up a small rock
To skip across the first wave that rose.

It was then that a new (or was it old?) feeling arose,
Though no sooner than felt I began to forget,
And the earth began to rock,
To crumble like dried petals in the giant’s hand
Bringing forgotten ways of life rushing back to settle in,
Along with memories of the desire for a voice not silenced.

I hadn’t remembered a time before the silence.
The memory went the minute that I rose
To my feet to see the old friend who’d come in.
It had been years since we last spoke and I’ll never forget
How cold it was once again there standing hand in hand,
By the bay at low tide our bare feet on sharp rocks.

But now alone. Alone, and not alone, I ask the sea a question for each rock.
Will I spend my life here, wrapped in this web spun of silence?
Could I still hold my voice with these cold callused hands?
Could silence pierce me like thorns on a rose?
But the sea interrupts, and it begs me “forget,”
Undecided, distracted, I return and walk in.

It was seven years ago, in rock cold silence,
That I rose from my ashes and threw up my hands.
In Devon or Cornwall. . . I always forget.

Little Jack Frost – Kate Rusby

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Here is a tale of the trees in a wood
They were never that pleased on the land that they stood.
So they upped and they walked as far as they could
‘Til they felt the sun shine on their branches.

I was little boy lost, and I was little boy blue
I am little Jack Frost but I am warm through and through
It’s not easy to hide when your heart’s on full view
Oh, tonight, cruel world be forgiving
Oh, for once in my life I am living.

There they did stand and there they did stay
When there came a young boy who was running away
From a mad world, a bad world, a world of decay
And it’s comfort he sought in their branches

I was little boy lost, and I was little boy blue
I am little Jack Frost and but I am warm through and through
It’s not easy to hide when your heart’s on full view
Oh, tonight, cruel world be forgiving
Oh, for once in my life I am living.

There we found love and there we found joy
And the warmth in his heart oh, it filled the young boy
And his friends taught him magic and secrets of old
While the trees kept him safe with their branches.

I was little boy lost, and I was little boy blue
I am little Jack Frost but I am warm through and through
It’s not easy to hide when your heart’s on full view
Oh, tonight cruel world be forgiven
I was little boy lost, and I was little boy blue
I’m little Jack Frost but I am warm through and through
It’s not easy to hide when your heart’s on full view
Oh, tonight, cruel world be forgiving
Oh, for once in my life I am living.

kids can be so cruel

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

i have a friend who used to call me “radar ears”.

that was because i learned at a young age how to pick up on what other people were saying. in case they were saying it about me. because most often, they were.

i would sit in assemblies with my vision turned forward toward the stage and whoever was speaking to us, and my ears focussed backwards towards whoever was sitting in the chairs behind me whispering about me. making fun of my clothes or hair or about how they were glad they didn’t have to sit next to me or talking about who they would invite to their new secret club. . . making sure to say ‘but NOT sienna, OUR club is only for cool people.” whenever there was a birthday party, more often than not, i would not be invited, though the invitations were always handed out right under my nose. there was a girl called A who would rally the troups at the playground. they would sit on top of the climbing frame and look down on the world around them (both literally and figuatively) and she would say “now, who should we make fun of today? oh look! there’s sienna!”

the school counsellor was even called in by a teacher. she pulled me out of class one day and tried to ask me what all the problems were about. i really didn’t have anything to tell her, because i really didn’t know. then she called all the other girls out of class for another meeting without me. to talk…about me. then she had a third meeting with all of us involved, obviously creating a big unhelpful ‘us and them’ situation. (or more accurtately ‘me and them’)

one of the girls even said “maybe it’s because she doesn’t go to church. maybe if she came along with one of our families we’d be able to get along better” well, isn’t that rich?! bullied becasue i didn’t go to church!

so i developed my ears. in a way it was a defense mechanism, but in another way it was a pretty useless one, as there wasn’t really anything i could actually do about it. i supose i always would rather know what accusations were being brought against me than to live in blissful ignorance.

so we all grew up, like all children do, and we all moved on, like all human beings have to, and along with maturity some of those girls are now stil very good friends. (believe it or not, i’ve even had the odd appology as an adult!)

but i’m still pretty paranoid about being left out of a party. and i promise you. . . i still have very good ears!

