THURSDAY

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rod & Kubby. Photo by Bob Gentry, ©2002 by Stanyan Entertainment Group.

A Thought for Today

God never gives any of us more than we can handle. Stretching exercises for the mind, heart and soul is every bit as important as push-ups for the body.

 

FROM the¨BOOKS

I admit it, my diaries are the very definition of ipseity. Of course if it were otherwise they wouldn’t be diaries. The Sound of Solitude, published in 1983, is taken from a journal kept the year before. The four poems for today are based on entries from that journal.

DECEMBER POEMS from THE SOUND OF SOLITUDE

Magic / December 12

On furry fours she comes to me
tail flicking, twitching in the air,
then mental judgment firm, intact,
she jumps up on my land and lands
firm, exactly as she planned.
She pushes at my whiskered chin,
                     and I push back.

It’s Magic’s Welcome Home.
The non-accusing purr
is pure electric.
While I was gone
a new trick has been mastered.
She throws a round red ball
                      high in the air,
catches it and bats it
back and forth to Edward.

Nikki watches
like a grandstand tennis fan,
head stationary, eyes rowing left to right.


Home Ground / December 13

The house suspended change
                      while I was gone,
it waited.

The only way to know the lightning
is to touch the thunder on home ground.
I would not miss
a creak or crack arriving,
a single shingle
that the wind gives wings to.

Where else but home
can any man meet danger
                      almost as an equal?


Empty Harbor / December 14

Those of us who sleep alone
are like abandoned boats –
we become accustomed
to lack of ownership.
We believe our chosen paths
are only where the sea drift takes us.

I have come back
to where the cedar hills
wear darkness like a stocking cap,
where morning comes the way
                                 the fish hawk comes
quickly and on silent wings –
not because I had to or so wished
but because I found myself
moving in this sure direction.

I am here still looking for you.
There are no days
when I do not seek you out,
no hours anymore when you are not
                                     paramount
when I am not sure beyond imagining
that I will meet you in the hills
       or on the street.
I never do.
But I still go and come
to places we shred first together.
I always travel alleyways we knew;
these journeys need no compass
               and no graph.
They have been diagramed before
and I will go on tracking them
alone if need be.

As the week winds down, fear not. Tomorrow is ‘Pass it Along Day.’ Sleep warm.

RM 12/4/2002 9:19 PM

THE FINAL WORD

"People who want to give 100th birthday greetings to Thurmond on Thursday can send them to be put in a basket at the senator's statue on the Statehouse grounds," the Sun News reports.

Yes, or we can just put the senator in the basket.

 – Bruce Bellingham

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notable birthdays Morgan Brittany o Margaret Cho o General George Custer o Joan Didion o Walt Disney o Morgan J. Freeman o Maggie Hayes o Larry Kert o Fritz Lang o Little Richard o Jim Messina o Grace Moore o Frankie Muniz o Jim Plunkett o Otto Preminger o John Rzeznik o George Savalas o Strom Thurmond o Calvin Trillin o Jack Valenti o Martin Van Buren
Rod's random thoughts If we kept Christmas every day apologies would be unnecessary.

On deceit: once a philanthropist, twice a fool.

Buy love by giving it away.

THE CHRISTMAS CACTUS /
December 17

The Christmas cactus
blooms against the wall -
its crimson vulva opening at night
and staying through the season,
the blossoms heavy
at the end of slender stems
of plants like octopi
sans evil eye and middles.

Pink and crimson
in the bath or after bath
hands dabbing at your arms
you were Christmas every silent night.
Today a woman in the East-end market
looked up from celery and salad greens.
For one slow moment, it was you -
Christmas in a black print dress.
I am hounded by the holidays
that come in bunches now.
Bright poinsettias and red ribbons
tied to cedar branch and pine,
great armfuls of you signal to me
question me at every corner.

Heavy-headed, staring down
avoiding Yuletide smiles
and New Year promises,
I stay as calm as crystal,
but I am still afraid
                 of looking up.

- from "The Sound of Solitude", 1983

 
© 1970, 1983, 1988, 1999, 2002 by Stanyan Music Group & Rod McKuen. All Rights Reserved
Birthday research by Wade Alexander o Poetry from the collection of Jay Hagan o Coordinated by Melinda Smith o Sound & Fury Dr. Eric Yeager o Webmaster Ken Blackie
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