Showing posts with label September. Show all posts
Showing posts with label September. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2011

September 11, 2011

firefighter

I have nothing really important or great to add to the many memorial events, articles, photographs and so on. I found it extremely painful to look back over images and news stories from that day. As many Americans do, I remember very clearly where I was and what I was doing when we first turned on the news.

Today my heart is heavy for the thousands of people affected by the 9/11 attacks in New York and Pennsylvania. I hope that while we take this day to remember the lives lost, we also remember the many who are left living with the effects of poisonous air and countless injuries associated with working at Ground Zero. I hope I don’t stop remembering them tomorrow when there isn’t a story about them on CNN or my homepage. It’s easy for me to want to sweep these memories under the rug but not everyone has that luxury. And I hope that we take today as an opportunity to give back to our own communities, the way the many first responders, firefighters, police, and rescue workers gave (and continue to give) in their community.

If you or someone you know was affected by the September 11th attack, my heart is with you, especially today.

love, elizabeth

PS: I couldn’t locate the original source for the photograph above but if someone knows it, email me or comment so I can credit it properly.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Fresh Air

 

Happy Labor Day Monday. Hope you’re all celebrating by doing some not-so-laborious things. Woke up this morning to find out that Ohio had suddenly realized it’s in September now for REAL. Madigan dragged me outside for a walk and I was greeted by some of the coolest, freshest smelling air. The wind was blowing just a little and the leaves were crunchy and the world smelled like rain and I thought, “Fall has arrived.” I’m sure it’ll get hot again and ruin it for me but until then, I’ve turned off the air-conditioning (which has given me the most outrageous electric bill all summer) and opened all the windows. Time for some fresh air.

I know I already said this, but I am ALMOST done re-doing my office and will be posting pictures, hopefully by tomorrow morning. Can’t wait to show you!

What about you? What’s taking up your Labor Day?

love, elizabeth

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Inspiration of the Month: Wayne Gilbert

Well, it’s September and I’m pleased as punch to present another inspiration of the month. And in honor of everyone going back to school, I thought I’d feature one of my all time favorite teachers. Meet Wayne.

Wayne was my very first college professor. I took English 101, Introduction to Literature, and two creative writing courses with him in my freshman year. I’ve told him this before and I’ll say it again, he has a way of approaching the students’ heart and work, as if they were equally important. Wayne taught me to look at the whole person, to treat myself and my journey (and the journey of others) with kindness, and to look at writing as a way to crawl inside the soul and shout with joy. Some of my best memories in a college classroom…Wayne jumping up and down, waving his hands, over the moon that he might actually get us to really, truly HEAR a poem. I could write and write about the ways that those first classes with Wayne shaped my views of education but I’ll simply say I would absolutely not be where I am today without him.

 

Wayne

I also owe him a huge debt for all of the poetry I read/heard in his classes. Wayne is a working poet and has graciously agreed to let me feature one of his poems here.

 

mourning-jazz for my mom

(alice may gilbert, 1929-2010;

“what are human beings that you are mindful of them. . .” Psalm 8:4a)

when we were re-united the last time

my mother was young her head full of mirthful hair

i hear her laughing now behind the door

on my side it’s raining

the cold wind has followed me home

the price of my usual luggage was too high to carry on

the ice has split herself open

my head is full of icelandic ash clouds

i’m waiting

to be

magma borne gaseous plumes

envelopes of post-eruptive matter

job’s god screaming at the inert world his new word order

solar fistulas flying out of the universe

older than the first droplets of sacred water

imprisoned miles inside arctic ice

mother says

the dark for her is sweet now lazy now as chocolate streams in thick milk shakes

she says her body is    light

i’ve walked here without a cane

waiting            waiting i’m

medicinal herbs in a swallowed capsule

the chemical in the head of a match to be scratched

her last exhalation spilled into my brother’s cupped hands

i press my palms against the cold wood

mirth bleeds through the heavy slab into my withered hands

runic syllables bubble up gurgle scat on my tongue

the wind offers a reedy chord

the rain picks up the rhythm

we stand on the dark porch-stage

making     m   u   s   i   c       all night long

 

Wayne2

You can find Wayne’s book, Magma-Mystic, by visiting HERE. He is also available for readings and workshops, especially in the Rocky Mountain area. You can email him at magmapoet@comcast.net. He writes and performs in Colorado, most often under the name Magmapoet with a group of improvisational jazz musicians. Be sure to check out his work! I’ll be posting a link to his new website on my sidebar soon.

What about you? What teachers have made an impact in YOUR life?

love, elizabeth

PS: Incidentally, Wayne’s the first dude inspiration I’ve featured on Love is the Adventure so he should feel preeeeeeetttttttty special. Ha.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...