Categories
Ordinary Muse Space is the Place

Marigolds and Jimi Hendrix

This week, I rented a documentary film about the 1969 Woodstock Festival. I couldn’t imagine being there with 500,000 people on a pig farm, as I am not a fan of mud, porta-potties, or of large crowds, ever since I was made permanently clausterphobic when Tracy Earl sat on top of me in a tree house stuffed with twelve fifteen-year-old girls and no one heeded to my screams for freedom.

Well, okay, if I were to have been there I imagine I would have had to secure a nice little circle of green grass on a hill, with a ring of marigolds around me, and I would have made a sign stating “The Nation of Solitude,” just so I could keep some breathing space. For food, I could eat some of the marigolds. They have a lovely smell to me. I think people would have let me be, as they all seemed happy and at peace with each other’s idiosyncracies.

Anyway, on to the main point! While I listened to Jimi Hendrix play the national anthem I felt so sad. The way he played it was so deeply sorrowful, as if he is (and all of us are) being betrayed by the reality of what America is.

His music reminded me of that poem by Langston Hughes, “Let America Be America Again.”

I found it here.

I, too, doubt if America was ever what it says it was and is, but like Hughes, I always hope it will someday be true to its ideals. Amen and out.

Categories
Beginning Spiral Ordinary Miracles

Spring is here

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Well, okay, okay it did snow yesterday I admit it, but the optimist in me must focus on the fact that the tree outside my office window is sprouting teeny weeny leaves. And okay, okay, I am still wearing a hat and wool trousers every day, but the grass has turned into a courageous green and the crocuses (that’s Korokkasu in romaji) have sprung forth in their royal purples and canary yellows.
So, just let me sing of these tiny miracles today….

Categories
Whirling Dervish

Busy bee dreams

I have been badly neglecting my blog of late, so forgive me. This is because I found something else to focus my energies on during this two-week break from my graduate studies. The problem is I have become so obsessed with my new project that I have even forgotten to relax during the weekend or over golden week holidays. Thank god my husband has been understanding and I still manage to play outside with my son each day, regardless of any obsession; running around outside each day is what keeps me sane.

I have been trying to gather together all the worthwhile pieces of my teaching career of over 15 years into some semblance of order for an interesting job opening. I am very excited about it, but I also am prepared to accept that, in the real world, someone with more experience, a doctoral degree in hand, or of the male persuasion will become the ‘chosen one.’ But I hope not!

Of course, I am going to try my best, as I am getting tired of not having one job, one home. I know, I know, it doesn’t sound like me. But I always said that when I hit 40 I want a place to call home. That is what I am searching for these days, since in a few years the 4-0 will be reality. This doesn’t mean I plan to give up exploring my varied and at times seemingly chaotic interests…I just hope to have a home base from where I can set off to explore the world, rather than continue flitting from place to place, an ephemeral butterfly and thus I could maybe become more visible to the world in a sense… .

So, please send me all of your most excellent job karma and we’ll see how it goes. I won’t say where I am applying, as it seems bad luck to be overly optimistic and too forthcoming at this point.

Oh yes, my husband has his music website up, so please check it out at pranatronic.com or use the link on this page to Funkiest Techno God in the Universe ;-)!
And email him if you encounter a glitch or wish to sing his praises!

More later! Peace out!

Categories
Ordinary Miracles

Green tea as heat

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When I came into my office this morning the heat wasn’t on, so first thing I did was boil some water for green tea.

Now I am typing these words with icy hands and my jacket zipped up, waiting for some idea of warmth. Kauai. Tahiti. Palau. Fiji. Tobago. Cuba. Fortaleza. Mali. Asahikawa?

The lack of central heating in Japan seems worse at the beginning and end of winter because that’s when the officials don’t know how to handle fickle weather. Hands now blueish white….From April it’s officially spring, and all secondary students must wear spring uniforms. Will the heaters also be ‘officially’ turned off, regardless of actual temperature? Wild glancing into tea pot….Oh, yes!

Excuse me, the tea has turned that lovely, beckoning chartreuse, the color of absinthe….I never have drunk the real absinthe (made of wormwood per my friend Renee,;-))…wasn’t that the drink that drove Van Gogh to a dark corner to slice at his ear? I recall reading somewhere this liqueur was banned nowadays….one of those things I could find out if I perused the Internet no doubt. Anyway, if a cup of absinthe provided me with a bit of warmth this morning, I’d give it an honest sip, ear be damned.

Categories
Ordinary Miracles Poems & art

Found hat!

