Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Psion Journal with Uncle Beast

20140420 Easter Sunday

            April 20, 2014 10:17  PM I am sitting in the trunk of Keith's car in the dark while Keith and Neil have a long long long long long conversation.  We are in ML's driveway after Easter din  I am glad that I finally discovered the map reading light in Keith's car.  I did pretty well writing in the dark, but my hips and back hurt and I had not idea what I was writing..  ner.

            10:23 I had to move into the car

            I was too sore.

            Monday, April 21, 2014, 4:32 PM I am out walking.  I did not get to walk yesterday.  I missed two days of walking the last 7-day. 

            Earlier, it was sunny.  Now it is overcast and breezy verging on windy.  Yahoo said it was 77 degrees, but it doesn't feel that warm to me.  But I am out in a T-shirt and relatively comfortable (temperature wise, that is.)  My rashes have worsened and are pretty itchy during the day, whereas before, they mainly bad at night.  My hands, feet and inner thighs are sollen, red, and covered with itchy weeping rashes. 

            I'm also tired, as usual, was up late last night.  Didn't get to bed until after midnight, was still awake at 12:30 and was awake many other times as well.  I also gained 6 pounds from last night's eating.

            I worked on cleaning up a 3D orchid shot in photoshop.  It was probably a waste of time.  And I worked on a poem that came from a recent story.  For class tomorrow.

            Tomorrow, I got my nose frozen.  And I have my poetry class.  It would be nice if I could wal extra to make up for the walking I didn't do yesterday.  But being tired is not helpful to that process.

            Today, Keith is over at his Mom's washing dishes and cleaning up after the party las night.  Tomorrow, he has Dr. Beeai and since I have poetry, we may not be able to eat together, it depends on much he's delayed in seeing her.

            As far as the story I am working on below I know I wrote a little bit more.  But I don't really remember exactly what I wrote.  And Iw as eager to get going on my walk before it got any later and so I didn't thing to reread what I'd written.  Most of it was a note to Mrs. Dietrich. 

            Tiny wanted to write a novella (or even a short story) for the 3rd person Omnicient, but neither of us have thought about what to write. 

            5:30 PM, I walked 57:30, almost an hour.  I should walk a few more minutes to make it over an hour so that I can count 15 minutes toward making up lost walking time.  Then cut veggies.

            Tuesday, April 22, 2014, 12:56 PM I am at Ferrara Dermatology clinic for my face-freezing.  I was stupid this morning in several common ways for me.  I got up late because I was up in the night and went back to bad after taking some Benadryl for itching so then ended up getting up late and instead of getting ready first, as I always tell myself I should, I wrote down and commented on two dreams I had, took pictures of the hellebores with the 3D camera, lying on my belly in the grass in my nightgown, and worked on my poem for tonight, which I also worked on when I was up earlier, before going back to bed.

            I sat on the couch with only other person in the waiting room, an African American woman named Roxanne.  We were just having a nice conversation and she was about to tell me why she was here for the first time when she got called in.  I must be hungry for female conversation because I was sad when she had to leave.  She started by telling me she was new here and asking me if Dr. Ferrara was good.  I said he was and showed him my "scars".

            I was thinking I would walk after this, in the park behind the City offices which are next next to the clinic (and then maybe check with the health-food store to see if they got a delivery.)  I don't have a lot of time and need to print copies of my poem and have dinner before class.  But after being frozen, I may not want to walk, I don't know.  I've already missed two days.

            I didn't braid my hair or shower, and washed very hastily.

            1:53 PM  It's over.  It hurt, but wasn't unbearable.  It still hurts and is all bubbled up.  He said that would happen. It's stinging and "burning."  I hope it settles down. 

            Now I am at the park.  In flower:  Veronica, shapherd's purse, chickweed.  Dandelions.  I saw my first dandelions yesterday, so I ought to do a dandelion Day diary.

            But I may not, unless I just call whatever i write today that. 

            I' not dressed warmly enough, the wind is very cold.

            Some kids are playing baseball.  I think they are on vacation this week.  No longer having a kid in public school makes me less aware of such things.  Buds opening. 

            A kid climbes over the fence to get a ball, heaves it back.  Stands kicking the fence rhythmically over and over. 

            Squirrels, mourning doves, a nicely tended gardeen with Hellebores, daffodils, hhyacinths in brilliant hot pink.  Tiny yards with tiny gardens, kids rding by on bikes, ffast, boys about nine or ten.  A few forsythias in bloom, jus5t a branch ort two, like at home.  I am walking along the perimeter fence looking into people's backyards.  The day lily leaces are up 6-8 inches.  in our backyard, they are, too.  The spruce that came down back there messed up the yard (poor spruce, I miss it.). 

            By the old schoolhouse, I got down on my hands and knees and photographed some of those "weeds" with the 3D camera.  I put it around my neck, but then stuckit back in bag becuase it interferes with the psion.  I am trying to come up with an idea for fiction that Tiny might write. 

            Wild basil in flower.  I photograph it, or attempt to.  Someone painted their fence silver and some oak leaves are silver, so I try to phtograph those.  I hear girls giggling.  This house I am passing has had an addtion and comes almost right up to the fence.  They have almost no yard.  Two houses down, there's a house with a (relatively) huge yard, campared to may of these houses. 

            This park is very small, so I will probably have to walk more later, but I'd like to get home before Keith does and clean up the mess I left in the kitchen.

            2:48  I walked half an hour and am stopping at the Health-food store.  I won't make it back before K.

            5:58 PM I am downtown on Farnworth.  I ran around like a chicken with my head cut off.  My other class at Ewald was 6-8 and I got confused and thought I had to be at class at 6 and I got there after skipping vcarious things and was half an hour early so I parked on Farnworth thinking I'd go in the Scarab club bt itls not open mondays and Tuesday and closes anyways at 5 PM so now I am walking alone on John R whoch is not my favorite thing to do but I need a walk.  So I am walking.  I wish I could the whole half hour but I have to get back in car and drive back to Woodward and Warren.  I could walk there from here, in fact I am almost at John R and Warren now, but of course, I do not want to leave my car on Farnsworth and walk back in the dark and anyway, my poems are in my car.  I'm like totally not happy with the poem.  For one thing, there's no turn and "discovery" and for another, there's an unearned epiphany and for a third (fourth), it's clunky.  Too new.  I really basically just started working on it yesterday and today, I was too busy to work on it much. 

            The other thing is that since I thought I was running late and would be going right into the building and then driving straight home, I didn't a coat, just my "sports jacket," and the wind is very cold,  I haven't braided my hair and it's blowing al around getting messy.

            Poop, I am back at my car, freezing, and have only walked 12 minutes.  I am sure as heck not going to walk a whole lot more.  But I'd like complete 15.  That would give me 46 for the day.  I was hoping for 60 since I missed yeatday (no Sunday, Easter, and another day.  I wanted to make up some or all of that time.

            I am almost back to the car and will probably mnake 16 minbutes.  Yup, and that good enough for now.  No made up time, but no los5t time, eitther.

            Wednesday, April 23, 2014, 4:48 PM I am out on my first walk of the day at R'dale and woops, I forgot to water and mark the newly planted pansies.  They also need to be mulched.  I should have bougt a second bag for R'dale.  (Spent $65 at the garden store on mulch, potting soil and pansies and Ranunculous [something that looks like a rose})   Judi in Alabama must be rich, she bought 49 bags of mulch and then 40 more.  How can people afford that?

            Anyway, I walking at R'dale on the small loop and then I am going to walk hime, hopefully after watering the newly planted pansies, and marking them and dumping the Afrucan violets.  I may also download the Psion and send it to myself, AK!  All that takes time!

            That terrible rash I have is fading a little, not sure why.  I stopped the hysdroxyzine and also the Niacin  I may add the Niacin back in later.

            I meet a man, maybe hispanic, tall and cute with a dog named Riley.  He points to where he lives.  Then I see a man who looks like he has an igauan but the I decide it is maybe a plastic or stuffed or toy dinosaur.  He is sitting corss-legged and the ground and looks as if he is shaking it fairly violently (or, if it's real, it's tryung hard to get away?)  He's on the driveway next Riley's house, behind the house, so I only get a fairly short look at him.  Then he's out of sight and I cannot satisfy my curiosity.

            A young woman with a black dog on a leash jogs by.  Now that it is nicer, I see more people out walking.

            There are very large bugs on the magnolias, but none are open.  Over near the Moran house, there a magnolia that is open or nearly open.

            Which reminds me that I also walted to stop at Balduck and check for Fawn Lilies.

            I think I will skip downloading the Psion today, as that will require turning two computers on andtwo off again.  And kieth worked late and is making dinner tonight and will not be stopping intil  I mean will not be starting until I start home from R'dale.  I'm sure he's hungry.

            5:19 And now I am headed home.  I did skip downloading the Psion, this one, the one and only one I have.  It makes me nervous to not download once I have somehig on it, not the journal, but the other stuff, for fear I will accidentally erase it--itls easy to do.  But I din't want to keep Keith waiting any longer than necessary. 

            I am feeling slightly queasy. 

            The small magnoia at the corner of Canyon and Rolandale is in flower, but only a few flowers near the top are open.  It's a white one. 

            I am going around Balduck the back way, hope I can still get in that way.  Yes.

            5:30  I found Fawn Lily leaves, but no flowers or even buds.  I guess Belle Isle, where we saw buds, is ahead of us.  And Clark has trout lilies. 

