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#antiques
Aphorisms rarely confer the comfort they intend                                     BUT    “One man’s trash is another man’s treasure” An antique wooden trunk sits languidly beside the road (Alabama State Highway 98 Scenic Route, Main St. Daphne, for those that need to know) atop a concrete culvert cover amidst a color-guard composed of an unused ironing board, and a mildewed duffel-bag (but the nicer kind- made of synthetic blend, with the wheels that don’t really roll, and an extendable handle that’s stuck “in”; not the heavy olive-drab canvas of the pop-culture cliche, found slung across the shoulder of the love-lorn/shell-shocked/long-lost soldier returning home unannounced in a lifetime movie melodrama) discarded haphazardly, and awaiting their diesel-powered trash-truck ferry to the afterlife of moribund things; but serendipitously and surreptitiously it is to be rescued from oblivion by the unexpected happenstance of a passerby passing by distractedly (gone out of his way though he really has no where to go, just somewhere to be, eventually) meandering through town, down alternate roads making his way to a rendezvous with a friend to give them a hand, for a minute, with some chores they’d like to get through before they leave for Atlanta, because he hasn’t seen them recently, and he had nothing better to do. How many others have passed by the unmapped X, but never saw it for they were so myopic in their missions and goals: rushed and unconscious, on autopilot, en route, to work, or to lunch, to mid-day meetings with clients for paper and gold; How many missed the possibility of adventure passing by, the childish excitement that could unfold, if they had just looked up from their phones and coffees and looked around for signs, untold? How many noticed the slight shimmer of fantasy left sitting by the road, but couldn’t stop because they were in a carpool, they weren’t driving, or just so unimaginative that to believe, for a bit, that a treasure exists outside the storied pages of fairy tales was too much to do, or too much to bear, with a rundown, old soul. Did a child see, with impressionable eyes, the chest of treasure left by a fool, unattended, out in the open (not buried, not even a bit, barely even hidden from view) and instantly wonder, too, just what might be inside? Could it be shimmering, shining jewels, loose and encrusting golden crowns, and goblets, scepters and silver candlesticks, precious oriental silks, or bullion and pirate ***** possibly a magic lamp, or maybe some enchanted tools?! A flying carpet!? Perhaps A Ghost of some grim ghoul. Did they beg a guardian to stop the carriage, but were denied and told, “we have to keep going little one, there’s much to get to that you don’t know. You have to go to school.” Well, the glimmer caught the eye of one beholder and made them think immediately, “That looks like treasure!” Indeed! It did look like treasure: a literal chest, built of heartwood with a carved arch-top, weathered paint, rusted hinges, metal bindings and filigree. (It was obviously empty of value, scuttled, broken, and relinquished to the refuse heap; However, To one with a limp, and a bad eye, and a deaf ear, brandishing a homeward bound insignia upon his chest and an island luck charm in black ink on his leg, whom you’d easily confuse for a pirate misplaced, you can see how it might seem to warrant an inspection.) Plus: It’s uncommon to find a treasure chest in the trash, in this century. Perhaps hope got the best of me; but also I knew its fate was not to be buried under heaps of plastic and rot. I’ve a friend whose proclivity one could describe as a collector of things, useful and abandoned... but not a “hoarder” like on the television - Unless you count Ariel as such- with all her jetsam, Knick-knacks, thing-a-ma-bobbers, and dreams. We are “of a kind,” prone to picking up after others, collecting aesthetic driftwood- anthropomorphized or just architecturally interesting, finding faces in fallen leaves, pointing to leaves that look like bugs, picking up bugs dried up like leaves and or sticks and stones and broken bones of small creatures long left rotting, beautifully decaying detritus of modernity - deemed useless; but still WE believe a greater purpose lies within, undefined by its usefulness, to be determined by it’s form Rather than function, appropriated and repaired  or dismantled and “re-crafted” into art, by simplification. Driven by a simple inspiration; To make beautiful decoration. I pull aside, let traffic pass, circle back, reorient and reclaim this bounty of the proverbial “spring-clean.” Its condition is one of slight disrepair: needs hinges re-attached; but otherwise in fine shape. I collect this treasured trash and return to my path, on course to its new home with my friend to whom I was already bound; But now I come bearing gifts. His smile was worth the drive and the dumpster-diving and the the whole day. A gift given is a love lived-in, and a smile shared with a friend Is love and life for me.
