I don’t write in a journal everyday, but I have accumulated many entries over the past 50+ years beginning in 1966. Some items evolved into longer works. Among the leftovers little pieces survived. I thought a collection of these with a piece culled from the same date in a past year would make an interesting yearbook. The consistencies and inconsistencies of mind, skipping back and forth across time, provide varied perspectives. It is difficult to remember the context of the past we’ve lived; we also make suppositions about times that predate ourselves.

The few alterations from original drafts were to improve clarity. The worst of my work is not included. There remains enough mediocrity and immaturity to make me feel humble and you feel smart. There are also moments of accidental insight and incidental humor.

Author Stephen Crane referred to his little pieces as pills…apparently they were small and somewhat hard to swallow, but good for you.


Comments Welcome!

Sunday, June 30, 2019

When the self-addressed stamped envelope


from this week in 2015  (I was 70)

When the self-addressed stamped envelope
returned marked Rejected
or stated so in curt form-letter language
I thought they meant the enclosed manuscript
But I was young and it was so much more
They rejected the very idea that it was worthwhile
for them to take the time to put it in the SASE
distasteful to moisten the glue to seal its fate
But they did it because it was their job
In the end they felt they had the final word
from some anonymous writer even if they had not
I learned to repay rejection with rejection
It is an easy thing to learn
At the farmers’ market an unsavory acquaintance
is easily ignored among the selection of peaches
The committee appointed to draft a mission statement
doesn’t miss a missing member
A class shouldn’t require dinner at the professor’s house
It is a presumption beyond the scope of course description
Reunions should be as brief and meaningless
as the memories they rekindle
So in spite I mailed another failure in
With a return envelope addressed to them

Saturday, June 29, 2019

From a balcony on the 5th floor


June 29, 2010  (I was 65)

From a balcony on the 5th floor of Keauhou Beach Hotel overlooking tidal pools, fish pond, restored heiau and lava coastline:
         A native cultural activity is in progress, a small group, most moved like locals.  They brought bundles of green reeds into the water to soak, then pounded them with rocks at the shoreline.  They peeled them lengthwise into long strips.  Two young Hawaiian girls washed an assortment of gourds inside and out and left them on the grass in the sun.  The man leading the group, guiding what they did, was possibly the young girls’ father.  As for guidance, the group though mostly haoles, needed little, and each was soon engaged in their particular task in proximity to the others, but with plenty of individual workspace.  None of them saw me smoking on one high balcony among so many others. 
         At one point the leader, lying prone on the lava with his lips near the water’s edge, seemed to stare into an opening or possibly into the tidal pond.  Then his quiet voice could easily be heard chanting Hawaiian syllables even at my three to four hundred yard distance.  I realized his voice was resonating through a chain of mini lava tubes.  Some from the group lay with ears on the rock, obviously to experience the reverberating acoustic effect.
         The chanting ended, some settled into serious braiding and weaving with their strands of reed.  Others tired of the project or the heat and wandered off with their materials.  The leader carried his stuff up the lawn past some hammocks toward the parking lo-.  Did I forget to mention the interesting feeding display among the schools of tropical fish in the clear tidal pond directly beneath me?  I must have been preoccupied.

Friday, June 28, 2019

Marsh Harbour, Sea Trail


June 28, 2000  (I was 55)

Marsh Harbour G.C.   Calabash N.C. -morning
         Another great round at a course whose attraction is natural beauty unadorned and tamper free.  It is interesting that most guys in the group find this the most appealing course after playing such a variety of modern sculptured ones.  Architect Dan Maples’ best work seems to create interesting avenues for fairways among the trees and waterways with minimal disruption.  I like the thinned trees that define borders with scattered pine needles underneath as the primary rough.  Even with some spotty greens, apparently attacked by some type of fungus,  the scenic variety and the build-up to dramatic finishes on both nines makes this the best we played in terms of bang for the buck.  Sparse summer play by locals makes for the seclusion of a private club.
Sea Trail –Reese Jones Course  -afternoon
         Dan Bachelder and I stopped into the real estate office to pick up some brochures and spoke to an agent for less than 15 minutes.  When he learned we had a tee time, he called the pro shop and compt our round.  Nice.  After all the golf in the past weeks we were too tired to focus on serious play.  The day was warm, we were relaxed as we recalled memorable moments of the trip.  Dan Stevens came upon a six-foot alligator that eyed him from the lip of a fairway trap he was in.  After ignorant re-assurances from the rest of us, he hit the shot (quite well) as we took pictures.