            And the chances of my ever seeing hepatica and bloodroot are dismally small.  We will see wilflowers at the Pinery, probably, but they will nbot be hepaticas, bloodroots, trout or fawn lilies etc.  They will maybe be columbines and hairy puccoons etc. 

            We could go to 7 Lakes state park, but it is fairly far and we would only catch what's in flower, if anything, on the weekend we go.  It's not close enough for ready repeat visits.  Same with the metroparks. It's a kind of a crap shoot.  I miss home.  Spring wildflower season is one of the times I most miss B'ville and Centraol NY.

            I just ran into Kathy (Cathy?).  She now lives in the old lady's house where the bicycle shop kids were living for a while.  She's paying $4375 for a 2-dormer upstair flat (very small) and access to the downstair bathroom and kitchen, BUT the bike shops sister wants to have an office there and Kathy thinks she's a bitch.  Kathy had been living in a small house on Warren.  She says she hates all blonds.  Kathy Kathy Kathy.  I tell generalizations are sually wrong.  At least about my beautiful daughters and grandson. I tell her she should trim the suckers closer to the tree.  I explain that the tree will heal better if she does.  I tell her I'm an old stumpy.  Keith doesn't mind if I thing he's either stupid or lazy or impatient.  I am still angry with him for butchering the forsythia. 

            Earlier today, I dug everything out from under the sink looking for the rooting compound which I thought I'd put there, but did not find it, so I need to buy more.  Start some forsythias for Rolandale. And I was going to use it on the fig cutting Fran Morano sent.

            Thursday, April 24, 2014, 4:58 PM I am out walking.  I just planted 6 pansies and a red rose Ranunculous in the back yard where the spruce used to be.  Keith said he wanted to rake there and do something with the area, but there are day lilies already growing, so it probbaly shouldn't be raked.  And we need to decide what to with the area.  I'd like to plant some everygreen shrubbery along the fence for privacy and put a garden in there.  But only if we can afford to buy sufficient Mulch because gardeningwithout Mulch is very labor instesive and I probably am not up to that any more unless I start sleeping. My health needs to improve before I can do much physical work in the yard or anywhere else.  Not sleeping also affects my motivation and enthusiasm.

            It's partly sunny and partly hazy clouds and cool.  I'm not quite dressed warm enoigh.  There's a poetry reading tonight at the Jazz cafe.  Not sure if we're going or not.  I'm so tired it's difficult to get motivated.  Keith is taking a nap.  He often takes naps.  He gets up very early.  But I was up OUT OF BED until 3:40 and awake until after 4:30 and did NOT get enough sleep.  I'd like to nap, too!

            But I'm out walking inastead.  Not racewalking or walking at all fast, but at least I'm walking.  Also, I finally list more than 2 pounds after the Easter glut.

            Actually, I am kind of staggering along in a stupor, not writing or even really thing, have dreaming, half asleep on my feet.

           

                        *            *            *            *  End Journal

            from last time, Taming Uncle Beast:

                        Now, sitting on Harmon's lap, she remembered Boris the Bug, how he's been kind, or seemed to have been kind, how he'd made her feel special.  He was someone who seemed to care about her who didn't have to care about her. She snuggled closer to Harmon, feeling safe and loved, and then thought, I still don't really know what was going on with Bugsy, and what about Harmon? I don't even know him.  And a few minutes ago, I was furious with him.  She leaned back and looked up at him, and he smiled beatifically down at her.  Neither Jake nor Trey seemed concerned any more.

            "Feeling better, Little Lady?" Harmon asked.  If someone else had said that to her, Tiny would have been pissed, but coming from him, it somehow seemed just right.

            "You are absolutely right.  I deserved that, every bit of it.  I deserved to be defrocked.  I did the wrong thing, more than once."

            "Then why do I feel so safe with you?" Tiny asked, feeling more confused than ever.

            *            *            *            *

            "Because I'm not a bad guy at heart.  I have a problem with alcohol.  It's like a monster riding me.  It lives inside me, and when I drink, I forget to be all that I can be otherwise.  The shadow slips out and swallows me."

            *            *            8            8 NEW Taning Uncle Beast

            "How about if I come with you?" Harmon asked.  Everyone stared at him.  "I mean all the way downriver."

            "Harmon," Jake said, looking distressed.  He didn't want to hurt Harmon's feelings.  "The tent's already overcrowded.""I'll get another tent."  It had occurred to Harmon that if Jake was succeeding at staying sober, maybe he could, too."

            "We don't have room for another tent.  The raft's too smalll" Jake said, considering implications for Tiny being on a raft with 3 testosterone poisoned men."

            Tiny was still sitting on Harmon's lap.  She jumped up and pointed at him again.  "You can't come!" she shouted, all the serenity gained from his comforting arms lost in a moment of fear.  £"You'll be a bad influence on Jake.!"

            Harmon stoof up, picked up the remaining beer, and chcuked it into the river, with Trey's shirt still on it.  "I'll buy you a new shirt, he said.  I'll buy a 5-man tent.  Jake can sleep next to Tiny to protect her.  I'll buy us some food.  I'll cook.  I'm a good cook."

            "I'm not strong enough to stop both of you from drinking.  I am only 14."  Tiny liked Harmon, but she wasn't sure she trusted him. 

            "I'll help," Trey said.  "It'll be fun!" Trey liked Harmon, Jake and Tiny.  He didn't know how he'd get back from the river's end, but getting there was sure to be an adventure.

            "Okay, okay, listen, we'll try it on a trial basis.  You were planning to come along part of the way anyway, right, as Far as Bon Matin?  When we get to Bon Matin, Tiny can decide if you're in or your out for the next leg.  But what about your commitment in Bon Matin?"

            "That won't take long," Harmon said.  "If you guys would join me for the services, I'll treat you to a huge all-you can eat brunch at Mon Cher Ami."

            "Does the congregation at Bon Matin know you've defrocked?" Tiny asked, wrinkling her brow at Harmon.

            "No, not exactly," Harmon admitted.

            "And you're going to tell them . . . ?" Jake asked.

            "Yes, course," Harmon answered.  He was planning on telling them, after the sermon.  After he got his money and left.  In an email.  Maybe. 

            "And when were you going to tell them?" Trey asked.  He didn't really care.  He thought it was kind of funny.  If Harmon could preach a good sermon before he was defrocked, he probably could still.  That's Trey thought.

            "I will tell the, Harmon finally said, after a long pause.  "I will tell before I finish the sermon."  He was thinking it might be the last thing he said, before he surrendered the pulpit.  He was hoping they would pay him the promised () first, because it would making buying the tent and the big brunch a little easier.  But, if they didn't, he's have to figure something else out.

            *            *            *            *

            Okay, Mrs Dietrich, I wrote that part in the 3rd person Omniscient.  Like I said, it would work better in fiction.  As it was, I had to pretend to know what other people might thinking, and I might be wrong.  In fiction, if I were making it up, I could have everything think whatever I decided they were thinking, if it served the story, as you always say.  I may write some fiction, but I've gotten another assignment from you that seems even stupider than the third person omniscient. 

            You want me to write in the second person, with the second person being the protagonist.  I think tat would work better in a letter (if the second person was the person to whom you were addressing the letter), or in a poem.  And then in the second person omniscient.  Is that just for torture?  I can already see it won't work.  Unless the second person is God.

            It seems to me that if I can see it doesn't work, I shouldn't have to do it at all.  Having me do it would be meaningful only if I leanred something from it.  But here goes.  I'm going to the bite the bullet and try, 'cause Iw ant you to give me a good grade.  I like your suggestion that if I can do all the work, you'll put me in a special class where I can work at my own speed.  I guess sitting in on the regular gifted and talented class once a week would be okay, so I can hear what everyone else is doing and  maintain my friendships.  I hope no one is jealous.  I know you said they wouldn't be when you told them how much extra work I was doing, but I don't want them to think I'm a brown nose.  (EEEyyyooo!!)

            *            *            *            *

            You are excited to be leaving the raft with Jake, Trey and Harmon.  Harmon knows where there's a Dick's Sporting Goods store.  He's going to buy a tent.  Jake's got Amigo in his special working harness and is pretending to be blind so he doesn't have to leave him behind.  He's a pretty good actor most of the time, but you can't help laughing sometimes, when he slips up. 

            No one at Dick's seems to care.  But there are no 5-man tents.  There are 4-man tents and family tents.  Harmon leaves his driver's license with the clerk and borrows a tape measure and you walk back to the docks where you left the raft.  A bunch of kids are playing on it and Jake shoos them away.  Luckily, he'd locked the storage cabinets.  He tells them that if they're back on the raft when they return, he sick "Killer" on them and Amigo obligingly growls low in his throat.  His ruff goes up and he crouches as if to spring.  The kids scream and run off.

            You're just thinking that Jake was unnecessarily mean, when you spot a tear in the tent. 

            "We'd be in trouble," Jake says, "If one of them fell off and drowned or got hurt playing on the raft.  And we'd be in trouble, too, if we weren't getting a new tent.

            Jake and Harmon measure the spot where the tent needs to go and record the measurements on a scrap of paper you find blowing around above the docks.

            You all walk back to Dick's and Harmon hands back the tape measure and retrieves his license.  You happen to be standing beside him staring off into space, when something catches your eye.  Harmon's license.  It says Joseph Bellows, and the guy on it does not look much like Harmon.  He's big and hairy, like Harmon, but everything else about him looks different.  He's got the wrong eyebrows and squinty eyes.  You file that note away for further thought and find yourself glad that Harmon looks like Harmon and not like Joseph Bellows, whoever he is.

