A mixed bag

All posts in the A mixed bag category

HO HO!

Published February 6, 2019 by Nan Mykel

“Can you type?”

“No.”

“Can you file?”

“No.”

“Can you take shorthand?”

“No.”

“How about simple bookkeeping?”

“No.”

“What on earth can you do?”

“Everything you can!”

 

The above was discovered in a delightful 1970 book of poetry, Come Into the Mountains, Dear Friend,  by Susan Polis Schutz  Blue Mountain Arts, Inc.

Image: Pexels

Things — A Poem

Published February 4, 2019 by Nan Mykel

THINGS

They say it isn’t nice

to  love things as well as life

 

but hoarders know that things will stay

when others in their lives go way.

 

My things all around me pile,

big Mama to the little child.

 

Old letters calling to my mind,

tales from those who are left behind.

 

Wise old Yoda looks back at me

as though to say, “It’s me and thee.”

 

 

 

Breath of Fresh Air

Published February 4, 2019 by Nan Mykel

When I dabble in genealogy I frequently come upon quaint famly stories.  These are not my family, but are buried in various family line reports. It feels good and restful to think of simpler times:

First:  ….They then decided to return to Stokes County. In route back to North Carolina, they stayed overnight in Atlanta, Georgia. While eating supper in a big hotel that night, his daughter Myrtle spoke up and asked her papa, “please pass the dog bread.” He felt like going under the table. He stood up and explained that she always made cornbread for his greyhounds, for which he paid her 25 cents for each pone.

Second:   What I can recall the best is reading the newspaper for him. He always took the Winston-Salem Journal, but in his later years, he wanted me to read it for him. I don’t recall if he was having trouble with his eyesight, or if he was unable to read. After I got home from school, I would go over to his house, and he would be sitting in his front yard under one of those big maple trees in a straight-back chair. He was more interested in what was being printed about the war-World War II. I can remember reading about the Allies landing in France and how they fought across France and Belgium.

He would always check the western sky in the evening, to see what weather to expect for the next two or three days. If the red came on up overhead when the sun would set, it would be fair for the next two or three days. I don’t recall his peach orchard up there on Thompson’s Knob, except after it had grown up. We used to pick blackberries growing in the old orchard. I remember the apple and cherry trees above the house. I would go up there and find a big Jonathan Winters apple to take with me to school the next day.

He had a pack house. He had filled the space between the floor and ground with sawdust. He would put apples and pears down in the sawdust and keep them all winter.

He always brought the mules from the barn to the watering trough at noon to get a cool drink, so when we were out off working in the fields, and someone rang the dinnerbell, the mules would stop in their tracks–you could not even get them to finish the row. They would just stand there until you unhooked them from the plow, and they knew they were on their way to get a cool drink of that mountain water.

I always looked forward to wheat thrashing at Grandpa’s house. There was always a big dinner made. I remember how good that apple pie was. Wheat thrashing time was when the junebugs were flying. The kids would take a string of thread and tie it to the junebugs’ back legs and let him fly around.

These are the things that I can recall about my grandfather.

 

 

Breath-Taking Bird Photos (Really!)

Published February 2, 2019 by Nan Mykel

JoHanna Massey shares many fantastic bird photos which were taken this winter.  Too bad comments are closed.  I promise they’re remarkable.     https://johannamassey.com/2019/02/01/songs-too-sweet-and-wild/

THIS MOMENT IN TIME

Published January 30, 2019 by Nan Mykel

Gone one block for medicine for

me,

hasn’t returned after 3 hours.

Ice under snow,

I pray.

Pray? I have no one to pray to.

But I want

someone, something  to hear.

I never needed medicine that

bad.

A Good Way to Start the Day

Published January 24, 2019 by Nan Mykel

Go here and read this poem on the Poetry Foundation blog:  https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/53599/snowshoe-to-otter-creek

Snowshoe to Otter Creek

As One of You Observed: Yes I do long for a Group

Published January 23, 2019 by Nan Mykel

My current posting on facebook:

What’s happened to Face Book? Unexplained (to me) Changes
 New fiends (Freudian error, I promise) have unexpectedly been added. I’m not agin’ them, I just don’t know them. Yet. Looks like I will soon, tho.
 I sat down to tap out the announcement that I’m contemplating starting a new group. It will begin the Sunday during

I wonder if…

which the first person joins. Don’t call me, please. I prefer e-mails, I even answer them. I’m deaf and tongue-tied on the phone, as many marketers will vouch. Re the envisioned weekly group, tentatively known as the confidential Women’s Poetry Support Group: 

Membership initially limited from 2 to 12 females by birth or choice. Time one hour with freedom always to go longer. Revolving leadership after group has solidified. Members will either bring a poem they have currently or formerly authored which either expresses or elicits feelings. Ideally members would provide readable copies of their poem so members can read and listen at the same time. Group will begin with each member stating how they are feeling at the moment, and the immediate antecedents. Goal is growth rather than fixing, like the spirit of the former women’s consciousness raising groups. Rudeness, aggression, hostility, put-downs or non-acceptance will be greeted with the banging of metal on metal (spoons battering pans).

 Preference will be given to those not currently in another poetry group. The group will not aim to siphon off other poetry group’s members. I hope to meet in my apartment Sunday nights at 7 pm; parking across the street at the credit union.

Obviously there will be no videotaping of meetings.   nmykel@gmail.com

Sonnet V – The Wreck

Published January 23, 2019 by Nan Mykel

“enough to distort the frown

of the one who bent closer, who looked in-
to the fog of time, morphing the present;”

If this is enjambment, it’s delicious!

petrujviljoen's avatarpetrujviljoen

img_6002 (158x211) Copyright Petru J Viljoen

there’s no-one left to remember. it’s on
to seventy-five years since the Chev rolled down
the mountain. The chrome on the bumper shone
in the midday sun, enough to distort the frown

of the one who bent closer, who looked in-
to the fog of time, morphing the present;
the past a hologram; souls who have seen
who have borne witness of a quest fervent

seeking peace, forgiveness, deliverance
from a hell-fire brewed – a moonshine potent
enough to raze the years of innocence;
all memory brought to the moment.

the present a contract compact, a fevered brow
cooled – a whoosh of wind, a mercy bestowed

….

Linked to Dverse Poets

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He Doesn’t Ask

Published January 23, 2019 by Nan Mykel

The president of the United States doesn’t ask us to pray for those hurt by his government shutdown, the children separated from their mothers, victims of the NRA or his soul, but for a wall separating formerly good neighbors.  He also forgets to ask us to pray for…(you fill in the blanks)…..

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