Archive for the ‘dog’ category

Thanksgiving – Vegetarian/Carnivorous/Gratitudinous!

November 22, 2012

Thanksgiving – you can’t please everyone.

Or maybe you can.

Happy Thanksgiving.

These are old paintings, but they always feel right to me at Thanksgiving, sharing the festive meal, as I seem to, with vegetarians, vegans, the highly-carnivorous, the gluten-free, winedrinkers, tee-totalers, sweet-tooths, salt fanatics – but all (and I’m pretty sure I’m describing many here) extremely thankful.

I count myself among the thankful today. (How did I get so lucky as to be alive right here right now!  And with daughters, by the way, who do the cooking!)

I want to send thanks to all of you especially for the incredibly kind company you give me on the lonely journey of trying to write.  Pearl and the elephants send thanks too.

Pearl Wants to Help Me Jump-Start

November 21, 2012

Pearl Gets Thoughtful About Nanowrimo.

Pearl is eager for me to me to move more quickly on my Nanowrimo project. I really do have to be careful of her advice though.  She has an extremely poor understanding of U.S. copyright laws.

Doing What It Takes (Pearl Just Doesn’t “Get” Plagiarism)

(Thankfully, she has no copy of Shades of Grey.)

Nanowrimo (National Novel Writing Month) Off the Computer – Writing by hand…errr… (Pearl!)

November 20, 2012

It can be hard to write in a notebook, once you’ve gotten used to a computer.

But it really can be done if you put your mind to it,

and sink in your teeth.

************************************

I am reposting these pictures from a prior Nanowrimo when my dog Pearl was a bit younger and a lot more helpful.  

I am, in fact, writing my novel by paw (errr… hand.)   At the moment, however, I can hardly imagine transcribing it – first, because my vision is pretty bad, and secondly because the story is so slow!   Oddly, I know where it is supposed to go, but it does not want to go there very rapidly.  I worry this is also fall-out from writing poetry – poems- mine anyway – tend to get involved with the moment, memory, reflection – not so much with, you know, chase scenes.

And then there’s Pearl’s refusal to help out!  At seventeen and a half, she’s not very involved in chase scenes either.  Agh.

Tired! A (not) Novel Sensation!

November 1, 2012

Tired! But Ready To Write! (Maybe!)

I am very tired.

I have always thought of myself as a novelist (not poet!)

It is November 1.

All of these factors lead me to say I hope to substantially cut down on blogging over the next few weeks.

November is “National Novel Writing Month.”  (The original Nanowrimo, invented by Chris Baty – not napowrimo or nablopowrimo or any of the weird na-mo’s.)  The idea is that if you just have a deadline you can write a novel in a single month.

I have, in the past, continued blogging while also trying to write a one-month novel.  But this year, I know that I do not have the time or mental space  to devote attention to both a new novel and an ongoing blog.

So, I’m really going to try to discipline myself this month and not blog so much.

All that said, please do check in on this space every once in a while!  My discipline is extremely faulty.  I will terribly miss you!    Also, I’m still on the dVerse Poets Pub staff and will be doing an upcoming prompt this month (and probably participating in some.)

Before I sign off (and I’ll probably end up saying more about this before Tuesday) – please do VOTE!   Personally, I support President Obama:  because I am a woman who wants equal pay and the control of my own body, because I have a close relative who is about to go to Afghanistan as a serviceman, because I care about the environment, because I believe in science and public education, because I live in a City that is on the front lines of foreign policy bluster, because I live in a City that will need FEMA aid, because I am close to persons who deeply and romantically love others of the same sex.   There are a zillion other reasons, including jobs.  

Two very compelling endorsements of President Obama:  Larry Pressler, Republican South Dakota Congressman and Senator, Vietnam War Vet, here.  Also the Salt Lake City Tribune endorsement of Obama is very enlightening, called Too Many Mitts.   Read here.  

P.S. MANY THANKS TO ALL OF YOU WHO HAVE EXPRESSED CONCERN ABOUT THE WELL-BEING OF MYSELF AND MY FAMILY AND OTHER NEW YORKERS IN THE WAKE OF SANDY!  I still have not been home, I’m running out of clothes, but I am so very grateful for your support, and especially for the support of the online poetry community.  Thanks Thanks Thanks!  

 

“Here, Body” (Your Body Is Not Even Your Good Lab)

July 29, 2012

20111025-121306.jpg

Here, Body

The body is not your good dog.
It may sit, lie down, roll over,
but there’s a limit to its Rover
aspect. No spank
will keep it from
accident; no leash
train it to the right; no yank
make it heel
feelings.

You tell it what to want, but
it will vaunt
its fleshly, furry ways,
sneaking food when already fed;
taking up all the room on the bed;
whiffing what should not be sniffed;
its passion aimed at but a toy–
here, girl; here, boy–
that can never love it back.

It will decay
though you say stay. Still,
you will love it,
this not-good dog;
for even as you scold and cajole,
call,
and despair
of calling,
you will find yourself
cradling it;
you will find yourself
in its arms.

This is an older poem I am reposting for MagPie Tales, a writing blog hosted by Tess Kincaid. Tess posts a picture prompt each week; Tess’s prompt, an image by Zelko Nedic.  I am also posting for Open Link Night of Imaginary Garden With Real Toads, a great poetry blog.  My rather silly picture, prompted by Leonardo, is above.