            You finally settle on a tent that's almost too big for the available space, and then you get another two sleeping bags, very lightweight, a patch kit and two shirts for Trey.  One is a plain baby blue and matches his eyes (?) and the other has a picture of an Osprey with a fish.  Harmon pays for everything.  You wonder if the credit card is his own.  But you don't ask.

            Back at the raft, the kids are spraying shaving cream all over everything.  They take off running when they see you coming and Jake groans a huge groan that turns to a roar.    You're afraid he's thinking, "I need a drink." 

            But Harmon drags the raft up on shore.  One the rest of you realize what he's doing, you pitch in.  It's still difficult. 

            There's a boat cleaning station attached to Marina and Harmon talks a couple men into helping.  The position the raft over the sewer and hose it down.  Then you and Trey and Amigo stay with the raft while Harmon and Jake take the sleeping bags to the laundromat.

            After they leave, you worry that they may have gone to a bar and consider sending Trey after them.  But the docks aren't a good place for girl alone some days, and this seems like one of them. 

            When the kids come back, you, Trey and Amigo chase them.  They split up, and you go back to the raft.  A little while later, a stone hits you on the side of the head.  You have a goose egg, and it hurts.  Tears of frustration squeeze from your eyes and you wipe them on the hem of your T-shirt.

            When Harmon and Jake come back, they are carrying not only clean sleeping bags, and tent, but also a big bag of tacos, nachos  and soda.  No beer, and neither of them stink. 

            You cast off and are glad to be back onto the river.  You pitch into the tacos as if you haven't eaten in weeks.  After eating, you set up the new tent and lay out your bags.  Jake points to the places.  "Tiny, Killer, me, Trey, Harmon," He says.

            You wonder why he's put Harmon at the opposite end of the tent.  Maybe for protection.  But if that's why, why you on the other outside edge? You  wouldn't be as good protection as Jake.

            *            *            *            *

            It is interesting, I think, the way each different POV produces a different feel.  It's interesting, but I still think it's inappropriate for nonfiction memoir.  I hope I did enough of it to satisfy you.  You didn't really say how much I had to do.  Now the even harder part, I think, second person omniscient.

            I keep thinking about the fiction assignment you gave, to write what you know  That's what I am doing with the nonfiction.  All my fiction ideas have nothing to do with what I know, really.  But what about science fiction, fantasy and horror?  That stuff is all made up.  I mean take Ann McCaffrey for example.  DragonSong.  I love that book.  But it takes place in a whole other made-up world.  She couldn't "know" from experience about thread and red suns and living in a cave community.

            And how about a post-apocalyptic dystopian world?  There are hints of that in the world already, but I don't have much first-hand knowledge of them.  Like Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower. That vision is different than Margaret Atwood's Trilogy, which is different from ().  ((and . . ?))  I haven't finished Parable of the Sower yet.  I am reading it between chapters of Huckleberry Finn.  I know you said not to do that, and I am sort of sorry I am disobeying, but if I can keep my own life story separate from my Uncle's (when it is separate and my parent's and all the books I read and the stories of my friends and Aphrodite and Mars and all the stories of animals we learn about in science and the parenchama and schlerenchyma and the edible wild foods in the survival class and the Native Amnerica stories at the corn Festivals, it seems to me I ought to be able to differentiate and keep straight the parable of the sowers and Huckleberry Finn.

            I think I will try a post-apocalyptic story of my own, since my memoir is following Huckleberry Finn.

            By the way, I was madly writing on your mini iPad and Harmon asked what I was doing and I told him I was writing my Memoir, which was true, and he said, "You are too young to write a memoir" so I told him it was a summer assignment for my English class and he laughed.  He said, "whatever happened to the obligatory assignment at the beginning of school, 'what happened during my summer vacation.'"  And I said, "That's the assignment I'm doing now, writing about what happened on my summer vacation.  This is it."  He said that was the name of a book by Alan Watts and laughed.  "What is the name of the book?"  "This is it."  He said, they used to give you the summers off and make you do it at the beginning of the year, in September, and I told him most of the kids would be doing that, but if I get all the work done ahead, I can go ahead maybe even a whole grade, and he said, why would you want to do that?  I couldn't give him an answer right away, and he said, don't wish your life away, and I said, my Great great grandmother, Ina, used to say that.

            That reminded of her.  She died a long time ago, but I have a picture of me sitting on her lap as a toddler.  I look very skeptical.  It's weird that I can remember that.

            I look up the book Harmon mentioned, This is It, by Alan Watts.  It's a free download, so I download it onto your mini iPad to look at between Huckleberry Finn and The Parable of the Sower.  Then, I google Joseph Bellows.  I find a lot of hits for an art gallery in La Jolla California, and then, when I'm about to give up, I find a small obituary for a soldier who died a few month ago in Iraq, and the services were done by a minister named Harmony (Qrst?).  Hmmm.  If Harmon was the one who sent the man effects to his family . . . 

            I joined the story site you told me about, called Cowbird, as you know, since I've been posting my stories like you told me to, and people were posting about their earliest memories.  I didn't think of that one, it almost seems impossible I could remember it.  ((Kids jumping the fence over and over to retrieve balls.  a girl runs in the road after a ball.))  I was going to post this memory.  I am just learning to talk.  I can't be more that 18 months or two years old, at the most.  I say "gaw" for girl.  My mother enunciates "girl" over and over.  I say "gaw" to myself, I say, "girl"  I practice.  I do it in private when I think she can't hear me.  But to her, I always say "gaw."  Then I forget and say "girl" and she is so excited.  I am disappointed that I didn't succeed in keeping my little secret longer.

            I don't think I like what that says about me, that I am sneaky.  I don't want to be sneaky.  But of course, I was sneaky, too, when I ran away to go with Jake.  (I keep almost writing Beast, and have to stop myself and write Jake.)

            OK, so a post apocalyptic piece of fiction.  I feel as if write that I will be stealing or borrowing ideas from all the authors I've been reading.  I'm not as smart or well-educated as Margaret Atwood.  I read online though that she calls her novles dystopian romances, which, considering the lierary view of romances, strikes me as strange.  It's a goood thing, though, if she succeeds at elevating the status of romances for those of us who like love.  I'm suddenly more interested in romance than I was.

            I was thinking about the wild dogs in Parable of the Sower.  I want to inlcude them in my own story.  Not to Copy Octavia Butler.  And Not to copy, Tom Brown, either.  I read about wild dogs in one of his books.  But a couple years ago, I wrote a story about wild dogs.  I hadn't yet read Parable of the Sower of Tom Brown.  I had read a story about a kid getting mauled by wild dogs.  I can show you the store.  It is actually ahnd-written in pencil in y notebook, and it's kind of a dumb story because the dogs win.  They kill everybody.  They make these huge packs and break through windows and kill people and eat them. 

            Of course people have guns.  Some people do.  I know lots of people who don't, though.

            I was pretty naive when I wrote the story, and of course, I am probably still naive.  Pa says I am, so does Jake.  I feel like I'm not as naive as I was, but I don't know.  Anyway, I want wild dogs.  I guess I need to decide on a likely apocalypse.  There are so many of them.  Republicans, big business, people too stupid to believe in global warming, global warming, ice caps melting, new diseases, the fools who believe that we're supposed to have the end of the world and so they want to make it happen.  Ozone and holes in the atmosphere.  Nuclear winter, war, rampant terrorists, big greed (I know, I'm repeating myself, I can't help it.  I'm resentful toward big business and rich people. [án you tell?]) I guess rather than trying to determine which scenario or scenarios are the most likely (I saw some movie about a plague caused by something that jumped from pigs to humans but I can't think of the name of it; I carefully put it out of my mind), I should maybe instead choose a scenario that would be fun and interesting for me to think and write about.  And then there's the Hunger Games, which I am afarid to read after reading about them.  Should I read them?  If thinking and writing about Global catastrophe could be called fun.  What would be interesting for me would be some situation that is extremely challenging but where there is hope for humanity.  Margaret Atwood succeeds at that, I think.  In other words, no comiet crashing into the earth and destroying all of humanity.  I am not saying that can't happen, I just don't want to write about that ot a nuclear winter, if we all die.  In my apaocalyse, people survive.  Good people who are challenged to remain good or become good again after failing, bad people, ordinary people.  Really, it is the people, pitted against the difficult challenges and each other that makes the story worth writing and maybe worth reading.

            A long time ago, when I was like in 5th grade, I think, I read one of my Mom's books, I think it was calledSpiritwalker.  We are in wild section of the river here, and don't have any wi-fi, so I can't look it up, (or send you my work), but I will try to find out more later if it seems relevant.  The point is, that story was post apocalyptic.  What happened, if I remember right, is that global warming caused the oceans to rise so precipitously that most of the major population and government centers (I may not be getting quite right because it was a long time ago and I've read so many other books since then) were destroyed along with infrastructure, electricity, phones (I think the book may have been written before cell phones) that civilization essentially collapsed.  Looting robbing, shooting for food and all that broke out.  The only people who were surviving were Native Americans, survivalists, and other people with survival skills.  A group of people were wandering out West somewhere.  I don't remember what happened because the book got all spiritual, thus the name, Spirit walker.  I'm having an urge to read it again though.  (Later, I look online for it and find a lot of books with that title.  I am bummed out that I can't determine which Is the one I read, and will try later to find it at home or in the library or maybe I will buy ALL the books with that title.  Yeah, right, that's almost gonna happen.)

