Monday, September 28, 2015

I ABSOLUTELY LOVE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN


Good ol' Ben feels like my soul mate. Always has. From my first sixth grade report on him to this morning.

My latest crush is my falling back in love with my library. (Thank you Ben for such a good idea) Yes, people should have access to books and for free.  What a radical important idea for a democracy.  

I have re-discovered the inter-library loan.  I call the library and give them a list of books (up to 15) and they tell me when one appears and I go pick it up.
For free people!!!!  For free.  

I am ecstatic. No need to buy. I save my iPad for travel or the odd book I want to share on Facebook. The library staff laughs (and enjoys) my absolute joy when I pick up books. The last time I picked up books they asked, "Is this still like your Birthday for you?"  Yes, yes and yes.  If I get jaded about free books at my command, available with ease, then all is lost.

I leave extolling America and Ben, for creative energy, for the radical idea of democracy, for big ideas that generate good change, for an insatiable hunger for progress and learning. Yippee.  

Ben was a scoundrel and ready for adventure (and romance too). He drove John Adams nuts with his womanizing and exorbitant book buying when they were in
Europe together.  No wonder I love him.  Let's hear it for Ben!!  We need this kind of zesty positive energy full of possibilities.  

Monday, September 21, 2015

THE PLEASURE OF LETTERS WRITTEN ON PAPER. HOW QUAINT!


Here's how I want to start:

—Dear reader, hope this finds you well. Thanks for the kind words you shared about my latest writing. I've been in the end of Summer hectic transition to Fall and look forward to a reading and writing frenzy instead. I have the books you suggested stacked on my already stacked desk. My book I PRAY ANYWAY—Devotions for the Ambivalent should go to Createspace this week. 
Hope this letter finds digging into your own work after a great Summer. Forgive my em dashes—

This is a poor imitation of a letter from the book Elizabeth Bishop and The New Yorker. I read it over the week-end and it was and is so sooooooothing. Every single letter back and forth between author and editors is so polite and lovely
(a word I rarely use). The cadence is almost courtly even when discussing punctuation.  I find reading letters written before the 60's so reassuring. (Poor ol' sixties--they are not to blame for absolutely everything.)  You know, that they recent TIME magazine asks the question, "Is etiquette finished forever?" or something like that.  

Anyway, if you want some calming and civility, read correspondence from the near or distant past. It shows how far we have come in a decline to crude tidbits of projectile vomiting viewed as writing or communication. (Sorry, I didn't know that description, itself, would be so graphic. Irony emerges!  

So dear reader, I recommend the book Elizabeth and The New Yorker. Elizabeth Bishop was/is quite the poet and worked with some greats at the THE NEW YORKER magazine. She drove them nuts with her erratic punctuation as I do my  writing colleague.  The point is to enjoy a kind of civility that is not at all restrictive, but uplifting in style and substance.



Monday, September 14, 2015

AND NOW, THE LESSONS LEARNED FROM A 2 1/2 YEAR OLD.


Reminders from a babysitting grandmother/YaYa:


—Bedtime should not be at the end of the day when everyone is exhausted! All that cuddle and ritual and book after deadly book needs morning energy.

—Anyone who thinks they don't pray, will if they can't get that darn little person to take a nap as the oxygen beckons just out of reach

—Building  a tight routine is excruciatingly boring and doesn't work when you most need it.  Chaos is only slightly worse

—Peak moments of toilet training only happen when you absolutely have to be out the door on the dot for the most important appointment of your life and you have to go into  Bhudda mind or lose yours

—Repetition builds learning.  Repetition makes you repeat what you wished the little kiddo already knew.  Repetition makes hate your own voice.
Repetition is unrelenting punishment for kid and adult. Repetition only works for learning when it's fun which produces the need for fun games for things that should be dull, like brushing teeth and, which in turn, become deathly boring.

—We all resort to sugar under duress. Thank goodness for bribery with sugar and just a teeny tiny drip of cold medicine when there is no cold.

—Demanding relentlessly really does work.  


—Give-up trying to find the lost "y" for the alphabet puzzle

—Know that you are normal if a heart squeezing moment resets you to "over the moon"  about your kiddo and don't beat yourself up when all you want to do is freeze dry your two year old while you catch your breath




Monday, September 7, 2015

THANKS OLIVER SACKS


Oliver Sacks died this past week.  Oddly, I haven't read a lot of his books. He was Professor of Neurology at NYU and wrote books about his clinical practice.
He recently finished his memoir, On the Move.  I did read an article of his that stuck with me. It was about the Sabbath.

I spent the day, yesterday on the front porch in total quiet.  That, in itself, is a miracle, given the car repair garage across the street and a house guest and a frequent and welcome granddaughter visit.  The quiet had that poignant feel of Summer sliding into Fall. The window box flowers were having their last fling at freshness.  Everything was poised in an in between moment. Hushed and achingly (not an overblown phrase here) perfect.

I picked up a magazine and read Oliver Sacks' comments about the Sabbath.
He had not been an observant Jew for years but was visiting a cousin. He had finished his memoir and had been told shortly after that he was dying of cancer.
No reprieve.  He went to Sabbath at his cousin's home.

The peace of the Sabbath, of a stopped world, a time outside of time, was palpable, infused everything, and I found myself drenched with wistfulness, something akin to nostalgia.

He goes on to say more about the Sabbath as his death grows closer:

I find my thought, increasingly, not on the supernatural or spiritual, but on what is meant by living a good and worthwhile life—achieving a sense of peace within oneself. I find my thought drifting to the Sabbath, the day of rest, the seventh day of the week, and perhaps the seventh day of one's life as well, when one can feel that one's work is done, and one may, in good conscience, rest.

That is the tone of the moment I had on my front porch. An intimation.