By Moristotle
[Originally published 10 years ago, on December 29, 2011]
Moristotle, you recently said that you’d be more mindful how you spend your time. Are you spending it better?
If you’d asked me that yesterday, I don’t think I could have answered coherently—and not sure I can yet. Apparently, the challenge to be more mindful went deeper than I realized. It raises lots of difficult questions.
For example?
Welcome statement
”Parting Words from Moristotle” (07/31/2023)
tells how to access our archives
of art, poems, stories, serials, travelogues,
essays, reviews, interviews, correspondence….
tells how to access our archives
of art, poems, stories, serials, travelogues,
essays, reviews, interviews, correspondence….
Friday, December 31, 2021
Thursday, December 30, 2021
What if basketball games
weren’t won or lost?
By Moristotle
[Originally published 12 years ago, on December 30, 2009]
We’re going to a Tar Heels men’s basketball game tonight. I know, for those of you aware of my attitude toward spectator sports, it isn’t possible that I’m going. Nevertheless, my wife and I are going; we want to spend as much time with our daughter and son-in-law as possible and they told us before they came to visit that they would like to go if I could get tickets.
[Originally published 12 years ago, on December 30, 2009]
We’re going to a Tar Heels men’s basketball game tonight. I know, for those of you aware of my attitude toward spectator sports, it isn’t possible that I’m going. Nevertheless, my wife and I are going; we want to spend as much time with our daughter and son-in-law as possible and they told us before they came to visit that they would like to go if I could get tickets.
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
The PocketRock Heart Project:
The Things We Hold Dear (Part 1)
By Maik Strosahl
Heading back into work after spending Thanksgiving with my wife and boys, I received my next load assignment. Three deliveries and a pickup in the Quad Cities. First time for everything. A load heading to my home town of Moline, Illinois.
Now, I have been working out of Fulton, Missouri, for over three years and have taken many a load that goes farther than the 244 miles to Moline, but I have never pulled that load—mostly because their stores are usually serviced out of Janesville, Wisconsin. This was special.
Heading back into work after spending Thanksgiving with my wife and boys, I received my next load assignment. Three deliveries and a pickup in the Quad Cities. First time for everything. A load heading to my home town of Moline, Illinois.
Now, I have been working out of Fulton, Missouri, for over three years and have taken many a load that goes farther than the 244 miles to Moline, but I have never pulled that load—mostly because their stores are usually serviced out of Janesville, Wisconsin. This was special.
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
Belated “Merry Christmas” to Ken
By Moristotle
[Originally published 11 years ago, on December 26, 2010]
Well, Ken [Marks], I’ll see what I can do about a few field observations in the persona you suggested of an anthropologist from an atheistic society:
[Originally published 11 years ago, on December 26, 2010]
Well, Ken [Marks], I’ll see what I can do about a few field observations in the persona you suggested of an anthropologist from an atheistic society:
Labels:
Christ,
Christmas,
Ken Marks,
Merry Christmas
Monday, December 27, 2021
From “The Scratching Post”
2021: Story of the year
By Ken Marks
[Originally posted on The Scratching Post three days ago, on December 24, 2021. Extracted here by permission of the author.]
We thought last January that the worst was behind us. We had a new president with an inspiring agenda. He called on an admirable cast of professionals to fill his cabinet posts. Covid vaccines were widely available. In short order, a Covid relief bill became law, though without the support of a single Republican senator. That was the first dark sign. Now, as the final days of the year play out, our democracy is clinging to a cliff’s edge. How the hell could this have happened? Let me count the ways.
[Originally posted on The Scratching Post three days ago, on December 24, 2021. Extracted here by permission of the author.]
We thought last January that the worst was behind us. We had a new president with an inspiring agenda. He called on an admirable cast of professionals to fill his cabinet posts. Covid vaccines were widely available. In short order, a Covid relief bill became law, though without the support of a single Republican senator. That was the first dark sign. Now, as the final days of the year play out, our democracy is clinging to a cliff’s edge. How the hell could this have happened? Let me count the ways.
