Work Product of Heavy Procrastinator (Long form Tic Tac Toe?) (Animation)

Posted December 14, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: animation, dog, iPad art

Tags: , , , , ,

I post the above to show what a really determined procrastinator (with an iPad 2) can get up to.

Also to clarify that I really am not much of a perfectionist.

The above is not one of my better animations.  I did the whole thing, as they say, a– backwards.  Meaning that I didn’t consider what I was doing at the beginning and had to go back and fill in frames without the help of the “ghost” images of my animation app.  This method doesn’t work well and yet managed to take up an inordinate amount of time, much of which was to be spent cleaning my apartment to make room for guests and tree.

Oh well, I still have room in the closets.  (For the clutter, not the tree. Or guests. Sheesh.)

(P.S. if you like silliness, check out NOSE DIVE, novel by Karin Gustafson and Jonathan Segal, for a higher level of it.)

Rewoven – Revising Blogged Poems– “Born Blind (circa 1927)”

Posted December 13, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: poetry, Uncategorized

Tags: , , , ,

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Here’s a revised version of the poem I wrote last Saturday for Victoria C. Slotto’s dVerse Poets prompt about quilting and the fabric of life.  I posted the poem then as a draft under the title “Against the Weave,” and although I received very kind comments, I felt certain that I had not conveyed the real kernel of the poem, which is perhaps sadder than the original draft.

This issue of drafts and re-drafts is one of the hard things about blogging poetry.  I, for one, get a strong urge to post quickly, especially when working with a publicized prompt.  (One never wants to be too far down on the link list!)

Don’t get me wrong, prompts are terrific.  They spark one out of one’s groove.  One problem of a premature posting for me, however, is that I find it mortifyingly difficult/embarrassing to revisit work once it’s gone out into the world.

I also worry that it’s a bit of a burden to followers to repost revised work.  (I’m not sure how many people are that interested in my creative process.)

All that said, I’m very thankful for the supportive community (dVerse Poets mainly, Jingle, and of course, my non-virtual friends!) who have given me the nerve to review, revise and repost.  (Ha!)

(Please note that the details of the poem are all imagined/changes come mainly in middle.  Also, sorry it’s so long.)

Born Blind (circa 1927)

The convulsive flicker
could just hook onto the gap
between white and black but
other spectral shifts–
cadmium to indigo to green–
could not be seen, nor shapes–
except those looming or not there–s0
he chose his shades by smell mainly: some washed
with the salt of fresh ham, others imbued
with a kind of must, a corner of the
barn where the planks rotted.
An occasional skein smelled
new mown while others
he could barely stand to sniff, their acrid
sharpness testifying to strident dyes, the warp
of fresh uniform–he remembered when his brothers
had gone off–even the diluted stink
of the slaughtering pen.

Then there were the webs
of cloth that he twisted before weaving;
their original patterns–the chintz or pink
geometry–converted on his cellar loom to
a knotted crisscross, stripes
that would hold up to years
of sun or shadow, feet and floor–and
those, when his quick hearing was sure
of isolation, he would cleave close–
donations mainly, they smelled
of the cleanliness of some other
farmhouse, run by some other
woman, girl, who wore a drape of skirt
over thighs unseen by all, and,
even in those rough crinkles
of sweat that refused to vacate the
joints of blouse or dress, carried softly tensile
traces–if only the ghost
of a fold–whose feel he craved
in the sameness of night/day,
beneath the clack-clack
of shuttle and loom.

He stood
like someone tied to a chair, chest
in seeming strain, hands
to sides, shirt,
like a boy’s, buttoned right up
to the chin, belt loops slightly
puckering.  He’s very bright, you know,
they whispered insistently.

Eyelids fluttered
beneath a pale high
forehead that seemed to squint
in compensation.  But meeting him,
one (turning from eyes,
forehead) was drawn to
those hands, with their large
chiseled knuckles.
Hard to realize from their
stiff dangle how very fast they could
weave.  For he got
good at it, a past-time
allowed a blind man
when sons were meant to plow
straight furrows.

(P.S. – don’t forget to check out NOSE DIVE, new novel by Karin Gustafson, illustrated by Jonathan Segal.  Thanks!)

 

I am also linking this piece to Imperfect Prose since it’s almost more a story than poem.   in the hush of the moon

Doesn’t Quite Feel Like Christmas Despite Sense of Extra Pounds- Gifts of Experience

Posted December 12, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Uncategorized, Vicissitudes of Life

Tags: , , ,
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Not Quite Feeling It Despite All This And More

The only thing that feels to me like a credible sign of the onslaught of Christmas is the certainty that I will soon be putting on some extra pounds.

The above remark is equally true if I substitute the words “holiday season.”

It just doesn’t feel very holiday-y.

Partly it’s the weather; partly it’s because the season is already so worn out.   (The decorations that felt premature on Halloween seem suddenly a bit old hat.)