            What I do NOT want to write about is something like the book, The Death of Grass.  Jake told me about it, he'd gotten it from someone else and I downloaded on your mini iPad and was reading it between some of the other books, but it was so awful I stopped reading it.  The protagonist were murdering people in cold blood.  The "good guys" aren't supposed to be that bad.  They can do bad things, but not that bad.  I'm talking about in my world, the world I create, if I succeed in creating on.

            I know, I know, the good guys can't be all good, that have to be human, and the bad guys can't be all bad, they have to have some redeeming value.  Although I am not sure that some crimes leave any redeeming value. 

            I guess I am saying, among other things, that my story must have at least a partly happy ending, or hope for the future or something.  Some redeeming value.  Life doesn't have a happy ending, since we all die, but it can have happy middles.  Like right now, gliding down the river in the sunshine with a breeze playing over the water keeping us cool and keeping the bugs away.  Jake is steering, Trey is fishing, Harmon is napping I, I am cogitating. 

            Sometimes, I find your assignments easy and sometimes difficult.  These two are difficult, but maybe because I was trying to combine them.  That is, make the second person Omniscient part of the fiction piece.  But in some ways, good fiction more difficult than memoir.  For Memoir, I don't have to dream up a whole story, I just have to tell what's happening.  That has it's difficulties, trying to decide what to put in and what to leave out.  Your word and page suggestions are helpful.  They remind me not to ramble on endlessly about lying on my belly with my face close to the water watching the fish that swim out from under the raft or lying on my back watching the birds.  Right now, seven vultures are circling overhead.  Mr Ony says they are turkey vultures.  Most everyone I know calls them buzzards, but they aren't actually buzzards.  I looked it up, and buzzards are something else. ((put in more info here)). 

            I am also fascinated by the flotsam and jetsam.  Some of the things that float by, or float along with us, since we're riding with the current, are truly amazing.  Whole dead aniamls, (), all kinds of trash, bottles with notes in them.  I opened two of them,  read them recorked them, and sent them off again.  They were both from kids, one named Alex and one named Alicia.  Both As, maybe the Bs will come tomorrow.  They had cute crayon drawings of themselves.  But I said I wasn't' going to go on about it and here I am doing just that! 

            Tonight, Harmon is supposed to preach.  I'm waiting to see what he decides to do.

            So, yeah, I may have to delete half of what I wrote, but you say that's normal.  It seems sort of sad to put all that thought and effort into writing something coherent and then have to delete it.

            I was just scrolling through my notes above to see if I had mentioned the names and couldn't find it, but I may have missed it.  Or, I may have thought it and forgotten to write it down.  I was thinking of the two main characters being Leigh (me, a more sophisticated version of Lee (I am named after Robert E. Lee), and Troy, for Trey.  I'm imagining a romance of course, even though no romance is actually happening between Trey and me.

            I am going to start my fiction piece from where I am now and then diverge.  Sounds like a plan, since I have no other. 

            *

            You watch vultures circling, and you count them.  Seven.  You've always thought of seven as a lucky number, but somehow, seven vultures doesn't seem lucky today.  Nothing seems lucky any more, except maybe hooking up with Troy.  Not the the kind of hooking up kids talked about in seventh grade.  Not yet, anyway.  You and Troy are more of a team to escape the chaos thaan anything else.

            "Is something dead?" Troy asks.  "Or is it just thermals?"  He sounds worried and you get a flash from the tone of his voice of dead people.  The chaos.

            Something is dead, though, you can smell it. 

            Troy smells it, too.  He wrinkles his face.  On most people, that expression would make them look stupid or ugly, but on Troy, it's cute.

            Stop it! you tell yourself.  Pay attention; this is no time for mooning." Then you laugh aloud thinking of two different meaning of mooning, neither which has much to do with the moon.  Then, you stifle the laugh.  Troy is looking at you.  He's thinking you are really weird to be laughing when something or someone is very dead nearby.

            The smell sticks in your throat.  Troy's too, by the look of him.  Troy is thinking, Let's get the fuck out of here! but where to?  That's the problem.

            And then you see them.  You can tell by the color of their skin that they are dead.  Their skin is kind blue-grey and translucent.  And then one of them moves and you start to scream, but clap a hand over your mouth. 

            Troy spots it too, and you both sit with paddles posed ready to dig in and take flight.  You stare.  A woman's body, blue and sickly looking, covered with blood, with one a leg hacked off and missing is rising slowly as if being lifted by an invisible crane.  Then it thumps back down and there is a kid, wild eyed and filthy.  She has blood smeared on her face and clothes.

            As if by mutual consent, you and Troy paddle the canoe up to the dock, which is also covered with blood.  The kid begins to run, staggering, tripping, falling.  Troy runs after her, tackles her.  She screams and claws at him. He picks her up and carries her to the canoe.

            "It's okay," you say.  "We aren't going to hurt you.  You're hoping Troy is as good as you want him to be, and isn't planning to hurt the kid.

            He isn't.

            *            *            *            *

            OK, Mrs. D!  You may have to give me a bad grade.  I can't do this omniscient stuff.  Even in fiction, I prefer (I've decided) one person's POV.  I don't see how Leigh could know what Troy is thinking.  God could, but I'm not God. 

            *            *            *            *

            Hi This is God speaking.  (Hoboy!)  I will tell you what everyone is thinking.  Troy and Leigh are both innocents at this point.  They think they can survive without doing the horrible things others are doing.  Troy does not intend to hurt the girl.  What he might do on the verge of true starvation, we don't know yet.

            *           

            You've told the girl it's okay, but of course, it's not OK.  The woman with her leg hacked off is probably--was probably-- this girl's mother.  And she's dead.  The girl is probably an orphan now.

            She struggles and thrashes and you hold her down on the floor of the canoe.  "We're not going to hurt you," you repeat, over and over.  The girl is pretty strong.  "Sit still," you tell her, "before the Amokkers come back.  Do you want them to eat you, too?"

            "We're trying to help you," Troy says, soothingly.  He means it.  The girl lets go of her terror or swallows it and goes limp in your arms. 

            *            *            *            *

            I hope that that is enough of a fairly failed attempt at writing in the second person present omniscient.  GAK!  Please do make me do that again.  I know what you're going to say, that it's a teaching moment.  I hate to brag, but I think I'm smart enough to figure out certain things without having to do them.  Like sticking my hand in the fire or shooting up heroine.  Neither would be good. And the second person present omniscient is downright succulent.  And I do not mean juicy in a good way.  OK, 'nuf said.

            I get your point thought, that there options, and each one produces a different result.  And it's probably good to consider the options before choosing one.  But the range of possibilities that work well seem fairly limited to me.

            I just reread what I wrote and got rid of a couple verys and stuff  and it occurred to me that I could write the whole story in the 2nd person as long as it wasn't the second person omniscient.  But I'm not sure what the benefit or value doing so would be.  It has an interesting feel to it, a resonance.  But I'm not sure if I like it or not.  I'm almost tempted to write some more that way as a sort of challenge and experiment--which is probably what you had in mind all along.  Exploration.  Okay, I take back all the bad things I said earlier.

            *

            You've been heading downriver, because the paddling is easier.  You settle the girl in the center of the canoe where she sits with her head on her knees crying.  You let her cry.

            After a while, Troy says, "What's your name?"  He's talking to the girl, obviously.  A few days ago, he didn't know my name, either.

            The girl stops crying lifts her head.  "Alys," she say, "A-L-Y-S, but is sounds like Alice in Alice in wonderland."

            "This ain't no wonderland," Troy says.  Troy is in the front of the canoe, supplying the power.  I'm in the back, paddling and steering.

            Alys asks us our names and we tell her.  Troy and Leah. 

            You've decided to call yourself Leah instead of Leigh.  Troy just smiles.

            *

            OK, Mrs. Dietrich.  I've had it with the second person.  I keep forgetting.  I know.  If this ever turns into a real story, I need ONE POV, probably first person, and One time preior, except for flashbacks etc.  I think, like my journal/memoir, 1st person present for ongoing action and 1st person past for past action and anything else is told by other characters.  In their first person voice, either in immediate conversation, first person present, or in stories told about the past.  OR Leah could relate a story told to her in her voice, as long as she says something like . . .

            *

            We find a sheltered spot under some overhanging trees.  A breeze off the river kept the bugs down.  We didn't have much food.  I'd collected some groundnuts and hog peanuts earlier, despite the difficulty of digging them, and I washed them in the river and divided them between the three of us.

            Alys stares at them and then at us.

            "It's food, I said.  And it isn't bad, try it."  Troy crunched his down and I did the same.  Alys takes a tentative tiny nibble, and then a bigger one and then stuffed them all in her mouth, looking anxiously around as if she expected someone to take them.  Se tried to chew, but there was too many.  I thought she would choke.

            "Spit them out," I say, as forcefully as I can.  "No one is going to take them.  Eat one at a time." 

            She bends her head over her hand and spit out a couple.  Sge chewed with her mouth still too full, swallowed, and immediately ate the others.

            "You'll get more nutrition from them if you chew them better," I said.  She looked at me like I had three heads. 

            "I want my mother." she said, sounding defiant and a little petulant.

            We stare at her.  Her mother was not only very dead, but also partly eaten.  But I had no idea what to say to her and neither, apparently, did Troy. 

