mermaidcamp

mermaidcamp

Keeping current in wellness, in and out of the water

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Hawks and Hummers

April 1, 2015 2 Comments

hawk and hummer

hawk and hummer

Hawks and hummers build peace on earth in the pine tree

Nesting next to each other for social and security reasons

Flying out at dawn in search of different kinds of sustenance

Flowers gently lift their cups of nectar while mice scatter and hide

The tree takes care of hidden family members not yet prepared to fly

Above our heads and beyond our vision the world revolves and evolves

Peace on Earth

Peace on Earth

NaPoWriMo 2015

NaPoWriMo 2015

For more fun during the month of April, hop on the poetry train, which has just pulled out of the station.

 

April Fool Romance

March 31, 2015 2 Comments

Jurgen and Ardell

Jurgen and Ardell

Born to be together, nobody would ever guess

How destiny had formed their souls into a perfect fit

He is concerned with systems, mathematics, digital hacks

She is an intuitive healer, in possession of everything he lacks

They found themselves in Big Sur, a classic hippie venue

Aires attraction brought them in sync, and the magnetism continues

Sharing  a birthday on  April first  these lovers celebrate diversity

Cherishing home grown romance, more abundant with each anniversary

These fools know the secret in taking risks is usually on the surface

Be the lover you were born to be by ignoring what makes others nervous

 

Happy birthday to my favorite foolish couple!

NaPoWriMo 2015

NaPoWriMo 2015

Please enjoy the poetry party this month by clicking here.  Read, write, recite…be corny, gentle readers. There is no such thing as too corny.

 

 

 

Schedule Success

March 30, 2015 6 Comments

sunrise on the Rillito

sunrise on the Rillito

Today I am preparing for the verbal marathon of #NaPoWriMo, during which I will produce 30 poems in 30 days. April in Arizona is a very rapidly changing display of flower to fruit to summer heat. We have hit 90 already and are staying just below that 90 degree mark for our high temperatures this week. Wild flowers and cactus blossoms are liberally painting the desert with saturated colors. Nights are cool, with a drastic differences between the low and high temperatures. Our climate is one of extremes, and we seem to be drifting into ever more unpredictable weather and endless drought. By May the heat will keep many folks inside for most of the day. April, however, is the perfect time to enjoy the outdoors and appreciate nature.  My preparation to become a poet has fostered a schedule change in my routine.  I started going to the gym as soon as I awake in order to log my exercise and clear the slate for the middle of the day.  Much to my delight my gym is not yet very crowded at 6:30 in the morning.  I hit the weight room, take a walk along the river, then linger in the steam room as long as I can.  The accomplishment feels good, but the steamed clean body is also a wonderful benefit.  I leave feeling uplifted and energetic.  I had such a great time today I am sure it will be easy to implement this new routine for April, and maybe for the entire summer.

I have been gathering my strength as well as my supplies for this challenge.  I have a few notes, some art I have been preparing, and a notebook for freehand writing.  I normally do all my composing on a laptop or iPad, but all the poets say longhand unlocks a certain part of the brain not accessed on a keyboard.  I am interested in illustrating my own poems, so I will jump back and forth from paper to digital formats in creating the visuals.  Anything goes.  I am not educated in all the themes and forms that poetry takes.  I always end up in iambic pentameter if I make up a rhyming ditty out loud (limerick style).  On paper it is fun to write in different colors, applying doodles, notes, mind mapping, or any device that fills and shapes the page.  My goal is to stretch creatively in both my written and visual material.  I am looking forward to reading the other participants poems because I know from past years that is where the real inspiration occurs.

I am also setting up my sewing machine on my office desk for daily use.  I believe that creativity runs in streaks, and to capture it all, one must work in different mediums.  I have a stash of beautiful fabric; and who doesn’t like to have new wardrobe options that nobody else has?  The tactile, somewhat mathematical activity of sewing a garment is a good balance to word craft.  I plan to make clothing suitable for wear at poetry readings and gallery openings, in other words, unusual.  I am seeing  this challenge as I might perceive a duck that looks and quacks like a duck.  If I look and act like a poet, I am on my way:

  • I will be in nature for the sunrise because that is what I think poets should do.
  • I will conclude my active work out early in the day to make plenty of uninterrupted time for art and poetry.
  • I commit to sewing some new garments designed to tell the world that I am a poet (or at least an eccentric).
  • I will mingle daily with my fellow poets who are sharing this month with me
  • I hope to turn on some of my gentle readers to my fellow poets and their work

Following the hashtag #NaPoWriMo will take you to the source.  I wish you pleasure, perception, and connection during this special month.  Enjoy!!!

