Sunday, December 30, 2007

This poem is by Pablo Neruda. I simply love it and read two or three times each year.

Ode To My Socks
Maru Mori brought me
a pair
of socks
knitted with her own
shepherd's hands,
two socks soft
as rabbits.
I slipped
my feet into them
as if
into
jewel cases
woven
with threads of
dusk
and sheeps wool.
Audacious socks,
my feet became
two woolen
fish,
two long sharks
of lapis blue
shot
with a golden thread.
Two mammoth blackbirds.
Two cannons,
thus honored
were
my feet
by
these
celestial
socks.
They were
so beautiful
that for the first time
my feet seemed
unacceptable to me,
two tired old
fire fighters
not worthy
of the woven
fire
of those luminous
socks.
Nonetheless,
I resisted
the strong temptation
to save them
the way schoolboys
bottle
fireflies,
the way scholars
hoard
sacred documents.
I resisted
the wild impulse
to place them
in a cage
of gold
and daily feed them
birdseed
and rosy melon flesh.
Like explorers
who in the forest
surrender a rare
and tender deer
to the spit
and eat it
with remorse,
I stuck out
my feet
and pulled on
the
handsome
socks,
and then my shoes.
So this is
the moral of my ode:
twice beautiful
is beauty
and what is good doubly
good
when it is a case of two
woolen socks
in wintertime.

Monday, October 08, 2007

My mother was born on the prairie of Alberta in 1916. One day in 1918, her parents discovered that she was missing from the house. They ran outside and found her standing amongst the horses in the corral. As she toddled around, the horses sidestepped her to avoid contact. Her father retrieved her, unharmed.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Yesterday and Friday mornings, we had RAIN. It's been a long time. I feel positively uplifted when it rains, like I'm in a place where I belong. Has to be living in rainy places for my first 11 years.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

With the help of my kids, I've finally figured out how to use my blog. Might be a dangerous thing.

Monday, September 10, 2007