            "The Amokkers got her," she says, and starts crying.  They got us all, except me.  I hid."

            Apparently, there was a depression in the ground and when the Amokkers attacked, Alys's mother had thrown Alys into the depression and laid on top of her, whispering to her to be still and silent no matter what.  Alys knew what to expect.  She'd seen the work of Amokkers before.  She did as she was told, even when she felt her mother's body go limp, even when she felt them sawing away one of her legs.

            She told us this in fits and starts between tears and long silences.  TRoy and I were patient, because we were well-hidden and didn't know where were were going anyway.

            AMOK is a drug.  It's an acronym for Amylase Mertensia Oligartin Keratinylaaise.  (?)  People who take it get high from violence, particularly murder and cannibalism.  It's known for giving a contact high, so that even people who have not taken the drug can get caught up in the murderous fever, even if they are the targets for murder. 

            I wonder if the contact high could affect Alys and if so, for how long.  Even without the contact high, anyone could be dangerous, including little kids.  Desperate times call for desperate measures, and kids will rob and kill for food.  Even without the drugs, people have resorted to cannibalism since the Chaos.  They all should have taken Mr. Oby's Survival 101 and 102.  Then, they would know that there is food available that doesn't require murder.  Of course, it can very difficult, as Troy and I learned the hard way. 

            For one thing, we don't have any of our books with us.  My books.  Troy's not from my school and didn't take survival 101 and 102.  But his father was a hunter, trapper and tracker.  I probably shouldn't say was.  Troy doesn't know what happened to him.  He could still be alive. 

            Troy told us how his father had left him in a tree stand.  He said he'd be back in couple hours, but he never came back.  Troy had waited all night and all day, ad when he went home, his house was a smoking ruins and there was no sign of any of his family.  No bones, either, in the ashes and ruins.  He is still smudged with ash and charcoal and has burns on his skin, probably from hunting for them.

            We, all three of us desperately need baths.


Saturday, April 19, 2014

Psion Journal 20140417 Brian Powers Pier Park VM with Taming Uncle Beast and dream

20140417  Brian Powers Pier Park VM

            Thursday, April 17, 20141:05 PM I am at Brian Powers' waiting room.  I was about 4 minutes late getting here.  I was worried, but he is in with another client.

            I actually had 2 delays that' weren't my fault, as well as a few that were.  The other client comes out and then BP heads for the bathroom.

            I've started yet another BRAND NEW story, what I need to do is work on the old ones.  I have so many stories in progress it's ridiculous!

            I was in bed 12 hours today (last night and this morning.)  That seems excessive, but the night before, I was in bed less than 4 hours.  And being in bed, for me, is not synonymous with sleeping.  My itchiness the past two days was worse than usual.  At night, I mean.

            I did not bring anything new to share with BP

            We talked a long time.  He kept me late!

            2:23 PM 4/17 I am at Pier Park.  I intend to walk for a half hour, then go home, unload the dishwasher, walk to Village Market.  I brought a coat and hat but left them in the car.  AM wearing a "sports jacket" and a thin blouse and it's windy and cool.  I wonder if I should go back for more clothes.

            I wonder if I should drive over to R'dale and water the seedlings, since Keith neglected to do that and it could kill them.

            The sun is warm, the breeze cold.  I saw daffodils on the way over, on a south slope. 

            If I were to drive to R'dale, should I do it before of after I go to Village?  K has Scroggin today, which is a good thing since I'm so far behind and would like to accomplish something before he gets home like unload the dishwasher, etc. 

            Signs of spring: the adirondack chairs are out on the mini dock/deck.

            My hair is down.  It is very long and wind may tangle it.   I keep thinking I should cut it.

            4:20 PM I am walking to VM.  It is very warm, even warmer than earlier.  I am wearing a lightweight fleece shirt over a laightweight blouse (very light summer blouse) and am still hot.  It is breezy.  The kids next door are locked out of their house and when I asked them if they needed anything, they said "keys".  I can't help them with that.   Not today.  Deeana could give us a key and we could let the kids in if they got locked out.

            I did not go to R'dale yet and am hoping I will have time to do so before it gets too late.

            A little girl is kneeling on her front porch staring down the throat of any Easter Lily.

            Friday April 18, 2014, 3:48 PM I am riding in my own car and Keith is driving.  :-(  We are going to ake a walk at Elmwood Cemetery or Blisle.  Belle Isle, and probably Blisle because Elmwood will probably be closed by the time we get there.

            I had a strange dream ealy this monring, it was long and cpmplex and I am not sire I can remember it.  Or all of it.

            I write down the drem below (the parts i remember.  Elmwood is closed and we're on Blisle now.

            We walked at Blisle.  I was feeling drugged and tired and am blaming the hydroxyzine

            Saturday, April 19, 2014, 2:26 PM.  I am on my way to VM to get stuff for tonight's dinner and for tomorrow's Easter dinner.  I am feeling really angry, primarily at myself for being stupid yet again. 

            I wanted to walk over to Rolandale but I started working on a poem and picure in Photoshop, just as I was about to leave and wasted all my avaialble time and now am running late for the next ting and can't go to R'dale.  ;-{

            We will be taking ML to a senior assisted living place today.  We have to leave at 3 and it's 2:30 now and I have to go to the store and soetime, I have to walk.  This taking her around is important, more important than my posting to facebook.  I eman cowbird. 

            Which is what I was going (for the first time in while, although I have many stories to post, I never have time or energy.  And then there are all those stories you have to read in order to sustain an audience.  It's a ton of work.

            So I am walking down the sidewalk as fast as I can reasonably walk in order to grab things we need.

            Yesterday morning, I awoke wish a poison-ivy-like rash on mhands and yesterday night, it had spread to my feet and ankles and this morning my hands, wrists, feet, ankles and inner thoighs were involved.

            I am worried and afraid, and I showed Keith, but he showed a total lack of concern.  I am afaid I may be allergic to hydroxyzine or something else and I could into anaphylactic shock and die, but does he care.  No.  Not that I told him that.  He wasn't really interested.

            On the way back I probably won't be able tow rite because I will be carrying too much shit.

            I never got to look up spiders that mimic flowers.  I wonder if there is such a thing (from my dream).

            2:49 Well, how do you like that.  We crammed everything in the backpack!  Of course, I did not get everything on my main list, only those things we most needed in the next two days. 

            Kristina is going to be singing Pamina in the Magic flute.  Next November, hope we get to go to Grand Rapids and see her perform.  I am so excited for her.  YAY!  Well, I will have 13 of my required walking for the done when I get home and will do the rest, I guess, when K is cooking spaghetti.

            Paul will not be coming to Easter dinner.

            I wonder why.

            It's possible that it may be the last holiday meal at ML's.  That is, if she goes into assisted living.

            Since shopping is more difficult than walking for me, at least I will have a break between seesions.  I don't count the shopping time, but it is exercise.  I saw Keith coming, but he doesn't look like himself.  He's dressed up and jacket makes him look bigger.

            3:04 we are in the car heaed for ML's but Keith just told me something that totally upset me--I got 1/4 pound of ground round to make up the difference with the 3/4 pound I thought we already had, but we ate that meat last night in tacos, which means we still need 1 pound or 3/4 pound of ground round for the spaghetti which means I or we have to go back to the store AGAIN. And the store was very crowded with Easter shoppers. 

            AK!

            3:40 PM So now I am in the back seat of the Chey that used to be ML's.  ML is riding shotgun (in my seat) and Keith is driving and we are on our way to the Sunrise Senior Living Center.  The sky is a neary cloudless blue, a pale spring blue instead of a deep autumn blue.  We are slightly more dressed up than usual.  Kwith is wering widewale brown cords that went out with the dinosaurs (but which we both like) and a nice stiped shirt.  One I got him.

            It's about $900 a month at the previous place for asistence dressing and undressing.  $15 dollar every morning to dress and $13 in the evening to undress. 

            I am wearing a blouse and a necklace, but did not have time to change into a skirt or redo my ahir, which is in braids. 

            I ma having health issues that make me fearful that I, too, may need assisted living in the not-too-distant future.  :-(

            The guy ahead of us is riding a brand new motorcycle with a pink slip on the plate and a black Northface lightweight jacket.  K says we watch him in case he's a newbie instead of a retread and does something dumb.

            There is a young woman with an orange vest standing in the middle of the road, maybe handing out leafllets.  I see the long curve of her neck as she turns away and worry for her safety.

            We drive by a garden store where there are flats and flats of pansies out and I want some.

            The whole building is your home can come and go as you wish.  Friends relatives can come and go as they wish.  They do the laundry, linens,   You furnish the apartment.  They provide all the means all the way to the end of life.

            They entirely private pay

            6:09 PM I am out walking again, ML is enscounced in the house with a book and Keith is making dinner and I will be walking for 30 minutes.  It is sunny, cool, blue, one small thin cloud, burds chirping.  I'm walking on the sunny side of the street because it is warmer.

            *            *            *            *

            Camouflage

            I am staring ithrough sliding glass doors into a house where there are some huge holographic screen where large colorful nimals are leaping from one screen to another.  Then a bunch of stuff happens and I am baack there at the glass doors, later.  The doors are steamed up.  I am staring through agaisn, but the screens aren't on.  Instead, there is a party going on, a weird party with black cats and chickens wandering through and I see someone I think is cute. I order to see him, I have to get close to the window because it is al steamed up.  Just as I am staring at this cute guy, he turs and spots me.  I back up and walk aay.  It is raining lightly, almost a mist.  I go to a hedgerow and bend over to look at something and spot something very strage.  It is a spider with appendages between its legs that allow it, when it stands still with its legs spread, to look like a flower.  I see three of these spiders.  They are fiarly small.  They ook like spirea flowers, sort of, and there is a spirea bush nearby.  On the ground, they look like fallen blossoms.

