Sunday, March 18, 2012

Dear Updike

Dear Updike — Evelyn Lau 
I dreaded those future aeons when I would not be
present — an endless succession of days I would
miss, with their own news and songs and styles
of machine.

John Updike, “On Being a Self Forever”

No, nothing much has changed.
A year later, the world is still one you’d recognize —
no winged cars to clog the air,
no robots to do our dirty work.
The hours and days, as it turns out,
just go on. No space age fabrics
drape our tired bodies, though I did try on a sweater
built of bamboo, soft as chewed silk.
The chrome surface of the dream’s lake
where I swim every night
still hides the same wreckage in its mud bottom.
Sometimes I open my eyes at the morning
and wonder what words you would wring
from the splendour and boredom
of these limited hours. Some day
there’ll be a future we won’t recognize,
but not now. Outside my window,
the low moan of winter in the ragged street.
Flakes of funereal ash falling from the sky.
The soiled comforters of the clouds;
the tightly wrapped buds of winter roses.
These grudging gifts of December,
tied in newsprint. For weeks after your death,
The New Yorker continued to print your backlog
as if death couldn’t stopper your creativity,
as if you were still writing in that midnight room.
But not a word from you now, and it’s dark at four.

John Hoyer Updike, March 18, 1932 – January 27, 2009, was an American novelist, poet, short-story writer, art critic, and literary critic.
Evelyn Lau is a Canadian poet and novelist. 



Thursday, March 1, 2012

We all feel sorry for ourselves








The roots of artistic ability grow from psychological injury. — Charles Dickens

Rolling in the Deep — Adele 
There's a fire starting in my heart 
Reaching a fever pitch, and it's bringin' me out the dark
Finally I can see you crystal clear 
Go ahead and sell me out, and 
I'll lay your shit bare 
See how I'll leave with every piece of you 
Don't underestimate the things that I will do...

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Buddha teaching











Do not go by revelation; 
Do not go by tradition; 
Do not go by hearsay; 
Do not go on the authority of sacred texts; 
Do not go on the grounds of pure logic; 
Do not go by a view that seems rational; 
Do not go by reflecting on mere appearances; 
Do not go along with a considered view because you agree with it; 
Do not go along on the grounds that the person is competent; 
Do not go along because the recluse is our teacher. 
—Siddartha Gautama c.563-c.460

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Almodóvar Viva Pedro

9 films in a box set: 
—Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown 
—All About My Mother 
—Talk to Her 
—The Flower of my Secret 
—Live Fresh 
—Law of Desire 
—Matador 
—Bad Education 
Add one more to make it 10 —
Volver 
Money well spent.










The main facts in human life are five: birth, food, sleep, love and death. Almodovar add 5 more to life: secret, transsexual, betrayal, incest, murder.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Thank-You Notes















I own so much
to those I don't love.
The relief as I agree
that someone else needs them more.

The happiness that I'm not
the wolf to their sheep.
The peace I feel with them,
the freedom -
love can neither give
nor take that.

I don't wait for them,
as in window-to-door-and-back.
Almost as patient
as a sundial.
I understand
what love can't.
— Wislawa Szymborska, 1923 – 2012

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Under a Certain Little Star — Wislawa Szymborska

















My apologies to chance for calling it necessity.
My apologies to necessity in case I'm mistaken.
Don't be angry, happiness, that I take you for my own.
May the dead forgive me that their memory's but a flicker.
My apologies to time for the quantity of world overlooked per second.
My apologies to an old love for treating a new one as the first.
Forgive me, far-off wars, for carrying my flowers home.
Forgive me, open wounds, for pricking my finger.
My apologies for the minuet record, to those calling out from the abyss.
My apologies to those in train stations for sleeping soundly at five in the morning.
Pardon me, hounded hope, for laughing sometimes.
Pardon me, deserts, for not rushing in with a spoonful of water.
And you, O hawk, the same bird for years in the same cage,
staring, motionless, always at the same spot,
absolve me even if you happen to be stuffed.
My apologies to the tree felled for four table legs.
My apologies to large questions for small answers.
Truth, do not pay me too much attention.
Solemnity, be magnanimous toward me.
Bear with me, O mystery of being, for pulling threads from your veil.
Soul, don't blame me that I've got you so seldom.
My apologies to everything that I can't be everywhere.
My apologies to all for not knowing how to be every man and woman.
I know that as long as I live nothing can excuse me,
since I am my own obstacle.
Do not hold it against me, O speech, that I borrow weighty words,
and then labor to make them light.

Wislawa Szymborska July 2, 1923 — February 1, 2012

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Treasure finds




















Table cloth from Value Village $5.99 
French market basket $3.99 
Ballet Slipper from Sears $14.99