Sunday, December 26, 2021
All Over the Place:
Christmas Eve on Ash Street
By Michael H. Brownstein
The day before Christmas there was a glorious silence.
Even the meth house next door closed down for the holiday.
The drunk racist bar owner did not come out of her home
with her hee-hee laughter filling the air with bad bourbon breath.
No trucks left their loud engines running as they banged
deliveries down long metal ramps. No car doors slammed.
No one cursed in East Side Terrace. No one broke a window.
No one played obscene rap music so loud it scrambled eggs.
Seventy degrees by noon, the third day of winter, a glorious quiet
and we sat on our porch, reminisced about Christmas, family
and friends, the dogs in the yard by the alley patiently perfect.
By nightfall, the moon shared the sky with a warm spring drizzle
and we settled down to dinner, in love, and then—the soft hum
of a cricket, the melody of songbirds, a whistle of wind and leaf.
No one anywhere could ask for anything so precious as this.
Copyright © 2021 by Michael H. Brownstein Michael H. Brownstein’s volumes of poetry, A Slipknot Into Somewhere Else and How Do We Create Love?, were published by Cholla Needles Press in 2018 & 2019, respectively. |
Labels:
All Over the Place,
Michael H. Brownstein,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Acting Citizen: Once in a Decade
By James Knudsen
This has never happened. Well, it’s never happened to me. Is this a case of white male privilege? Is that supposed to be hyphenated? Have I lost my train of thought? Again? Where was I?
Christmas 2021 is on a Saturday. Since joining Moristotle, the fourth Saturday has never fallen on December 25th, and the pressure to bring a spirit of “glad tidings, joy, noel (where’s the umlaut?), mistletoe & holly, cup o’ cheer, let’s be jolly” is once-in-a-decade intense.
This has never happened. Well, it’s never happened to me. Is this a case of white male privilege? Is that supposed to be hyphenated? Have I lost my train of thought? Again? Where was I?
Christmas 2021 is on a Saturday. Since joining Moristotle, the fourth Saturday has never fallen on December 25th, and the pressure to bring a spirit of “glad tidings, joy, noel (where’s the umlaut?), mistletoe & holly, cup o’ cheer, let’s be jolly” is once-in-a-decade intense.
Friday, December 24, 2021
Goines On: “Merry Christmas!”
Click image for more vignettes |
The Christmas holidays (including New Year’s Day) are sad for reminding us of losses. Our parents are dead, some of our siblings, a number of friends. We can’t quite get back into the child’s belief in Santa Claus.
Labels:
Christmas,
fiction,
Goines On,
Merry Christmas
Thursday, December 23, 2021
Silent night, empty night
12 years later,
still silent and empty
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 23, 2009.]
It behooves me, I think, to try to explain why the Christmas holidays compound life’s sadness, as I said the other day they do.
It’s actually pretty simple. The sadness of life lies in loss. We are born (if we haven’t lost already in the womb) and immediately start losing things, at last our life itself. The holidays are symbolic of our once-upon-a-time hope that loss is an illusion:
still silent and empty
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 23, 2009.]
It behooves me, I think, to try to explain why the Christmas holidays compound life’s sadness, as I said the other day they do.
It’s actually pretty simple. The sadness of life lies in loss. We are born (if we haven’t lost already in the womb) and immediately start losing things, at last our life itself. The holidays are symbolic of our once-upon-a-time hope that loss is an illusion:
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
Highways and Byways:
Windshield Martyry
By Maik Strosahl
Throughout my years, I have heard of several “miraculous” incarnations of important Holy people. I remember as a kid reading something of a corn flake-shaped Savior. A quick internet search found an article about the Jesus pancake, the Lord’s smudge, the blessing from the ironing board, and my personal favorite, Mother Mary’s grilled cheese.
So, when a stray rock was launched my way as I was taking an eighteen-wheeler down a rural Missouri back road, I too came to see a miracle. Right before my eyes.
Throughout my years, I have heard of several “miraculous” incarnations of important Holy people. I remember as a kid reading something of a corn flake-shaped Savior. A quick internet search found an article about the Jesus pancake, the Lord’s smudge, the blessing from the ironing board, and my personal favorite, Mother Mary’s grilled cheese.
