Tuesday, December 31, 2019

But That's Me...



Had I been the wedding photographer - I believe I would
have turned off the ceiling light out in the hallway.
It's nice that it shows off the glass work above the doors
but the light itself is harsh and detracts.

I would have let the lady on the left sit down and I 
would have had the man stand where she's standing.

I may have gone with a brown or dark rust area rug
 instead of the green.

And, if the wedding photographer had been included
in the head count for dinner, I would have gone with the chicken, the pasta salad and cheesecake. 


Saint Bernard




responsible for feeding the 
larger breed dogs.

1279 to 1352  Boise




No More Calls







Something tells me

this happens a lot.







Friday, December 27, 2019

Painting the Shadows


I discovered this artist just last month. 
I was told by the locals that she always comes to
this same spot and always at the same time.

She seemed to have incredible focus.  No matter
how many tourists stopped to admire her work
and no matter how often the birds landed and squawked
about, she remained unaffected.

  
Her brushes and paints were not of the highest
quality.  I'm sure it was what she could afford.
And it was never about flash.  Colors were
secondary to her.

To her, shadows were key.


A fine example would be this one she calls;

Hand Shadow.

She's made it look as if the sun itself was
shining brightly behind her.


Truly Gifted.




Under Size 11


It’s not like they were stars twinkling in the night sky, these were just various houses up on the hillside.  Bedroom and kitchen lights seen from a distance – poking through the darkness appear almost magical.  People were going about their lives, unaware that from across the valley, their neighborhood looked like a wondrous galaxy.  Although it looked alien from a distance, in the light of day it was simply a hillside of mortgage payments, plumbing problems and dinner tables full of homework assignments and leftovers.

An unseen infrastructure comprised of bosses, teachers and parents scurry just below the surface.  Seemingly important issues generate stress and often time chaos in a daily routine.

Perhaps similar to a world explored by astronauts, unnoticed systems are crushed underfoot as unimportant rock samples are tossed into collection bags to be examined once back on Earth.


Now there’s your homework assignment.




Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Helium was on the ceiling

At first I thought it was me.  I thought I was becoming forgetful and I was misplacing things.  Small words were missing.  Many of my sentences weren't making sense.  I'd have to go back to whatever I was writing and add them back in.  It really was becoming quite annoying.

Then, this morning, as I was headed to the kitchen for my coffee - I tripped over something.  I looked back to see what it was and lying there on the carpet was the word stumble.  I had no idea where that had come from.

As I looked around the room I could see other words; some smaller words were lying on table tops and counters, while bigger, heavier words were on the floor.  What was going on?

Once into the kitchen, where I had the coffee pot and my tablet plugged in, I could see the source of the leak.  The cord to my tablet had broken.  Right up by the plug was split open.

I couldn't believe it.  How long had this been going on?  I felt a little better knowing it wasn't me that was going bonkers, it was just my Samsung tablet that was leaking words.

I went to the back bedroom and opened my suitcase.  Sure enough, the suitcase lining was scattered with punctuation.  There were small periods, commas, quotes and asterisks everywhere.

What a mess.










Sunday, December 8, 2019

It wasn't me

Last night I dreamt of a great treasure that fate was sending my way.  I was, however, surrounded by people colored by greed and infested with bad intentions.  I was a simple fish swimming about in a tank of sharks and trixters.

I began to question if any such treasure was worth thinking the worst of people.  I didn't even have the treasure yet and it was already affecting me as well as my sleep.  Perhaps for me the treasure was my ability to reject it and to hold fast to my belief that most people are good and decent.

The moment I came to that realization I began to feel better about myself.  No longer was I tossing and turning trying to get back to sleep.  A great calm came over me and I felt good.

That morning I explained to my wife and children the dream about fate's plan to deliver a great treasure to me and my realization that I needed to reject it.

My wife looked at me with intense disappointment and left the table.  My two girls told me I was lame, insensitive to their needs and was only thinking of myself.  Then they too left the table.

