Friday 4 November 2016

It's the little things now


The last blog post was titled for my dad - "Be of good cheer" was one of his favourite expressions. He died quite a while ago but November 4th was his birthday and I will have a dram later and drink to "absent friends".  His generation lived or died through the war and got by on cups of tea and cigarettes it seems.  We are luckier. 




Just now many of us are talking about the surreal nature of the impending US election, the enormity of the refugee crisis and the confusion over Brexit - to B or not to B? Maybe it's because I am getting older (just a little) but some days it seems as if the world really is going to hell in a handcart. Rarely has the global picture looked more sombre. 

Somehow we go on with our lives.  We even enjoy them. This poem came to me during a sleepless night and I think it's about this phenomenon. An awareness of our precarious hold on the world combined with a need to "keep calm and carry on".  What's your solace?


It’s the little things now
Sally Givertz

Wandering over this troubled globe
There are – the UN tells us -
more than three million
refugees

And in the States the average mind
has sunk so low, they want to elect
a Primitive Life Form as their
leader

As for our crowded little island
We are become a disunited kingdom
Don’t know whether we are coming or
going.

So today we took a low-key trip
The ordinary stuff – the groceries
A charity shop or
two

Then stopped, this dreich day
to look at the sea, watch the grey waves
and the windscreen grow dappled with
rain.

As the inside gently misted over
we shared a Thermos of coffee
(the real thing, not instant)
and

A fresh, perfect, almond croissant.
Here suddenly, out of almost
nothing, the taste of
happiness
   
3.11.16



Have a good day in a small way. 

Wednesday 2 November 2016

Be of good cheer


Every morning I walk like this around the pond, thinking: if the doors of my heart ever close, 
I am as good as dead. 

Every morning, so far, I’m alive. 


Mary Oliver

These lines are from a poem called "Landscape" and I think it offers a good reminder that we need to keep our hearts open. The poem ends with an image of crows.


The wonderful Norman MacCaig uses a "stoned crow" metaphor for this poem that I also love:


A writer
Norman MacCaig   (1910-1996)

Events got him in a corner
and gave him a bad time of it –
poverty, people, ill-health
battered at him from all sides.
So far from being silenced,
he wrote more poems than ever
and all of them different –
just as a stoned crow
invents new ways of flying
it had never thought of before.

No wonder now he sometimes
suddenly lurches, stalls, twirls sideways,
before continuing his effortless level flight
so high over the heads of people
their stones can’t reach him.

 

I enjoy the idea that criticism or bad luck can just make us more creative and determined to do our own thing regardless. Strangely cheering. 



                                               Bruce Monro  -  Field of Light 


I've been finding cheer in all sorts of places and with winter approaching we seek as much light as possible. 


You’ll Never Walk alone
Sally Givertz

How are you?

Well my body has let me down a couple of times lately
I’m sure there were faults on both sides
Maybe I wasn’t giving her enough attention
Did stuff I shouldn’t have done

Until she flat refused to carry me any further
Just lay down and refused all food or comfort

I was totally out of it for a while, I was steaming!
I flew off and wandered in strange lands
Didn’t know where I was half the time
Until I got scared and came back to her

We called for mediation
The doc gave us stern instructions
Told us to pull ourselves back together
So we made a pledge

She’ll do as I ask if I treat her right
So I give her more of my time
I take her to the gym
Lift the damn weights

She lets me lounge on the bed reading lyric poetry
In return I eat right and drink green tea -
Whatever it takes
We’re still an item her and me

Thanks for asking





The Day the Music Revived
Sally Givertz

Feeling like a glad Lazarus
Raised up by antibiotics

I started last night with Bach – what else?
And today the gold of Mozart 
Fell on me like a blessing

After four days of radio silence – 
all gone dark 
Locked in the box of my brain

I can switch on, re-tune
Receive and be glad



Finally I include this poem by Charlie Rossiter that actually uses the word bliss - well he even makes it into a verb. Such a sane way to approach the arrival of winter.  Celebrate and embrace it.  Enjoy! 



Blissing on the Season's First Snowfall
Charlie Rossiter










I light a morning candle
and lift my cup of espresso

the hiss of the old radiator
purrs to me like a friendly cat

I lift my cup of espresso
and wish a silent wish

blissing on the season's first snowfall
listening to the hiss of the old radiator

the kiss of morning espresso steam
rising to disappear in pearly air

outside, snow falls silent as a stalking cat
the candle flickers in columns of warm

air rising, I lift my cup of espresso
to the single silent wish, to always


and forever to this much love my life.