I regret that I lost faith in the Celtics for a few moments.
MEA CULPA, MEA CULPA, MEA MAXIMA CULPA.
May the BASKETBALL GODS forgive me.
With the help of Kemba Walker they put on a display of great basketball that allowed them to sweep the series with the Philadelphia opponents.
What a difference a player like KEMBA brings. He has everything that Kyrie lacked, and he really clicks with the other team members. Also I am thrilled to see Marcus Smart spur the team on and make the great defensive moves when they are needed.
One of the things I learned was that the team had spent sometime in China with Kemba playing with them as part of the USA team. They clicked and I imagine that facilitated both the trade and the happy result of that trade.
Believe it or not this is the first time that Kemba has advanced in the playoffs. So he is glad to be on a team that wants to win. And the team has not had a player like Kemba who now is being compared to such Celtic legends as Cousy and Mc Hale.
I hope that they don't get too overconfident. I think that they may be facing the talented Toronto Raptors next.
PLAY ON
This Blog describes reactions that a woman who was born and raised in Pawtucket has when she returns to her native city after an absence of thirty years, recalls the sites of her childhood and registers the way she is affected by the changes and lack of changes that have taken place since her childhood.
Monday, August 24, 2020
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
SIMPLE THINGS IN THE BUCKET--- TOO HOT TO BLOG?
Just wanted to tell you that I have not succumbed to the COVID or the heat--but I sometimes feel as if I am on the brink.
ENOUGH ALREADY!!
PANDEMIC
has gone on too long and even the return of my beloved Celtics has been a little less than glorious. They cannot seem to find enough intensity to carry them through all four quarters.
I have certainly been grateful for the races at Saratoga and have gotten through many afternoons and evenings with Maggie and those wonderful,well-spoken touts that tell me so much.
So those are the best events.
Surely we have comeback to SIMPLE THINGS.
Poet, author, and farmer Wendell Berry is a shining example of humility and simple living. He’s made it his life’s concern to commit to one beloved plot of land in Kentucky. He says everything he’s learned has been through his faithfulness to that commitment. He reminds me of St. Francis of Assisi in that he loves nature deeply and takes the Gospel seriously. Berry writes of the profound pleasure that can come from simple things—if we can attune ourselves to them:
It is impossible not to notice how little the proponents of the ideal of competition have to say about honesty, which is the fundamental economic virtue, and how very little they have to say about community, compassion, and mutual help. . . .
For human beings, affection is the
ultimate motive, because the force
that powers us, as [John] Ruskin
[1819–1900] also said, is not “steam,
magnetism, or gravitation,” but “a
Soul.”. . . [1]
ultimate motive, because the force
that powers us, as [John] Ruskin
[1819–1900] also said, is not “steam,
magnetism, or gravitation,” but “a
Soul.”. . . [1]
Is it possible to look beyond this all-consuming “rush” of winning and losing to the possibility of countrysides, a nation of countrysides, in which use is not synonymous with defeat? It is. But in order to do so we must consider our pleasures. . . . [There are] pleasures that are free or without a permanent cost. . . . These are the pleasures that we take in our own lives, our own wakefulness in this world, and in the company of other people and other creatures—pleasures innate in the Creation and in our own good work. It is in these pleasures that we possess the likeness to God that is spoken of in Genesis. [God looked upon all that God had created and saw that it was very good (Genesis 1:31).] . . .
The passage suggests . . . that our truest and profoundest religious experience may be the simple, unasking pleasure in the existence of other creatures that is possible to humans. It suggests that God’s pleasure in all things must be respected by us in our use of things. . . . It suggests too that we have an obligation to preserve God’s pleasure in all things. . . .
Where is our comfort but in the free,
uninvolved, finally mysterious
beauty and grace of this world that
uninvolved, finally mysterious
beauty and grace of this world that
we did not make, that has no price?
Where is our sanity but there?
Where is our pleasure but in
working and resting kindly in the
presence of this world?