As I sat there looking down into my cereal bowl I began to wonder how, when floating in milk, the cereal manages to stay crunchy.  Maybe if I knew how that was possible, I could float about in riches but still remain steadfast to my principals.

What I needed was to seek out someone who was wise.  I was not smart enough to solve this one for myself.  While pushing my cereal around with my spoon I tried to think of someone very, very smart.

Some twenty minutes later I noticed the cereal had sunk to the bottom of the bowl and I was now late for work.






Sunday, December 1, 2019

Blips




Blips on the Screen

Some friends I thought I would have for a lifetime turned out to be no more than blips on the screen.  They came into my life as warm butter joining a slice of fresh bread and we quickly became one entity.

Somewhere in a flicker of darkness they became memories, leaving me a little less than I was before.  I would have told them about you, your sense of humor - your smile.  I would have explained to them that you read my blog and sometimes you write back and we laugh at the silliness.

They used to point out my spelling errors and of course my punctuation.  They never let me slide on improper sentence structure or changing tenses in the middle of a paragraph.

Boy - they were annoying little blips.



Awareness

I believe it to be the single most important attribute you can have.  Without it you become victim to skulduggery and remain prey to no-good-nicks.  Nurture it, however, and universal understanding envelopes you.

Having a keen awareness, along with a handy carrying case is priceless.  It lends you a certain air but not one so offensive that no one will sit sit next to you on the plane.

Complete and total understanding will help you to identify redundancies.  You will notice the world around you with every step, from the tiny ant - thankful for your awkward stride, to the spider lowering itself from the ceiling just above your head as you sit viewing this screen.

HA!  Made you look.




zc




Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Chrysanthemums

As technology advances - new words are coming into use.  
To make room for these new words in the Oxford English Dictionary - some words, the ones too silly to be in there, should be removed.



This, of course, is just my opinion.



Z. Corwin



Saturday, November 23, 2019

Inside the Box


I cannot, within the span of this lifetime, complete all of the thinking I have left to do.  I am afraid I am going to run a bit over.  I hope that is all right.  

It isn’t that I have been slacking off or anything.  I mean, I’ve been thinking during the week and on weekends and holidays.  I am all the time thinking but there just isn’t adequate time - if you know what I mean.

         Even when I am reading books about what someone else has thought - I’m thinking, what were they thinking? And television, well of course I’m thinking while I am watching television.  Mostly I’m wondering how on Earth this garbage gets put on the tube. 

         Anyway - after having done the math on my expected life duration, minus that which has already passed, and then calculating that into my remaining questions - well there you have it.  I am over by at least eight point two years.

         Avoiding any puns about thinking inside the box, let’s consider for a moment that a person could, after having passed over, continue on with their thinking.   I would have to think that their new surroundings might influence their perspective just a bit.  Most likely their initial thoughts might run toward that machine, the one that told the doctors all brain activity had stopped.  Boy are they in for a surprise.

         But seriously, after we hang up this coat and wander down the all into the bright light, who’s to say we’re not still thinking about changing the furnace filter or hooking up the garden hose so we can wash the car?  I mean, we are not actually a very complex creature.  

We’ve existed on Earth for hundreds of years, given more land that we need and we’re still killing each other over boundaries.  One group processes our food through chemicals while another attempts to find a cure for why we are dying off. 

         One bunch of us munches down the rain forest while another studies the changing weather patterns.  And just when our library shelves are full of closed books we open Windows and read our filtered history and slanted news through computers - like penned up veal being fed probabilities and outcomes.

         I guess that if I were to just write off those last eight point two years and simply call it a day, whenever that day comes, I too could rest peacefully without all the stress and hubbub and just mentally focus on a flat line with a study hum in the background.   You know, just to give that machine something to think about.




zc


Thursday, November 21, 2019

A Simple Country Poem



Little hope for city folk
who leave the robin's song unheard -
and scurry on their busy way
saddened by a hasty word -

No cricket's chirp nor bovine sent -
no moonlit nights
or gentle breeze -

can city time be so well spent -
without such Earthly harmonies?





