michaelboy: (Default)
It is amazing how the pattern of a scent can be so complex and yet so precise.

I imagine holding my yellow oilskin rain slicker (somewhat like the Gorton's Fisherman's apparel) and remember its smell most of all. With that, I am in a steady warm downpour waiting for my sisters and dad to come home from school. The coat has a stoplight pattern safety theme print on the inside of the coat. Near the curb, I am stomping and humming to myself and I like the way it sounds as the rain patters on the detached beaked hood. I am wearing a pair of oversized black rubber boots - the kind with slotted steel buckles that jostle with a very characteristic metallic sound.

Now many raincoats are vinyl which really doesn't remind me of rainwear - rather I think of swimming pools, beach balls, and those guaranteed-flat-by-morning air-mattresses.

* * *

I depart as air—I shake my white locks at the run-away sun,
I effuse my flesh in eddies, and drift it in lacy jags.

I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love,
If you want me again, look for me under your boot-soles.

"You will hardly know who I am, or what I mean,
But I shall be good health to you nevertheless,
And filter and fibre your blood.

Failing to fetch me at first, keep encouraged,
Missing me one place, search another,
I stop somewhere waiting for you."

~ From: "Leaves of Grass", Song of Myself, Walt Whitman

Jus Soli

May. 11th, 2025 07:16 pm
michaelboy: (Default)


Lusty feminine weed
-- flourishing in a scraggly field
imparting it's spice to the air
brings fire to the limbs and
and breath to the full of life
without reserve in poor soil
This is your country's heart
and it contains a vast mark
of your beauty, body and form


* * *

One of the loneliest things I know is the sound of a flagpole clasp slapping against its metal pole in a strong wind.

What We Do

May. 8th, 2025 06:50 pm
michaelboy: (Default)
I just purchased the entire Ken Burns' Civil War series and watched the first episode today. It's been years since I first saw this series but, in my opinion, it is one of the finest produced documentaries ever made.

Sometimes my mind wanders and wonders - at how awful people can be, especially at how one human can treat another person. Sometimes, it happens during war - even though we do share the same flesh and spirit - we are able to torture, mame and kill - and even, at times, under the blessing of righteousness and justice. I know I am an inexorable part of this history but I still feel embarrassed by it.

In contrast, I think as many horrible acts that can be imagined, there are incidents and times born of better human character that make me feel proud. The writer Walt Whitman, didn't hold a rifle during the American Civil War but I think in his own way, he battled. Some folks might question his motivation - whether his political fervor or sexual interests bolstered him, but regardless of any such notions or declamations, he spent many precious hours with wounded soldiers from the war. Often he would read poetry or prose to them, share trifles such a tobacco or candy or simply spend time listening. He saw many men suffer greatly and saw many men die. But in my mind... I think he also loved greatly.



"In one bed a young man, Marcus Small, Co. K, Seventh Maine -- sick with dysentery and typhoid fever -- pretty critical, too -- I talk with him often -- he thinks he will die -- looks like it indeed. I write a letter for him home to East Livermore, Maine -- I let him talk to me a little, but not much, advise him to keep very quiet -- do most of the talking myself -- stay quite a while with him, as he holds to my hand -- talk to him in a cheering, but slow, low, and measured manner -- talk about his furlough, and going home as soon as he is able to travel."

* * *
A more than worthy excerpt:

michaelboy: (Default)

Open Field with Two Trees, e.e. cummings

There is a pattern of home that is made from the folds of rich terrain of which I am able to recall the scent, shape and character of the land more than I can accurately remember the names of any particular streets or townships.

This few square miles of space will always be home even though it is not home and has a design which sits in equally in and is imprinted into your heart the same as mine.

It could be the contour of a dirt road, the remnants of a highwall, or the curve of your shoulder. It is here that I imagine waking with you as the haze burns slowly into yellow.


So

May. 4th, 2025 08:27 pm
michaelboy: (Default)
Most of the deaths I encountered in the ten years that I volunteered in the Sewickley Hospital emergency room in Pittsburgh were due to heart disease.

In one moment, a man my age was routinely taking out the garbage at home and in the next all there is for the family to see was the stub of an intubation tube in the mouth of a lifeless body.

If there is one thing I could say to folks, is to please do not wait until someone like me leads your grieving partner and family into a silent treatment room. It's really hard and really really sad. I promise. So please make yourself a promise -- to eat better food, and to start to make exercise and healthy living more of a regular part of your life.