Saturday, July 18, 2020
NOT SUCH GREAT RECKONINGS IN LITTLE ROOMS
This morning I was happy to see the full dress rehearsal of the seven plays that the BLUE COW GROUP is presenting as their part in the Providence Fringe Festival.
The Director Daniel Lee White polished our work and ----WHOA!!!-----
Stop the PRESSES I am watching the meet at Saratoga as I write this and am amazed that the winner of the race I am watching is named OAK HILL.
Anyone who knows me in Rhode Island knows that I am much involved in the management of a great Historical Civil War Cemetery called OAK HILL. My father's people are buried there dating back to the first ancestor who established a mill in Woonsocket JOB JENCKES.
If I had not spent much of my life avoiding the sad fate of my dear father who "FOLLOWED THE HORSES" I would have had a big bet on that horse.
Well now back to the on line ZOOM presentation of the BLUE COW GROUP.
The first performance is MONDAY JULY 20 at 6pm EDST
The second performance is WEDNESDAY JULY 29 EDST at 9pm.
These performances are all free on Zoom and open to all.
Of course, there is an opportunity to donate. But do what you can, you are all most welcome.
SO matter where you are in the world you can use your computer to see these shows.
I was pleased with the wonderful performances that the Director has gotten from a group of 17
talented actors.
ZOOM THEATER looks like a new medium to me and it is thrilling to see how live theater performance can translate to those limitations.
The Director Daniel Lee White polished our work and ----WHOA!!!-----
Stop the PRESSES I am watching the meet at Saratoga as I write this and am amazed that the winner of the race I am watching is named OAK HILL.
Anyone who knows me in Rhode Island knows that I am much involved in the management of a great Historical Civil War Cemetery called OAK HILL. My father's people are buried there dating back to the first ancestor who established a mill in Woonsocket JOB JENCKES.
If I had not spent much of my life avoiding the sad fate of my dear father who "FOLLOWED THE HORSES" I would have had a big bet on that horse.
Well now back to the on line ZOOM presentation of the BLUE COW GROUP.
The first performance is MONDAY JULY 20 at 6pm EDST
The second performance is WEDNESDAY JULY 29 EDST at 9pm.
A Play’s the Thing
Presented by The Blue Cow Group
FRINGE PVD 2020
Showtimes:
Monday, July 20, at 6 p.m.
Wednesday, July 29, at 9 p.m.
Stream via
The Plays
Directed by Daniel Lee White
Sonnet: “To Our Wonderful Audience” by Norma Jenckes
Player—Jane Bird
Two Ladies Doth Protest by Kay Ellen Bullard
Sara—Becky Minard
Gwen—Carole Collins
Ghosted by Martha Douglas-Osmundson
Sadie Wyatt - Sarah Reed
Maya Lee - Lee Rush
Clementine DeVere - Pamela Gill
The Apparel Oft Proclaims the Man by Norma Jenckes
Allen—W. Richard Johnson
Beth—Kayla Ribeiro
Dale—Mike Daniels
Hand Off by Monica Staaf
Alice—Mary Paolino
Melanie—Kate Fitzgerald
All the World’s a Stage by Elaine Brousseau
(with original songs by Paula Elser Clare)
Julie—Amy W. Thompson
Paula—Paula Elser Clare
Open Seating by Susan Buttrick
Forest—Christopher Ferreira
Lilac—Ava Rigelhaupt
Betsy—Chantell Marie Arraial
At the Stage Door by Jayne Hannah
Olivia—Nova Drewes
Mom—Carol Drewes
Clementine DeVere—Pamela Gill
These performances are all free on Zoom and open to all.
Of course, there is an opportunity to donate. But do what you can, you are all most welcome.
SO matter where you are in the world you can use your computer to see these shows.
I was pleased with the wonderful performances that the Director has gotten from a group of 17
talented actors.
ZOOM THEATER looks like a new medium to me and it is thrilling to see how live theater performance can translate to those limitations.