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It’s found! It’s found! Yes, it’s found!

If you recall, a few months ago (uuuuhhh, I don’t know, back in the January entry titled “Lost hat”), I bemoaned the loss of a favored hat in poesy. Well, as I sat chatting to my husband on the cell phone from our car in the faculty parking lot last Friday, I suddenly spotted that furry old hat propped up against the bicycle canopy. The melting snow had revealed its captive treasure to me!

I had to chip the hat’s tassles out of a big block of ice with the edge of my car’s ice scraper, and it was tough work–at least twenty minutes of wild hacking.

Scrouched like an insane grey squirrel at the side of the lot, I realized my behavior might appear undignified as a university faculty member, but sometimes I cannot (okay, all right, I usually cannot) control myself.

It was my hat, my beloved hat! It was only proper to rescue it from the ice bed it had been entombed in for all too long.

A senior faculty member drove past as I hacked away, and I paused and slightly bowed to her. She did a double-take, then a triple. I haven’t seen her face-to-face yet, so I assume she thinks that foreign lecturer has gone bonkers.

Two girl students walked past, so I invited them over to explain my ordeal (in part, to find some informed witnesses in my questionable act). They wished me luck, laughing, and their kindness emboldened me. In my determined attack, I finally released one tassle, but then I had to amputate the last tassle’s tip to the ice block–there was no other way. It may look a bit battered, but it’s home!

Kudos to my husband for reminding me to take pictures of the finding. The hat, which he said smelled like a wet dog but I felt smelled like the fresh outdoors, is now washed and hanging in the house, over the heater, to dry.

Categories
Ordinary Muse

Dirty business

Warning: Do not proceed if you dislike scatological topics!

While I was innocently doing my feeble attempt at yoga this early morning, my son rose up from the futon and waddled past me, only giving me a brief side-long look.

I noticed he walked gingerly, with his legs wide apart, as if he had just been on horseback for an hour too long or he was wearing a samurai’s armor, replete with inro ornament hanging from his girdle. Hmmm…

Sure enough he squatted down on his haunches, slowly, slowly, and then proceeded to do his vacant stare and grunting routine. I guess that cake needed icing, so to speak.

My son is presently ‘in medi res’ in regard to toilet-training, and from the way he held his full bottom up by arching his back as I laid him down for the change, he finally has begun to find diaper-wearing a wearisome and disagreeable business.

Categories
Ordinary Muse

Canned coffee

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The line between life in the US and life in Japan blurs. I can’t remember if hot canned coffee is common in the States. I don’t think it is, at least I doubt it’s offered in vending machines, and it’s definitely not spat out of the machine piping hot like it is in Japan.

Canned coffee is an odd drink. It tastes nothing like real coffee. For one, it contains loads of sugar, more than actual coffee, so it tastes like hot water with corn syrup. For another, if you get the “cafe au lait” type, which I usually do, it has that strange milk-flavored dairy creamer taste that leaves an oily coating of white glue on your teeth, tongue and throat, which is not even remotely pleasant.

In short, I have no idea why I bother to drink it, but I drink it about once or twice a month.

Maybe I succumb to the convenience of getting a warm drink without having to boil water, maybe I have an urge for sickly sweet liquids, maybe I’m hungry and want to fool my stomach for a while longer, or maybe, just maybe, I enjoy holding onto the miniature hot can, so hot I have to pass it from hand to hand on the way back to my office. I should just leave it unopened and treat it as a tiny instant heater for my often freezing hands.

Categories
Multicultural life Whirling Dervish

Driving for light conversation

Yesterday evening my family and I drove out, creeping our way instinctively through a blizzard, to the neighboring village of Higashikawa. We had been invited by a local NPO worker who said the townspeople wanted to speak with foreigners for advice about setting up a concierge system for incoming foriegn tourists who wished to hike Asahidake of the Daisetsu mountains.

Yet, not surprisingly (after ten years in this country I should have known better), after we arrived we were spaced out evenly (a man from Korea was also present), so we were about three to four Japanese people per adult foreigner.

I was asked how long I had been in Japan, in Asahikawa, what I did for a living, how old my son was, why he had a Japanese name, what my husband did, where I learned to speak Japanese, and whether I cooked Japanese food or not, etc.

In other words, the event turned into a “talk with the foreigner” event and in an hour and a half no one asked me any questions about what would be helpful for foreign tourists who wished to visit the National Park (and later my husband confirmed that no such questions were asked of him either).