NaPoWriMo 2015

NaPoWriMo 2015

spring green

spring green

April in Fool’s Paradise

March 27, 2015 2 Comments

deep center

deep center

My dear gentle readers, it is with some trepidation that I embark on a voyage that will take this blog into new territory. During the month of April, National Poetry Writing Month, I will be publishing 30 poems in 30 days right here.  It has been my desire to portray my persona in a writing.  I like covering subjects like my family tree and current events because it gives me a fact based framework, like news reporting.  I do enjoy that kind of research, so I will resume my prose posting when my 30 poems have been produced.  Do not fear. I will not turn this into my own little garden of verses.  I think it is fun to be a scribe, choosing subjects that I find intriguing.  Your fact finding reporter will return in May.

One aspect of creativity and psychic phenomena I notice and follow is the way willingness to practice opens new frontiers.  I believe we are all psychic, and all poets.  These talents or gifts can’t develop unless they are used.  Another belief that I hold strongly is that we create art that has a specific audience.  The audience can only find us if we publish or otherwise give them a chance to read it.  During April contests and events will be held to teach and share poetry writing.  By following the hashtag #NaPoWriMo on social media you can tune into happenings in your area and share fun with folks from around the world.  You may decide to participate in a group poem or attend a reading.  Of course you do not need to publish 30 poems to enjoy reading them.  I started on my path by tuning into this a couple of years ago and writing only a few of my own.  I think it is contagious in a very good way.

psyche

psyche

I was a production potter for years, selling my pots to make a living. Some of the best and most interesting pottery I made was done when I was a beginner and had very little skill. Later I made technically better pieces, but I was always producing something to sell, so I was influenced by that thought.  I hope that my poetry will follow that pattern.  My April adventure is intended to break out some new area of my ability in order to stay truly creative. I count on beginner’s luck, but am working hard to find good subjects.  Please stay tuned to find out where this leads.  I appreciate any suggestions you may have.

pitcher plant

pitcher plant

Wellness and Self Expression

March 26, 2015 2 Comments

flower

flower

aloe

aloe

green

green

The quest for balance and health leads down some blind alleys. I found a medical doctor last year in my neighborhood because I will soon have Medicare and have no idea how to make it work for me. The guy is billed as alternative health gerontologist, so I thought he would be right for my philosophy.  We had a fairly long initial interview and then he asked me to get a mammogram or thermography.  I was glad to go for a full body thermography because I was curious to know what it would reveal.

After my test was concluded the results were sent to the doctor and we discussed them on my next visit, which was for a pelvic exam.  My breasts showed no signs of problems, so the doctor decided that everything must be fine.  I asked him to discuss the areas where my thermography revealed inflammation because I was really concerned when I saw it. He dismissed my concern by saying “Don’t you think that is just a generalization?”  I was shocked for half a second, and then I realized there was no point in talking to him about anything not initiated by him.  He would call the agenda for my body and let me know.  Strike one.  He told me to go do my “alternative thing”, using two fingers on each side to make that obnoxious parenthesis gesture.  I honestly wanted to slap him.

The pelvic exam results were inconclusive and he thought there was some problem. I was sent to a specialist for another exam.  My insurance had covered the first one, but I had to pay full price for the extra one. My pelvic exam, done by a more professional person, showed no signs of problems.  Strike two. Now I have received a letter from this guy informing me that I have the opportunity to pay him $500 EXTRA dollars a year and have super special access to him.  He will give one hour consultations and hand out his private cell number to the exclusive group of patients which will be limited. I do have the option of being followed by a physicians assistant who will be hired to deal with those of us who do not care to see the doctor.  This was a very easy decision for me.  I picked the assistant.

I am not of the mindset that the doctor is always right.  In fact I am intensely iatrophobic, suspecting error and negligence in every medial procedure done on the planet. I have not taken any prescription drugs for any reason, and do not plan to start.  I feel good and enjoy life.  I think my health is a function of my own enjoyment and self expression.  One of the ways the new “health care system” disrespects the individual is by not listening.  I have decided to take the entire incident as a warning.  I still go to my osteopath and pay cash when I need a doctor.  She does manipulative medicine only , and I trust her completely.  I am a regular receiver of body work and acupuncture, which I value much more than time in a MD’s office.