So, when a stray rock was launched my way as I was taking an eighteen-wheeler down a rural Missouri back road, I too came to see a miracle. Right before my eyes.
Labels:
Highways and Byways,
Maik Strosahl,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Happy Birthday
To all good people
born on December 21
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 21, 2019.]
Because today is the birthday of my son, Contributing Editor Geoffrey Dean, I would like to dedicate today’s [re]publication of poet Bob Boldt’s “Caruso in Honduras” to him and to all other good people born on this date, in whatever year.
Honored individuals (and everyone else, good or bad): don’t deprive yourselves of the joy of reading Bob’s poem and watching and, especially, listening to his video performance and the video performances of Luciano Pavarotti & Lucio Dalla and Andrea Giuffredi.
born on December 21
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 21, 2019.]
Because today is the birthday of my son, Contributing Editor Geoffrey Dean, I would like to dedicate today’s [re]publication of poet Bob Boldt’s “Caruso in Honduras” to him and to all other good people born on this date, in whatever year.
Honored individuals (and everyone else, good or bad): don’t deprive yourselves of the joy of reading Bob’s poem and watching and, especially, listening to his video performance and the video performances of Luciano Pavarotti & Lucio Dalla and Andrea Giuffredi.
Boldt Words & Images:
Caruso in Honduras
By Bob Boldt
[Originally published on December 21, 2019.]
A couple stands by the wind-blown bus sign.
His chin, still fuzzy, merely a boy,
an unstrung guitar string hanging there.
With three strings he begins his song.
[Originally published on December 21, 2019.]
A couple stands by the wind-blown bus sign.
His chin, still fuzzy, merely a boy,
an unstrung guitar string hanging there.
With three strings he begins his song.
Labels:
Andrea Giuffredi,
Bob Boldt,
Boldt Words,
Caruso,
Enrico Caruso,
Luciano Pavarotti,
Lucio Dalla,
poem,
poetry,
verse,
x years
Monday, December 20, 2021
Two ways of looking
at the chicken in the egg
By Moristotle
[Originally published on Thor’s Day December 20, 2012.
[Originally published on Thor’s Day December 20, 2012.
This republication is dedicated to Dr. Nortin M. Hadler and all other Scientific Americans, whether or not they are members of the Sigma Xi Scientific Research Honor Society.]
The following science story came to my attention this morning [9 years ago]:
The following science story came to my attention this morning [9 years ago]:
Sunday, December 19, 2021
All Over the Place: A Dance to the Music of Wind and Sunlight
By Michael H. Brownstein
The morning sky cobalt and emerald,
The morning sky cobalt and emerald,
a ghost river and a ghost shoreline without litter,
and then shadows of decrescendo and allegro,
a challenge that brings fortissimo to daylight.
Labels:
All Over the Place,
Michael H. Brownstein,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Three “little Siegfrieds”
Siegfried Dean as a pup |
all still beloved
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 18, 2009.]
[The woman] who sold us our beloved Siegfried back in March [2009] has announced the availability of three more “beautiful Cream/White puppies.”
Labels:
Beauregard,
Der Ring des Nibelungen,
Jennifer Neumann,
photos,
Richard Wagner,
Siegfried,
Wolfie
Friday, December 17, 2021
35 and 118 Years Ago:
December 17, 1903
By Moristotle
[A visit to the Wright Brothers memorial at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, in October 1986 unexpectedly provoked me to write a poem, and the arrival of December 17 again renews the thrill of the remembered occasion. Originally published on December 17, 2006, during this blog’s first year, without the image.]
Oh, calm brothers, a thousand glides
off Kill Devil Hill and you know
your Flyer’s cambered wings can catch enough
[A visit to the Wright Brothers memorial at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, in October 1986 unexpectedly provoked me to write a poem, and the arrival of December 17 again renews the thrill of the remembered occasion. Originally published on December 17, 2006, during this blog’s first year, without the image.]
