Tuesday 17 December 2019

Winter Solstice


Happy Winter Solstice!

The harvest is in
persistence and patience grown
Another year told



My favorite photo of the year I took last month at dawn, off the wharf at Kaunakakai -- it shows five islands from left to right: Moloka'i,  Maui, Hawai'i, Kaho’olawe blending into Lanai. Yes, the "big island", over one hundred miles to the south, fills the horizon between Maui and Kaho’olawe. Both volcanoes on Hawai’i are visible, Mauna Kea is under that squiggly cloud, Mauna Loa to it’s right.






This Google Map shows the channel from green dot where I am on Moloka’I to Mauna Kea on Hawai’i





Entering the third decade of the twenty-first century I've been reminiscing more and more. Looking back I find that connections are vital to me; connecting with people, connecting with ideas.

One symbolic act of connecting was attempted in March of 1964, when my friend Judy and I crossed the Atlantic on a Norwegian freighter. Midway we wrote a message, sealed it in a bottle and tossed it into the sea. We were told the current would probably take it to Africa.

I feel these quarterly blogs are the same, never knowing what effects they might have, where they might land, or if they are just tossed out into a vast ocean.

I haven't stopped trying to connect. I've made friends with repetition and persist.


Like deaf composer,
blind artist, mute story teller
Find a way to connect

Monday 16 September 2019

Fall Equinox 2019

19" x 22" Untitled (The Good Enough Life)
Mixed Media on Paper by Ruth Ann Howden


This is the only painting I’ve done this year. I do have a piece of wood that will one day be a block print, when I get around to it. That task hasn’t even made it to the To Do list, but I’ve left it sitting out where I see it everyday. The artist of good intentions . . .

my good enough life
nearing the last soft hurrah
scattering of whims


 My paternal grandfather was a poet, musician, wanderer. When he lost his farm during the depression he was already a widower twice. I knew him in the 1950's, as happy, playful and great fun to hang out with.
He had eight children and when he could no longer work as a hired hand on other people’s farms he did the family circuit and stayed with one of his children and then another. He slept on our living room sofa when he stayed with us. I remember him playing banjo and we would sing and dance to She’ll Be Coming ‘Round the Mountain, Clementine, and my favorite, Red River Valley, which was very sad, filled with his longing for home.
He taught us to braid four strands of leather into lanyards, and how to make slingshots, both the forked style and the sling that you spun around your head. He built a swing for us in an old oak tree up on the hillside. An all-around delightful companion. Grandpa used snuff and to cover the odor he would eat sen-sen, little bits of dried licorice from a tiny box. He would share some of his sen-sen with us kids, and though I don’t think I cared for the taste, licorice still hits a nostalgic spot when I smell it.
While he was living with us he self-published a chap-book of his poetry, 49 of his poems plus one anonymous poem titled "The Deadman's Journey" that is three pages long. He apparently had memorized that poem. Grandpa worked with the local newspaper to get the book type set and printed. Titled “Thoughts Along the Way” by S. G. Howden, subtitled Prairie Poems by a Pioneer with the price of $.65 on the soft cover but no date. Clues within the poems indicate they were written from the 1920’s to mid-century and give an idea of what his life and his world was like almost 100 years ago.
I am impressed by his effort, but as I recall he was not successful in selling them, and my parents were embarrassed by his trying. A box of these books were found in my uncle’s basement after he died. I am very glad that I have one. For a couple more samples of his work see my blog dated spring 2019.


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I have been reading my grandfather’s poetry again, seeing that he survived very difficult times and that he also let out a rant now and then, but he kept his sense of humor as seen in the following poem.

THE RUNT OF THEM ALL by S. G. Howden

My eldest boy found pleasure and joy
In wielding the gloves with me,
When he was yet small, I, being too tall,
I then would get down on my knee;
But the last time I tried I had to decide
That he was too much for me.

Now I used to play on the fiddle – –
My daughter she plays the violin,
She doesn’t play in my old fashion way,
She holds it up under her chin; 
She stands when she plays, fixes her gaze,
On notes that are Latin to me. 
I do not object – – she must be correct – –
For she plays so much better than me.

Well I remember one December
Of teaching the boys to skate,
For the last time I tried
I had lost that stride – –
I found I was twenty years late.

Children have kept an old record,
Their markings are there on the wall – –
Now when I step under that chalk mark,
I find I’m the Runt of them all.




