Thursday, February 3, 2022

Some URLs

RABBIT HOLES

I may not be the duke of URLs but I know what rabbit-holes I like slipping into. 

Here's a few.

MICROCOSMS: Sacred Plants of the Americas

LORD OF THE RAINY SKY: A Possible Redefinition of Pre-Columbian Aquaculture

BIANCA MIKAHN: Denver Performance Poet Extraordinaire

PAUL CELAN: Audacious Rhetorical Devices in Paul Celan’s“Todesfuge” 

RALPH PEARCE: Weeds in Australia

DAN PAGIS: Holocaust tutorial

KINSHIP: BELONGING IN A WORLD OF RELATIONS: Center for Humans and Nature (Chicago)

GHOSTHORSE TIOKASIN: First Voices Indigenous Radio

JONATHAN STALLINGS: Sinophonic English Poetry and Poetics


Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Bardic Trails: Goodtimes Coming-Out Playground

GOOD QUESTIONS



Two years of working on myself. Not carrying the county burden. Or the ecopolitical albatross. I'm not used to paying attention to my body, that trusty spacetimeship. For two years that's about all I've done. But maybe itki's all done.

Or at least appears to be. See this morning's post in the queue far below, PSA Lab Report.

Tonight's for poetry! KC Trommer in New York City  and the Shroompa in Telluride. Join us for Bardic Trails virtual poetry series 7 pm MST at the Wilkinson Public Library in collaboration with the Telluride Institute's Talking Gourds poetry program. Come bring a poem to the playground. Or a story, a heartsong.

Talking Gourds is about performing, not just listening -- although that's an important lesson always. But after tonight's feature we'll have a virtual Gourd Circle with everyone in the Zoom getting a chance to read a poem, tell a story, sing a song, or just say a word of thanks and mute.




Here's the Zoom Recording 

if you missed my Bardic Trails 

Coming-Out Reading, Interview & Gourd Circle

this Chinese New Year's




Halle-fuckin'-lulia
as my one buddy media'd me earlier
Today's the Year of the Tiger


If you missed this performance, you can access it HERE

Monday, January 31, 2022

PSA lab report

 CELEBRATING

My post-op PSA lab test came in at 0.1, which is basically negligible, as I understand itki.

Forgive me for focusing on my personal health but this is a big hurdle. Itki means I'm in remission from my prostate cancer post surgery. We will keep monitoring, and this one low reading doesn't mean the cancer can't return, but itki does mean the surgery was successful in removing the cancer that was there.


After two years of challenges -- throat cancer, radiation, chemo, pneumonia, Covid, hernia and prostate cancer -- I may be healthy again. Huge thank yous to my wonderful team of docs -- Dr. Heather Linder, Dr.  Michael Murray, Dr. Duane Hartshorn, Dr. Vernon King, Dr. Kyle Work, Dr. Helen Goldberg, and various consultants and corollary providers; my kind, generous and loving family; and my whole crew of caregivers, friends and well-wishers. You've made the difference for me. Bless you.

I won't be using my CaringBridge site from now on. And hopefully far into the future. But I hope you'll make comments here on my blog, if you're so moved.

Year of the Tiger

13022 [Western Slope Calendar] 

my son Gregorio's birth year

a propitious omen for a gentle man

Photo by Rio Coyotl









If you missed the Holocaust Remembrance Reading 27jan22, you can catch it now on YouTube here

POETRY DOUBLEHEADER

First Tuesday this February First  at 7 pm isn't Lupercalia, but itki's a poetry doubleheader with KC Trommer reading on the East Coast and the Art Goodtimes  in Telluride. Trommer, essayist and poet-in-law of San Miguel County's own Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, headlines a Jackson-Heights-based First Tuesday reading series at 7 p.m. EST (5 pm. MST). The zoom series is run by Richard Jeffrey Newman and sponsored by New York State and Poets & Writers, Inc.

Trommer's reading is free but requires registration with Newman of Nassau Community College.  