            The only cmera I have with meis the Fuji W3, and I take it out of stereo qand try to photograph the spider flowers, or flower spiders.  But I keep failing, becuase something gets in the way, a dead leaf or a plant or a chicken or a black cat.  Then I relaize these are the chickens and black cats from inside that house.  I look up, and there is the cute guy I'd seen through the window.  I grab his leg to try to anchor him beside me.

            We have a pleasant conversation and then he goes away and it rains harder and harder.  I curl up on the ground in fetal position in my long grey wool dress as the cold of the rain seeps itno my skin.

            *            *            *            *

            Taming Uncle Beast from earlier file:

            *

            "No wonder you aren't a minister or priest any more," I screamed at him, and pointed, at him, at the beer he was wrapped around.  "  You are bad! You are downright evil!" And I burst out crying.

            Everyone stared at me, including Harmon.

            "Tiny . . . " Jake started.  He looked embarrased, mortified, even.  He did not put his arms around me, and neither did Trey. 

            Instead, Harmon did, and I cried on his shoulder.  He held me close, and it seemed ok.  I wasn't weirded out out (embaraased) or anything.  I also didn't feel like he was hitting on me or feel skeeved out the way I sometimes do when an older guy touches me.  Instead, I felt loved and accepted just as I was, comforted.

            This made me feel guilty for yelling at him and I cried even harder, so hard I couldn't catch my breath for a minute of two.

            I've been noticing that when someone makes me angry, if I behave in a reprehensible way rather than in an honorable way, so that I then feel guilty for not being kind and compassionate and wise and gentle like I'd like to be, without even realizing it, I get even angrier at the person I was already angry at for causing me to feel guilty.  I know that sounds really stupid.  But when I do that sort of inappropriate thing, I'm not thinking with my intellect or with my heart, but with my fish brain and some wounded inner child.  That's what Martin says, sort of.

            I wonder if it's like potty training.  I mean, will I ever get the hang of it and stop myself before I poop all over myself and someone else?  I hope so, but I seem to be a slow learner, at least in this area.

            So Harmon kept rocking me, and I let him.  I thought about Boris the Bug Bugnasty.  After Jake got back from Iraq and had his meltdown, and we all had to go into counseling, because Martin said the problem belonged to the whole family and Jake (only he called him Farley, of course) wouldn't get better until we all got better.

            So here I am, with Martin, and he tells me I have to go to Al-Anon.  I'm not happy about this.  Not at all.  Who wants to go to a group with a bunch of strangers and talk about your family's secret problems.  Pa calls that "hanging out the dirty linens" and Ma calls it "hanging out the wash."  Ma makes more sense, I mean why would you hang out your dirty linens?

            Anyways, since I had to go, I went.  And, guess what--they weren't all strangers.  Of course I can't say who they were.  "What you hear here and who you see here stays here."

            Anyway, there was this guy and I will call him Boris the Bug Bugnasty.  That's not his real name, but it's a little close for comfort.  Luckily, what I am writing to you is not for general consumption.   Or I'd have to call him something else further from his real name.  And, since it's not his real name, I am not breaking the Alanon rules to use it.  (I hope you dn't know him and can guess who I mean.)

            *            *            *            * Taming Uncle Beast New:

            So, As I told you,  . . .

            Oh, wait, I just remembered the latest assigmnet, I'd gotten distracted by the all the stuff going on.  I was pistcuring lazy days of floating down the river with nothing to do when I agreed to do these assigments.  Seemed like I'd Have all day to do it.  You said to write in the third person from the POV of the protagonist, and then to do a chapter or section in the third person Omnicient.

            I don't understand how to write NONfiction in the 3rd person Omnicient when I am trying to write the truth and I don't actually know what other people are thinking.  I know what you said, you said, use your imagination and put yourself in the place of the other person.  But sometimes when I do that, what I think they might be thinking is not what they're thinking at all.  It may be diametrically opposed or just quite different.  Sometimes I am shocked to learn what someone else is thinking.  And sometimes I'm correct.

            But here's the question:  If I am imagining what other people are thinking, and may be wrong in my imaginings, how is that nonfiction.  Sounds like fiction to me.

            OK, so anyway, let me do the first part of the assigment, which should easier part.  I'm going to back up a little and start with my yelling at Harmon. 

            *

            (rewrite that part in third person)(?)  or just start where I left off?)

            *

            Tiny Lee's first Al-anon meeting with with adults.  She sat in the corner trying to be invisible, trying to suck her arms and legs into her shell like a turtle.  She visualized herself as a box turtle and closed the box around her soft inner body.  She closed her eyes, too, because it was dark in the box, so she was surprised when someone spoke to her.  She was trying to picture the closed box as invisible, but apparently, it asn't working.

            She opened her eyes and opened her box and poked her head, arms and legs out of the box and stared around the room.  Everyone was looking at her.

            "What is your name?" asked the person sitting next to her.  It was a woman with long red braids and green eyes and a big bruise on her face.

            "Tiny Lee Latham," Tiny said.

            "Oh," said the woman, "we don't use last names here.  Do you want to be Tiny or Tiny Lee?"

            "Tiny is fine," Tiny said.  Tiny wasn't exactly tiny, but she wasn't very big, either.  But for the first time she could remember, no one commented on her size.   She didn't have to tell them about being a preemie and almost not making it past her first day in the world.  Not that any of them would have cared.  They looked like a bunch of weirdos, Tiny thought.

            Several other people gave their names and Tiny deduced that the others had given theirs while she was in box, being blind and invisible.  Apparently, she'd also been deaf.  She wondered if turtles had a way of closing their ears.  Probably it was just the hyperfocus stage of her ADHD.  She rarely heard anything when she was in hyperfocus mode.  She wondered for the umpteenth time how hyperfocus could be part of the same syndrome as ADHD.  Martin Jakata said it was, so it must be.  But it didn't seem logical.  It would be sort of like Mammoth Caves being part of the Empire State Building. 

            Everyone said, "Hello, Tiny."

            Someone asked Tiny if she wanted to tell her story and she shook her head.  "Maybe later," someone else said.

            The man sitting on Tinys left began to speak.  "My name is Boris," he said.  Tiny wasn't sure what a Boris should look like, but Boris did not look like that.  He had sandy blond hair and a pink face and kind-looking smile.  He semed shy and defferntial.  He said he was an alcoholic, but that his sponsor said he should come to Al-aanon to get an idea how his behavior might be affecting the people in his life.  Tiny thought that sounded like a good idea and wondered why Beast's counselor, martin Jakata, didn't suggest that for him.

            Boris said that people called him Bugs, explaining that he was also called Boris the Bug, but he liked Bugs better.  Everyone said, "Hello Bugs."  Tiny didn't think he looked like a Bugs, either, but he did look a little like a bug, only she could say why she thought that.  He didn't have buggy eyes.  He didnt' have a buggy body, he was a little fat around the middle.  He looked more like a businessman than anything else, Tiny thought.

            Bug rambled on about his wife and daughter, about how they didn't understand him.  He sounded sad and earnst.  Tiny felt sort of sorry for him.  (The kids next door are locked out of their house.  I asked them if they needed anything and they said, "keys")

            They went around the room, everyone taking a turn to speak and then came back to Tiny.  She'd relaxed enough to say a few words about her Uncle and the trouble he'd been causing at home.

            After the meeting, Tiny tried to sneak out but Bugs cornered her and told her not to be shy, there were there to help.  The meeting was in a church basement, not Tiny's church, but another.  When they got outside, it was raining hard and Bugs asked her if she wanted a ride home.  She wasn't supposed to ride with strangers, but Bugs didn't seem like a stranger any more, and all the other people from the meeting were there, nodding their heads.  no one else offered her a ride.

            It wasn't far, she could walk it, but she'd be soaked when she got home, so she accepted the ride and Bugs took her straight home and pulled into the driveway as close to the house as he could.

            "Thanks," she said, and ran isnide.

            The next week, Boris was friendly at the meeting and offered her a ride and because she was in a hurry, she accepted it and soon, it became a regular thing.  Occasionally, Boris would give her something to tale to her mother, a dozen eggs from a friend's farm, an extra bag of sugar he said held purhcased accidentally.  Then he began bring small treats for her.  A single individuallyw rapped truffle, a chocolate chip muffin, a bag of doritos he'd picked up somehwere.  It happened so slowly that Tiny didnt' notice.  If he'd given her a box of chocolates that first night, it would have sent a warning signal.  But one day, a few months later, he gave Tiny a box of chocolates he said he'd won at the P&C.  He and Lenny were on a diet.  Lenny was his wife, Leonora.  So could she please save them by taking the chocolates.  Tiny did.  I mean, who doesn't like to help someone out? she thought.

            One day, when it was raining, Boris showed up at school.  Tinyw as walking out with her friend Meg.  Boris rolled down the window and offered the girls a ride.  Meg backed away, but Tiny told her it was okay, Boris was a friend.  Meg got in reluctantly.  He dropped them off at Tiny's "on the way," he said, to the drugstore get pick up some pictures for Lenny. 

