Thursday, February 28, 2013
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
love
The Buddha says everything is temporary and that our attachment to that which we do not own -- our desire for permanence when all is transient -- is the cause for our suffering. But we love, so sometimes the best we can do is fall into grief and try to be grateful for all the color and shape that loving, and loss, give to living.
Monday, February 25, 2013
hunger moon
The last full moon of February
stalks the fields; barbed wire casts a shadow.
Rising slowly, a beam moved toward the west
stealthily changing position
until now, in the small hours, across the snow
it advances on my pillow
to wake me, not rudely like the sun
but with the cocked gun of silence.
I am alone in a vast room
where a vain woman once slept.
The moon, in pale buckskins, crouches
on guard beside her bed.
Slowly the light wanes, the snow will melt
and all the fences thrum in the spring breeze
but not until that sleeper, trapped
in my body, turns and turns.
--Jane Cooper
Sunday, February 24, 2013
field notes
gray ceiling that has to be studied for evidence of variation
in the frozen mud, a honeycomb of tracks from men, beasts and machines -- a temporary fossil record of all that has recently preceeded me
swelling magnolia buds
cold air holding only the faintest scents of animal musk, a shovel-full of earth and somehow, the idea of clover
crows, crows, crows and killdeer
sap dripping into buckets
geese crowded into thin moving currents
cubist trees in ice
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Saturday, February 16, 2013
pancho and lefty
Livin on the road my friend, is gonna keep you free and clean
Now you wear your skin like iron
Your breath as hard as kerosene
Now you wear your skin like iron
Your breath as hard as kerosene
Sunday, February 10, 2013
the journey
... It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voices behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do --
determined to save
the only life you could save.
~ Mary Oliver, from The Journey
field notes
sparrow chip-hopping over brush in front of my feet
hollow knocking of downy woodpecker
rising shriek of pileated woodpecker
crows dropping their messages over bare fields
the soft rattle of the breeze as it moves through clinging beech and oak leaves
the various sounds of footsteps over slushy snow -- melting crackle ice -- frozen bare earth
the silences between
Thursday, February 7, 2013
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
economy and grace
From this interview:
This brings us to the difference between having an intimate knowledge of food versus fetishizing it?
Kurt: Yes. Is there a more fetishized food than bacon?
Tamar: Bacon is a great example. Bacon is a sort of magic food, a little like olives, or anchovies, in that if you have a little, anything else you have seems special. If you have a tiny bit of bacon around, simple pasta with butter and cheese becomes a wonderful version of carbonara. Or an egg, fried in [bacon] fat, seems rustic and hardy. If you have olives, you can make olive paste, which disguises the fact that other than that you only have toast. A couple of anchovies transform anything, from pasta, to salad, to stale bread. But I didn’t feel able, in my book, to say that bacon was magical for all those reasons, because instead of understanding bacon as deeply economical, and all it takes to transform a staple into a great, rustic meal, we [now] understand it as something that needs to go into bourbon and chocolate. Even into peanut butter! We manage to pervert the most useful things, and in so doing, lose the ability to really marshal them.
The most profound and artful cooking is easily the most humble and satisfying. I write these words as the aroma of bacon still hangs in the air and reminds me that simple abundances -- eggs from a co-worker, the last two potatoes, a bit of homemade bacon, and some toasted bread slathered in butter and a little something from a jar of summer preserved -- these are all that are needed to make a meal that will nourish and beautifully sustain the body, and the spirit, regardless of the time of day.
...cooking with economy and grace here.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
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