Z. Corwin



Faculties


I sat quietly yesterday morning on one of the little padded benches at the mall.  It was our rendezvous point and I was first to arrive.  It wasn’t a minute later when two elderly men came walking up to the bench next to mine.  They appeared to be brothers.  One held a canvas book bag and a newspaper while the second explained to the first that he would be close by looking in and out of the near-by shops. 

As the first old man set his things on the bench he looked up at his brother, acknowledging the fact that his brother would not be sitting but wandering about.  Then again the wandering brother stated the exact same thing over again as if he had no idea that he had just said that. I looked at the man who was now sitting.  There was quiet desperation in his expression.  He flipped his newspaper open and drew it up close to his very substantial glasses.

I didn’t see him diving into the top story of the day, so much as I saw him trying hard to be anywhere else.  Wherever he was reading about I would guess he was mentally placing himself there, if only for a few minutes.   He kept looking at the article but I could tell he was listening and very much focused on where his brother was and how far away he was getting.  They were apparently taking care of each other in Life’s later years but the burden had obviously shifted and was now all one sided. 

As I gazed up at the ceiling and skylights I began to think about the architect who had designed the angles, arches and passageways for sunlight way up there, where most scurrying shoppers rarely look.  I wondered if, while sitting at his drafting board, or computer, he envisioned a couple of old men sitting - waiting for someone and looking up.   I wondered if he intentionally thought to entertain us with light and shadows while we waited.  

As much as I played with that thought I knew that I was simply avoiding what was really nibbling away at me.  What would become of me if something ever happened to Sally?  I was already a gray-haired old man sitting here on the bench at the mall.

We all plan to take care of each other as long as we can.  As we know, the holes within the fabric of today’s community are quite large and people slip through them on a daily basis.   Without the right, coherent response at the right time, people find themselves being shuffled off into agencies and programs, being handled and fed by charts and timetables.

The obvious challenge is to see how long we can hang onto our faculties.  Other internal systems may fail and send us on unexpected adventures but when the bulb starts to flicker we start that downward slide into grilled cheese and Jell-o at a 3 PM feeding.

Down at the entrance to the store I could see Sally making her way to our rendezvous point.  My spirits immediately picked up.  We would go home, enjoy lunch together, having what we wanted and when we wanted it.   

Later I would go down in the basement to my workbench.  I would gather some ½ inch Pine and build a sturdy box with heavy latches and trim.  I will use it to keep my faculties in.   

Perhaps with a metal plate on top indicating that they are all here.

   You know - just in case.






















Momentary Items


Had I the time and talent I would learn to strum and old front porch guitar.  I would make up songs as I went along, entertaining anyone who happened to linger.  

If I had the resources I'd travel down south.  I would sit in local cafés just to listen to the slow, southern accents, feeling my own blood pressure and stress level calm down.  And I would have some pie.

Somewhere in the back of my mind I have this running list of things that fall under the category of, one of these days.   Over the years some of the items on this list have changed.  Even the ones that have held on the longest haven't always kept their original position.  

As my personal likes and dislikes change, my list makes priority adjustments.  The time of year also affects these items, for as July and August draw near my desire to head to southern states diminishes.

I have no inclinations towards space exploration, sailing, mountain climbing, or exploring religious philosophies.  The items on my list have always been the simple pleasures, like finding the perfect cookie, learning Italian or to photograph someone's face for a chance of capturing unsullied human expression.  Maybe simply sitting with friends and hearing about the things on their list.

As most of you know, the one thing that has never fallen from my list is to take a little time every day to play with words.  For me the written word holds all of the treasures found within human thought.  Its bounty extends beyond all margins, in soft, colorful strokes or can be as sharp as a single word expressed in a harsh, regrettable tone.  

Words, when arranged just right, can evolve into brilliant stage plays that pull us through rivers of emotions, even though we never once leave our chair.  Words, when sinisterly manipulated by advertisers can gnaw away at us, forcing us to remember their product.  

