Dawn Reader
Friday, July 31, 2020
Spin & Marty
Thursday, July 30, 2020
When Words Sneak Away
Laura Riding |
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, Riding Through the Glen
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
When Your Bucket List Becomes a Thimble List
On the Chilkoot Trail, summer 1993 |
Monday, July 27, 2020
Sunday Sundries, 287
anfractuous [an-FRAK-choo-uhs ]
Adjective: characterized by windings and turnings; sinuous; circuitous:
an anfractuous path.
ORIGIN: Anfractuous ultimately comes from the Late Latin
adjective ānfrāctuōsus, a term in rhetoric meaning “roundabout, prolix,”
and first used by St. Augustine of Hippo in one of his sermons. Ānfrāctuōsus
is a derivative of the noun ānfrāctus (also āmfrāctus) “a bend,
curve, circular motion, digression, recurrence,” formed by the prefix am-,
an-, a rare variant of ambi– “both, around, about,” and a
derivative of the verb frangere “to break, shatter, smash.” Anfractuous
entered English in the early 15th century.
HOW IS ANFRACTUOUS USED?
Then, as the road resumed its anfractuous course, clinging to
the extreme margin of this tumbled and chaotic coast, the fun began. JONATHAN
RABAN, "THE GETAWAY CAR," NEW YORK TIMES, JUNE 10, 2011
Saturday, July 25, 2020
I Sit Here, Thinking ...
Friday, July 24, 2020
Scone Response
Yesterday's apricot-walnut scones. |
- preheat oven to 400F
- assemble the following devices:
- a long knife to cut the dough into 8 parts just before you're ready to bake
- a sturdy spoon to mix the dough
- a shorter knife to cut the frozen butter (more about this below)
- a stiff rubber spatula to gather the dough & scrape the bowl
- oh, a large mixing bowl
- a one-cup glass measuring cup
- a set of measuring spoons
- a small cutting board, lightly floured
- a pan for baking--I bought the one you see below from a King Arthur Flour catalog--available online, too; squirt it with some spray oil (PS--careful: I broke one recently)
- a hot-pad or oven mitt
- Ingredients
- 1 egg (or 1/4 cup Egg Beaters--the latter is what I use, though I occasionally use an actual chicken egg)
- 1/3 cup honey
- 1 small cup (5.3 oz) of Chobani plain yogurt (any brand will do, of course)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp baking soda
- flour
- 1/2 cup oat flour
- 1 cup whole wheat flour
- 1/2 cup white flour
- about 1/2 cup shelled walnuts
- about 1/2 cup dried apricots, sliced
- 1/4 cup (1 stick) butter/margarine--FROZEN
- Preparation/Baking Instructions
- in bowl, put egg, honey, yogurt, and salt; whisk until it's smooth and creamy
- in blender (we use a Cuisinart) put flour, baking powder, baking soda
- in bowl, add walnuts, whisk till evenly mixed
- in bowl, add sliced dried apricots, whisk till evenly mixed
- remove frozen butter/margarine from freezer; cut into eight pieces; drop the pieces evenly on the flour in your processor; blend until thoroughly ... blended
- add flour mixture to the egg/honey/etc. in the bowl; mix thoroughly with the sturdy spoon; it's possible you'll need a little more flour to make the dough fairly sturdy (but not dry); form into a ball; remove ball from bowl and place on lightly floured board
- flatten the ball of dough with the heel of your hand into a circle that (be careful here!) approximates the size of your scone pan (or whatever device you're using)
- use large knife to cut into 8 equal portions
- carefully remove each piece and place it in the pan
- pop pan in the 400-degree oven for about 24 minutes (keep your eye on them--don't over- or under-bake)
- when they're done, put pan on cooling rack for a few minutes until the scones cool off a little, then remove them from the pan (carefully!), placing them on the cooling rack
- CLEAN UP!
- PIG OUT!
Thursday, July 23, 2020
Guessing: Will It Rain?
When I was a kid, my mom supplied the rain gear we three boys had: rubber raincoat (with hood), rubber pull-over boots with little metal clasps--boots we pulled over the shoes we were wearing. When I wore that outfit to Adams Elementary School, I felt a little ... childish (what an odd thing for a child to feel!) ... but I still remember the little cloakroom in each classroom, a cloakroom with hooks (we each had one), and there we would hang our raincoats (or, at other times, other outer wear) and line up our boots. The teacher would check to make sure everything looked neat and orderly.
They sort of looked like this-- but not nearly so ... fancy. |
As I got older and became a sophisticated adolescent, I never wore rain gear. If it started raining when I was outside, I simply ran for cover. (These dizzy days, I could run about two steps before I hit the pavement, face first!) And this continued for years--decades, really. Sometimes I got awfully wet, always blaming the heavens, not myself, of course.