I believe it is my own responsibility to care for myself and evaluate my choices constantly. I also think that repression is a source of ill health.  Wellness springs from our emotional and spiritual contentment.  Acceptance of the self as magical, artistic, and full of creativity opens the door to a full life.  We each have instinctual wisdom about our own health.  My own philosophy is that we need to open to our center to give our art a conduit to the world. Of course it is wise to seek medical attention when needed, but a daily dose of movement, social interaction with friends, and creative challenge is the prescription for well being.  I hope you find your own creative muse, gentle reader.  The relationship can be a valuable asset to your continued good health.  The right primary care muse can make all the difference to your future.

Memory and Poetry

March 24, 2015 3 Comments

shrimp plant

shrimp plant

 

Our memories are not accurate, but serve as a guide to learning more about what might have happened. We fill in the blanks with what we are told or what is presumably common knowledge when we think about the past. This was never so clear to me as when a group of my elementary school friends recalled our childhood together after 50 years. Most of us remembered different versions of the past, with a few striking exceptions. The most hated teacher was remembered in her worst aspects. None of us could recall her being nice at all during the entire 5th grade year. The memories had become more like cartoons than real events, with only a few details sparking us to bring up related stories.  The only event we all vividly recalled exactly the same was an incident involving a girl who spewed vomit out of her nose. In the third grade this made a very big impression on all of us.  I believe the intense olfactory element of the memory is what made it so specific.  We laughed about it, but this was the most memorable shared experience we had from our time in elementary school.  She was not present, but she was the center of attention for a while.

Good and romantic memories may be built on delusion or on fables that are repeated and slightly altered by each person who tells them.  We recall certain details and omit others to patch together a self-fulfilling story of cause and effect. Our dreams and pastimes create  frameworks for the past to become a fairy tale, and our self-image a sport.  Time changes our perspective and buries much of the unpleasant reality under a blanket of foggy forgetfulness.  We are all in the same memory soup in this sense.  None of us is a reliable witness to anything we experienced in the past.  Some choose to highlight the suffering, and others feature past success or accomplishment as the anchor to the ship of self-definition.  The overriding emotions blur the facts, and that is all perfectly normal.

I remember writing poems and songs when I was very young.  I have no examples of any of it, but I am sure I was prolific.  I sent poems to magazines for publication.  I saved my rejection letters because I was into my role as a poet.  I played piano and clarinet when I was very young, but switched to baritone ukulele, then later guitar for my role as teen folk singer.  My first job in life was as a singer and a costumer when I was 17 years old.  I traveled to North Carolina for the summer theater gig my high school choir director had helped me land.  My mother and aunt drove me across Tennessee, stopping at the Grand Ole Opry to see a show.  Minnie Pearl was on stage…memorable Minnie. I arrived in Cherokee, North Carolina in high spirits because I was working and living away from my parents.  It was my high dive into the deep end, and I was thrilled. “Where am I going with this?”, you may wonder, gentle reader.

I am returning to some kind of remembered roots in this blog for the month of April, 2015.  I will participate in #NaPoWriMo and create 30 poems in 30 days right here.  I have been enjoying a period of study and immersion into poems and poets, and now will boldly commit to the creative task of being a poet all next month. I have done enough creative ventures in my life to know that there are many different tastes, and therefore room for all kinds of art.  After April I will resume my matter of fact writing style.  I hope my poetic posting will please you. For me it is a big stretch beyond my present boundaries, and that is why I want to do it.  If you send rejection letters I will be perfectly understanding.   By publishing I am already moving beyond my childhood limits.  I believe it is good to find a new high dive into the deep end from time to time.

yucca

yucca

Grow Down 2015 at Tucson Botanical Gardens

March 24, 2015 2 Comments

Then Grow Down event is a competition held in the spring each year at the Tucson Botanical Gardens.  This year the designers created spaces featuring native plants coordinated with metal, wood, stone, bamboo, brick, and glass.  I liked all of them, but my favorite one was the most stark.  The copper background wall sets off the large rain chain designed with metal bowls and colored glass sitting in the center of the garden.  This installation won no prize, probably because there was no seating provided.  The other two entries gave the visitor a feeling of private seating in an outdoor room.  The winner has a wonderful water feature that circulates around the space creating a rushing liquid sound.