* * *

Cacoëthes

May. 4th, 2025 08:24 pm
michaelboy: (Default)
I wake up and feel us entangling
even when you are not there, I do.
michaelboy: (Default)
The scent of cinders, slag and creosote -
balancing from rail to rail, signal flares and
the green glass of telephone pole insulators


* * *




I always dreamed of making a small rail riding car that would be powered by a lawnmower engine. It wouldn't have been elaborate -- simply a platform with a crude set of controls. Even today, I imagine how it would be made and more importantly, you beside me on the seat. When I see a railroad company pickup truck that has been retrofitted with rail wheels, I get excited. I guess my soul is dazzled by trains and you but I don't really understand much of the reasoning for it.

I may never make the rail riding car, but that's really not so important.
michaelboy: (Default)


The field has an early scent of horses -
the steam rising from their velvet mouths.
Tearing the closer to a place further away
from where you are, simply to be with you.
Here, where once a determined plow parted
and harrow softened, now lies softly fallow
as they don't remember, or seem to care
what purpose other than sweet grass to
find along this fence and twisted board
I knew you before I was born, with hands
that worked the field, but no longer do

I want to sit in the sun with warm denim stretched over my skin and remember those things I anticipated the most.



This exploration, not of land but of your country.

~~~~~~

* Some of the very best poetry that I've ever known in a song... so it is well worth a listen:

michaelboy: (Default)
For all of our armchair quarterbacking and posturing, the greatest good may actually come from getting our hands dirty.

Mother Teresa made a significant impact to the entire world -- greater than most might ever imagine, but it wasn’t because she posted the coolest memes which suited her ideology or conversely finding ones that condemned another’s. Instead she founded the Missionaries of Charity which gave “wholehearted service to the poorest of the poor” Of course, one could argue against several of her individual principles, but endemically as humans we will always have differing philosophies and fortunately just as deserving of love.
So if you want to see change in the world, live your life as a demonstration of what is right in you. Someone may actually take note of it, be correspondingly inspired and find a desirable change in themselves because of it.

Help a neighbor shovel a walk, or take someone who can’t drive to the grocery store, mow someone’s grass, collect gifts for needy, tend to the sick, donate clothes, sponsor an AA meeting, edit a résumé, volunteer with kids or old folks, help someone sort out mathematics, their taxes or retirement planning, put in a light switch or an electrical outlet, or even teach someone to paint.

One of our greatest gifts is that we ALL have special talents to share and by investing a small amount of time doing these things each week, your personal rate of return, on any discounted basis, will be positive.

And you may get peed on by handling a toad, but you won’t get warts from it.

* * *


"Quand tu veux construire un bateau, ne commence pas par rassembler du bois, couper des planches et distribuer du travail, mais réveille au sein des hommes le désir de la mer grande et large."

~Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
michaelboy: (Default)
Years ago, this was purported to be a way of exercising with minimal exertion or effort:



Now we have the Legxercise Ellipse and the Legxercise Pro.





While I would agree that these electrically-powered devices might minimally improve circulation and muscle tone (especially for the infirmed or elderly), the benefits are marginal, at best. If these devices required actual muscle energy rather than an electrical motor, at least the caloric burn would be more considerable. The commercials where I've seen these $200+ contraptions, often depict young healthy people touting the significant benefits. I'm thinking a walk to the kitchen or bathroom would easily be more anaerobically beneficial.

As much as I know, most beneficial excerise (such as a yoga vinyasa) takes a measurable level of effort.

I won't be spending that $200 anytime soon.
michaelboy: (Default)
with the Stick-Shaker rattling like a tin-can full of marbles:



It's okay to be afraid when scary things happen. Being brave is a whole different matter - it's like those moments when your heart flutters before and during a difficult climb. You keep the engine throttled-up because you know, in spite of your fear, an aerodynamic stall would be catastrophic
michaelboy: (Default)
I half-swallowed a marble when I was five and it caused me to choke. My mom turned me upside-down in the living room and started pounding my back in a futile attempt to dislodge it. I still remember that incredible feeling of her desperation. I had swallowed my tongue and remember her finally reaching in with her fingers to free it and the marble. When I was a bit older, she told me that I was turning blue and she thought I might die.




Sometimes when I miss her, I especially remember this, just because...
michaelboy: (Default)


Since 1st class postage stamps are now 73 cents and postcard stamps are now 56 cents, it's a great deal if you buy a stamp from me. The hard part was finding those little cardboard sanitary folders (for your protection).
michaelboy: (Default)
