Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Magne and Linda's Wedding
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Good YouTube Stuff
This first one is on the age old question can men and women be just friends. Perhaps there was some editing done on this to give the appearance of the black and white response from those interviewed. It doesn't make any difference. It's a funny interview.
This next one is going to make you laugh. It was filmed on a train in Berlin. Laughter is contagious.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Looking outward or inward
Here's an example of the first kind - one face, one picture taken every day for 3 years:
Next, and what a contrast, is some wonderful contrast is a video from the TED from Louie Schwartzberg on gratitude. He is an award winning photographer whose film on the changes in nature are beautiful. His presentation and film truly does lead to being more grateful for being here today.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Hip-Hop; Good Stuff!
Here is the great Theophilus London (don't you just love that name 'Theophilus'. The only other time Big Frank ever heard of that name was the novel 'Theophilus North' by Thorton Wilder. Wonder if there is a connection there somewhere?
Saturday, November 26, 2011
In Ashland with Gina
Big Frank just returned from spending Thanksgiving with his daughter, Gina, in Ashland, Oregon. He had Thanksgiving dinner, prepared by Gina, with Riley and Aaron. Then two fun days in Ashland, a gem of a town. They have a festival of lights where the whole town is lit up and everyone comes downtown on the 25th for the official lighting. It was magical. This was topped off by a great meal and drinks with Gina and Riley. A wonderful visit.
Monday, November 21, 2011
Musings for November
Musings
Why is it that pretty much everyone believes that we exist in duality: spirit inside body, except philosophers?
The compulsion to identify work with moving matter is the matter with work.
Window dressing is like putting a bow on the outside.
Couches are daybeds, so why not call beds nightcouches?
The imprudent reason is often the stated reason for prudence.
Who do people say they are ‘engaged’ to get married, but not say they are ‘disengaged’ to get divorced?
Thanksgiving should lead to other holidays, like Testimonygiving, Accountgiving, Giftgiving (could replace Christmas), and Directiongiving.
If love makes the world go round; rejection makes it flat.
What is the feeling of a feeling of a feeling?
Is your face fiction or nonfiction?
Monday, November 7, 2011
Magne's Aphorisms
Occasionally people give you a look that says: I like you because you are a child of god. I prefer the look that says: I like you because you are not like the others.
No one needs to understand the love you have for other people, as much as you yourself do.
How can I be loved for things I don't love about myself?
I don't need to be loved for who I am. I need to be loved in spite of who I am.
The best mirror in the world is a beautiful woman who worships you.
Much of what we call love is actually partnering.
Sex is driving around enjoying the ride. Love is traveling — often to a place you have never been before.
What makes us think that love is the answer? Our heart.
Life
Life involves going into a box and staying there a lot.
There is never enough time to enjoy the moment.
We take our little solo. It lasts but a lifetime. (You're on.)
It is fantasy that floats our boats.
We have such high expectation of life. How can we know there's more to life than this?
You seldom have to walk the walk.
If life is a journey we spend a lot of time lost and sitting down.
It is not good to keep your options open forever.
It hardly takes a village, just a few friends and lovers.
Sometimes you need to disconnect the dots.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Six Word Memoirs
Saturday, November 5, 2011
John Ashbery's Night
Big Frank has been reading "Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror" by John Ashbery. a great book of poetry. There is much too much to comment on in a single post and Asbery's words are so much more interesting than Big Frank's so let's read some. Ashbery writes of the confusion that the say brings; how difficult it is to bring meaning into your life through conscious effort using words that have so many holes in them. Night however, is a different situation. Here's what Ashbery has to say on night in this collection of poetry.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Significance Anonymous
Significance Anonymous (Everything does not mean something)
by Big Frank Dickinson
“Dave: Hi everyone, my name’s Dave, and I’m a meaning freak.
Everyone: Hi Dave.”
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Ghosts
One need not be a chamber to be haunted,
One need not be a house;
The brain has corridors surpassing
Material place.
Far safer, of a midnight meeting
External ghost,
Than an interior confronting
That whiter host.