Only Kazu, the organizer for the event, made one comment, in Japanese, somewhat related to the unmentioned concierge planning. He said that when foreign tourists came to the mountain in tour groups all went smoothly because the Japanese agent handled everything and made sure the visitors followed the rules. But when people from foreign countries visited independently problems occurred. He said that they couldn’t read the rules since they were written in Japanese, and thus, they broke many rules. I wanted to state the obvious, that the rules should be posted in other languages, but I held my tongue.

When we begged leave, my husband had a puzzled look on his face and I was reminded of why I normally declined such formal social invitations.

The only person who seemed to have a blast was our son, who had the rare chance to eat three taboo chocolate chip cookies, and he celebrated the windfall by circling the sedated adults who sat around the table as if he were an insane hornet.

On the way home, driving slowly on invisible roads covered with snow and with visiblilty limited to ten yards, I went to the verge of apologizing for dragging my husband and son out of our warm house, into a snowstorm, for light conversation with total strangers. Instead, I said that we could chalk it up as a cultural learning experience.

My husband said, “And we met some nice people.” “People we will probably never see again,” I added. And so, we chuckled about the evening, thinking that maybe they had met with us to warn us indirectly to follow the rules if we ever stepped foot on the mountain. Very happy to be heading toward home, I silently wondered if our hosts had felt the scheduled meeting a success?

Categories
Oops Whirling Dervish

X the late movie

Remind me to never watch movies, especially violent ones, at night. Yesterday evening I went to the cinema to see “Bourne Supremacy” (alone) and I shared the experience with less than five other strangers.

In Japan, since the English language is supplementary to the sound and the music, the volume is increased to the extreme, and with the digital surround sound, I found myself imprisoned in thousands of squealing tires, crashing cars and was repeatedly shot through the heart, lungs, head, leg, shoulder, enough to turn me into a sponge.

Yes, I enjoyed the movie. The director of photography had some nice in-the-face, realistic, camera work, and with the sound that loud, I couldn’t escape immersion into the story…which is the crux of the problem. I often get too immersed in a book or a movie so that I stop distinguishing it as fiction; at least while I am reading or watching: the story is happening and I am there.

Last night I had two separate nightmares where people with guns were haunting me and my family. There is no fear greater than the fear that someone wants to harm your child. Wide-eyed, in the middle of the dark, I cursed men and war and guns…how can people possibly do such things after they have held a child in their arms? I came to the conclusion that the only real reason a human might naturally kill another would be if someone had killed their child.

Thinking of Iraq and Afghanistan and all the places on this planet where people kill each other, I pictured all the parents who have lost children to guns, tanks, knives, bombs, tasers, and landmines. These people must feel their hearts were torn out with bare hands. I cannot fathom such first-hand grief, although I grew up in the clouds of my mother’s silent grieving and taste the residue of such pain in my bones.

George W. calls some of these very parents terrorists, but I would call them humans who have suffered and wish revenge. I think, laudably, few parents who lose their children turn to revenge, but some must. I know not all so-called terrorists lost children, but many have lost someone they loved, or why else would they willingly die? Faith? Maybe, but I doubt it. Loss distinguishes those who fight as a job, for pay, and those who fight due to a history of death and pain.

I don’t justify either’s choice, both are delusional to me and both do not understand how violence begets violence. I suppose both soldiers and so-called terrorists (whom, recall, the media calls ‘freedom fighters’ whenever they are good for US business) eventually turn into the same sad, broken humans–but I can understand better the latter who began killing out of the loss of someone they had loved.

Reaching over to check my son last night, who felt as warm as a fresh loaf of bread, I wondered if I could ever live in the US again. That sinister fear invades every gesture and sentence on the TV and movie screen until people start to think no one can be trusted, not even your doctor, your neighbor, or your spouse, or your own self.

By the shape of the movies, by the actions of the US government, by the coiffed glee the news reporters report their wars, the respect for life–as a precious, beautiful, once-in-a-lifetime force that enriches us with each breath–dissipates into plastic consumption and necessary entertainment. The media, and perhaps eventually the general populace, have justified erasing others’ lives. What makes humans reach such a point?

I am not saying I don’t enjoy Hollywood movies, I do, but I wonder if I should? The barrage of fabricated metallic and human sounds and the bloody images of countless acts of violence submerge into my subconciousness, maybe even into my unconsciousness, and I am gripped in a panic of fear. Twice in the night. Such fear never would have visited me had I stayed home. Oh please, remind me never to watch movies late at night.