The third design used a theme of feng shui.  The bamboo divider functions as a wind chime as well as a privacy veil.  The seating is cozy around the artful floor with a stone compass made of rounded pebbles.  This design felt the most personal to me.  It won the people’s choice award.

These contests give gardeners ideas to try ourselves, and introduce us to local landscape designers we can hire when we want something special.   The entries this year were less elaborate than in the past, but to my taste they were more artful.  They all bring new ways to think about garden spaces that are easy to execute, and not too wildly expensive for a home gardener.

#Weekendcoffeeshare Bad Hofgastien, Austria

March 22, 2015 3 Comments

pay with a poem

pay with a poem

Today is World Poetry Day, 21 Mar, 2015. If we were having coffee today I would invite you to use your transporter cloak to travel to Austria for a special offer. Bäckerei Konditorei Cafe Confiserie Bauer Mühlbach/Hochkönig in Bad Hofgastein, Austria is one of many coffee shops honoring the day by accepting poems for payment.  This lovely town near Salzburg has it all, hot springs, ski area, and a jolly friendly populace.  I went there once for Carnival and had more fun than a barrel of monkeys.  The video below shows some of the town in costume ready to parade and party for Fasching (carnival).  When I was there the costume parade marched around the spa, playing music around the indoor pools.  It was hysterical to see from the water, where I was at the time.  Later we danced the night away with Austrians and our friends who came down from Germany to meet us.  It was one of the most festive occasions I have attended in my life, unforgettable.  Make sure you take a dip in the thermal water before you leave.  It is wonderful for the body and the soul.

I have been writing, reading, and studying poetry in preparation for April, which is poetry month.  I endeavor to write a poem every day in April, and I hoped that some study and preparation would bring better results this year.  Once immersed in poems and words, I hardly care if my own writing improves.  I just think it is fun and enriching to explore the works of written fancy.  I have been learning about the lives of the poets as well, which is maybe the most interesting facet of the study.  Poets come from every direction and occupation.  There is no common denominator. They start writing at all ages, and are both self-taught and learned.  I find this to be inspiring because it means we all have voice, just waiting to be discovered and used.  I enjoy the process of developing the sense of poetic timing and sounds, along with subjects that matter.  I am learning that it takes time and concentration to create finished works, so I am patient about my own output.  It is enjoyable in itself, so I do it for the fun rather than for my own legacy as a writer.

I look forward to hearing how your week has gone and what is new in your life, gentle reader.  After we catch up on current events we need to sit and create our poems to pay for these fancy coffees.  The Austrians invented the coffee-house culture, and they are no slouches when it comes to variety.  They always serve coffee with a glass of water, which I have not seen anywhere else in the world.  The crystal light fixtures, the formal service, and the perfectly prepared drinks set the right atmosphere for a long luxurious talk about everything and nothing.  The view of the mountains is even poetic. It should be fairly easy to create a poem here in this place of beauty to pay for our coffee.  Thanks for joining me here for World Poetry Day.

#Weekendcoffeeshare

#Weekendcoffeeshare

#ROW80 Plots for Poems

March 19, 2015 2 Comments

ROW80

ROW80

Our 80 day writing exercise has flown by quickly for me. I planned to write a poem every day, but have managed to do so about half the time. I am not at all discouraged by this result because I have also managed to expand my repertoire of subjects and formats in my poetry.  Last April I wrote daily and all of my poems were inspired by works of art, ekphrastic in nature.  This was fun because I visited artist friends and took photos to use as the subjects.  When I began this challenge all of my poems were ekphrastic, but I created the art myself rather than finding it.  First I tired making the art followed by the words, then I tried it in reverse.  It does not seem to matter which way I do it now, which is sort of silly to me.  If you are inspired by it, it seems like it should exist before you write…but I am practicing both ways, trying them both to monitor results.