I believe there to be an agonizing plight in the Hearts of true poets.  It is a weight never lifted, a passion fueled by both love and rage.  It is perhaps their very soul slowly leaking through the tip of the pen, leaving behind what some would see as excess droplets of ink but are in fact small fragments of momentary items that once resided on the back pages of a list.




Blueberry.




Life at the Waiten Sea



          We are headed into the five Wednesdays of January.  It is a bleak, bone-chilling and dismal span of time, void of tinsel, grog and good cheer.  It is the stark reminder that Life goes on.

          A sea of humming computers, clacking keyboards, and the exchange of vacant pleasantries slowly fills each of these days until we find ourselves searching desperately for an escape hatch.  

           The daily paper fails us as it only peers into the dregs of humanity.  Television provides a barrage of blathering pitchmen interrupted by feeble one-liners and canned laughter.
  
          Throughout these vast stretches of boredom a few of us reach out, if only briefly and hold hands.  Not, of course in the physical sense but by means of letters, e-mails and phone calls.  We momentarily lock fingers with a few words, placing our own little stepping-stones across the calendar.  

           Others opt to join organizations or to live vicariously through the exploits of their children.  Some of us simply dive head first into diets and focus upon self-improvement.  

          In the past I have chosen to tell stories; fabricated adventures in fictional places such as Oak Valley and Putrid Sound.  I have dabbled with ideas involving sock puppets and magistrates and have sometimes blended reality with fiction that I might solicit responses from those too long quiet. 

          I am thinking that 2020 should not just be another stretch of empty Wednesdays.  We should grind it up and form it into a rich, usable work of art.  It should come alive with laughter and music and nonsensical chaos.  

         We should roll it out before us like a new carpet and run through it with bare feet - giving carpet shocks to everyone who thinks life is to be taken seriously. 


Zobostic Corwin


         




Hard to do without fingers



I would have to think that paradise is different for everyone.  As our likes and dislikes vary - so must our conception of the ideal.  Following this line of thinking brings me to my particular concept of Heaven.   

For me, Heaven isn't a place that exist somewhere up in the clouds but rather lives as an entity within our spirit.  Perhaps it is our spirit.

It isn't somewhere to go once we stop living this life.  It is Life itself but without the physical attributes.  Heaven triggers a feeling of calm within us.  It is that spark of mental reassurance when we are standing in the midst of indecision.  

One can often glimpse a bit of Heaven in the eyes of another.  Friend or stranger matters not, the spirit transcends boundaries, borders and languages.  It permeates our soul, bringing us to awareness beyond reason.  

Bits of Heaven can be transmitted through a smile or a touch.  It travels freely through memory like the pleasant fragrance of home cooking, the vision of a playful puppy or hearing the giggle of a child.  It flows to the surface at the sound of distant church bells and it warms us when winter winds bite.

My concept of Heaven is that we eventually become one with this spirit, to travel freely from smile to smile, to glide in and out of hearts, leaving hope and love in our wake. 

We join the universal awareness that finds no star too distant, nor any moment uninviting.   Free to circle those we have left behind with warm memories that they not grieve our passing but smile at a moment once shared. 

I believe we simply blend with the Human Spirit, picking up small bits of love and hope as we go and depositing them with those in need.

I don't believe that we float about wearing halos while we spend an eternity trying to learn the harp. 



zc





Wednesday, November 20, 2019

No Matter How Bad the Music is



As I see it - the radio personality sits in a sound booth, talks and plays music.  As they do this and depending on his or her comfort level, the office chair moves.  It rolls, swivels and may even recline just a little, depending on the success of the station and how much they spent on the chair.

So far – no problem; the minor movement of the office chair does not affect the broadcast transmission -
 unless it squeaks.

Now, however, assume for the moment that you, the listening audience, are sitting in a moving car.  You are traveling along the interstate at 75 miles per hour.  This means your car antenna is also traveling at 75 miles per hour.  You are not only going fast but up and down hills and mountains, around corners and depending on your sense of direction, there’s an occasional U-turn.