But mainly, it’s the shopping (and more shopping).  Even if I could afford either mentally or financially to buy a bunch of presents, neither me nor mine have any place to put the stuff.  (Every once in a while, it would be nice to be able to jam shut a closet door.)

I also get these self-righteous feelings of denial on the part of the Planet.

So my current plan is to buy experiences as gifts.

(You thought I was going to say to make a gift donation to charity, didn’t you?  And such donations are great, but they don’t always satisfy the gift imperative either for the donor or for the non-recipient–that is, the person on whose so-called behalf you are sponsoring the turtle, orangutan, heifer or bee hive.)

By gift of experience–I mean, a gift of tickets to the theater, a movie or concert.  Or maybe a dinner out, museum admission, flight ticket; ski lift ticket, bowling alley entrance!

The idea is to give something (i) that doesn’t use up space, and (ii) actually benefits the local economy.   And, if you are lucky, you too can partake of the gift–i.e. eat out with your donee!    (Forget the extra pounds!)

PS – My exception to this newly-decided policy is the gift of books.  Particularly, my new comic novel, Nose Dive, by Karin Gustafson, illustrated (terrifically) by Jonathan Segal. Or alternatively, Going on Somewhere (poetry) or 1 Mississippi (children’s picture book).  Check the out!  (And many thanks!)

Mag 95- “Futility-Ha!” Mired in Schadenfreude, With Elephant

Posted December 11, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: elephants, iPad art, poetry, Uncategorized

Tags: , , , ,

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When I saw the photo prompt of Tess Kincaid of Magpie Tales this week–a wonderful painting/photo of a swimmer partly buried in sand, my brain filled instantly with heavy poems.  But in the midst of a sun-filled walk, silliness came to mind, and, true to nature, I opted for that:

Futility-Ha!

The fledgling surrealist, mired in schadenfreude, built his
scene with greyed hues and competitive passion–
Take that, Dali, with your dribble of melting clocks, your
self-referential facial hair; your stinking thrown arched cat–

He sniffed.
And you, de Chirico,
forget the portentous shadows–
he darkened
the outlines of empty rowboat– that grandiose
trapped geometry, I’ll
show
you Futility.

A moment bent towards the palette,
milking color.  What he sought was
the suggestive but mysterious, just a touch
of squeamish–wrinkles in caught
flesh: I’ll put my oar in now, ha ha!
(The tenor of that laugh was getting worrisome, thought the
studio assistant, scurrying for more turp.)

A person chest-swallowed in sand, a nearby boat, parked
boat, sober waiting
boat–  So much for Rimbaud–dab dab–(a muted blue
that should be steel filled the inner keel)– and it will be my passenger
who is sunk
and not the ship; the actor, the observer both, an
image to get stuck from
shore to shore-

To turn up the volume (as it were),
he bared the dim-pale back, turned shoulders
to swimmer’s rounds,
sculpted with cylindrical precision (but unclear
detail) a bathing cap.

Profundity, eh! he grinned, the assistant quietly
checking the studio door–sometimes he locked it
from the inside–
And you, Magritte!  How do you like
them apples?

P.S.  A few side notes: the creator of the true image (without elephant) is Mostafa Habibi, who, to the best of my knowledge, has no beef with Salvador Dali, Giorgio diChirico, Arthur Rimbaud, or Rene Magritte, all of whom I admire greatly.

P.P.S. – if you like silliness, please please please check out my new silly, but fun, teen novel, Nose Dive, by Karin Gustafson, illustrated (terrifically) by Jonathan Segal.   On Amazon.  When you’re there–take a look at Going on Somewhere (poetry) or 1 Mississippi (elephants).  Thanks much!

Blindness/Poetry/ Fabric of Lives – “Against the Weave”

Posted December 10, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: poetry, Uncategorized

Tags: , , , ,

20111210-065201.jpg

DVerse Poets Pub has a lovely prompt today, hosted by Victoria C. Slotto, broadly based on quilting, the fabric of one’s life, as a means of self-expression, art, beauty (as well as warmth).   My poem below is about a blind relative who actually made the rug depicted above.  (Please note that the poem itself is fictional!  Also that it’s a draft!   (NOTE – December 13–I’ve done a revised version of the poem below which may be found here.)

Against the weave

The convulsive flicker
could just hook onto the gap
between white and black but
other spectral shifts–
cadmium to indigo to green–
could not be seen, nor shapes–
except for looming or not there–so
he chose his shades by smell mainly: some washed
with the saltiness of fresh ham, others imbued with a slight
must, a corner of the
barn where the planks rotted.
An occasional skein smelled
new mown while another whispered of water
silken with suds.  Others
he could barely stand to sniff, their acrid
sharpness testifying to strong dyes, the warp
of a fresh uniform–he remembered
when his brothers had gotten
away–or even the diluted stink
of slaughtering pen.

There were colored yarns too and webs
of cloth that he twisted before weaving–
their original patterns–the chintz or pink
geometry–converted on his cellar loom to
a knotted crisscross, stripes
that would hold up to years
of sun or shadow, feet and floor.