Lately I am happy because I attempted very unusual subjects and did some slightly representational drawing about them.  I wrote about a lady who was ditched by her Euro-spy boyfriend in a restaurant.  She was presented with a giant plate of raw meat, steak tartare, and a note saying her boyfriend had never existed.  Now this might seem macabre or in bad taste, and perhaps it is.  What is interesting is that I finally put a character and plot into a poem.  My first attempt at this involved a swarm of ladybugs around a cabin.  These might not have come up if I had not been following my fiction writing friends who work on plot and character all the time.  My desire to make poems from historical figures and history itself lends itself to this practice.  If I want to turn my dead ancestors into epic poems I need to employ some of the devices used to flesh out characters and thicken the plot.  Since I endeavor to bring dream images into my poetry my technique will now expand to outlining plots and characters, then working on lucid dreaming to give me some vivid imagery with which to work.  I can embellish the true stories of my family in my dreams and use the impressions to create poetic versions of historical events.

As the solar eclipse tomorrow brings us a dramatic illustration of light and shadow, I see a metaphor for the known and the unknown.  What is obscured from view is often the most important part of the plot, and revealing it is the point of the story.  What I do not know about my ancestors leaves room for invention and fancy. Here are some of the real people I think can become interesting poems:

I also have a true contemporary story I want the public to hear and remember.  The Emperor’s New Neighborhood Watch is a rap poem about city government running amok.  If I do this with rhyme and humor it will be more impactful.  A good (digital) friend of mine told me this week that hexameter was the form used by Homer in his classic epics, not because it was great language, but so the actors could easily remember it.  I have written about just the facts in this case for years, but what this story needs is some memorable rhyming truth. After the solar eclipse I will start outlining these stories for Poetry Month in April. It is a fun new way for me to paint with words.  I am grateful to my fellow writers for teaching my some of their process.  Check out the diversity of this group here.  There is a lot of talent in this creative group of people.  Thanks for sharing these 80 days with a beginner. Your support has been very inspirational. I aspire to be like you.

reaching higher

reaching higher

#ROW80 Potential and Poetry

March 15, 2015 6 Comments

ROW80

ROW80

We have no idea what tomorrow will bring, but today is overflowing with potential.
Allan Lokos
Through the Flames

This quote by Mr Lokos perfectly describes my current position on my poetic future. By starting to investigate life and learning through poetry I have opened a vast area of artistic and intellectual study that I am just beginning to understand.  Turning my attention to it has automatically turned some poets’ attention to me.  One or two people post poems on my Facebook wall every day, which adds a social element to the mix.  I don’t believe these writers have read any of my poems, but they have decided to share theirs directly to/with me.  I follow more poets all the time who blog. Calligraphy with word significance has also come to my attention.  This is a wonderful way to make words larger than life and more colorful than just typing.  I have not tried it myself but am thinking of doing some writing by hand instead of always on a keyboard.  It may stimulate something new.

I have thought about working with my ancestors as characters to create epic poems or stories, and have done a little work in that direction.  People work with notes and written outlines, but I have yet to put these to work for me.  I still contemplate images in my head for a while before I begin, but think I can benefit from a notebook with handwritten notes and drawings.  When this 80 days has come to a full circle I plan to start a notebook and handwriting practice.  I want to see if random idea trapping and tracking will help me kill my darlings and move on to deeper subjects.  If I start pages for different times in history or branches of my family tree I think I can develop some themes from which to write fiction or poetry.  I like mind mapping, but have not employed it to the task of writing.  I believe it can unlock a boat load of potential material using this method.  I have no idea what I may do with it, but it will be fun to find it.

Allan Lokos was in a plane that crashed and burned leaving him injured. His book was written to help others find compassion and patience in the face of challenging circumstances.  His attitude about potential is key because every day is full of potential.  Many of our lives contain too much repetition, little true bliss, and a lack of compassion.  We are all recovering from something, although normally nothing so severe as an airplane crash.  Honoring potential today by writing is a tribute to collective creativity.  Rarely do plans for tomorrow work out exactly as we imagined.  Writing creates a trail of breadcrumbs for the soul to trace its’ way.  Poetry celebrates the way each of us is gifted with our own set of talents and perspectives.  Leaving our stories and thoughts recorded for others to read may turn out to be uplifting or helpful to someone.  This journey has  contributed greatly to my ability to tap into the overflowing potential all around us. I appreciate the chance to interact with magic, words, and power. Cheers, gentle readers!

cocktail that wants to be a poem

cocktail that wants to be a poem