A MFA graduate of Univ. of Michigan at Ann Arbor, KC has published books, founded poetry programs, been awarded grants and fellowships in the U.S. and the Czech Republic, collaborated with Grammy-recognized composer Herschel Garfein  on a poetry song cycle, and served as poet-in-residence both for Works on Water and Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's COVID-19 Response Residency Program on Governors Island. KC is the Assistant Director of Communications at NYU Gallatin and lives in Jackson Heights, Queens, with her son.

At 7 pm MST (same time but not simultaneous shows thanks to different zones) Art Goodtimes of Wrights Mesa (who has spent the last two years healing from multiple challenges) is having a poetry coming-out party of sorts as part of the Bardic Trails virtual reading series sponsored jointly by the Wilkinson Public Library and the Telluride Institute's Talking Gourds poetry programs.

Join us and bring a poem/story/heartsong to share in the Gourd Circle portion of the reading.

<zoom link came>

Join Zoom Meeting
Bardic Trails
Feb 1, 22 
7:00 pm MST (Mountain Standard Time)
Meeting ID: 810 6884 6690




Sunday, January 30, 2022

Elissa Dickson in Stockholm

 




GREEN THUMB


What if you just never knew

Your heart is a greenhouse

Outside

Icy hate, shame bruised sleet,

The gathering dark of apathy

Sure, sure

But 

Inside

Just today

A superbloom

A cacophony of

magenta tangerine vermillion

All clamoring for more

The air thick with lavender

And everywhere 

Butterflies busy 

Pollinating just one thing


-Elissa Dickson

This poem is dedicated to 
my mentor @rosemerry.trommer 

who teaches us all everyday 
how love is everything

Saturday, January 29, 2022

Back to the Paleo Present

 



looking for mushrooms



takes one back to the Paleolithic

on a forest time machine, hunting

& wild harvesting as our ancestors did


but with new tools: African baskets

Finnish knives, Lincoff field guides

& edibles laced with magic


Photo by Linnea Gillman
  

parading into a mountain rainbow

under Colorado's highest peaks

looking on looking back looking at us


Photo courtesy of Rick and Marty Hollinbeck


Friday, January 28, 2022

Let Us Never Forget

Poems in Remembrance of the Holocaust 

On behalf of the Colorado Poetry Center, the trio of Beth Harris, Judyth Hill and Tina Bueche ran a quite impressive virtual poetry reading in honor of UNESCO's International Holocaust Remembrance Day on 27jan22.  Itki was the 77th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, the complex of German concentration/extermination camps in Poland.


I hope the full video is available at some point. There were many powerful moments and readings by my cohort of impressive fellow readers. But here at this blogspot I wanted to share my script portion of the evening, with the new poem that came out of remembering the Shoah and participating in this important world event. 

Dedicated to my dear friends Pamela & John Lifton-Zoline.


Death Fugue 

from European poet and Romanian Holocaust survivor 

Paul Celan (1920-1970]

Translated from the German by American poet Pierre Joris


Todesfuge 

Schwarze Milch der Frühe wir trinken sie abends

wir trinken sie mittags und morgens wir trinken sie nachts

wir trinken und trinken

wir schaufeln ein Grab in den Lüften da liegt man nicht eng

Ein Mann wohnt im Haus der spielt mit den Schlangen der schreibt

der schreibt wenn es dunkelt nach Deutschland

dein goldenes Haar Margarete


Black milk of morning, we drink you evenings

we drink you at noon and mornings 

we drink you at night

we drink and we drink


A man lives in the house

he plays with the snakes

he writes 

he writes when it darkens to Deutschland

your golden hair Margarete  


he writes and steps in front of his house 

and the stars glisten 

and he whistles his dogs to come

he whistles his jews to appear 


let a grave be dug in the earth

he commands us 

play up for the dance


Black milk of dawn we drink you at night

we drink you mornings and noontime 

we drink you evenings

we drink and we drink


A man lives in the house 

he plays with the snakes 

he writes

he writes when it turns dark to Deutschland 

your golden hair Margarete


Your ashen hair Shulamit [Shoo-lah-might]