Categories
Beginning Spiral Poems & art

SILVER PLATE LAKE

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Below the plane
a silver plate begs
for coins
of constellations,
enough to buy feed
for the night mare
to ride into the forest
of glistening eyes
and sharpened claws.

With blind mutt’s eye,
a lake searches its owner
by scent and sound.
There she is! Wrapped in
riveted armor
and hidden in
ocean-rage boom.

Yes, I ‘m here,
my lovely one,
and I hear you
snuffling through
snow for bones.

Wait. It won’t be long.
In May I’ll submerge
pale limbs
in your waters.
Add a tinge
of blue beauty
to your immortal eye.

Categories
Respite

Outside of Hanalei

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Just ten minutes from our beach home, we saw the lusher greens of the north shore of Kaua’i, as the rain falls heaviest in the mountain rainforest in the distance. Below the mountains lie the taro fields.

Categories
Respite

Waimea Canyon, Kaua’i

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On a dead-end road, we looked out over this majestic scene.

Categories
Beginning Spiral Respite

Return from Kaua’i

We just returned from a short stay in Kaua’i and now back among the snow tunnels and crisp blue skies of Hokkaido.

The relentless roar of the ocean, the lush variation of tropical greens, the smell of citronella candles and the taste of fresh coconut meat linger inside me and I find it hard to be fully “home.”

Both places hold natural beauty in a different way, both places hold me in their embrace.

Categories
Beginning Spiral Ordinary Miracles

Night trumpet

Yesterday my son decided not to take his nap. He lay in bed with his toy car and stayed silent, except for some muttering, for over an hour, without ever falling asleep. I figured the downtime might suffice for a nap…but in the evening he had reached that punch-drunk state of exhaustion, running wildly from room to room, falling and sliding across the floors, crashing into futons.

When carried off to bed, his body felt heavy, although he remained wide-eyed and chattery. He snuggled into the futon. After a short period of silence, he started to shout in very loud, syncopated yelps, maybe four or five times. These yells held no rhyme or reason, but blasted out of him like a trumpet on fire. Then, in another minute or so, he slipped into a blissful slumber.

Categories
Poems & art

Reptiles of the mind

(Upon hearing the 2005 State of the Union Address)

“The man who never alters his opinion is like
standing water, and breeds reptiles of the mind.”

–William Blake

The fetid pond frightened away most visitors
but not the reptiles, who slithered and slipped in
the slime with slight chlorophyll grins.
The water surrendered to the revelry
with a nitrogenous green song, silencing the lives
of all, fish or fowl, who cried for oxygen and clarity.
Those who thrived in the cauldron of algae
were left alone to exhale in clouded caves.

But then one day the sun broke through the grey air
and with baker’s hands wrapped these creatures
in fresh papered skins to bake
their eye sockets empty of any misdeeds
while the water desiccated into flour, then bread.

The grasses grew long tresses into the earth
and tangled and tossed about their seeds.
Then someone saw a child arrive with twigs and feathers
twisted in unkempt hair. It romped on sturdy legs
through paintbrush and dandelions, singing
a song void of colors, void of words,
drowning out the ancestors’ coughing bones.

Categories
Ordinary Muse

Life’s lesson

My son pecks at food, never has been a three-square-meal child. He has some idiosyncratic preferences as well: he likes to eat ketchup with a spoon, parmesan cheese with nothing under it, uncooked spaghetti noodles, and frozen uncooked french fries. Neither my husband or I crave these foods, however.

In his first days of daycare he wouldn’t eat the lunches we had packed: rice and vegetables, spaghetti (cooked), tofu stir-fry, foods he sometimes likes to eat at home. Finally we hit upon peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and that seemed to satisfy him, although he’d probably prefer we’d skip the bread part of the deal.

Then he occasionally stopped eating the sandwich, just half-hearted bites….until yesterday, when a little boy named Takato, three months his junior, began to attend the same daycare. Apparently Takato had taken a strong interest in our son’s PB&J sandwich and tried to reach for it earnestly, repeatedly.

At that moment (his teacher reports) my son took an avid interest in his sandwich and hurriedly jammed the sandwich into his mouth (“chooka-chooka-chooka” was the sound she made to describe his quick munching). The lesson is easy, but a good one: sometimes we don’t appreciate the value of what we have until someone attempts to take it away.

Categories
Whirling Dervish

Windows narrow

Free time for me, if it were a window, would be a slit cut into the fortress turret.