But eventually I bought raincoats--wore a baseball hat or something.
No umbrella.
And then I did, started buying umbrellas. I crossed the rain-gear Rubicon.
And the older I got, the more often I carried one (in fact, I carry a collapsible one in my backpack at all times). In most recent years, I check my weather app, see what the percentage of possibility is: If it's 20% or higher, I carry one with me.
We also keep one in each car. And our umbrella stand inside the back door is jammed with them. (See pic at the bottom of this post.)
Adolescents in town, I've noticed, still eschew rain gear (as they do winter coats). Near the coffee shop where I go every day, I used to sit (in pre-COVID days) and watch high school kids from Western Reserve Academy walking down the street, many of the boys not wearing coats in winter, never carrying an umbrella in the rain.
The girls are different--though not always. A few years ago several girls from WRA were in the coffee shop when a cloud broke open, and we could hear Noah hammering in the back parking lot. The girls had no umbrella--they were worried about being late to class. I--gallant soul--offered them the one I'd carried in (I would use the one in my backpack to get home). They graciously accepted it.
And I never saw it again.
No worry. I had its twin at home.
This morning, before I walked over to the shop, I checked my weather app: 20%. So I pulled an umbrella from the stand--well, pulled my umbrella from the stand (Joyce and I have different, uh, standards concerning what decoration is on the device).
As I walked over, I passed some younger men, some of whom looked at me, looked at my umbrella, allowed their eyes to form a look that very clearly said, Why does that Old Guy have an umbrella? Then they paused a moment. Never mind--it's an Old Guy--that's why.
It didn't rain this morning during my walk. But I figured this (which, actually, is what I always figure in such situations): If I hadn't carried the umbrella, it definitely would have rained.
Wednesday, July 22, 2020
What To Do with the Fountain Pen?
My Mont Blanc pen, purchased in the summer of 1997. |
Tuesday, July 21, 2020
This Day--Five Years Ago
When I retired from the Aurora City Schools (January 1997), I began keeping a journal. I'd done so off and on before then (more off than on, unfortunately), but I became kind of obsessive about it back in 1997. I've hardly missed a day since.
Yesterday, when our son and his family came up for a socially distanced supper on the front porch to celebrate Joyce's birthday, I found I was not able to do a lot. I sliced some bread I'd baked on Sunday; I carried a few things to and fro; I put some things in the dishwasher; I laughed and talked with everyone. But most of the physical tasks went to the young-uns.
Son Steve and older grandson, Logan, cleaned out the birdhouse recently occupied by the chickadees that instinct (theirs) had evicted; they also set up one of their gifts for Joyce--a little portable herb garden that now stands right outside a back door. Melissa and the kids and Steve and Joyce did most of the "heavy lifting"--setting up, cleaning up.
And why not I? My persistent dizziness becomes worse later in the day, and the last thing I need is another fall. (The last one spilled a large Diet Coke all over our light-toned carpet up in the bedroom.)
As I watched everyone hurrying around last night--carrying, lifting, cleaning, etc.--I recalled quite wistfully those things I was once able to do--and not all that long ago. (Not counting, of course, those tasks that required skill).
So, this morning I decided to look at my journal entry for July 21, 2015--a mere five years ago (for those of you who are arithmetically challenged)--and see what I did. Below is a list:
- I got up at 6:30 a.m.
- I walked over to Open Door Coffee Company here in Hudson, where I sat at "my" table and worked for a couple of hours.
- I read 100 pp of the book I would be reviewing that week for Kirkus Reviews.
- I edited a book review I was working on for the Cleveland Plain Dealer (Palimpsest: A History of the Written Word, by Matthew
Battles, appeared in the paper on August 2.)
- Back home, I wrote and uploaded a blog post about frustrations in my life and how I've dealt with them (link to it).
- After lunch with Joyce, I biked down to Starbucks (about a mile away), where I wrote a doggerel, read some Elmore Leonard stories, continued editing the PD review.
- I biked home, then drove out to a local health club (Life Center Plus), where all "my" machines were occupied by Evil Ones, so I walked very brisk laps (for me) for half an hour, for some of that time carrying hand weights, doing curls as I walked.
- I stopped at the grocery store on the way home to pick up a roasted chicken for supper.
- After supper, Joyce drove to Oberlin for a memorial service for a friend.
- I started a blog for the following day and read from several books (I didn't list what they were--and I ain't gonna go paging through all our books to check the dates to see when I read what!).
- I watched some of a trashy movie (ain't sayin').
- I worked on a (clumsy) poem about my dad and the moonwalk in 1969. (See below.) (Until I found it and read it again just now, I had no memory that it dealt, in ways, with the same topic as this blog post!)