Notes:
All measurements were taken at 68° F
The average person talks at 125 to 150 words per minute
Your speed on the Interstate = 75 mph
Speed of sound = 767 miles per hour
Your speed converted = 1.233 miles per minute

Conclusion:  It is not possible to outrun your radio.







Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Why Architects should learn...





what it takes to change a light bulb.









Action Figures




We have been action figures this past week.  Our arms and legs have been in constant motion, while we jumped in and out of our little action figure car.  We zoomed here and zoomed there, turning our heads from side to side and munching up little action figure meals.

Now we must climb back into the box and sit quietly while our batteries try to recuperate from the over charging we did at the action mall.

It isn’t often we get to see both ends of the rainbow at the same time but yesterday we stopped in to visit with a friend who had to spend their week laying on their back, staring up at the ceiling of a hospital room.  

For what seems to be a lack of imagination, they don’t hang artwork on ceilings.  There are no Goyas, or Grant Woods.  No funny photographs or still-lifes.   There is just a simple narrow gauge track running in a loop, where trains of curtains are drawn whenever they want your view to change from the ceiling to some other non-creative direction.

We ended up in a house filled to capacity with other laughing, smiling action figures.  We all talked about our lives and our plans and on every wall; no matter where we looked there was art.  

There were paintings with brilliant colors in bold frames; there were photographs of family members who had long since lost their “Action” status.  There was hugging and hand shaking and promises of fun in summers to come.

Now that I am resting and recharging back in my box I ponder the possibilities of rainbows without the rain.  I try to imagine hospital room ceilings painted with fields of colorful lilies or even empty frames where one might bring in pictures of their own loving action figures. 

Pulling both ends of the rainbow closer together isn’t easy but if enough action figures got together - who knows? 







zc


Monday, November 18, 2019

The Final Frontier is a Vacuum



            Shortly after the Klingons had been abolished from our Solar System, Captain Kirk found himself wandering the halls of the Enterprise.  He was annoying the Kitchen Staff and giving recommendations to the chief.  He was down on the laundry deck helping to fold sheets but doing it wrong.

          No matter where he went or what he tried to help with he was in the way.  He wasn't needed in those other departments but he was bored.   He was at a loss as to how to spend his time.  

          After all, there were no Planets to save and no civilizations to rescue.  The television show didn’t show all the episodes when the Captain, Bones and Spock had nothing to do.   Sponsors were reluctant to buy commercial time for what they referred to as -  dead air.

           Currently, I sit below the observation deck at this computer writing these posts.  It seems a nice gesture, you know, it gives the crew something to read other than the Captain’s Log. 

          Boredom is one thing but being bored in space can get to a person. 



Maybe I'll clean the carpet again.  It's hard to tell  just what it is those Romulans have tracked in.













Sunday, November 17, 2019

Making Believe



         Last Tuesday I wandered back stage.  I saw the vast array of building materials, lighting fixtures and knick-knacks that fill the small rooms, storage areas and rafters of our local theater.  There were miles of moldings - wide and narrow, large sections of flooring that would extend into rooms never to be seen.  

Baskets full of doorknobs, some turn of the century while others designed for a simple Oliver Twist; they sat next to teapots, muskets, and stacks of books leaning on televisions and moose heads.  

Closets were packed with overcoats and feathered hats with wigs piled next to cigar boxes that held an assortment of mustaches.  An old cookie tin held a variety of stick-on tattoos; some suggesting a military history while others indicating an allegiance to a cause or a bold proclamation of independence.   

One wall was peppered with an assortment of beards and toupees for those plays requiring fur-bearing actors. 

          It is a wondrous place filled with potential and anticipation.  It is a place where lines from a sketch are lifted from the page and transformed into bedrooms, back alleys, hideouts, or a grandmother’s kitchen.   

Jars of dust and spools of cobwebs sit on a back shelf waiting to create just the right atmosphere, while wooden signs painted with indiscernible languages lean against the wall.   