Friday, July 17, 2020
MY UNCLE GEORGE SURVIVED THE SINKING OF THE USS POLLUX
MY MOTHER WAS VERY PROUD OF HER BROTHER GEORGE.
And she had good reason!
Her younger brother, George, enlisted in the Navy when he was 18 in 1930.
He visited us occasionally when I was growing up and my mother was always excited to see him.
I remember that he talked only when urged about his close brush with death on the coast of Newfoundland.
He made light of it. He told me that when he finally made it to the narrow stony beach beneath the cliffs that seemed so high as cold and wet and exhausted by his own efforts to get to shore.
And so he began doing jumping-jacks to keep his muscles going and to get his blood to circulate freely.. Later someone from the town who helped him told him that when they saw George doing his jumping jacks and ordering other sailors who had made it to the shore to join him, they said "That guy wants to live,"
And the towns people came down the cliff face and helped men to leave that freezing shoreline. George helped them to aid the other men. Then he took his turn and was helped up to the top of the cliff.
He was taken to hospital and there he got well again,
So much gratitude-- he expressed to the wonderful people of Newfoundland who rescued him and his ship mates.
George L. Coleman was born at Valley Falls, Rhode Island on April 4, 1912 to parents Jane and Joseph Coleman. He enlisted in the US Navy in 1930 and initially served in the eastern Pacific Ocean aboard the armored cruiser USS Seattle. He transferred to the Navy's Asiatic Fleet several years later, where he served for three years aboard the heavy cruiser USS Augusta. Coleman was reassigned in 1941 to the supply ship USS Pollux, which transported troops, equipment, food, and other goods to Allied ports on both sides of the North Atlantic. He was 29 years old when the vessel ran aground off Newfoundland's south coast during a violent winter storm on February 18, 1942.
Coleman survived the shipwreck, but 93 of his fellow sailors drowned or froze to death; among the dead was his close friend George Marks. Years later, Coleman described to author Cassie Brown how he felt while watching men jump overboard: "I believe I was more stunned and bewildered to see what was happening and just couldn't believe what was going on. I don't know how long I was standing there by the lifeline looking down in that raging sea when I raised my eyes and looked towards the beach and I saw one sailor making his way to the beach, and then he may have been about 12 to 15 feet from the beach. I saw him turn around, face the ship, give a hand salute, and I saw him go down."
Coleman eventually made it to shore and was rescued by a group of men from the nearby communities of Lawn and St. Lawrence. He spent three weeks in hospital following the disaster and returned to military service shortly afterwards. He participated in the invasion of North Africa during the Second World War and also fought in France, Normandy, England, and Norway before peace was restored in 1945.
Coleman was married to Helen for 25 years before she died of cancer in the 1960s. The two did not have any children. Coleman remarried in 1966, this time to Marcellena Lawson, and the pair lived in Norfolk, Virginia.
Wednesday, July 8, 2020
BLUE COW ACTING UP IN THE BUCKET
PLAYWRIGHT COMES OUT OF THE CLOSET
--OR IS IT THE BUCKET?
Those of you who read this BLOG know that the Blogger--ME!!--is also a poet and very interested in Poetry.
What I have not blogged much about is that I am also a playwright.
That interest and play productions were more to the fore when I was still teaching drama and playwriting at the University of Cincinnati and having my own plays produced in various Cincinnati theaters.
It was an exciting time and deserves more attention. But when I retired completely from teaching in 2012, I was drawn back into my first passion POETRY.
In recent years due to the good influence of a former high school student of mine who is now a college professor, I became a founding member of the BLUE COW GROUP--a group of playwrights who formed a support group that met twice monthly to read and improve each other's plays.
Since I left the playwriting scene a new phenomena of ten- minute plays has mushroomed as a way to get new work performed, and also a way to bring beginning playwrights to the attention of theaters. It was also a way to see new writing without commiting to a full length play production.