0
Mar 7, 2024
Mar 7, 2024 at 1:43 AM UTC
Trash and Treasure by the Roadside
Aphorisms rarely confer the comfort they intend                                     BUT    “One man’s trash is another man’s treasure” An antique wooden trunk sits languidly beside the road (Alabama State Highway 98 Scenic Route, Main St. Daphne, for those that need to know) atop a concrete culvert cover amidst a color-guard composed of an unused ironing board, and a mildewed duffel-bag (but the nicer kind- made of synthetic blend, with the wheels that don’t really roll, and an extendable handle that’s stuck “in”; not the heavy olive-drab canvas of the pop-culture cliche, found slung across the shoulder of the love-lorn/shell-shocked/long-lost soldier returning home unannounced in a lifetime movie melodrama) discarded haphazardly, and awaiting their diesel-powered trash-truck ferry to the afterlife of moribund things; but serendipitously and surreptitiously it is to be rescued from oblivion by the unexpected happenstance of a passerby passing by distractedly (gone out of his way though he really has no where to go, just somewhere to be, eventually) meandering through town, down alternate roads making his way to a rendezvous with a friend to give them a hand, for a minute, with some chores they’d like to get through before they leave for Atlanta, because he hasn’t seen them recently, and he had nothing better to do. How many others have passed by the unmapped X, but never saw it for they were so myopic in their missions and goals: rushed and unconscious, on autopilot, en route, to work, or to lunch, to mid-day meetings with clients for paper and gold; How many missed the possibility of adventure passing by, the childish excitement that could unfold, if they had just looked up from their phones and coffees and looked around for signs, untold? How many noticed the slight shimmer of fantasy left sitting by the road, but couldn’t stop because they were in a carpool, they weren’t driving, or just so unimaginative that to believe, for a bit, that a treasure exists outside the storied pages of fairy tales was too much to do, or too much to bear, with a rundown, old soul. Did a child see, with impressionable eyes, the chest of treasure left by a fool, unattended, out in the open (not buried, not even a bit, barely even hidden from view) and instantly wonder, too, just what might be inside? Could it be shimmering, shining jewels, loose and encrusting golden crowns, and goblets, scepters and silver candlesticks, precious oriental silks, or bullion and pirate ***** possibly a magic lamp, or maybe some enchanted tools?! A flying carpet!? Perhaps A Ghost of some grim ghoul. Did they beg a guardian to stop the carriage, but were denied and told, “we have to keep going little one, there’s much to get to that you don’t know. You have to go to school.” Well, the glimmer caught the eye of one beholder and made them think immediately, “That looks like treasure!” Indeed! It did look like treasure: a literal chest, built of heartwood with a carved arch-top, weathered paint, rusted hinges, metal bindings and filigree. (It was obviously empty of value, scuttled, broken, and relinquished to the refuse heap; However, To one with a limp, and a bad eye, and a deaf ear, brandishing a homeward bound insignia upon his chest and an island luck charm in black ink on his leg, whom you’d easily confuse for a pirate misplaced, you can see how it might seem to warrant an inspection.) Plus: It’s uncommon to find a treasure chest in the trash, in this century. Perhaps hope got the best of me; but also I knew its fate was not to be buried under heaps of plastic and rot. I’ve a friend whose proclivity one could describe as a collector of things, useful and abandoned... but not a “hoarder” like on the television - Unless you count Ariel as such- with all her jetsam, Knick-knacks, thing-a-ma-bobbers, and dreams. We are “of a kind,” prone to picking up after others, collecting aesthetic driftwood- anthropomorphized or just architecturally interesting, finding faces in fallen leaves, pointing to leaves that look like bugs, picking up bugs dried up like leaves and or sticks and stones and broken bones of small creatures long left rotting, beautifully decaying detritus of modernity - deemed useless; but still WE believe a greater purpose lies within, undefined by its usefulness, to be determined by it’s form Rather than function, appropriated and repaired  or dismantled and “re-crafted” into art, by simplification. Driven by a simple inspiration; To make beautiful decoration. I pull aside, let traffic pass, circle back, reorient and reclaim this bounty of the proverbial “spring-clean.” Its condition is one of slight disrepair: needs hinges re-attached; but otherwise in fine shape. I collect this treasured trash and return to my path, on course to its new home with my friend to whom I was already bound; But now I come bearing gifts. His smile was worth the drive and the dumpster-diving and the the whole day. A gift given is a love lived-in, and a smile shared with a friend Is love and life for me.
Continue reading...
17
Another day and things are the same. The sun shines through lace, Obscuring my view to the chaos outside. In here, it’s serene, no pressure To perform or produce, Although I do. No expectations of talk During the day. Everything I need is around me: Books and notes and discs With the record of my thoughts And flash drives with feelings. I have filled my rooms with Things that fascinate and inspire, Even after many years. A red chair with printed pillows, A prayer rug from Iran On the wall above Buddha, Brought a century ago by a lady On her Grand Tour of the world. My little, golden friend Laughs at this excess. Her photos of Florence and Venice Cause feelings of nostalgia, As if I was there in 1910, When duster-clad ladies bought them In Saint Mark's square, Hand-colored by poor artists. And on the other wall, My young father gazes at me, From the distance of sixty-seven years. There are other houses from the past And streets in my town That almost look like now. There are dark-finished tables, Gracing the space between The walls and the world and me. Brass lamps glint out Like beacons in the shadows That trail the creeping evening, For I am a mental traveler, As Karen Blixen said. She told her tales to Finch-Hatton And Berkeley Cole, On fire-lit evenings, Like Scheherazade on her carpet. I have no adventurers as my guests, But instead, send my stories to a virtual world, Hoping someone will listen and be inspired. But even if the words remain unread, unseen, I am content to write, to spin my tales For my own ears and the future.