- Joyce got home a little after 10; we talked a while, then sank into sleep.
Monday, July 20, 2020
Sunday Sundries, 286
1. HBOTW: Not long ago I posted a query on Facebook: Who had left by one of our trees out front a pair of nicely painted rocks? Some speculations came--no definite answers. But the other day, reading in the front room, door open, I heard a woman telling her kids to pick up a couple of rocks from the mass of them lining a nearby driveway. I went out on the porch, asked her if she'd been the one to place them by our tree earlier. She said, "Yes." I said, "You deserve the Nobel Prize"--and I wasn't kidding. Such a kind thing to do--to bring a little joy into this world. And so ... she and her two little ones: Human Beings of the Week.
2. I finished three books this week ...
- The first (via Kindle) was the final volume of Ken Bruen's series The White Trilogy--this one called The McDead (2000). These cop thrillers feature a hard-ass named Detective Sergeant Brant, who is not exactly the most politically correct officer of the law you'll ever encounter. He's crude, violent, judgmental, and funny. Oh, and sexist, too.
About the only difference between him and those he pursues? A badge.
Bruen's style is what's fun--lots of dialogue (funny dialogue), brief chapters, allusions to things you wouldn't expect (like books and famous writers!), and the bad guy(s) (this time, the killer of a cop's brother) generally get what they deserve, though not in the most, uh, democratic way.
It's eerie, reading a book like this in a time like this. Published twenty years ago, it could have been published yesterday.
- The second was a book I started over a year ago--then set it aside: Jonathan Bate's How the Classics Made Shakespeare (2019). I don't usually do that--put a book aside. And when I do, I hardly ever pick it back up again.
But I didn't put this one aside because I didn't like it (my usual reason) but because I got too engrossed in some other writers. But it was still in my backpack (like something in a cluttered mind that's trying to forget), so when I saw it there the other day, I resolved to finish it. And did.
Bate is one of the most renowned and respected Shakespeare scholars in the world, and in this volume he talks about the influence of Latin classics in the Bard's plays and poems--classics he would have been aware of because of his years in the Stratford school and because of their pervasiveness in the culture of the time. As he writes near the beginning, "Storytelling was Shakespeare's method of making sense of the world, and no stories gripped him more fully than those of classical antiquity" (8).
And off we go on a journey through some of those classical stories--through the Bard's plays, sonnets, and poems--to see exactly how he employed those ancient stories.
I confess: I couldn't follow some of it (dotage?), but I did gain a new respect for how Shakespeare, pretty much an autodidact, devoted himself to his profession, to his storytelling.
Bate ends with this observation about Shakespeare: "He is our singular classic" (276). I concur.
- The third was Colum McCann's 2020 novel, Apeirogon (a word that means an infinitely sided polygon--and don't ask me a thing more about that!--I was an English teacher, remember?).
This is a novel about the Middle East, specifically about the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict--and the horrors it has produced--on both sides.
McCann focuses on two men--one a Palestinian, one an Israeli--both of whom have lost a daughter in the violence. One, a nine-year-old was shot in the head with a rubber bullet by an Israeli officer; the other, a teenager killed in a suicide bomb explosion.
Based on true events, the novel shows us how the two fathers met, became allies in the peace process, devoted themselves to ending the violence that killed their daughters.
The style is unique. Very short sections, sometimes telling about the victims (slowly the entire episodes unfold), sometimes talking about the birds in the region, the history, the geography.
It is indeed a grim story (an overlooked eyeball is found at the bombing scene after it had been "cleared"), but it is also, ultimately, a hopeful one. Common ground can be found--common ground based on family and hope and heart and the profound wish for all the violence to stop.
3. We're still hanging in there with Perry Mason on HBO--but it's become more of a habit now than a passion. I like seeing how characters from the old TV show (characters like Della Street, Mason's secretary, and Paul Drake, a private eye in the old series) are making their way into the HBO story in significant ways.
But I have to admit that I'm not caught up in it--watching more out of curiosity than obsession.
4. We're still doing virtually all of our grocery shopping online with the local Acme store. We wait in the parking lot; they bring our order to the car, put it in the trunk. Oh, occasionally one of us will dash into the store to get something we neglected to order, but we rival The Flash in speed, I'll tell you! Yesterday, I made such a dash--and was pleased (surprised?) to see that everyone was masked!
5. Monday is Joyce's birthday. And every day since I met her has been a gift to me.
6. I recently vowed I would quit clipping and filing articles from newspapers and magazines, articles related to things I used to teach. I break that vow almost every day.
