Posted in inspiration | Tagged acceptance, appreciation, choice, encouragement, experience, G.K. Chesterton quote, goldfinch, gratitude, inspiration, perspective, positive attitudes, spring, vacation, wisdom | Leave a Comment »

If your ears are the only thing that’s listening, you aren’t hearing.”
―
One bird calls-out to another. I don’t recognize its voice. Or the returned answer from a distant tree. A child laughs as he runs after a dog. A car with a radio cranked to what feels like 85 decibels, pauses next to me. Sound. It’s everywhere, simultaneous, yet disconnected.
I imagine what it would be like to be universal, capable of hearing every word, every sound. As it happens. In a small city neighborhood. As well as in a city, nation, and country in dire pain. Cacophony is a human experience. By definition it judges.
Human ears. Created for hearing. Not capable of discerning all that cries out. For good, evil, or ordinary ignorance.
I turn off the radio and listen to as much silence as possible. Try to recognize the beating of my own heart. Yet realize my spirit is far from alone.
No, I cannot catch every meaningful vibration. I can choose to realize this tiny space around me is not all that exists.
For many this season is holy. And that is good. May celebrations reach deep. Yet may the participants refrain from claiming that their sounds are central for all.
Posted in inspiration | Tagged acceptance, Craig D. Lounsbrough quote, hearing, judgment, perspective, positive thinking, universality | Leave a Comment »

Sometimes the questions are complicated, and the answers are simple.
(Dr. Seuss)
The Bridge Called Life A bridge not always named because some know they cross it, and others believe they own it. The bridge called life. One thing I suspect to be true. The blind understands better than the sighted. Hold my hand. And don’t let go. We’ll learn along the way. photo taken from a public domain pic used in a previous blog
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Love, the moment and the energy of that moment, will spread beyond all boundaries. (Corita Kent)
Both the smile and the purple bruises on the side of my face, are real. I fell. Tripped over an air vent and landed on something hard enough to raise a bump the size of an extra appendage. Okay, I’m exaggerating. The bump is no larger than the average oversized walnut. The pain, however, made me think a tank had parked in my kitchen, and I’d been thrown into it.
My husband took me to the emergency room.
I was fortunate. Hematoma with no brain-bleed. I came home to heal. On St. Patrick’s Day—wearing the wrong color. Healing will take time. There are no prescriptions for patience. If there were I would ask for double-strength dosage.
In the meantime, I treasure holding my two-year-old granddaughter during a rare moment when she isn’t experimenting with perpetual motion.
“Precious child Addie, thanks for overlooking bruises and seeing me behind them. We will conquer the imaginative world again after you are rested.”
Okay, maybe I should rest a little, too.
Posted in inspiration | Tagged bruises, Corita Kent quote, Emergency room, experience, grandchildren, perspective, positive attitudes, St. Patrick's Day | 3 Comments »

Some of the most wonderful people are the ones who don’t fit into boxes. Tori Amos. DEAR ELLA: WHAT I WISH I COULD TELL YOU My Dear Ella, You lead our make-believe time as we make a blue birthday cake for cow and scoop chocolate ice cream for rabbit. The birthday song needs only happy and birthday, repeated with fervor, sung with heart. I’ve often wondered if your tripled twenty-first chromosome holds unique gifts, including a sixth sense, compassion. I recall a day before you learned to walk, when you scooted freestyle along the floor. A movie on television showed a violent scene, reminiscent of an old crime, different victim—me. I gasped. You climbed into my lap and blocked my view of terror. Too young for words, your eyes said what you could not. Don’t look at the screen. Look at me. Then, the past faded into the beauty of your presence, a reality lost to those who have not yet seen more than a slant to your eyes and delays in your motor skills. Now, my attention returns to cow, rabbit, snowman, and dog, unequal in size, shape, and fabric, equal in importance. Today we pretend. The ordinary opens to show the extraordinary, above, below, and beyond the surface of each moment. My youngest granddaughter, watching you be you makes me a better person. Love, Grandma In honor of World Down Syndrome Day celebrated this past March 21 Third prize poetry contest winner Down & Beautiful 2017
Posted in inspiration, Uncategorized | Tagged acceptance, choice, disabilities, gratitude, imagination, inspiration, poem, positive attitudes, Tori Adams quote, World Down Syndrome Day | 3 Comments »