All this history is just to introduce my Blog Readers to an opportunity to see some of the work of the BLUE COW GROUP which is being staged as part of the Providence Fringe Festival.
Due to the PANDEMIC these plays will be available on ZOOM and so anyone with a computer can watch them.
So in that spirit of trying to find the upside of these trying times, I invite each and every one of you to follow the link below and watch the plays wherever you are on the globe.
This is an introduction. I will provide more specifics of time and date in future blogs.
https://www.instagram.com/p/
Sunday, July 5, 2020
Name changing extends to Belfast Northern Ireland
Recent name changes inspired by the BLACK LIVES MATTER has expanded from Columbus in the US to leaders of colonialism in England.
So Churchill's statue has been attacked and now we hear that the celebrated Queen's University in Belfast will be named Mairead Farrell in memory of an IRA member who was killed by British intelligence.
Also street names have been changed and there is now
a BOBBY SANDS STREET!
I hope those changes become official.
I think it is time to celebrate the 4TH of JULY with a blow for the independence
of the remaining 6 counties that are still held by England and considered part of the UK.
TIME TO RECALL AGAIN THE GREATNESS OF BOBBY SANDS.
THE WRECK OF THE EDMUND FITZGERALD--BOBBY SANDS'' FAVORITE
I woke up ten mornings ago with these lyrics repeating in my head and I thought--that wreck must have happened in NOVEMBER and it did.
NOVEMBER 10, 1975
Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald
Music and lyrics ©1976 by Gordon Lightfoot
The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down of the big lake they called "Gitche Gumee." The lake, it is said, never gives up her dead when the skies of November turn gloomy. With a load of iron ore twenty-six thousand tons more than the Edmund Fitzgerald weighed empty, that good ship and true was a bone to be chewed when the "Gales of November" came early. The ship was the pride of the American side coming back from some mill in Wisconsin. As the big freighters go, it was bigger than most with a crew and good captain well seasoned, concluding some terms with a couple of steel firms when they left fully loaded for Cleveland. And later that night when the ship's bell rang, could it be the north wind they'd been feelin'? The wind in the wires made a tattle-tale sound and a wave broke over the railing. And ev'ry man knew, as the captain did too 'twas the witch of November come stealin'. The dawn came late and the breakfast had to wait when the Gales of November came slashin'. When afternoon came it was freezin' rain in the face of a hurricane west wind. When suppertime came the old cook came on deck
Sayin' "Fellas, it's too rough t'feed ya." At seven P.M. a main hatchway caved in; he said,(**2010 lyric change: At 7 p.m., it grew dark, it was then he said,)
"Fellas, it's bin good t'know ya!" The captain wired in he had water comin' in and the good ship and crew was in peril. And later that night when 'is lights went outta sight came the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald. Does any one know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the minutes to hours? The searchers all say they'd have made Whitefish Bay if they'd put fifteen more miles behind 'er. They might have split up or they might have capsized; they may have broke deep and took water. And all that remains is the faces and the names of the wives and the sons and the daughters. Lake Huron rolls, Superior sings in the rooms of her ice-water mansion. Old Michigan steams like a young man's dreams; the islands and bays are for sportsmen. And farther below Lake Ontario takes in what Lake Erie can send her, And the iron boats go as the mariners all know with the Gales of November remembered. In a musty old hall in Detroit they prayed, in the "Maritime Sailors' Cathedral." The church bell chimed 'til it rang twenty-nine times for each man on the Edmund Fitzgerald. The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down of the big lake they call "Gitche Gumee." "Superior," they said, "never gives up her dead when the gales of November come early!"
PROBABLY ONE OF THE GREATEST NARRATIVE SONGS WRITTEN in the 20TH CENTURY, THIS BALLAD DELIGHTED AND INSPIRED BOBBY SANDS
PLAY IT ON YOU TUBE BY GORDON LIGHTFOOT. It will stay in your head for days.