There are many good things that I miss. Some of them are unspeakable as they are either too embarrassing or their revelation might hurt the feelings of those around me in an undesirable way. At times, I wonder if I expect more than I should or if I am just an extraordinarily selfish person.

Notwithstanding, I am grateful that I'm able to climb into bed at night -- relatively pain free, snuggle and think about my day. I live in a comfortable environment. I have my sanity (I think..therefore I do, I think). I'm able to work at a part-time job and have two volunteer things that I love doing so very much.

* * *

Missing


A consuming wildfire that spreads inside the chest. It steals the breath – not so much as to kill or injure a person but just enough that even a hundred spoons of Jif® are ineffective in dousing it.
michaelboy: (Default)
Who knew there could be so much feeling in such an incredibly soft spot - just behind and below each ear?
Anyone who reads this surely may place two fingers from each hand there, yet not even begin to imagine.
michaelboy: (Default)
There are so many things to lose
(tangible, warm, and living things)
at a pace faster than perception allows
yet there is great value in the hand that
you held when small, or the shuddering
shy release of yearning or the closeness
once touchable in the scent of another


* * *



"I can feel you're still around
and the dream overtakes me"
~ From: "Persistence of Memory", Afro Celt Sound System
michaelboy: (Default)
In the fold of your hands, I grew
dad doesn't wipe my headlights clean
mom doesn't say "I hate to see you go"
- as once both were true

but I'm terribly lucky and wouldn't trade
days that pass differently now, simply because they do
and for all this in the fold of your hands, I knew


At the end of those weekends when I'd come home from college, I'd pack my truck with clean laundry, extra food and a fresh $20 bill from my dad (well sometimes it was two bills). I hadn't really studied - like I had planned to do. (Forget it Maslow, my self-actualisation levels weren't quite high enough) I would say 'bye' to mom in the living room and dad would come down to the garage. In an small way, I didn't want to go and I think in the same odd way, he didn't want me to go. Anxiously, he'd ask me if I had changed my oil or if I needed anything. And as we headed out into the driveway, dad would bring his homemade windshield washer stuff in the Windex bottle and would tell me how it was "good stuff" and that newspaper was always better than using paper towels. This was a scene repeated many times - it was a way of staying physically connected until the last minute. I think, more importantly it was also his precious way of protecting me.

Postulate: Clean Windows = Safer Trip


He would always be sure to wipe my headlights as my truck rumbled to life - just to be sure I was extra safe.
michaelboy: (Default)
I used to sit under the Forsythia bush -- the one by the back basement door of my parent's house. I imagined that some day we would timidly trade the yellow flowers and then wander down by the burning barrel where we would count each ant crawling on my mom's peonies and so then we could reckon it was our entire world. Overwhelmed with desire or perhaps need, I would have loved you so completely.

What sometimes seems irrational, often isn't at all and recognizing weakness can also be one of our greatest strengths.
michaelboy: (Default)
When I ran along the creek, I remember the round rocks that bruised the bottom of my feet but still I loved it. It was more a lesson of feeling than of knowing and I would grow around the life that water brings as it would be part of me
michaelboy: (Default)
Against the Sahara sand
and to its soft conform
the nape, curve and languish
of your smooth skin rests

I held you here - fast
in my heart and in my fancy
and hoped for desert stars
to be whispered as your eyes

Here rests a quiet desire
where beauty is not
by pencil or of powder
but is tendered in morning

This unending moment
more than all ever beauty
is when I helplessly dream
of touching your hair



* * *

Once, in this same mineral Sahara, I was taught that a dream might partake of the miraculous. Again I had been forced down, and until day dawned I was helpless. Hillocks of sand offered up their luminous slopes to the moon, and blocks of shadow rose to share the sands with the light. Over the deserted work-yard of darkness and moonray there reigned a peace as of work suspended and a silence like a trap, in which I fell asleep.

When I opened my eyes I saw nothing but the pool of nocturnal sky, for I was lying on my back with outstretched arms, face to face with that hatchery of stars. Only half awake, still unaware that those depths were sky, having no roof between those depths and me, no branches to screen them, no root to cling to, I was seized with vertigo and felt myself as if flung forth and plunging downward like a diver.

But I did not fall. From nape to heel I discovered myself bound to earth. I felt a sort of appeasement in surrendering to it my weight. Gravitation had become as sovereign as love. The earth, I felt, was supporting my back, sustaining me, lifting me up, transporting me through the immense void of night. I was glued to our planet by a pressure like that with which one is glued to the side of a car on a curve. I leaned with joy against this admirable breast-work, this solidity, this security, feeling against my body this curving bridge of my ship.

~ From: Wind, Sand and Stars, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
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