we dig a grave in the air 

there one lies at ease


He calls 

jab deeper into the earth 

you there 

and you other men sing and play 


he grabs the gun in his belt 

he draws it 

his eyes are blue

jab deeper your spades 

you there 

and you other men continue to play for the dance


Black milk of dawn we drink you at night 

we drink you at noon we drink you evenings 

we drink you and drink 


a man lives in the house 

your golden hair Margarete 

your ashen hair Shulamit 

he plays with the snakes


He calls out 

play death more sweetly 

death is a master from Deutschland 

he calls scrape those fiddles more darkly 

then as smoke you’ll rise in the air 

then you’ll have a grave in the clouds 

there you’ll lie at ease


Black milk of dawn we drink you at night 

we drink you at noon 

death is a master from Deutschland 

we drink you evenings and mornings 

we drink and drink 


death is a master from Deutschland 

his eye is blue 

he strikes you with lead bullets 

his aim is true 


a man lives in the house 

your golden hair Margarete 


he sets his dogs on us 

he gifts us a grave in the air 

he plays with the snakes and dreams 

death is a master from Deutschland


your golden hair Margarete

your ashen hair Shulamit

Photo courtesy of Jerry Roberts

















This famous poem from Israeli poet and Romanian Holocaust survivor

Dan Pagis (1930-1986)


Written in Pencil 

in the Sealed Railway-Car


here  in  this  carload

I  am  eve

with  abel  my  son

if  you  see  my  other  son

cain  son  of  man

tell  him  that  I



Death Camp 

from American-Yiddish poet, lesbian scholar and Warsaw Ghetto survivor 

Irena Klelpfisz (1941 to the present)





when they took us to the shower 

i saw the rebbetzin her sagging breasts sparse

pubic hairs i knew 

and remembered the old rebbe 

and turned my eyes away


i could still hear her advice 

a woman with a husband a scholar


when they turned on the gas 

i smelled it first coming at me 

pressed myself hard to the wall 

crying rebbetzin rebbetzin

i am here with you 

and the advice you gave me

i screamed into the wall 

as the blood burst from my lungs 


cracking her nails in women's flesh 

i watched her capsize beneath me 

my blood in her mouth 


i screamed 

when they dragged my body into the oven 

i burned slowly at first 

i could smell my own flesh 

and could hear them grunt 

with the weight of the rebbetzin

and they flung her on top of me 

and i could smell her hair 

burning against my stomach


when i pressed through the chimney

it was sunny and clear 

my smoke was distinct 


i rose quiet 

left her 

beneath


Photo by Vero López


Holocaust


Conceived in war

she was born after the catastrophe

Raised Christian


Stories sprinkled on baptized hair

like holy water. Catechism class

her boot camp


Jesu Christos, they tell her

was, according to the Book, rejected

by the Pharisees. By the Jews


And yet the Haight’s Capt. Barefoot

finds herself celebrating Shabbat

every Friday


Turning distant rites

into family practice. Obedient

to a learned vigil of kinning


Fervent in remembering

the Shoah, that shared WWII story of

yellow-star roundups & gunpoint liberation


She too has seen the arms

tatooed in the algebra of Auschwitz

Skeletons in stripes behind barbed wire


Read of women, children, whole families

boxcar’d & shipped like cattle

to the Nazi factories of ethnic cleansing


She’s staying with the troubles

Not to exceptionalize

since world horrors abound


But to believe and grieve

To conceptualize itki

To see through the media’s cacophony


to the twisted steel plates of a possible future

The architecture of a dozen religious

arguments for a just war


As if, as converts, justice, or just us

could be salvaged from genocide

with a nuclear lock on blocking chaos


As if everybody else’s divinities

were apocalypse zombies. Intent

on dismembering her-him-us


As if the scapegoat infections

of even the healthy were merely

the viruses of evolution


As if the black milk of dawn

rises in the East

Dreaming gold. Drinking ash


As if winnowing

were the only way to assure

the rapture of the species


Photo of Pinwheel Cave Datura by Devlin Gandy