His shirt was always buttoned
to the chin, belt loops puckered,
eyelids fluttering beneath a pale high
forehead that seemed, nonetheless, compressed
as if trying hard to focus all
that could not be seen.
But meeting him one would look
at the large knuckled hands (turning
from eyes, forehead).  Hard to realize from their
stiff dangle how fast they could
weave.  For he got
very good at it, one past-time
allowed a blind man
when sons were meant to plow
straight furrows.

(P.S. – I am also submitting this poem for Gooseberry’s poetry picnic.)

Art–With No Elephants–With Rainbows (Have Train Ride Will iPad 2)

Posted December 9, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: iPad art

Tags: , , , ,

20111209-100207.jpg

I had a train ride this evening, and my iPad 2, and without a poem to illustrate, well, had to come up with something different. The above is based on some photographs taken by my husband Jason Martin of his light sculptures. (His things are kind of cool, mine clunky but high-tech–ha!)

Friday Flash 55 – Talking About A Minor Accident

Posted December 9, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: iPad art, poetry, writing

Tags: , , , , ,

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Minor Accident (Much Spoken of)

“It might have been a good idea to do yoga BEFORE that glass of wine,” said the door jamb to the hand that had just banged it. At least that’s what the jamb implied.

“Your fault,” the hand replied sullenly–well, silently. (Mad.)

“Shush,” I tell them both. “We’re trying to do some yoga here.”

The above story (minus title and any ouches) is 55 words, so go tell it to the G-Man.

And have a great weekend.

(And check out NOSE DIVE.)

THANKS!

Expression of Emotion in Poetry (Muted) – Burned Soldier

Posted December 8, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: iPad art, poetry, Uncategorized, villanelle

Tags: , , , , , ,

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Victorio Ceretto-Slotto is hosting the dVerse Poets Pub “Meet the Bar” event today, and has posted an article about infusing poetry with emotion through use of particular detail and metaphor (among other things.)   She has very kindly included my poem “Far” in her article.  (I am also, at a later date, linking this poem to the Poetry Picnic.)

Here’s another older poem, a villanelle, that doesn’t really have the kind of particular detail Victoria writes of.  Still, I’m posting it because it deals, quite literally, with the muted  expression of emotion.  (My apologies that some readers may have seen this poem, or its companion villanelle.)

Burned Soldier (A Mask For Face)

He tried to smile but found that skin would balk;
a mask for face was not what he had planned.
Right action should give rise to right result,

saving the day as it called on God to halt
all burn and bite of bomb as if by wand;
he tried to smile but found that skin would balk.

When they talked of graft, he always thought of molt,
as if his flesh held feathers that could span
right action, then give rise to right result:

cheeks that were smooth but rough, but loose but taut—
it all had been so easy as a man.
He tried to smile but found that skin would balk.

Hate helped at times; to think it was their fault.
But how could “they” be numbered? Like grains of sand,
like actions that give rise to like result,

like eyes that fit in lids not white as salt.
This lead white face was not what he had planned.
He tried to smile but found that skin would balk;
right action should give rise to right result.

On a very different (i.e. humerous) note, check out my new silly teen novel, Nose Dive, by Karin Gustafson, illustrated (terrifically) by Jonathan Segal.   (When you’re there–take a look at Going on Somewhere, or 1 Mississippi.)  Sorry–but it’s that time of year.

Cheap Thrills? Cheap Anyway! And Worth Way More. Take a (NOSE) DIVE!

Posted December 7, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: , , , ,

NOSE DIVE

What is cheaper than a cup of coffee, a newspaper, a pack of gum in an airport, one-eighth of a restaurant glass of wine, 0.5% of the lowest gig oldest model iPhone, half an egg sandwich?

What will cost you way less than a subway ride, and give you a much pleasanter feel of the West Village (a/k/a Greenwich Village), NYC?

What will provide you with (highly censored) phone sex at a fraction of normal per minute rates?

The (virtual) smell of extremely fine cheese with no after-stink?

Lots of little side trips down Musical memory lane?

The answer is my new novel, NOSE DIVE, available now on Kindle for only 99 cents!

99 CENTS!!!!  You could get it in a Dollar Store (only you can’t.)   In fact, you need to go here!

Come on!  Take a chance!  99 CENTS!!!!

 

(P.S.  For those without a Kindle, print copies are available for $10.00–think 3 or 4 egg sandwiches.)

Open Link/Broken Link Poem – “Divorce”

Posted December 6, 2011 by ManicDdaily
Categories: iPad art, poetry, Uncategorized

Tags: , , , ,

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After a couple of weeks away from job, time is short, so here is a short, older poem from GOING ON SOMEWHERE (check it out!) posted for dVerse Poets Pub open link night.

Divorce

Starvation for love sands heart to sliver,
my daughter’s cheeks smell of her hours with the sitter:
too sweet.
Let me have a sip–