Far safer through an Abbey gallop,
The stones achase,
Than, moonless, one's own self encounter
In lonesome place.
Ourself, behind ourself concealed,
Should startle most;
Assassin, hid in our apartment,
Be horror's least.
The prudent carries a revolver,
He bolts the door,
O'erlooking a superior spectre
More near.
~ Lizette Woodworth Reese
Two things I did on Hallows Night:—
Made my house April-clear;
Left open wide my door
To the ghosts of the year.
Then one came in. Across the room
It stood up long and fair—
The ghost that was myself—
And gave me stare for stare.
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Trick-n-Treat
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Two by Tomas Tranströmer
Two Poems by Tomas Tranströmer, the 2011 Nobel Prize laureate for literature.
April and Silence
Spring lies deserted.
The velvet-dark ditch
crawls by my side without reflections.
All that shines
are yellow flowers.
I’m carried in my shadow
like a violin in its black case.
The only thing I want to say
gleams out of reach
like the silver
in a pawnshop.
Romanesque Arches
Inside the huge Romanesque church the tourists jostled in the half darkness.
vault gaped behind vault, no complete view.
A few candle flames flickered.
An angel with no face embraced me
and whispered through my whole body:
"Don't be ashamed of being human, be proud!
Inside you vault opens behind vault endlessly.
You will never be complete, that's how it's meant to be."
Blind with tears
I was pushed out on the sun-seething piazza
together with Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Mr Tanaka, and Signora Sabatini,
and inside each of them vault opened behind vault endlessly.
Sunday, October 23, 2011
Friday, October 21, 2011
Trainlag
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
Shinjuku Skyscrapers
This is the 200-metre high Sompo Japan Head Officet. The building was completed in 1976 and designer by Uchida Shozo.
Daibutsu: The Great Buddha in Kamakura:
[Photos: Big Frank Dickinson]
Big Frank went to one of his favorite places in Japan yesterday, Kamakura. This is an ancient city of Japan that is full of Buddhist temples, shines, and the Daibutsu (the great Buddha). This bronze statue is of Amitabha Budda (the Buddha of infinite light). It was built in 1252 and stands around 50 feet in height. It was originally gilded in gold leaf, but only a few traces remain around its ears. It was originally enclose in a great hall, but that was washed away in the 14th century and since then it has stood in the open. It is beautiful and casts its serene shadow over the entire area.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Hello Tokyo; Hello Shinjuku
Big Frank has arrived in Tokyo. He's staying in Shinjuku, which one of 23 Tokyo wards. It's a a busy commercial center and has the busiest train station in the world (Shinjuku Station). It's pretty crowded here - there are around 17, 140 people per square kilometer, with 107 different nationalities registered in addition to the Japanese of course (Big Frank grew up in North Dakota where there are about 5 people per square kilometer). Big Frank definitely needs some elbow room here - knee and ankle room too.
Friday, October 14, 2011
Travel Poems
[Photo: Big Frank Dickinson]
A Traveler's Wish
By BIG FRANK DICKINSON
Let me take off clearly knowing nothing
Haunts me as I move outside of the usual;
Let those dear ones behind be as
Safe at home as I will be on the road.
Let the journey take me outside of me
To a place long-sought, accepted, and true;
Let this absence be a presence
Arriving with me and welcomed by all.
Let the return be a renewed reward
For having left the unwanted behind.
Let my presence be a fulfillment;
What's wanted welcomed home.
What You Have to Get Over
BY DICK ALLEN
Stumps. Railroad tracks. Early sicknesses,
the blue one, especially.
Your first love rounding a corner,
that snowy minefield.
Whether you step lightly or heavily,
you have to get over to that tree line a hundred yards in the distance
before evening falls,
letting no one see you wend your way,
that wonderful, old-fashioned word, wend,
meaning “to proceed, to journey,
to travel from one place to another,”
as from bed to breakfast, breakfast to imbecile work.
You have to get over your resentments,
the sun in the morning and the moon at night,
all those shadows of yourself you left behind
on odd little tables.
Tote that barge! Lift that bale! You have to
cross that river, jump that hedge, surmount that slogan,
crawl over this ego or that eros,
then hoist yourself up onto that yonder mountain.