Thursday, June 27, 2019

rhubarb poem


June 27, 1970  (I was 25)

         rhubarb poem
Each summer in a neighboring yard
rhubarb stalks folded their green umbrellas
to squeeze through the picket fence.
I followed the dry transition from leaf to leather
and awaited a moment of divine inspiration.
Rhubarb is swiped alone.
There’s no camaraderie in it
not like the apple trees watched by gangs
in anticipation of darker raids.
This is spontaneous crime, second degree
decided just after dusk, too light to go home
but night enough for fear,
a shock to make fence jumping easier.
Two three four stalks snapped and out
and up the alley before a thought of freedom
so sweet and tart, sour celery dipped in sugar. 

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

If I were editor


June 26, 1974  (I was 29)

If I were editor
I would have no friends
I’d stick ms’s together with gum
and send them home to papa
My rejection notice would say
Fuck You
-don’t waste our time

If I were editor I would have no friends
I’d read with teeth
clenched and pores open
Then when something blew my jaws
I’d know and I’d lay the thing out in Braille
and touch it completely   

Tuesday, June 25, 2019

We can easily imagine because we’ve seen


from this week in June 2013  (I was 68)
  
We can easily imagine because we’ve seen
the film running backwards
The diver emerging from the pool
to somersault upward and delicately
landing on the tip of the springboard
The full bloom rose withdrawing to bud
A poker dealer plucks cards out of the air
to snap them back on top of the deck
Though as readily available on the reel
we don’t do as well to mentally picture
the baby re-stuffed into the womb
feet first

And how many redirected images
swarming ants feet doing a jitterbug
breathing the pianist the drummer
in fact the whole damn orchestra
even orbiting planets and drifting stars
congressional speakers
seem not to change at all
no matter how we run the film through the projector

Monday, June 24, 2019

Ordeal number one


June 24,  1973  (I was 28)

Ordeal number one
life is a terminal disease you say
who cares says I
I am tired of your crying
The woman you left says Who the fuck cares
just quit coming back
I’ve got this life to live while you die
And you say Oh if someone only loved me
Oh if someone only chose me
Oh I should have been a priest
So go sit in a confessional
and turn brown
No one will see or smell the beer
behind those heavy curtains
Maybe you can find it in your heart
or in your religion
to forgive us all

Sunday, June 23, 2019

Emily Dickinson in Pleasanton


from this week in June 2013  (I was 68)

   Emily Dickinson in Pleasanton
I’m somebody.  Who are you?
Are you somebody too?
Could there be a pair of us?
Nobody told me so.

How dreary to be no one
how rural, like a lout
with a name unheard the livelong June.
The very idea makes me pout.

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Yosemite Valley


June 22, 2004  (I was 59)
                          
Yosemite Valley
Entering the valley down highway 120
upon reaching the floor and the Merced River
Dylan sang Forever Young
in both versions from Planet Waves
We stopped at the chapel
Where our small marriage began to grow
twenty-five years ago* 
I left the car windows open
We entered the building
wept smiling         
and reaffirmed a vow
that needed only eye contact and hands squeezed
We found another couple
to take our picture on the chapel steps
where the view of Yosemite Falls
is a natural reminder
of the power and fragility of permanence 

         * it's now been forty years ago today...

Friday, June 21, 2019

In a plain envelope


June 21, 1969  (I was 24)

In a plain envelope I received
a ten-dollar bill  A note said
Here is ten dollars If you
don’t want it send it to some
one else  I suppose it was
from a rich person but I hope
a car mechanic sent it

I burned Veblen’s Theory of
the Leisure Class

The People’s Market opened
You get a punch card when
you buy your groceries  After
you spend $600 a family
of four is entitled to a
really fantastic meal in
their restaurant
Rampant socialism

Thursday, June 20, 2019

I heard a Hawaiian lady she say


June 20, 2018  (I was 73)

I heard a Hawaiian lady she say
Pele erupt so furious
to discourage over-population
Too many people try live here
moving from all over but then
I think of five hundred hales destroyed
belong most of them to locals living
here all they life and wonder why
she pick on them allatime
The ones probly love her best

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

The sun was shining behind me in the morning


June 19, 2005  (I was 60)

The sun was shining behind me in the morning.
I drove the wagon down the dim low spot in the road.
What rains had been were not here now.
The descent was not steep, the shade was cool,
the mud not deep, I tracked us steadily through.
The sun promised itself on the slope ahead,
warmed our backs; sweat beaded our hair.
Forward the bright inclination soon glared in our eyes.
The wheels threw dirt then clay; the hillcrest lay in shadow.
We got stuck in my ignorance; the sun is setting.
The path behind is golden, our destination dark.
It’s a cool despondent night of frustration and fear.
With cold resignation we gather wood for fire,
eat canned food with plenty to drink.
The stars perforate our thoughts with light,
recognition of our comparative good fortune and a plan
to push the wagon to higher ground at dawn.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The world is so designed