PLAY IT ON YOU TUBE BY GORDON LIGHTFOOT. It will stay in your head for days.
SO now I am reminded by the great biography of Bobby Sands JUST AN UNFINISHED SONG by O'Hearn which relates how Bobby loved this ballad and thought that it was the greatest song that told a story. He sang it aloud during the prison protest and he taught it to the other men who were imprisoned with him.
He confided to "The Dark", his comrade Hughes, that he wanted to write a song about the Irish struggle to the same tune as the Edmund Fitzgerald. He did that as O'Hearn relates that one night when they were having a sing song to keep up morale one of the other prisoners asked Bobby to sing The Wreck.
Bobby said that he had been putting new words to it.
Then he sang THE VOYAGE a song about United Irish prisoners who were being transported to Tasmania on a ship called The Gull.
Here are some of the lyrics that Bobby sets to the tune of The Wreck:
It was 1803 when we sailed out to sea
And away from the sweet town of Derry
For Australia bound and if we didn't drown
The mark of the fetter we'd carry.
Here is another verse that ties together the United Irishmen and the Blanketmen:
In our own smelling slime we were lost for a time
Hoping God in his mercy would claim us
But our spirits shone high like the stars in the sky
We were rebels and no man would tame us.
Try singing these words to the tune of the Wreck and you will see how well they fit.
Bobby was able to pass from life through suffering to death with so much grace because he had the certainty of a martyr.
He knew that his cause, the cause of Irish Freedom, was just and the British Imperial claim was unjust and would be judged so by History and by God.
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
CLIMBING LADDERS TO NOTHING
Have I spent too much time climbing those ladders to Nothing?
I have just three things to teach:
simplicity, patience,
compassion. —Lao Tzu
Most of us have grown up with a capitalist worldview which makes a virtue and goal out of accumulation, consumption, and collecting. It has taught us to assume, quite falsely, that more is better.
But it’s hard for us to recognize this unsustainable and unhappy trap because it’s the only game in town.
When parents perform multiple duties all day and into the night, it is the story line that their children surely absorb. “I produce therefore I am” and “I consume therefore I am” might be today’s answers to Descartes’ “I think therefore I am.”
These identities are all terribly
mistaken, but we can’t discover
the truth until we remove the
clutter.
The course we are on assures us of a predictable future of strained individualism, environmental destruction, severe competition as resources dwindle for a growing population, and perpetual war.
CULTURE OF NEVER ENOUGH
Our culture ingrains in us the belief that there isn’t enough to go around, which determines most of our politics and spending. In the United States there is never enough money for adequate health care, education, the arts, or even basic infrastructure.
At the same time, the largest
budget is always for war, bombs,
and military gadgets. I hope we
can all recognize how the tragic
consequences of these decisions
are being played out right now.
E. F. Schumacher (1911–1977) said years ago, “Small is beautiful,” and many other wise people have come to know that less stuff invariably leaves room for more soul. In fact, possessions and soul seem to operate in inverse proportion to one another.
Only through simplicity can we find deep contentment instead of perpetually striving and living unsatisfied. Simple living is the foundational social justice teaching of Jesus, Francis and Clare of Assisi, Dorothy Day, Pope Francis, and all hermits, mystics, prophets, and seers since time immemorial.
We must let go, to recognize that there is enough to go around and meet everyone’s need but not everyone’s greed. A worldview of enoughness will predictably emerge in us as we realize our naked being in God instead of thinking that more of anything or more frenetic doing can fill up our infinite longing and restlessness.
Francis did not just tolerate or endure simplicity; he loved it and called it poverty. Francis dove into simplicity and found his freedom there.
Francis knew that climbing ladders to nowhere would never make us happy nor create peace and justice on this earth.
Too many have to stay at the
bottom of the ladder so we can
be at the top.
Epigraph: Tao Te Ching, 67. See Tao Te Ching: A New English Version, trans. Stephen Mitchell (Harper Perennial: 2006, ©1988), 67.
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