          Do not, however, believe that back stage is paved with wide aisles or meandering lanes, for it is not.  Barely navigable and dimly lit passageways wind around tripping hazards, skill saws and mannequin limbs.  

It is not a destination you’ll find in any brochure.  

The SET…


          Set builders are tasked with challenges of interpretation.  Using bits and pieces they must build what the playwright has only alluded to.  Five-sided rooms screwed together with imagination and lacquered over with gallons of illusion hide the reality of extension cords and duct tape.

         Windows that once looked out over a lake now gaze down on an apartment across the street or face the alley out back where sounds bring life to sinister shadows.   Understandably it takes a village to raise a curtain.

         Limited by available space, doorways leading down to the gardens oft time require the actors passing through them to make immediate right turns, for instead of gardens, less than a foot of stage remains behind the door.   A sudden drop-off can give a completely new meaning to the phrase, “Break a leg.”

         This has been a glimpse into my activities this past week. My first experience at building a set has left my muscles sore and my body aching.   

I spent the entire day building walls and steps in very confined spaces, hanging windows that looked out onto nothing more than a backdrop all the while avoiding the reality that I was simply a volunteer.  I was not back out in the workforce earning my way but simply making believe.

Even though I have seen the smoke and mirrors I will still be drawn into the magic - the moment the lights dim and the curtain goes up.





zc








Things Remembered




          “As Gregor Samas awoke one morning from uneasy dreams he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect.”

          That is the opening line in The Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka.

          As the Audi rested in the driveway during the summer I kept what I thought was a close eye on her health.  Full of oil and loaded with top of the line gas I exercised her around the block once a week, like you’d take a fine racehorse out for a run.  I wanted her to be fit and ready to face another winter.

          Soon after I began to drive her full time I noticed an exhaust smell inside the car.  “Nertz.”   I took her to Tuffy Muffler and informed them that I didn’t want to spend much on the repair.  I only wanted a Band-Aid.  I was thinking along the lines of maybe a $50.00 repair - there you go Sir, have a nice day.

          I soon found out that THEY were thinking, $1000.00 and oh by the way - we don’t have the parts.

          Annoyed at the lack of enthusiasm they showed in trying to solve the problem, I decided to take matters into my own hands.  At lunch time the following day I went to the grocery store and bought one of those large, aluminum roasting pans.  They are meant to be disposable.  Once you have roasted your turkey for your Thanksgiving meal you simply toss this roasting pan into the trash.

          This is flexible sheet metal, I thought to myself and it is resistant to heat so why not use it for a Band Aid?  So on Saturday morning; armed with my roasting pan, my tin snips and trusty car jack, I set out to fix the Audi.

          I pulled the Mustang out of the garage and pulled the Audi in.  I jacked it up as high as I thought safe and spread out a tarp.  I was ready. 
I knew that to just crumple a turkey roaster around a leaking muffler may be giving more credit to my crumple abilities than they deserved so I grabbed a handful of garbage ties and twisted them together making several long wire straps.

          I should mention at this point that when I pulled the car into the garage there wasn’t a lot of room on either side.  Sally’s Jimmy was on one side and the cement step leading up into the house was on the other.

          I opted to approach from the cement step side, so I laid on my back holding my turkey roaster, garbage ties, tin snips and flashlight and I scooted myself under the car.  It was soon apparent that I had not raised the car up as much as I should have.  It was a very snug fit and I had very little maneuverability.

          Having done as good a job as I thought I could, considering the amount of room I had, I now tried to scoot myself out from under the car.

 I was stuck.  I lay there on the garage floor - wedged between the bottom of the door panel and the cement step.  Kicking my feet in the air and waving my arms I tried to wiggle and twist to flip out of my predicament.

 It wasn’t working.   That’s when I remembered The Metamorphosis and this poor kid who had awoke to discover he had turned into a gigantic beetle and was kicking his many legs in the air as he tried to right himself.


          Ahhhh - Memories