Three things in human life are important: the first is to be kind; the second is to be kind; and the third is to be kind. (Henry James)
Every blog I have written has always included either a series of related facts, often through mutual experience, sometimes in poetry form. Today I am sharing a piece of flash fiction I wrote several years ago. Fiction or poetry relays reality in ways that touches the spirit sideways, sometimes a more effective route.
The written punishment in the short-short story was a familiar one when I was a kid in the seventh grade: Write about something hollow, invisible. The Inside of a Ping Pong Ball.
I suspect the point was to keep a student quiet long enough to think and to engage his or her creativity in a useful direction. I don’t know. I was a quiet kid. On one level I wanted to try it. However, getting in trouble on purpose wasn’t an option.
I gave the assignment to a character in my imagination.
The Inside of a Ping Pong Ball
Okay, Miss Marshall. You gave me the standard punishment. Write 500 words on the inside of a ping pong ball. The essay is due tomorrow morning, Tuesday, April 17, 1956.
I admit it. I talked while you were talking. I told Helen Keith how sorry I am that her grandma died. She had a heart attack on Helen’s birthday. I sighed pretty loud while you were giving instructions about how to write our next composition. You told us to describe how we could make Wellington School a better place. We were to present our plans properly.
“Be sure to write neatly with a fountain pen. No turquoise ink. No smudge marks. No repeating very 25 times in 25 sentences.”
I now have another assignment. A punishment. In at least 500 words, I need to extrapolate on the inside of a ping pong ball. Extrapolate was on the new-vocabulary list last week. I hope I get points for that because I’m not upset that you didn’t understand why I interrupted you. This essay gives me a chance to explain. I know you paid for Jeremy’s prescription glasses when his parents couldn’t afford them. He didn’t keep it secret, as you asked him. You aren’t mean. So, I hope you will forgive me for getting off the subject now and then. Everything will fit inside the ball. Soon.
How many times does a ping pong ball racquet hit a ball without denting the thin shell? Yet solid air holds it intact.
Strange how silence can work. You asked me what I had to say. Was it that important? It worked better to keep quiet. I let your imagination go wild instead of letting you know that Helen hadn’t slept the night before. All she wanted was one more hug from her grandma.
You see, her grandma asked Helen to hug her before she left for a party, that started in twenty minutes. Helen said she would do it the next time.
There was no next time. Her grandma died of a heart attack.
Helen had been smart enough to pass me a note and not open her mouth. Talking would make her cry. Crying in school is as bad as wetting your pants while writing on the blackboard.
So, this is about emptiness again, the inside of a ping pong ball.
And Helen finally had to fill it with words. Written words. I didn’t save them.
Did you know a twelve-year-old could have this much to say? Air is the empty inside of something. It holds a thing together or pretends to hold it together. My mom says I grew up too fast. Maybe that is because my dad died when I was seven. I have never seen the inside of a ping pong ball. But I have an idea about how it feels. Strong in one way and lonely in another.
My mom says that is why Helen knows to come to me.
The boys in our class get in trouble so that they can write something funny. I suspect that if I do something that doesn’t fit the rules again, I will have a different punishment.
I am sorry I talked at the wrong time. I am not sorry I helped Helen.
Posted in inspiration | Tagged creative punishment idea, elementary school in the 1950's, flash fiction story, Henry James quote, kindness, the inside of a ping pong ball | 1 Comment »

“Never believe that a few caring people can’t change the world. For, indeed, that’s all who ever have.” Margaret Mead Women’s March From Caleb’s Point of View My name is Caleb. I’m ten years old. I wear a sign that says, I march for my sister, and my mom didn’t make me do it. Great-Grandma links her left arm into my right. She holds a cane and shuffles from one foot to the other, an offbeat rhythm reminding me of an old-fashioned scratched CD. Dad helps Great-Grandma from the other side. The kind crowd gives us plenty of room. Great-Grandma’s parents died at Auschwitz. Our family matriarch marches in silence. I am only a kid, yet the pain of her story has leaked into our lives. I know its depths. Mom rushes ahead with my sister. A woman nods toward my sign. "Perhaps your sister can become president one day." Dad and I look at one another with the same tight-lipped understanding. When Mom runs my sister laughs and kicks her legs as if she could control them. Mom pauses and waits for us to catch up. My sister tries to rise from her wheelchair, her legs weak as dried kindling. She squeals with delight and flaps her arms when she sees us. I don’t march for my sister to become great. I march for my sister to be accepted for who she is. originally publishing in For A Better World 2017 illustration made from public domain images and cut paper
Posted in inspiration | Tagged appreciation, Auschwitz, choice, determination, encouragement, experience, gratitude, inspiration, Margaret Mead quote, people with special needs, perspective, positive attitudes | Leave a Comment »

“Why ban guns? Let’s give everyone rocket launchers! What could possibly go wrong?”
illustration made from domain-free images, pastels, and cut paper.
Posted in humor, inspiration | Tagged assassinated presidents, gun laws, incongruity, Oliver Marcus Malloy quote, the absurdity of a gun sale on President's day | Leave a Comment »

To live is the rarest thing in the world. Most people exist. That is all. (Oscar Wilde)
I’ll get up in a minute.
Or two, or three, or… A minute has been redefined. It has been carved from the clock and thrown into infinity. And no longer has meaning.
A line of pink appears on the horizon. Then two more. Parallel stripes. They don’t stay. Like the existence that passes before this old body faces the day.
I toss blankets aside. The weight of my past had been keeping me down, pressing into my dreams.
The pink in the sky has already faded. Its beauty passes. Nevertheless, another day begins. Another chance to grab the dark, the light, and the unexpected. Then create with each possibility.
Posted in inspiration | Tagged appreciation, choice, depression, gratitude, inspiration, Oscar Wilde quote, oversleeping, perspective, positive attitudes | 1 Comment »