June 18, 2011  (I was 66)

The world is so designed
to provide little beyond need
that may be gained sans treachery

Gold panned cold from mountain streams
is more surely attained by thievery
Easier to polish an idea than think it

How to be cheated a first lesson learned
to swallow pain in the heat of shame
to know rust is the heart of trust

The teacher teaches how to take
from any with any to give
and to learn our best gift is hunger

Monday, June 17, 2019

If you buy groceries in Sunol you buy them at Ben’s


June 17, 1978  (I was 33)

If you buy groceries in Sunol you buy them at Ben’s
it’s a lesson in the cost of convenience
to learn to pay his prices gladly
Time is the main thing Ben deals

When Ben does business quietly
he is out of sorts
One uncharitable might say disinterested
Still most often he’s flashing gold from the teeth

Knowing you Ben will joke and flirt with your young cousin
and ask how things are with your work
And when someone calls to him
Hey Chink, where’s the beer?
he hands over your bag and thanks you
before showing him where

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Tiger’s Eye golf course


June 16, 2006  (I was 61)

              Tiger’s Eye golf course at Ocean Ridge Plantation, NC

         After last week’s wet play, the fairways and greens have firmed up, cut to quickness with punitive subtle breaks. The maintenance on a course of this caliber for under $55 is incredible, a truly superior value.  I partnered with Dan.  He shot a 70, two under par from the back tees, beating his previous best by five strokes.  Awesome, five birdies.  All of us present were in agreement; we’d rather shoot 70 than have a hole in one. 
         Later Dan said he would never have done it if he was cart-partnered with JD, as it is JD’s style to talk trash and get inside a competitor’s head.  Instead, he appreciated my realization I ought to just play my game, maybe with more subdued commentary.  In part yes, but Dan’s play re-awakened me to a most satisfying pursuit in golf, to attain a meditative state through precision in physical action.  I bettered my front nine 53, with a back nine of 42; not a great total score but a valued lesson.
         In the afternoon, TP’s foursome traveled to Avocet at Wild Wing to cash in a rain check.  Four played Heather Glen in the usual golden warmth and magical light of late afternoon.  Four relaxed and packed for the morning flight home.  A most memorable trip. 

Saturday, June 15, 2019

When I was told so long ago


June 15, 2011  (I was 66)

When I was told so long ago
Appreciate your youth it will not last.
I believed and did as I was told,
lay on my back to look at the blue
and the clouds and appreciate.
Loved what I had and so valued it
I put some of it on deposit in the bank
Now so long from then I still withdraw
beneath contorted cloud, that boy to thank.

Friday, June 14, 2019

Every action shrinks the noun that made it


from this week in June 2014  (I was 69)

Every action shrinks the noun that made it
as Genesis shrunk the god to creation
quite a price for recognition
a defining of the Word
by saying what it did
Once that story starts
you can blame the author for anything
In every incantation is a mispronunciation
Every testament a singular perception

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Turn the corner or come round the bend


June 13, 1994  (I was 49)

Turn the corner or come round the bend
to feel wind in the face blowing a pace
not felt from behind.  Disconcerting to find
our movements of skill and grace
were artificially aided by wind at our back, 
Like the buoyancy of water
a levitating wind we were carried upon
and ran upon by choosing the path of the current,
the path of gravity unimpeded
until a friendly eddy brings us about
against the surprising force of the flow.
Facing the wind, fronting the wind
breath is filled with what is in the air,
lungs full with the forced inspiration
as when faced with an uphill climb.
But there is no hill, only the passage of time
a change in direction and the resistance of wind.
Wind builds strength in the body 
but each new turning toward resistant direction
requires an energy of unexpected intensity,
causes a pained exclamation from the thighs,
acknowledges in wry recognition less than surprise
the spiraling passage pulsing in sinew.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

I watch migrant workers tending crops


June 12,1972  (I was 27)

I watch migrant workers tending crops
row upon row they are bent over
strawberries cauliflower or cabbages
They arrive in buses condemned by state schools
The fenced fields are crowded by housing developments
Beyond the chain link is an apartment swimming pool
The last furrow borders a shopping center parking lot
These will be the final seasons here
The sun bakes dust  The workers wear straw hats
and neck cloths  Eight sheds with screen doors
stand in the center of the dry acreage  The bus
is parked there  The workers move
up the rows without straightening their backs
Local women wheel produce from Safeway
to their station wagons  Cars laugh by and leave fumes
If I stand here long I’ll feel suspect and dizzy
I can’t quite believe the mix  Business as usual