Oh, calm brothers, a thousand glides
off Kill Devil Hill and you know
your Flyer’s cambered wings can catch enough
Labels:
first flight,
poem,
poetry,
verse,
Wright Brothers,
x years
Thursday, December 16, 2021
Withholding yourself
15 years later,
still instructive
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 16, 2006, without an image and in the default font of the time.]
In Colm Tóibín’s novel, The Master, Henry James is visiting his old friend, the wealthy Paul Bourget, an “unpleasantly rigid and authoritarian” anti-Semite:
still instructive
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 16, 2006, without an image and in the default font of the time.]
In Colm Tóibín’s novel, The Master, Henry James is visiting his old friend, the wealthy Paul Bourget, an “unpleasantly rigid and authoritarian” anti-Semite:
Henry did everything he could, in the early days of his stay, not to discuss Zola or the Dreyfus case with Paul or Minnie Bourget or their guest, feeling that his own views on the matter would diverge from those of his hosts. His support for Zola and, indeed, for Dreyfus was sufficiently strong not to wish to hear the Bourgets’ prejudices on the matter.
Labels:
Christianity,
Christmas,
Henry James,
politics,
privacy,
religion,
secret self,
spontaneity,
withholding,
x years
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
Highways and Byways: The Orchard
By Maik Strosahl
When mistakes are made in a relationship, it is easy to compound them. Especially big mistakes. I have made my share of them, as many have through the years.
I have always been impressed by people who seem to find a way to work through even the toughest circumstance, overcome the greatest betrayals, and find a way to make a relationship work. I admire them, but I don’t know whether I could be that great a person.
Today’s poem was an experiment in working through the pain and some of the consequences of mistakes that can last a lifetime. I dedicate it to those who have found a way to stay, live through the day, and enjoy their responsibility for guiding the apples that come from The Orchard.
When mistakes are made in a relationship, it is easy to compound them. Especially big mistakes. I have made my share of them, as many have through the years.
I have always been impressed by people who seem to find a way to work through even the toughest circumstance, overcome the greatest betrayals, and find a way to make a relationship work. I admire them, but I don’t know whether I could be that great a person.
Today’s poem was an experiment in working through the pain and some of the consequences of mistakes that can last a lifetime. I dedicate it to those who have found a way to stay, live through the day, and enjoy their responsibility for guiding the apples that come from The Orchard.
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Goines On:
Was this what was going on?
Click image for more vignettes |
The resulting lapse, he guessed, was that he was attending more to narrating to himself what he was doing than attending to what he was doing, rather like an editor paying more attention to how someone had phrased the sentence he or she was reading than to what the sentence was saying.
Monday, December 13, 2021
Goines On: What’s going on?
Click image for more vignettes |
But then he felt and saw the carafe in his hand, which more shocked than relieved him. Wow, he thought, he had just emailed a neighbor who hadn’t answered him for several days and joked whether he should notify the coroner or have a memory specialist come around to check on the neighbor.
Sunday, December 12, 2021
All Over the Place: The Hungruf
By Michael H. Brownstein
In the early evening, the Hungruf* gather to feed,
One legged, one armed, half a head, half a body,
They come from sleep into a standing position and wait.
Why search for food when food is just a touch away?
Why race after prey when flesh melts away leaving meat
On bones, fresh blood for drinking, cooked by a mere finger
Labels:
All Over the Place,
Michael H. Brownstein,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Saturday, December 11, 2021
Prize (a poem)
6 Years & a Month Ago
By Morris Dean
[Originally published on November 15, 2015, here slightly amended.]
“Stately?” she quizzed my comment on her walk,
her high-heeled shoes exalting shapely limbs
displayed in tights that summoned men to gawk
and sing out praises fit for churchly hymns.
Friday, December 10, 2021
Goines On: Getting Goines going
Click image for more vignettes |
Labels:
fiction,
Goines On,
Paul Frommherz,
William James
Thursday, December 9, 2021
Goines On: In need of inspiration
Click image for more vignettes |
Today’s Quote: “Music is a higher revelation than...”