Another old-fashioned word, yonder, meaning
“that indicated place, somewhere generally seen
or just beyond sight.” If you would recover,
you have to get over the shattered autos in the backwoods lot
to that bridge in the darkness
where the sentinels stand
guarding the border with their half-slung rifles,
warned of the likes of you.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Shade Sails
Monday, October 10, 2011
Look at Me
Remember that old question: if a tree falls in the forest
Does it make a sound? Its fall only real if noticed.
A star shoots across the sky 1,000,000 years ago;
Did it shoot if no one saw it? Her doubts pull her
Into a cave of darkness; nobody knows – is she there?
“You never pay any attention to me anymore.”
The mailman can’t even remember the addresses that
He couldn’t find – do the mailboxes exist?
“Could I have a couple minutes of your time; this won’t take long?”
The sidelong glance, the backward glance, and the double take;
All pulled in and not even noticed by that which pulled them in.
If you take it all in yourself; or even one tenth of it all,
As if you could, as if the wind, the radiation and birds,
The fading memories of your neighbors, and the
Yearning looks of strangers who notice what they shouldn’t;
The burning looks of rangers who can’t forget what you took,
The unreturned phone calls, and casual promises that you remembered,
But she didn’t, or at least she hasn’t yet come across,
Just as the cross that you were told to bear as a child became too much
And you no longer notice it and hope it gives you the same disregard,
What if you could take it all in; you would become large, a god of sorts,
And everyone would come to you and be amazed at your insight, your
Acknowledgements, and love, for with this awareness how could you not
Love at a level you weren’t even aware was possible. If you noticed,
If you saw, then would it really matter if they looked back at you?
There would be a rainbow choir that would catch you in a melody of notice.
Tattoos
Photo: Big Frank Dickinson
We think that tattooing is a contemporary fad, but in fact its been around for a very very long time. It has been a Eurasian practice for over 5,000 years. If you remember that so-called Iceman, Otzi the Iceman, who was found in the Austrian Alps a few years ago, he had 57 separate tattoos: a cross on the inside of his left knee, a number of straight lines on his abdomen, and lots of parallel lines on his back, legs and ankles.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Obvious
by Big Frank Dickinson
There are obvious facts that sit down
Right at your doorstep and cannot be ignored:
The imbalance in conversation with a monologist;
The impermanence of feelings, and the hidden
Secrets that closets yield only when attacked.
Still obvious can delay and that’s exactly what
Is obvious to the patiently observant.
So, in time, always in time, always in the fullness
Of time when the door is opened and the stubborn
Fact doesn’t move, you stumble over it like
A unwanted phone book that is full of numbers
That you not only won’t call, but won’t even look up.
Then sing the song that wasn’t trapped in your head,
But pleases you to remember and awakes hidden
Hallways that take you to rooms that you didn’t know
Existed where you can sit down and finally have the
Conversation that always begins with the words,
“I don’t think you’re going to be surprised to hear this”,
But you, of course, are. It’s obvious, in retrospect,
Always in retrospect and yet it’s welcome,
As welcome as an Indian summer or an early spring bloom.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
Bon Iver
"Only love is all maroon
Gluey feathers on a flume
Sky is womb and she's the moon ...
Leaving rope burns, reddish ruse"
In the back and the racks and the stacks of your load
In the back with your racks and you're un-stacking your load"
Here, from the song "Calgary" a beautiful poetic passage.
Little waves our bodies break
There's a fire going out,
But there's really nothing to the south
Swollen orange and light let through
Your one piece swimmer stuck to you
Sold, I'm ever
Open ears and open eyes
Wake up to your starboard bride
Who goes in and then stays inside
Oh the demons come, they can subside"
Thursday, October 6, 2011
The Mark of Zoro
Big Frank loves the idea of anonymous; and here is a great poem by him/her/... whoever. He loves the simple repeated second part of each stanza. It is sweet, bittersweet, but not maudlin. OK, it's not anonymous, it's by Zoro. While it is hard to know for sure; perhaps this poem was written for his lover, Lolita Poido, the impoverished noblewoman. Others think it was intended for a much more attractive but at the same time less impoverished employee of the state (impoverished state nonetheless) whose name goes unrecorded.