            "That guy is skeevy" Meg said, after Boris was gone, but before they got in the house.

            "What do you mean?" Tiny asked.  But she knew what Meg meant.  Boris was starting to skeeve her out too.

            "He's creepy  He gives off bad vibes.  I'm kind of afraid of him."

            "Me too," Tiny said,  It was true.  She started having her MOm or Dad pick her up after meetings, but they weren't always avaialble.  She started sneaking out of the meetings eary on the days when no one was able to pictk her up.  She'd excuse herself to use the restroom and and then sneak away.  Then she started skipping meetings.

            Boris started showing up at school, and leaving treats and cards and messgaes in her mailbox at home.  Meg called him "Tiny's stalker."

            Tiny was ambivalent.  Boris always seemed so nice and so helpful and kind and generous and never did anything wrong.  Why was she worried about him.  She was, that was for certain.  For one thing, Hew as married.  He was older, and she was just a kid.  But he sort of seemed to be courting her, not that she knew much about it. 

            Then Boris called Uncle Jake and threatened him.  He told Jake to move out or he'd be sorry.  Jake told the family about the weird call he'd gotten, and Tiny had an idea it was Boris who'd made the call.  When Jake got a second call, she was furious.

            Of course she'd talked about Jake at Al-anon.  That's what she was there for. 

            She called Boris's house to confront him, and of course, Leonora answered the phone. 

            "Who is?" she screeched.  "Are you having an affair with my husband?"

            Tiny gasped.  "No!" she said.  "I just need to speak to him."

            "Who is this?  If I find you my husband, I'll kill you."

            Tiny hung up.  She called Martin and told him what happened. 

            "It does sound like you have a stalker, Tiny." he said.

            "What can I do?" she wailed.

            "They are very difficult to get rid of.  It's best not to interect with tem at all."

            Meg had called, later that same day.  "You know that salker of yours?" she asked.

            "Yeah, what about him?" Tiny snapped.

            "I think he's dead.  He was having an affair with some woman and her husband caught them and shot them both.  She was only 19.  That could have been you."

            "I'm 15, (14, 13?) Tiny said, and I am not married."

            "You know what I mean.  He could have forced you to have sex with him.  That might have been what he was working up to."

            "or not.  He could have been inncocent."

            "He wasn't inncoent.  He was screwing some married girl.  Young woman.  And I read she was pregant.  Now she and the baby are both and the father will go to jail or to the electric chair."

            "I don't know what to think," Tinyw ailed.  He was nice to me.  Maybe he wasn't so bad, but now he's dead and I feel guilty."

            "You didnt' kill him."

            "No.  I didn't But I feel guilty for being glad.  I feel one percent sad and 99 percent glad and that makes me sad and guilty."

            "That's ok," Meg said, "that's about right."  But Tiny actually felt more thaan one percent sad, and she felt confused. 

            Now, sitting on Harmon's lap, she remembered Boris the Bug, how he's been kind, or seemed to have been kind, how he'd made her feel special.  He was someone who seemed to care about her who didn't have to care about her. She snuggled closer to Harmon, feeling safe and loved, and then thought, I still don't really know what was going on with Bugsy, and what about Harmon? I don't even know him.  And a few minutes ago, I was furious with him.  She leaned back and looked up at him, and he smiled beatifically down at her.  Neither Jake nor Trey seemed concerned any more.

            "Feeling better, Little Lady?" Harmon asked.  If someone else had said that to her, Tiny would have been pissed, but coming from him, it somehow seemed just right.

            "You are absolutely right.  I deserved that, every bit of it.  I deserved to be defrocked.  I did the wrong thing, more than once."

            "Then why do I feel so safe with you?" Tiny asked, feeling more confused than ever.

            *            *            *            *

            "Because I'm not a bad guy at heart.  I have a problem with alcohol.  It's like a monster riding me.  It lives inside me, and when I drink, I forget to be all that I can be otherwise.  The shadow slips out and swallows me."

 

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Psion Journal with Bliss Point Poetry

20140409 DSS tonight double up session

            Get B12 spray

            Wednesday, April 9, 2014, 2:45 PM I am walking to Village Market to get Taco stuff for dinner tonight.  Also stuff for the next couple days but I may not get everything on the list because I have other stuff to do and I am very tired.  Sleep study last night.  Did not sleep enough.  Went to bed late and got up early and had an unfamiliar bed, an unfamilier room, an unfmailiar mask and CPAP, strange noises including a woman in the next room coughing like mad very loudly, and all the wires and itchy tape.  I'm just so tired.

            Worse yet, I had a few tantrums, attacks of general external and internal hatred, fury and rage.  I was alone, so I didn't injure anyone, but shortly after that, I lay down and imagined cloning myself so I could chop myself up with an axe.  I hope that's one of BP's revenge fantasties that doesn't hurt anything.  ;-{

            I don't think I ever slept, and only was down a half hour, but I had some of those waking dreams they asked about last night.

            In one, a giantess was run down by cars and collapsed onto the road over the top of some of the cars as of she were filled with air and then partly deflated when hit.  The feeling I had as an omnicient observer was one of terrible pain and sadness.

            3:28 PM I had a horrible tie at the store.  I couldn't find things, a number of things.  No Canadia Pea soup, no shredded lettuce.  I was going to make tacos for dinner.  Hand shredded lettuce never comes out as well.  And now I have too much stuff to write and K didn't come to help or drive me home.  And I grazed on foods that may make me sick.  (And there were a lot of other things I couldn't find)  Things I ate included spicy sausage and chips with dairy dips.

            I just noticed that I am singing runaround sue which they were playing in the store.

            Thursday,  April 10, 2014, 4:12 PM I am out walking in a skirt, blouse and long thin coat.  It is vvery wndy. 

            I had "Jury Duty"today, and arrived at the courthouse with two books to read at 7;30 AM and sat there reading in A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnely when the TVs came on and we saw a slide slow abot Jury duty.  It was both informational and promotional (rah rah).  They wanted to thank is and remind of the importance of our civic duty and its value to fredom, but I think they were preaching to the choir.  Absolutely nothing happened in the first hour, so that hour was totally wasted except for reading time.

            Then a nice grey-haired lady gave us a pep talk and speech and apologized for mispronouncing names.  She said she would put on a movie "because after all, there was nothing else to do," but no movie appeared for quite some time.  Eventually, they called several sets of people, maybe around 9:30.  I didn't have anything to write on or with, but I noticed other people had pens and paper, so next time, I may bring some.  Computers and palm pilots and cell phones etc are not allowed.

            The minute the last group of the people who were called in the first three sets filed out, something came on the TVs.  (Monitors).  It looked a footvall game and the volume was so low I could make it ou, but there was a series of replays of a certain play, some apparently important football play.  I went on with my reading, but it turned out to be the promised movie and I had trouble reading between the zillions of monitors, the announcements, the people alking around, and my neighbors talking to me, so I gave up and just watched the movie.  MY next-door (in the seats) neighbor, Leslie Nolan, who used to live on the east side but now livcs on the West side, told me the movie was called Blind side and that it was a good movie, so started trying to pay more attention.

            It was at an upscale private school and some big black kid was being promoted by somebody.  (Since I'd missed more of the beginning, I didn't know what was going on at first).  The person doing the promoting was saying how good this kid would be at football, ad they schould have him a scholarship.  The coach was demuirng and making excuses bit then started mumbling about his "Christian duty" and the took the kid on.  He was a gian of a kid, the only black kid in not only a white school, but an upper class white school.  He never loooked happy, and when he tried to talk to some girls, they ran away.  One little boy, a kind of friendly wise-acre type, befriended him.

            Then the family, the little boy, his older sister, and the parenst, are driving in the dark in the rian and they see the blck kid and offer him a ride and practically have to shove him in the car and end up taking him home and then he ends up staing on their couch and finally moving in with them.  The Mom adopts the kid (well, they both do, of course, but the father is a little slower coming around)

            The coach gets all frustrated with the kid because he has no idea wha5t to do and doesn't seem to take well to his yelling at him.  (I suppose I won't write down the story, but of course, I liked it.  A lot.  It was my kind of movie.

            They had the volume so low and there were so many interruptions and talking and people wandering around that I missed a lot of it, so now I'd like to rent or borrow it and see it again  all the way through. 

            We were given an official break for smoking and visiting the coin operated machine on some other floor, and using the bathrooms and there were more announcements and more people were taken.  There were 400 people there, to begin with. 

            Then another movie started this also with volume to low I could barely here 1/3 of it.  Again, my neighbor, Lesline Nolan, told me that it was a good movie and that I would like it.  It's called "Hitch"  A young African American Man acts as a consultant to men who like a certain woman and want to have a relatioship with her.  This movie is a comedy.  It has serious parts, but was hysterically funny (to me) and I lughed my head off so hard and often that people were turning around to look at me.  I couldn't help it.  It was really funny.  However, they kept turning it off for announcements, and eventually, they released us in groups, I was the third group to be released.  I was very glad to go, but I issed the end of the movie, so now I'd like to see that, too.

            After they released us and I got my paper, I went back to the car, got directs to Woodword from the parking attendant who no speaka dah engish, and went to Hannon house.  But I was tired and hungry.  I decidded to go to Utrech but the first building I drove through was thhe wrong building and took me to Whole Foods instead.  I drove around looking for a parking place but after driving up and down every aisle and not finding one, I went to look look for Utecxh again, got lost, and finally found it, now called Blick, almost directly across from Hannon House (actually kitty corner across the street and up a block.)  I got turned around and need to remember it is toward downtown from the DIA and not that far.  AND nearly across from Hannon House.  AND LEFT if getting off I94 from home.