With students streaming in for their graduate theses to be edited, with the demands of the readings and the group activities for my grad class in educational research, with the daily prep and teaching, the marking (long overdue), and with the waking up early to prepare my son for daycare, I am losing grip on giving myself time to just be.

This is not a complaint, really, because life always has its moments of high speed and, blessfully, there is an end in sight. At least the teaching and the students’ visits will end next Thursday and then I can have a less stringent daily schedule to follow. I welcome that freedom, and I need it!

My son is learning to play with other kids. For two years his primary playmates have been his parents, and now he is being immersed in the life of playing with people his own age. At first his teacher said he didn’t seem to notice the other kids, just off doing his own thing, in his own reality.

Yesterday, for the first time, he joined others to “run” at certain times while listening to a storybook. A landmark event! This morning is also the first time he didn’t start crying when I dropped him off at daycare.

I think he is starting to see the joy in playing with others besides his parents. I am happy and relieved.

We decided to to increase his days at daycare because he needs much more time with other kids, and we don’t wish to jar him weekly with only two days of school, and then he has the chance to learn Japanese naturally and proficiently. It is good for him to play outside everyday with others and to learn how to share and get along with others. It is something I need to learn, too ;-).

Now I am off to the land of educational research….this class is a challenge because it isn’t as compelling a subject for me, at least not yet.

Categories
Poems & art

Lost hat

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LOST HAT

I dreamt about that hat again
although it�s been gone
for two months now, slipped
from my hood into the deep
unplowed snow of the faculty lot.

When I retraced my path, it had
already vanished into the hands
of a student or a professor
who must daily marvel at the most
curious and warmest hat on earth.

My husband suggested that maybe
it wasn�t stolen, that maybe
it had burrowed into the snow
like its cousin, the squirrel,
and in spring it will reappear.

With watery eyes, it will leap
to my head and set its sodden paws
upon my chest and purr. Or a crowd
will gather around to whisper as
I fling myself onto its furry corpse.

As a child I had heard of a faraway land
where forgotten things live.
Millions of solitary socks, gloves and
mittens, umbrellas, unfinished books,
stray dogs and cats, and helium balloons
frolic in a mountainous land with
the children and the elderly
we discard or misplace.

In the dream my hat was there, large
enough to engulf the heads of the eight
most powerful world leaders, strong
enough to eradicate the coldest,
most ruthless minds, bold enough
to shout the truth of the oppressed,
a triumphant, headless King of the Hill.

Categories
Poems & art

A Fable: a friend is gone

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The poemcard called “A Fable” is written for my friend, the poet Kijima Hajime, who passed away last year. He will be missed! I met him only in words, we never met face to face, but through letters, faxes, postcards and emails, he inspired me with his joy of words, his mixing of drama, music, image with poems, and his reaching out to me, a stranger, and inviting me to co-translate modern Japanese poems with him for publication.

It is rare to meet an artist who seeks out others and takes joy in working with people, even those who are unknown, such as me. His readers know him mostly for his linked haiku (renga) postcard collaborations with poets and working happily in languages from distant places. He also translated Langston Hughes’s works and children’s books, such as those by Ezra Jack. I will miss his generous spirit and it is hard to believe there will be no more of his packages of books, artcards and poems at my doorstep.

I only found this sad news out yesterday when I received from his wife one of those colorless traditional postcards announcing death in Japan. I had noticed his email address stopped working months ago, but I had hoped it was a glitch, as he was a professed novice with a computer. Maybe my fear for the worst kept me from believing anything else… I knew he was very ill.

Today I feel sure his warmth and humble beauty will stay on earth with us, if we look and listen closely to the smallest and slowest moments of each day.

Categories
Respite

Silent hallways

Except for the atonal clanging and hissing of the ancient radiator and the hum of the electric fan heater and an inexplicable alarm’s buzzer (twice in three hours it has gone off for less than three seconds each), the day is an unusually quiet one.

The students are absent, like chalk erased from a blackboard, because preparations for the National University Entrance Examinations are underway. The only preparation I noticed so far was a lone woman from the Student Affairs division pulling down posters from the entrance walls, so my guess is that today is one of those secret days professors and administrators create for respite from the seagull noises of the young. The actual exams begin tomorrow.

The sky is out in that gorgeous bright winter blue, the same crisp pale blue O’Keefe captured in her painting of Minnesota birch trees, which I saw at the Minneapolis Metropolitan Museum of Art many moons ago. I assumed they are Minnesotan birches, but that just reveals my prejudice for the beauty of my birthplace. I don’t think this color can occur in a tropical world. It is painted with the serene hand of ice and snow.

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