Showing posts with label my bed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my bed. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 04, 2019

Home from travels.

It's been, as the kids say, a minute. Well, I lived my life, I did what I did, and now I'm sleeping in my own bed again--sleeping well, it must be said, which, at this late date in my life, is not nothing, I tell you, in fact sometimes it feels like everything.

We got home from Scotland, dazed from everything we'd experienced.

"Remember when we went to Ireland, then England, then Scotland? Remember when we were gone for weeks and weeks?" I say to the historian. He does remember. We remember everything.

We've seen my folks again, several times. I've gone to Pilates and the gym and to HIGH Fitness. We've eaten enchiladas. We've seen a few movies. I've been back to my writing group. I've written and delivered a poem at Convocation. I've had breakfast and lunch and coffee with my friends.

When we planned this trip, I wanted to be gone long enough, gone thoroughly enough, to feel like I was not on a vacation, rather living my life in other places. And I did feel that. I felt at home in the world. Of course it was still in a sense a vacation--a leaving of one's ordinary life to experience extraordinary things. This trip delivered that, and in spades. But what I really cherish is a feeling that I could do--could be--anywhere, and live my life.

I'm back now. And I want to see if I can sustain at least that dimension of our epic travels. We'll see.

During this sabbatical, when I am writing and also undertaking a substantial project that I'll talk, I'm sure, more about later, I want to use this blog as a space to keep a record, to talk about what's happening. It will be another space to be, to do, to live my life.




The future

Imagine a shore, says the clairvoyant, when I ask
about the future. Imagine a river emptying itself 
into the sea. It’s dusk, she goes on, but light enough 
that you can see the river moving out, its direction sure. 

I can see it, in fact I’ve been there recently. Overhead,
terns wheel and cry. Walk downshore, where the sea
moves in, the salt giving it greater weight. The slap
and churn, cold and immediate, of this meeting

of waters is an inevitability. I watch the sun fall, 
its theater of blaze. I’ve come to her to ask 
about the future and its brightness, by what measure 
we might predict or calibrate it. I’ve come to believe 

that everything depends on this, so when she replies, 
Imagine you’re at altitude, flying across an ocean from 
one continent to another, I’m impatient, but I do it,
depart the shore, see myself in a metal capsule, 

at a window that frames nothing but sky upon 
more sky, and in my mind, we’re in it and of it 
and above it, somehow, and also drowning in it, 
perhaps swimming to a far-off shore—l even hear 

the voice of the cabin attendant intoning in 
the unlikely event of an emergency landing, and outside 
the imagined window, the firmament dissolves
into blue mist, diffracted light, a structure made 

for holding nothing but its own airy figment:
I look again, and the clouds fissure into a sheet 
of ice, floes adrift, more and more water. I want
to believe in a better ending, to believe that we tilt

toward hope. I fret in the near-silent alcove
where this oracular stranger tells me, in figures,
what can be made of this moment, this now,
deposited like river matter, the dregs of the past.

The coins to pay her clink in my pocket. I should not 
have asked about the world, or the future, at least 
not directly. I should have asked her, is there form 
or efficacy, or beauty, still to be made in this world? 

Even though I already know the answer: yes and no, 
the sea roars in salt and the river meets it, its sediments
suspended and dazzling. A plane flies miles above 
earth, combustible device, and in so doing plunders 

the air. The wreck of an old fishing boat, there, 
in the mud, is the past, falling apart now and for years
to come. The inexorable silt the river carries makes 
and undoes this estuary. When the harbor seal bobs up 

to inspect me, that’s the now and also the future: 
we are momentary peers, investigating one another, 
as I disturb his habitat. When I paint the future, 
it is luminous but with a wash of gray, 

and when I spell out its sentence, it is an anagram 
for insurmountable. That’s not quite right: 
the anagram is made of reckoning. I say 
to the clairvoyant, The world is on fire, which is not 

a question, and she replies, but the world 
has always burned. This answers nothing, though I know 
it is a kind of truth, yet devoid of the particulars 
that lend a divination its requisite weight. 

The world is burning now, I say. She doesn’t need 
to repeat it: it has always burned, but at least I know
this blaze has history, and that I must learn it.
From that shore I might pick up two stones: one 

for ballast, and one to remind me of the past, 
already here, as I go forward, and that, 
in a burning world, we’d better be prepared 
to carry water.



Friday, October 11, 2013

Dear rejected topics I thought about writing a letter to:

Dear smug, bloviating bastards,

Dear where shall I park downtown,

Dear I want to buy all the stuff,

Dear potato chips,

Dear Saturday with a work obligation,

Dear week with no respite in it,

Dear farmer's market in its penultimate week,

Dear national parks that are not open,

Dear smug, bloviating bastards (I feel the urge to write this letter every other minute!),

Dear mid-semester pile-on,

Dear all the topics above, and more,

Perhaps I will take you up another day. But right now I do not want to summon the wit, words, wizardry, and (it's not a "w" word, but it's the only one that will do) rage to write you. It is Friday night and I am tired. Maybe tomorrow and maybe never, is when I might take one or another of you up. Now, I am retiring.

I said good night,

htms

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Thirteen ways of looking at April 13.

1. Pancakes for breakfast.
2. I got to wear my yellow coat.
4. However, odd poem.
5. Walk with Bruiser in the cold.
6. Escaped from challenging meeting dignity etc. intact.
7. Saw Dr. Write at her signing. Huzzah!
8. Rose to the challenge of making dinner after long day.
9. Inspiring homemade mac and cheese--perhaps the best ever made by anyone, ever? Perhaps.
10. Cute shoes.
11. The historian greeted me when I got home.
12. I shall arise early to greet the dawn and also the Board of Trustees on the morrow.
13. In the meanwhile, I shall sleep. Huzzah!

Friday, July 11, 2008

My bed: a memoir.

When I was in NoCal, aka Sonoma County, a few weeks ago, visiting my darling friend, I slept in a sublime bed. Sonoma County is dry and hot in the summer, and the bedroom was upstairs, so you'd a thought it would be hot, and therefore the plethora of downy blankets and throws would be unbearable. But instead, the bed was heavenly. I opened the window and the night got airier; the weird science of down inside of cotton was cool and lofty.

I got home and took a critical eye to the bed we sleep in each night. By "critical" I mean "whiny." What the hell is the matter with this bed? I asked. Why do I spring from it, insomnia-ridden and sleepless, plenty of nights, and why is it so freaking uncomfortable?

As it turns out, dear readers--and you may not have actually been in a location we call a "store" where they sell all sorts of materials called "bedding," so this may come as a shock--you can make your bed more comfortable by buying downy blankets and puffy mattress covers, and here's another tip--you can turn your mattress over.

I have transformed the daily/nightly bed into a much more splendid place. In fact, it's become a little obsession. Today, I stopped into Target (the holy city) and found 600-thread count sheets at a fetching discount. These will go with the new-ish puffy mattress cover and lovely, lightweight cotton-covered lofty down blanket. And, in what must have been kismet, these sheets are an elegant shade of bluish gray.

In conclusion, good night.

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