15 Quotes on Getting Older
Today’s Quote: “Love is free; it is not practiced as a way of...”
Mindfulness explained in 14 quotes
Today’s Quote: “Great necessities call out great...”
Labels:
fiction,
Frida Kahlo,
Goines On,
inspiration,
inspiring quotes,
Salma Hayek
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Highways and Byways:
The Seduction
By Maik Strosahl
I currently have a hundred browser pages open on my iPhone. Ridiculous, I know, but they are open to many items I hope to use for future pieces.
This poem was started in May from a challenge prompt put out by The Ekphrastic Review.
The challenge was to write something about the painting “Hylas and the Nymphs,” created in 1896 by John William Waterhouse.
I currently have a hundred browser pages open on my iPhone. Ridiculous, I know, but they are open to many items I hope to use for future pieces.
This poem was started in May from a challenge prompt put out by The Ekphrastic Review.
The challenge was to write something about the painting “Hylas and the Nymphs,” created in 1896 by John William Waterhouse.
Labels:
ekphrastic,
Highways and Byways,
John William Waterhouse,
Maik Strosahl,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Tuesday, December 7, 2021
From the Alwinac:
US Cello Performances, 1891-2:
An Annotated Timeline, part 2
[Click on image to go directly to the Alwinac’s home page] |
See Part 1 here.
January 1892
9 Liederkrantz Hall, NY – Anton Hekking among the solo performers
on Liederkrantz 45th anniversary event for 600 members and guests.
11 Academy of Music, Philadelphia – Alwin Schroeder performs solos
on Boston Symphony Orchestra concert there. The Leipzig Musikalisches Wochenblatt reported on the “enthusiastic reception” of Schroeder’s playing in Philadelphia, and the local press wrote….
_______________
Read on….
Copyright © 2021 by Geoffrey Dean |
Monday, December 6, 2021
West Coast Observer: Roe v. Wade
By William Silveira
In 1965 the United States Supreme Court decided the case of Griswold v. Connecticut, which held that the 14th amendment’s due process clause implied a fundamental right to privacy and overturned the Connecticut law. This was the first recognition by the Supreme Court of a constitutional right to privacy. But it has withheld court challenges ever since.
In 1965 the United States Supreme Court decided the case of Griswold v. Connecticut, which held that the 14th amendment’s due process clause implied a fundamental right to privacy and overturned the Connecticut law. This was the first recognition by the Supreme Court of a constitutional right to privacy. But it has withheld court challenges ever since.
So, along comes Roe v. Wade in 1973, in which the Supreme Court had to decide whether a woman’s right to privacy is outweighed by the due process clause, which gives an unborn child a right to life. So then, you had all the debate about when an unborn child is viable and deserving of due process protection, and so on.
Sunday, December 5, 2021
All Over the Place:
Santa Claus Visits the Projects
From My Teaching Book
By Michael H. Brownstein
I asked my fourth-grade class a number of years back to write about Santa Claus’s visit to the projects. I was hopeful. I thought I might receive a variety of stories—some funny, some serious, some outright violent. Unfortunately, they were all violent. These are from children living in the Robert Taylor Homes, at the time the world’s largest public housing development. The high-rises are now torn down and gone. The school these students went to is abandoned. The essays will always resonate within me. Here are four samples, unedited and written from their hearts and souls:
By Michael H. Brownstein
I asked my fourth-grade class a number of years back to write about Santa Claus’s visit to the projects. I was hopeful. I thought I might receive a variety of stories—some funny, some serious, some outright violent. Unfortunately, they were all violent. These are from children living in the Robert Taylor Homes, at the time the world’s largest public housing development. The high-rises are now torn down and gone. The school these students went to is abandoned. The essays will always resonate within me. Here are four samples, unedited and written from their hearts and souls:
Quindrell: One Christmas Eve, Santa Claus goes to people’s house and gives present (sic). Then he gets to my house in the projects. Santa Claus crawls on the wall with a rope and busts your window. Then he said, “Ho, ho, ho, merry Christmas.” Then they shot Santa in the mouth because they think he is a burglar.