  S.G. Howden on right, North Dakota ca. 1945





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This year when I try to write poetry it often comes out as rants — skip this if you wish to avoid negativity

Madness

The one-man militia comes to our festivals
He comes to our churches and schools
He comes to temples, offices, shopping centers and bars
Multiplying the grievers and also deceivers

Politicians claim they care but do nothing
The Second Amendment was a promise for security
With a well regulated militia
Now a loophole for arms dealers

We scatter and hide
Parents die on top of their children
Nowhere is safe
Marketers already sell bullet resistant backpacks
Slip into a crevice and hold your breath
Cower into nonexistence

Leaders who flaunt the law send
Messages that an individual’s belief and desires
Outweigh the unknown victims right to life
Random mass killings, more than one a week
Madness to accept this equation

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Monday 17 June 2019

Summer Solstice 2019

June Dawn








Bonus haiku


Besides the perfect
climate are wonderful friends
my fortunate life





High Tide at Dawn





I was recently asked what I have learned in my many years.
I did not have an answer, so I have been thinking about that
question. Maybe I could have answered that
‘questioning everything is a way of life.’


"It's better to have questions you can't answer,
than answers you can't question."
Yuval Noah Harari



Low Tide at Dawn



One of the things I have been questioning is the concept
of fate. Is choice an illusion, is believing in fate
avoiding responsibility?


And what do I believe?


I believe we are all connected.
I believe we can all learn from each other.
I believe we have a mutual responsibility to share.
And I also believe I need to question all my answers.


My head is a colorful cocoon

I try to write a poem as precise as a Sudoku puzzle
To be complete every row will add up 
as will every stanza.
A new age haiku 
each syllable counted.

Before I can complete this poem 
two syllables join into

butterfly wings, pulling along an article
or punctuation mark.

Following in random order
all the syllables rise up gracefully in pairs
Lifting off the page in silence.

I stand surrounded

as the butterflies light on my head and shoulders.
They enter my heart and mind and come back out

as infinite poems.

Monday 18 March 2019

Spring Equinox 2019

          Consistent C

Competitiveness I cannot claim
Consistently a C, content
Could say complacent

Compulsory contrition could be credited
Consolation citation craved
Complete convergence to chaos
(Our new normal beyond the facts)

Collusion or conspiracy
I am caught in alliteration of the C
“Collusion is not a crime,” said Chris Christie
Contrary to dictionary
Conspiracy: ​secret plan to do something harmful or illegal
Collusion: ​secret cooperation for dishonest or illegal purpose

Campaign claims complex complicity
Contrite
Could couldn’t, can can’t

Compassion constrained
Caring commitments clouded
Catastrophe complete
Condolences

Moving Nouns

A noun -- the name of something
Naming a day makes it appear to be a noun.

A Monday isn't a thing I can hold, it demands action
return to school or back to work.
Nor can I hold a Monday back --
It presents a new state of being as the sun rises.

The alarm is a noun I can throw across the room
to no avail
Monday moves like a wave pushing us into the week.

The days follow in ritual order
If they were nouns I could mix them up.
Thursday would come first, a reflective state of being
Pulled from deep in the week.

To-daying into Thursday smiles
Humming the scarecrow's lament
Knowing
Why the ocean is by the shore and

Why where I am is always here

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Last month I retrieved a book of poetry from storage that was written by my grandfather. His family migrated  from Canada  to North Dakota  in the late  19th century. The book was published in the 1950s covering poetry he had written from the 30s, maybe before, to contemporary -- including musing on missiles siloed in his beloved prairie during the Cold War. Very few pieces were dated. 

He wrote about his love of family, home and neighbors, the problems facing farmers - drought, economic depression, war - and he balanced this with delight in music, children, travel and friends. I wonder if there were more poems that didn't get printed. I am grateful for all he chose to share. My grandfather, Samuel George Howden, died in 1960. He is buried on his prairie home. 

The book begins with a memorial for a friend then goes to this lighter tone:

EVIDENCE 

"Stranger can you guess my calling?
I have gotten discouraged and blue;
Don't care to get up in the morning, 
And don't give a ding what I do."

"Why," said the stranger, "that's easy; 
I need only give you one glance 
To know you're a cow milking farmer, 
That has only one pair of pants."



And here are his thoughts on his life:

TAKING STOCK OF MY EFFORTS

Out on the rolling prairie, 
     I have spent the most of my life. 
I chose the profession of farming 
     Once blessed with an honorable wife.
We worked and planned together, 
     Shared in both troubles and joys, 
Well knowing the cares of a parent - - 
We having four girls and four boys.

The mother has gone to be rewarded, 
     In that place we all hope to see. 
And now when I think of her unswerving faith, 
     Those thoughts are a guidance to me. 
I used to have hope and ambition, 
    A purpose, a will and a plan; 
But now, taking stock of my efforts, 
    I find I am just an old man.