0
Dec 8, 2019
Dec 8, 2019 at 11:14 AM UTC
Another Day
Another day and things are the same. The sun shines through lace, Obscuring my view to the chaos outside. In here, it’s serene, no pressure To perform or produce, Although I do. No expectations of talk During the day. Everything I need is around me: Books and notes and discs With the record of my thoughts And flash drives with feelings. I have filled my rooms with Things that fascinate and inspire, Even after many years. A red chair with printed pillows, A prayer rug from Iran On the wall above Buddha, Brought a century ago by a lady On her Grand Tour of the world. My little, golden friend Laughs at this excess. Her photos of Florence and Venice Cause feelings of nostalgia, As if I was there in 1910, When duster-clad ladies bought them In Saint Mark's square, Hand-colored by poor artists. And on the other wall, My young father gazes at me, From the distance of sixty-seven years. There are other houses from the past And streets in my town That almost look like now. There are dark-finished tables, Gracing the space between The walls and the world and me. Brass lamps glint out Like beacons in the shadows That trail the creeping evening, For I am a mental traveler, As Karen Blixen said. She told her tales to Finch-Hatton And Berkeley Cole, On fire-lit evenings, Like Scheherazade on her carpet. I have no adventurers as my guests, But instead, send my stories to a virtual world, Hoping someone will listen and be inspired. But even if the words remain unread, unseen, I am content to write, to spin my tales For my own ears and the future.
Continue reading...
52
Mangle, the word alone indicates destruction. the mutilation of an object until it is unrecognizable, like the hands of maids in the 1800s. The mangle has become a symbol of the working class. An overpopulated, but unheard society. Forced to work twelve hour days, running at the whim of the wealthy, unspoken and underpaid. Diligently they worked, sweat dripping from their brows as they scrubbed the oil from the fabric and their hands, washing away the filth from previous days. Two heavy wooden rollers tightly aligned, crushing spirits of the working class. Wringing them dry like the sheet on wash day, torturously expelling water from the already beaten cloth. Buttons crushed under the intensity of pressure. Hope dampened at the first attempt, subjected to a second, if not third round of torture. Only to accidentally leave an undesired crease. A dangerous job meant for two, hindered by the unraveling of a loose thread. Forced to repeat the process again and again, until finally, they reach perfection. I can only imagine the history passed down through the decades. Put on display and overlooked by a generation overwhelmed by technology. The mangle is now a decoration piece from Grandma, used as a table to support my coffee. Its story, like the linen it so helplessly crushed, a memoir of the working class.
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Jan 27, 2019
Jan 27, 2019 at 11:18 PM UTC
The Mangle
Producers are making films On the decades of my life. I'm sitting there, and I think out loud: I remember that! At the Henry Ford Museum They've displayed my Radio Flyer And wooden Yo-Yo. I lost them long ago. Flea Markets sell postcards Of Grand Bend Beach and Casino. I bet my life there. I've been told My steel tubular kitchen set Is retro. I didn't know. Classic Car Shows Put barrier ropes Around VWs. They were cheap, Dependable. And everything's back in vogue, 'cept me.
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Aug 16, 2015
Aug 16, 2015 at 3:35 PM UTC
Back in Vogue
We sat on the floor Of the antique shop Thumbing through a large box Of old postcards Some of them have writing and were mailed a long time ago You buy only one It's a faded love letter With a line "I love you in the same old way"
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Dec 9, 2014
Dec 9, 2014 at 10:32 PM UTC
The same old way
Moths float out from behind an opened, warped door. I push my face into your clothes, hung heavy like pearls in an antique shop. Stale and familiar, the scent follows me like a lost little bee. It buzzes even after I leave. Hopscotch down the hallway to find dead crickets in the bathtub. Scuffed wallpaper camouflages a cobweb. Metallic vines curve around bursts of petals. I’m certain you chose this pattern, but I don't know. Memories are few. I fill in the holes with honey and arrowheads. Indian feathers and an old brooch. Piles of pie. Did you love to bake pie? Games of bridge on that old, scratched table top with a musty deck of Bicycle cards. Each deck a photo album of your face. Your raisined face. I remember holding it in my hands. “This aint a walk for old womans.” And out the door I go. Empty handed and independent.
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Oct 29, 2014
Oct 29, 2014 at 7:14 PM UTC
Pictures, Teacups, a Patterned Pillow