            Then I went to our ocal food store.  I was sort of bummed I did not get to Whole Foods.  ;-{

            Now I am at Village.

            Sonata for Syria, look up on You tube.

            Get tested for B12 (blood test)

            Methyl Cobalamin B12 spray. Sublingual

            Opera seats at tops of aisles 31, 32,   46, 47, 15 and 16,

            Saturday, April 12, 2014, 4:38 PM I am walking to R'dale, hopefully, to water the plants and download the Psion.  Then I will walk back and stop at Village and shop for food for the weekend.  This is, of course, the weekend.  But we don't have food specifically planned for tonight.  We have food we could eat, but not the regular food for this day

            I pass a dead dove on the sidewalk and am not ar dead bird alley,  am still n Moran.

            I consider taking it for its skull, but i do not.

            I was wearing too many clothes, and took off my jacket and hat --it was substantially cooler earlier.  It is downright warm now.

            Last night was the first night in a long long time when I did not take any medication for sleeping or itching, no ambien, no bendryll, no hysdroxyzine etc.  I did not sleepw ell, but I did not get up nor lay awake watching the clock for hours.

            So, that's a good thing.  I don't feel that great, But I feel better than I felt yesterday after the hydroxyzine.  I want to get some B12 spray or under tongue.  To test it to see if it helps my brain fog.

            I was sunny earlier and I wish I'd gotten outt thhen but of course, it was also cooler.  That might not be a bad thing, I'm getting overheated.

            I am also wearing my sandals, which probably need to be replaced.  I wore last night to the opera because I could not fnd one of my shoes (which also need to be replaced.))

            end Journal EJ            *            *            *

            *            *            *            *

            Bliss-Point Poetry, a Kind of Convergence

            Last night, April 10, 2914, I went to a poetry reading at Hannon House in Detroit.  One of the readers was Diane Wakowski, author of, among many other titles, Dancing on the Grave of a Son-of-a-Bitch. That book was an old favorite of mine, years ago, for the quality of the poetry and other reasons I won't go into, and I've always loved Diane Wakowski (Last night, she allowed me to give her a hug.)

            One of the poems she read last night was "Pumpkin Pie." Stupidly, I thought it would be a pleasant little poem about pumpkin pie.  It wasn't.  It was a poem that contained a woman, the human experience, the world, the universe, the vibrating strands of energy holding together the cosmos.

            She said she wrote it 40 years ago.  She said she had not read it in more than ten years.  She read it last night because the great Detroit poetry Guru, ML Liebler and company dreamed up the idea of  pies and poetry.  (We'd only recently been to a Pies and Pi-Day celebration, and pies and poetry sounded like just as much fun.)

            I was grateful to ML and company for dreaming the Pies and Poetry idea so that Diane Wakowski had a reason to read her Pumkin Pie poem and thus gave me the opportunity to hear it.  It was the high point of my day, my week, and maybe my month.  The whole event made me very happy, even though I did not eat any pie.  Diane Wakowski's other poems were very good as were the stories and poems of the other two readers. (I hope to address them later, in separate stories).

            When I was a student at Vermont College of Fine Arts, one of my professors, Natasha Saje, spoke often of "ambitious" poems.  The word "ambitious" grated a liltle.  It made me think of money-grabbing capitalist pigs.  Of capitalism at its worst, of Corporatism, of buying senators and representatives, of lobbying and other evils.

            But Natasha Sajé was not thinking of Capitalist Pigs.  She wanted me to leap.  I didn't quite get it and my lack of success at leaping made me feel "not good enough."  Leaps occur with dynamic purpose within both smaller, less "ambitious" poems and larger more ambitious poems, but Natasha Saje wanted the whole poem to leap, to take a quantum leap from the ordinary everyday to beyond the stratosphere and into the deep space of singularity, bigger than itself because it contained not only the everyday, but the cellular resonance of the everyday with heart, mind, soul and cosmos.

            I have what some people consider to be an unfortunate habit of reading many books at once.  How can you do that, they ask, how can you keep them straight? My answer is this: fairly easily (except for my galloping dementia [no-no-I will not own that]); our minds are designed to simultaneously hold many stories.  We hold the lives and stories of everyone we love (and hate), as well as all the stories we read, the movies we see, news on TV, etc.  The mind is designed for multiple stories.

            One of the books I am currant reading is Sugar, Salt, and Fat, by Michael Moss.  It is a fascinaing (if sometimes slightly tedious) book about the food industry.  Michael Moss speaks about the "Bliss Point" of foods.  It is actually a rane of points at which, when various ingredients are added to the food, the food reaches the highest appeal level before it starts falling off again from being too sweet, too salty, too fatty, too chocolaty to fruity or too too. 

            Poems have bliss points for their ingredients as well.  For example, a little alliteration is musically appealing but too much can be annoying and stick out like the proverbial sore thumb.  A rhythmic and rhyming poem can be very pleasing, but an endlessly repetitive rhthym can be numbing and too much rhyme can gak the reader.

                        Poems can contain bliss points, or they can be Bliss-Point Poems, meaning that the whole poem can leap out of the ordinary out of a solid grounding in the specific and sensory, and into the extraordinary. 

            Some poems, to me, are opaque and dull.  They are difficult to read, have no musicality, and seriously oppress me.  I could tell you which well-known publication publishes many of those, my I might get blackballed forever, so I will bite my tongue.

            Some poems are  nausaeatingy stupid or silly.  Don't get me wrong.  I have a juvenile sense of humor and enjoy witty or humorous poems.  But usually, poems about farting, for example, are over the top (or, under the bottom), even for me. And any poem mindlessly stupid isn't worth finishing.

            On the other hand, some poems are mysterious rather than opaque and speak to the deep mysteries of the unconscious.  They speak to the heart rather than the mind.  And some are intellectual, mind exercises that stimulate the intellect. Some poems address the right brain and some the left.  Some poems are musical.  They speak to the body. Some resonate with deep emotional self, addressing issues of hurt and healing.  Other are spiritual, speaking primarily to the "higher" self. The best poems combine two or more of these elements.

            Diane Wakowski's poem, "Pumpkin Pie," starts out as most better poems do, with careful detail and evocative sensory description of pie-making.  Listening to her read it, my mind was filled with images of harvesting the big ornage globes, cutting them and deseeding them (the seeds, the slippery guts), peeling them and cooking them.  and also, images of opening cans of pumpkin pie filling, the way it looked smelled.  I'm there in her childhood kicthen with salt and cinamon, and rolling dough, and cooking the pale orange flesh.

            I'm there, and I'm happy. I am eager to tatse that pie.  I worry along with her about the pie solidifying, I am reassured by the reassurances, and shocked and astounded by the duplicity.  All the betrayals of my life flood back.  I have to reintegrate them into who I am, bt Diane Wakowski's words are to help me home to myself again. 

            The bliss-point poem is the poem that resonates deeply on may levels.  Natasha Saje was right, of course.  The ordinary is extraorninary and the unambitious can be ambitious if it can leap into real exerience, the deep multilevel experience we have have every day.

            In order to make this leap, the poet must do two things well.  First, she fully inhabit her experience and second, she must communicate the experience successfully and with a sufficient amount of music to make the poem a poem.  Then, the reader needs to be receptive and open to allow the poet's experience to flow through and livine inside. 

            Diane Wakowski's "Pumpkin Pie" a whole poem that speaks to the whole person.  It broke through the brain fog that the wretched Hydroxyzine and insomnia give me, penetrated and came to live inside me.  It insinuated itself into my brain so that it is now a part of me.  For me, it was the grain of sand that held the universe.

            Because of my ADHD, I often do better reading poetry than listening, especially in a room crowded with many distractions.  It takes me a while to settle, focus and concentrate.  I have to admit that when listening to poetry, I sometimes miss things.

            I would like to add, to repeat, that I enjoyed many of the other poems and stories and could and maybe will write an enthusiastic review of one or more other pieces.

            I would also like to add that Diana Wakowski is a famous poetr.  People love to come and hear her read poetry.  But when she goes to a gambling Casino, for example, she is nothing but another player, losing or winning.  When she sits in a movie theater, she is just another head dimnly see in the light from the screen.  A person can be very fomous in one anerna and nobody at all in others.

            *            *            *            *

            Taming Uncle Beast from earlier file:

            *

            "No wonder you aren't a minister or priest any more," I screamed at him, and pointed, at him, at the beer he was wrapped around.  "  You are bad! You are downright evil!" And I burst out crying.

            Everyone was staring at me, including Harmon.

            "Tiny . . . " Jake started.  He looked embarrased, mortified, even.  He did not put his arms around me, and neither did Trey. 

            Instead, Harmon did, and I cried on his shoulder.  He held me close, and it seemed ok.  I wasn't weirded out ot (embaraased) r anything.  I also didn't feel like he was hitting on me or feel skeeved out the way I sometimes do when an older guy touches me. 

            *            *            *            * Taming Uncle Beast New:

           

 


--

“I wish I could show you when you are lonely or in darkness the astonishing light of your own being.” Hafiz of Persia"

I didn't trust it for a moment
but I drank it anyway,
the wine of my own poetry.
 
It gave me the daring to take hold
of the darkness and tear it down
and cut it into little pieces.
 
-- Lala, 14th century Persian poet

Mary