Thursday, January 28, 2010

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Ever have the feeling...

you miss someone and you're not sure who it is?

It could be John Lennon. Or Leonard Cohen. My childhood. My childhood dog. Amelia Earhart or Annie Oakley. Princess Diana. The illusion of symmetry. A feeling I had late at night on a Thursday with a past boyfriend who told me that I looked like an angel in that light. It could be my sister's grilled cheese sandwiches. Or my high school neighbor who drove his car off a cliff. Or my mother, long ago and far away. It's a feeling like an exquisite emptiness--what drives me to write. It's the feeling that comes once the umbilical cord gets snipped. The feeling after Savannah the cocker spaniel knocks me into the pool, after the roller coaster ends, after the ex-lover drives away, after the drug wears off--:

I wanted safety, sanity, in the midst of the madness...but now that it's over, I want my fix again.


A cage of my body



I am a bird of the heavenly garden,
I belong not to the earthly sphere.
They have made for two or three days
A cage of my body.
--Rumi

Thursday, January 21, 2010

The Child of Solitude Grows Up



...This is the temple
of my adult aloneness
and I belong
to that aloneness
as I belong to my life.

~ David Whyte

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Saintly ejaculations


"My me is God!"
Catherine of Genoa




Thursday, January 14, 2010

"The hero is always blind"


Charles Seliger, Don Quixote, 1944

In the dream I was in a house cluttered with lamps and tables, trinkets stacked in dim rooms and passageways. My bed seemed to be in a living room reminiscent of my childhood home. I can feel the direction it was facing in, the sense of being out in the open, unprotected despite the vague sense of people present in other rooms in the house; and the lack of privacy. I was trying to sleep, but some invisible beings were tormenting me. Poltergeist. What lingers are images of being pelted with rocks, hiding under the covers and the weight of something or someone sitting down next to me, trapping me in. I kept trying to yell, scream, call out, but my mouth emitted only the lamest of grunts. And then I was sitting on a man's lap (an energy similar to Gerard Depardieu's character in Maitresse); he was faintly paternal but also shadowy--I wasn't certain I could trust him, and on some level I knew that he could not protect me. I was telling him about the ghostly assaults, which he didn't seem to take very seriously. Speaking was hugely laborious--my breath wouldn't come, each word was an effort, and it felt terribly important to get him to understand--to convey the magnitude of my anger or shock or terror. I was under siege, plagued by the threat of a battle I had no chance of winning.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Frame plates

Because food is a work of art.


From d-vision (found via Funfurde)

Friday, January 8, 2010

SONG



under the burden
of solitude.
under the burden
of dissatisfaction.

the weight,
the weight we carry
is love.

who can deny?
in dreams
it touches
the body
constructs
a miracle
in imagination
anguishes
till born
in human––
looks out of the heart
burning with purity––
for the burden of life
is love,


but we carry the weight
wearily,
and so must rest
in the arms of love
at last,
must rest in the arms
of love.

no rest
without love,
no sleep
without dreams
of love––
be mad or chill
obsessed with angels
or machines,
the final wish
is love
–– cannot be bitter,
cannot deny
cannot withhold
if denied:


the weight is too heavy

–– must give
for no return
as thought
is given
in solitude
in all the excellence
of its excess.

the warm bodies
shine together
in the darkness,
the hand moves
to the center
of the flesh,
the skin trembles
in happiness
and the soul comes
joyful to the eye ––


yes, yes
that's what
i wanted,
i always wanted,
i always wanted,
to return
to the body
where i was born.


allen ginsberg

Life, Death and Time



  So fades the lovely, blooming flow’r,
      Frail, smiling solace of an hour,
      So soon our transient comforts fly,
      And pleasure only blooms to die.
- "Distress"

Memento mori


Earthly Vanity and Divine Salvation by Hans Memling

Memento mori is a Latin phrase translated as "Remember you must die" (and the origin of the English word memento, which appeared as memento mori, "remembrance of death"). It names a genre of artistic creations that vary widely from one another, but which all share the same purpose: to remind people of their own mortality and the punishment they will receive if they transgress the rules of their religion. (From Wikipedia)

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Dreamquote: A visit to the Underworld

"I flew down here to drink deeply of you, and now I have taken my last memento."