*******************************************

20120729-103952.jpg
*********************************************

If you have time on this rainy Sunday, check out my books. Nose Dive is only 99 cents on Kindle – well, with ten times that much, which is its price in paper!

Children’s counting book 1 Mississippi -for lovers of rivers, light and pachyderms. Or, if you in the mood for something older, check out Going on Somewhere, poetry, or Nose Dive, a very fun novel for those who are somewhat discontent with their appearance but love musicals, cheese and downtown NYC.

“This Old Dog” Friday Flash 55

July 27, 2012

20120727-085933.jpg

This Old Dog

Old dog, blinding,
(nose to ground)
still slowly leads our way.

Forget about new tricks — let us just
keep up our old–speak,
roll over,
(only) play dead, and
always, always,
heal.

And when we face some harsher
heel, let us not need
to beg for mercy, but
lie down softly,
good girl, good boy.

.

*********************************************

It’s Friday – hurrah!  And my dog, Pearl , is 17 going on 18!  (I think – my memory’s not so good these days.)

I post the above 55 word poem for the wonderful indefatigable G-Man.  Go tell him!  (Especially since I’m late!)

A Pleasant Break – Still Lives with Dog and Elephant

June 24, 2012

20120624-100727.jpg

Sometimes, when tired or stressed, it’s nice to do something, make something, simple–say, a drawing of an elephant and dog, without even an attempt at particular meaning–hidden or obvious. Just elephant, dog, bowl of fruit, flowers. (I do worry a bit about the dog on that high stool, but am going to dispel those concerns for now.)

Dog, Turtle, Elephant (In Dry Scape) Kind of Day

May 30, 2012

20120530-095355.jpg

Encountering Old Friends When Looking For a Ukulele

May 18, 2012

20120518-113931.jpg

I was very proud today, when my visiting daughter was looking for our ukulele, to be able to direct her immediately to an old box that was never unpacked after our last move several years ago.

Amazingly enough when she pulled the box down from the top of a closet, we saw the word “ukulele” scribbled on one flap.

Even more amazing was the fact that the ukulele was actually IN the box.

And beneath the ukulele, on top of a three games of Monopoly and one of a Scrabble, was an old sketch pad that included a series of drawings and paintings I did for a yet unpublished children’s book.

I’d almost completely forgotten about the book.  It is about–you guessed it–a couple of elephants, a dog, and a yoga mouse.

They reunite above.

******************************************************

Join me at dVerse Poets Pub tomorrow where I am hosting the Poetics Prompt.  I’d give you a hint of the prompt, but I’m not completely sure yet!  Come to dVerse and check it out!!!!

Between Parent and Child and Dog – 10th Day of National Poetry Month

April 10, 2012

Drawing of Dog Before Stomach Wakes Her Up

At dawn, dog clicks across wood floor, claws like indeterminate tap shoes.

I can just about sleep on. These are neither Kelly’s straight-edged snaps nor the elegant slides of Astaire.  Near-blindness has muffled her paws, cloaking them with hesitancy.  (Sometimes, I think that she feels her way with her fur; its slightly matted, but still puffed, halo sensing oncoming walls. )

I turn over on the pretext of recalibrating her stomach’s inner clock; the truth is that I want to go back to my parents.

It is Easter weekend, but my father was the only son of a man named Robert.  Hence, returning from the dead takes an awfully lot out of him.  I’m not even sure how he has done it.

In fact, he has managed several times: once in the surf by my parents’ house (though the sea has always unnerved him); once in a passageway leading from their bedroom; now here, in their kitchen, just to the side of the stove.

My mother has yet to notice.  She was preoccupied even when younger, even when not deaf, her inner gaze fixed upon the Iowa landscape where she and the tall corn grew, just outside a cunningly small-minded town.

And, right this minute, stacked on top of that inherent obliviousness are dirty dishes.  She bends over the sink to wash each item thoroughly before placing it into the dishwasher.

Mom, I say, turning her from the sink.  Mom, pointing at him.

At last, she sees; but now, upset that it’s taken so long, he turns away, his lower lip stuck out in an ashen pout.

Dad, I say, almost touching the frozen plaid of his shirt.  Dad, I whisper,she’s listening now.  Really. Don’t do this to her, dad.  She loves you; she loves you best of all.

When I initially say those words, I picture my mother’s family–parents, siblings, forefathers–all those characters she has charted, defended, justified.

But as I repeat them–she loves you best of all.  You love her too, Dad,  best of all–I realize that they also apply to me; that even as I stand between my parents, negotiating, directing, I stand apart, outside that interlock of best love, a visitor to that realm.

A part of me knows that this is exactly as it should be.  But still I begin to breathe heavily.  Even in half sleep, I pant, as if I had been running up a steep hill, as if there were no possible level ground.

The dog clicks right up to the bed now, back and forth she clicks, back and forth.

Okay, sweetie, I say, pulling back the covers.  Okay, I say, stretching down my hand.

********************************************************************************

(The above is, I know, a rather odd piece.  I’m calling it a prose poem in honor of the 10th day of National Poetry Month.  I am also linking to the poetry site Imaginary Gardens With Real Toads and to Imperfect Prose.  Check them out! )