Almond Eyes
by Zoro
Almond eyes and lips that drew;
You almost got the thing you knew.
Almost got it almost did
It came around and then you hid.
Laughter sweet and loud, you see
It grabbed you then you set it free.
Almost got it almost did
It came around and then you hid.
Conversation deep you caught;
Joined you in just what you sought.
Almost got it almost did
It came around and then you hid.
Simple touch to magic grew;
What it was is what you knew.
Almost got it almost did
It came around and then you hid.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
There is Only One Fish in the Sea
Big Frank is looking for people to interview for his work-in-progress: "There is Only One Fish in the Sea" - a collection of interviews on broken hearts. This is a collection of people's stories, in their own words, on unrequited love. Big Frank guarantees anonymity and confidentiality, so anyone who has a story to tell and is willing to be interviewed, contact Big Frank and the interview can be set up. These can be done via Skype so distance is not an issue.
For those of you who are seeking a bit more definition and clarification on what "unrequited love", read the following definition from Ray Baumeister and Sara Atman's "Breaking Hearts".
"Unrequited love refers to romantic, passionate love that is felt by one person toward another person who feels substantially less attraction toward the lover. It is not necessary that the object of unrequited love be thoroughly indifferent. but the discrepancy between liking and loving is apparent to all, and people in love typically find it quite inadequate to hear that the other likes them but fails to love them.
Unrequited love is a relationship that fails to form. One person wants a romantic attachment in the way his or her culture defines it -- in our society, that means a high degree of intimacy, physical and sexual expression ..., and some mutual commitment to reserve certain parts of one's life and one's psyche to be shared only with one's beloved. The other person does not want this. Unrequited love is thus a rejection of an opportunity, an invitation, for romantic attachment.
What sets unrequited love apart from other relationship failures is that the relationship is prevented, not by external factors, but by the decision and preference of one person in the relationship. The rejector does not desire the relationship."
If this is you, and you want to talk about it, let Big Frank know. You can write to Big Frank at: BigFrankDickinson@yahoo.com
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
The Roar of Falls and Rust of Trains
Monday, October 3, 2011
Erratic
by Big Frank Dickinson
There had been a time when they regularly
Were together; a time now gone.
Now it was irregular when they met.
It was an aberration for them to be sitting and talking.
The talk was not of them; not anymore. Now
They were talking about moths and how they
Fly erratically; she said that is how we fly too.
He thought to himself that can’t be true
Because people drive to work regularly,
They do have regular patterns that are straight.
She to him: people stay in line only when obliged;
Work, sleep, and standard routines.
He was thinking of her patterns now;
Is that how observations like this were made?
Had she looked at herself and saw erraticism.
They consulted the mighty google and discovered
Not that she was indeed erratic but
That earless moths fly erratically to avoid being eaten by bats.
The moths had no real destination other than survival.
They were not together by obligation; that was over.
They were not together by routine; that had been broken.
They were earless and afraid of the bats,
That chased them in the dark.
And avoided them by swerving off the lines
Of straight patterns into a one that neither of them
Could predict any better than the bats.
They were into survival not arrival.
Oy Vey (Ruffled)
No attaboy will cheer her up; the gender
Thing cloys (oh boy) another stupid offender.
Cowboy, choirboy, and bellyboy – ahoy,
It’s enough to make her want to deploy,
Alloy she won’t; her stance is solid
Corduroy poise rebutting the squalid.
Curvy joy; she ploys ruffles.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
Randall Brock
Big Frank belongs to a group of poets in Spokane that meet every couple of weeks and share what they have written with each other. It is a great group: good writers and very helpful to each other in providing a place for them to gather and read what they have written. Today Big Frank is going to feature one poet from the group: Randall Brock. Randall has a beautifully unique style and a lyrical conciseness to what he writes. He has published thousands of his poems over the years. Here are four of his poems. Above is a photo of him that Big Frank took at one of our readings.