Thursday Poem

I’ve been missing Toby and my mom and how things were ten years ago. I love the title on this one, and the green motif that goes from fields to bruises to hope. Something to remember:  “Every wound closes. Repair comes with sweetness,/ Come spring. Every empire will fall:/ I must believe this.”

 

Greensickness
by Laurel Chen

after Gwendolyn Brooks

My wild grief didn’t know where to end.
Everywhere I looked: a field alive and unburied.
Whole swaths of green swallowed the light.
All around me, the field was growing. I grew out
My hair in every direction. Let the sun freckle my face.
Even in the greenest depths, I crouched
Towards the light. That summer, everything grew
So alive and so alone. A world hushed in green.
Wildest grief grew inside out.

I crawled to the field’s edge, bruises blooming
In every crevice of my palms.
I didn’t know I’d reached a shoreline till I felt it
There: A salt wind lifted
The hair from my neck.
At the edge of every green lies an ocean.
When I saw that blue, I knew then:
This world will end.

Grief is not the only geography I know.
Every wound closes. Repair comes with sweetness,
Come spring. Every empire will fall:
I must believe this. I felt it
Somewhere in the field: my ancestors
Murmuring Go home, go home—soon, soon.
No country wants me back anymore and I’m okay.

If grief is love with nowhere to go, then
Oh, I’ve loved so immensely.
That summer, everything I touched
Was green. All bruises will fade
From green and blue to skin.
Let me grow through this green
And not drown in it.
Let me be lawless and beloved,
Ungovernable and unafraid.
Let me be brave enough to live here.
Let me be precise in my actions.
Let me feel hurt.
I know I can heal.
Let me try again—again and again.

Good Old Irving Berlin

 

I saw the above cover of a purported Irving Berlin song on Instagram and thought, “No way is that real”  But reader, it IS. It appears in the “list of Irving Berlin songs” Wikipedia entry and Glenn Miller recorded it in 1941:

 

Many other artists followed Glenn in 1941, if we can believe whoever compiled everything on Secondhand Songs. I can’t blame them; this is catchy as hell.

“When they lay him twelve feet deep
I’ll be there to laugh not weep
When that man is dead and gone”

Shirt Season Started Early

When you have 20 years of blog archives, it’s easy to identify patterns. In this case, every spring I start thinking about sewing button-up shirts. It’s early this year–previous posts were in April or May–but it’s also been an unseasonably warm winter so that makes sense.

I have two at a time going right now: One in a Liberty from deep stash (RIP, Fabric.com) that will be my “Easter dress,” and another in a woven stripe I picked up with the last of a gift card from Sewtopia. (There’s also a cut from Salt Lake Sewciety waiting to be a different button-up shirt pattern.)

Two shirts being sewn with collars but no sleeves. One is small pink floral and one is blue and purple stripes.

(Speaking of blog archives, that Liberty is a different colorway of a shirt I made in 2016 that I hulked out of but still have. Good to know my taste is pretty consistent.)

 

Monday Mood

I saw this over the weekend and it’s absolutely perfect. (I’ve been looking at job postings not because of anything specific at work, just as insurance against whatever happens to public health funding in the rest of this terrible administration. They all say shit like they’re Special Forces, not a job.)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Scott Seiss (@scottseiss)

Friday Links

1. This book review knows how to get me to pay attention: “This may be the only book in existence that discusses the game of Twister, the ethics of Aristotle and the mechanics of bureaucracies.” (The book–The Score by C. Thi Nguyen–sounds really interesting.)

2. Happy International Women’s month!
Screenshot of a tweet that says "Could we just run a trial period on matriarchy and see if it helps"

3. I liked this one (currently debating getting a new $$$ pillow).Cartoon of two birds looking in at a woman in a bed with lots of pillows. One bird is saying, "What an amazing nest."

Moab Weekend!

We were in the desert for a couple days at the beginning of the week (which you would never know, thanks to the magic of scheduled posts). It was SEVENTY DEGREES and everything I wanted it to be.

We did the Grandstaff Canyon hike the first day, one of my favorites.
Red cliffs at sunset against a blue sky

Water reflections on red rock

Desert willow buds against red rock

And then the next day before we left we tried a new trail to the Mill Creek Waterfall. The trailhead was really close to town, everything was well marked, and it even had bonus petroglyphs!
Green grass and sagebrush in front of red cliffs

Petroglyphs on rock chunks that have fallen from a cliff

A waterfall and swimming hole in the red cliffs

I think it the summer that waterfall would be party central, but it was still too cold for people to swim in. (Yes, I waded in.)

Tuesday Project Progress: More Sweater!

I jumped right into another sweater after I finished my non-itchy rainbow sweater. I was high on the success of the making something wearable, so I did some more shopping for cotton blend yarns, and now I’m already done with the yoke: A blue sweater with red stripes being knitting. Just the yoke of the sweater is finished.

 

This will end up being a rollneck sweater, like the classic J. Crew cotton sweater.  I’m using a PetiteKnit pattern again and added stripes for an even MORE J. Crew vibe. It’s going fast–bigger needles and more meetings at work in which to knit–so maybe I can wear it once or twice before summer.

(Shoutout to my new project bag, too. I’ve sewn three different knitting bags over the last three years and didn’t enjoy using any of them, so I finally gave up and bought something. It’s perfect.)

A Poem For When You Want It To Be Spring

The opening three lines of this delighted me but this line is the clear winner of them all: “Not even moths in the spell of the flame/ Can want it to be warmer so much as I do!” Amen, Kenneth.

 

Desire For Spring
by Kenneth Koch

Calcium days, days when we feed our bones!
Iron days, which enrich our blood!
Saltwater days, which give us valuable iodine!
When will there be a perfectly ordinary spring day?
For my heart needs to be fed, not my urine
Or my brain, and I wish to leap to Pittsburgh
From Tuskegee, Indiana, if necessary, spreading like a flower
In the spring light, and growing like a silver stair.
Nothing else will satisfy me, not even death!
Not even broken life insurance policies, cancer, loss of health,
Ruined furniture, prostate disease, headaches, melancholia,
No, not even a ravaging wolf eating up my flesh!
I want spring, I want to turn like a mobile
In a new fresh air! I don’t want to hibernate
Between walls, between halls! I want to bear
My share of the anguish of being succinctly here!
Not even moths in the spell of the flame
Can want it to be warmer so much as I do!
Not even the pilot slipping into the great green sea
In flames can want less to be turned to an icicle!
Though admiring the icicle’s cunning, how shall I be satisfied
With artificial daisies and roses, and wax pears?
O breeze, my lovely, come in, that I mayn’t be stultified!
Dear coolness of heaven, come swiftly and sit in my chairs!

Friday Links

1. Let’s plan a trip to Japan and go to Jeans Street in Kurashiki. “The road is dyed indigo, the color of Kojima’s iconic denim. The red and white lines at the road’s edge resemble the denim’s selvage— the reinforced end of a bolt of fabric that forms the outside seam of high-end jeans.”

2. These hand-drawn data visualizations from mid-1920s Turkey are beautiful:

3. I posted about reading to dissociate from the horrors yesterday but seriously, what would we do without books?

“What an astonishing thing a book is. It’s a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you’re inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years. Across the millennia, an author is speaking clearly and silently inside your head, directly to you. Writing is perhaps the greatest of human inventions, binding together people who never knew each other, citizens of distant epochs. Books break the shackles of time. A book is proof that humans are capable of working magic.”

Carl Sagan, Cosmos