Labels:
All Over the Place,
Michael H. Brownstein,
teaching
Saturday, December 4, 2021
15 Years Ago Today: “I don’t believe that x” ≠ “I believe that not-x”
By Moristotle
[Originally published on December 4, 2006.]
Last night I sliced open that one Fuyu persimmon from this year’s harvest [on Ironwood Place in Chapel Hill, North Carolina], preparing twenty or thirty thin slices for our dessert. (There was only the one fruit because, after last year’s Fuyu harvest of over 300, I apparently pruned the tree more severely than I should have. I won’t go into the theory of persimmon cultivation; anyway, my imperfect practice of it tends to disqualify me from stating it.)
[Originally published on December 4, 2006.]
Last night I sliced open that one Fuyu persimmon from this year’s harvest [on Ironwood Place in Chapel Hill, North Carolina], preparing twenty or thirty thin slices for our dessert. (There was only the one fruit because, after last year’s Fuyu harvest of over 300, I apparently pruned the tree more severely than I should have. I won’t go into the theory of persimmon cultivation; anyway, my imperfect practice of it tends to disqualify me from stating it.)
Labels:
agnosticism,
atheism,
Fuyu,
persimmons,
x years
Friday, December 3, 2021
Boldt Words & Images:
Are we living in a simulation?
By Bob Boldt
[Editor’s Note: This fine essay was submitted over two years ago, but we never got it off the ground. We are prompted to publish it now because of something revealed by a recent book review: “The Novel That Riveted France During Lockdown Arrives in the U.S.” (Roger Cohen, New York Times, November 23):
[Editor’s Note: This fine essay was submitted over two years ago, but we never got it off the ground. We are prompted to publish it now because of something revealed by a recent book review: “The Novel That Riveted France During Lockdown Arrives in the U.S.” (Roger Cohen, New York Times, November 23):
Yet in the end the double anomaly at the heart of the novel – the upending of time in a world that discovers it is simulated – captured a moment when the pandemic stopped the world and existence veered toward the virtual.]Are we living in a simulation? And what if we are? A 23-minute documentary film, What If the Earth Does Not Exist?1, explains what “living in a simulation” means and why the idea is taken seriously as a possibility. The film is imaginatively and descriptively visual. I had seen many of its demonstrations before, but they have been effectively re-imagined here. The film makers spend so much time on the video game series Grand Theft Auto, however, that I suspect coin may have changed hands – maybe I’m just joking with this observation.
Thursday, December 2, 2021
Goines On: ’Tis the season
Click image for more vignettes |
When he entered the store himself, he was accosted by music loud enough that when he phoned Mrs. Goines to tell her he was in the store and ask where she was, each of them had to speak louder to rise above the din.
Later, in the car, Mrs. Goines said she had complained to the front desk about the noise, but she was told, “The head office issued a directive we are to play seasonal music every hour during the month of December.”
Later, in the car, Mrs. Goines said she had complained to the front desk about the noise, but she was told, “The head office issued a directive we are to play seasonal music every hour during the month of December.”
Labels:
Costco. seasonal music,
fiction,
Goines On,
noise,
noise polution
Wednesday, December 1, 2021
Highways and Byways:
In the Fire of This Water
By Maik Strosahl
Before getting my license to drive commercially, I worked a couple years in an Amazon warehouse picking orders. It’s a controlled chaos system intended to utilize every bit of available space, so it feels like a scavenger hunt with a scanner gun.
On one of these many searches, I found a sobriety coin engraved with a serenity prayer for Native Americans who struggle with alcohol. I thought the message in the inscription was beautiful:
Before getting my license to drive commercially, I worked a couple years in an Amazon warehouse picking orders. It’s a controlled chaos system intended to utilize every bit of available space, so it feels like a scavenger hunt with a scanner gun.
On one of these many searches, I found a sobriety coin engraved with a serenity prayer for Native Americans who struggle with alcohol. I thought the message in the inscription was beautiful:
Labels:
Amazon,
Highways and Byways,
Maik Strosahl,
poem,
poetry,
verse
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)