T.S. Eliot

Monday, October 20th, 2008

Time present and time past
Are both perhaps present in time future,
And time future contained in time past.
If all time is eternally present
All time is unredeemable.
What might have been is an abstraction
Remaining a perpetual possibility
Only in a world of speculation.
What might have been and what has been
Point to one end, which is always present.
Footfalls echo in the memory
Down the passage which we did not take
Towards the door we never opened
Into the rose-garden…

Blue Man Group – Exhibit 13

Friday, October 3rd, 2008

p.s. (re: comment from below) sorry I never answered you Ian. I got your comment just as I was hitting what Flower would call a “mucky patch”. (she’s terrified of the In the Night Garden Episode where Igglepiggle falls into some mud. she often talks about “patch. no, patch.” after the last few weeks, i can sympathise. anyway…)

anyway, i’ve just been doing a bit of mental file cabinet dusting lately and have enjoyed rediscovering some old stuff i had stashed in there. (there’s a few new bits and pieces too, like the blue men, who i absolutely love.) so i guess in a way, yes, just an insight into my filing cabinet. for me too. it’s always good to remind oneself what’s in there from time to time.

Dar Williams on Mark Rothko, Mark Rothko on the wall at the Tate.

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

The blue it speaks so full
It’s like the beauty one can barely stand
Or too much things dropped in your hand
And there’s a green like the peace
In your heart sometimes
Painted underneath the sheets of ashy snow
And there’s a blue like where the urban angels go, very bright
Now the Calder mobile tips a biomorphic sphere
Then it swings its dangling pieces
round to other paintings here

Your behavior is so male
It’s like you can’t explain yourself to me
I think I’ll ask Renoir to tea
For his flowers are as real as they are all the time
And the sunlight sets the furniture aglow
It’s a pleasant time as far as people go, how far do they go?
Well his roses are perfect and his words have no wings
I know what he can give me and I like to know these things

I met her at the funeral
She said I don’t know what he meant to me
I just know he affected me
An effect not unlike his art,
I believe

The service starts and we are in the know
He had so much to say but more to show, and ain’t that true of life?
So we weep for a person who lived at great cost
Yet we barely knew his powers till we sensed that we had lost

A friend and I in a museum room
She says, “Look at Mark Rothko’s side
Did you know about his suicide?
Some folks were born with a foot in the grave, but not me, of course”
And she smiles as if to say we’re in the know
Then she names a coffee place where we can go, uptown
Now the painting is desperate, but the crowds wash away
In a world of kind pedestrians who’ve seen enough today

The Seagram Murals at the Tate (short video from the BBC)

Frank O’Hara

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Whitman

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

Whoever you are holding me now in hand,
Without one thing all will be useless,
I give you fair warning before you attempt me further,
I am not what you supposed, but far different.

Who is he that would become my follower?
Who would sign himself a candidate for my affections?

The way is suspicious, the result uncertain, perhaps destructive,
You would have to give up all else, I alone would expect to be your
sole and exclusive standard,
Your novitiate would even then be long and exhausting,
The whole past theory of your life and all conformity to the lives
around you would have to be abandon’d,
Therefore release me now before troubling yourself any further, let
go your hand from my shoulders,
Put me down and depart on your way…

…[T]hese leaves conning you con at peril,
For these leaves and me you will not understand,
They will elude you at first and still more afterward, I will
certainly elude you.
Even while you should think you had unquestionably caught me, behold!
Already you see I have escaped from you.

For it is not for what I have put into it that I have written this book,
Nor is it by reading it you will acquire it,
Nor do those know me best who admire me and vauntingly praise me,
Nor will the candidates for my love (unless at most a very few)
prove victorious,
Nor will my poems do good only, they will do just as much evil,
perhaps more,
For all is useless without that which you may guess at many times
and not hit, that which I hinted at;
Therefore release me and depart on your way.

from Calamus in Leaves of Grass

talking about someone else’s blog appearance, so i don’t have to talk about me today.

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

sorry. today’s been another one of those days that hasn’t been bad necessarily, just long. i’m tired and a bit mentally cluttered. so today you’re only getting a link to another blog. here’s an interesting interview with an interesting photographer, Kevin Meredith, on Flickr Blog. take particular note of his response to question 3. where he advises you to turn the LCD off. to take pictures the way you learned to take them before the digital age.

he says ” It's a bit like when Luke turned off his targeting computer as he flew along the Death Star's trench. You've just got to trust in the Force! Either that, or get blown up in a blaze of glory!”

novel advice which i admit i would find hard to do, but i think it’s probably worth a go. i have taken some shots i’m proud of before i could look at the straight after. so i must have known a bit at least about how to do it without looking.

also take a few seconds to watch the video he mentioned from another Flickr user of the starlings over the remains Brighton pier at sunset. stunning.

ok, i know what i just said…

Friday, July 25th, 2008

…. but just for a minute or two, forget about blogging deeper and enjoy this youtube clip that a friend sent to me because it made him think of me.

take from that what you will. lol. (so is it Beethovin, the Muppet, or the explosion that tweaked his associations?)