7. Confession: I'm streaming (before Joyce joins me in bed) Horrible Bosses--again.The dumb thing just makes me laugh. When Joyce comes in, I immediately pause it--then stop it. (Not that I fooled her: She has ears as well as eyes. I'm blessed that she tolerates these ... diversions ... from My Normal, though she probably knows that before I met her, it was more like MY NORMAL.) Being with her for more than fifty years has reduced this trait into lower-case!
8. Last Word--a word I liked this week from one of my online word-of-the-day providers ...
- from wordsmith.org (from same Latin root as the adj. strident)
Saturday, July 18, 2020
Medical Ruminations
As I've mentioned in a number of "Seidman posts," I have seen in the Seidman waiting room--in the Seidman hallways--people varying widely in gender, age, race, ethnicity, people who are suffering far more than I have. My turn is coming, I know, but since this dark journey began in June 2005 (when I had my cancerous prostate gland surgically removed), I have not really suffered in ways I routinely see when I'm at Seidman. To see people struggling to get inside the building--canes, walkers, wheelchairs--or held by loving friends or relatives is not a sight easily dismissed or forgotten.
It's humbling, believe me. And profoundly moving.
I am still able to do many of the things I love to do, and though I miss doing--so much--some of the things I can no longer do (jog, ride my bike, hop in the car and drive to Oregon, etc.), I remain grateful that I can still walk (carefully!) over to the coffee shop to pick up my Daily Dose, can still read and write, bake sourdough bread, take a jaunt with Joyce (as we did last night) down to Szalay's Farm & Market for some fresh corn and other produce, stream some films and TV, enjoy encounters on Facebook with people from all over my life (from junior high to now), keep in touch with a dear friend and his wife here in Hudson, host porch-visits (masked/socially-distanced) with our son and his family, laugh and talk and think with Joyce. How can I complain about any of that?
As I wrote here yesterday, I have been on a med (Lupron) that has altered my life significantly, and yesterday I started a new one--Xtandi. It's been in my system less than a full day, but, so far (cross fingers) I don't really notice much of a change. A few more "sweats"--perhaps a bit more dizziness (hard to tell). But this morning I did not wake up feeling profoundly altered.
Fear, of course, has been a fell companion through all of this. But after some time (and procedures) passed, I realized that I just have to do it. Sure, I still dread going down to Seidman for a nuclear bone scan, a CT scan; I do not look forward to monthly blood draws--nor to the waiting for the results.
But I realized I can't let fear debilitate me even more than the disease does.
I understand perfectly well that I am running out of options. When this Xtandi fails to accomplish its mission (reduce my PSA--the chemical that the cancer now produces), the next step is chemo. There are no steps after that. And because I have known quite a few of you who have endured chemo--and because I have seen people at Seidman having treatments--I realize what the procedure will likely do to me, as well.
And as for writing about it? And publicly so?
I write--as I've said here before--because it helps me to externalize the damn thing. To take it out of me, place it over there, examine it. I find it truly does relieve some pressure.
And, as I think I've mentioned among these posts--probably more than once!--I've been greatly inspired by a number of writers who have battled the Reaper with a quill.
Poet Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869-1935), three-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, lay dying of cancer in a New York hospital--and while he was alert, he edited the proofs of his final book, King Jasper (1935).
Years later, in 2009, the great novelist/essayist/playwright/poet John Updike also lay dying of cancer in a Massachusetts hospice facility, but was writing and editing the poems that would compose his final volume, Endpoint and Other Poems, 2009.
I ain't no Robinson, no Updike--but I do see them as models, as inspirations. Keep doing what you love to do until you no longer can--that's the message to me from their final days.
And though I think (hope?) my "final days" still lie a ways down the road, I continue to try to emulate those two--not in the quality of work (can't do that!) but in the determination to clutch life until it flings my hands away.
Friday, July 17, 2020
On the Edge of Change
Near Room 115, Satterfield Hall, KSU Where Joyce and I met in the summer of 1969-- note our reflection in the window of the door that we exited that day she first spoke to me! |
We parked and walked to Room 115, THE ROOM (it was locked), but the classroom door had a long vertical window, so we could see inside. And remember.
Then we drove over to nearby 323 College Court, site of our first apartment (we lived there from 1969 to 1972, when our son was born: The landlord allowed no children, but he was very kind, helping us find a new place, 214 S. Willow, only about a block away, a home that's now gone, razed for the Esplanade project in Kent).
323 College Court |
Because we were on the eve of what we knew would be a major change in our lives. The next day--our son's birthday!--I would take my first dose of Lupron, a drug that diminishes/kills testosterone, the "food" of the prostate cancer that had returned after my surgery in 2005, after a round of radiation in 2009. A persistent foe.
I've been on that drug ever since--and will remain so, getting quarterly injections in my derriere.
The side effects were indeed life-changing. Sweats. Weariness. Fragile bones (I'm on a med for that, too.) Fits of depression. Loss of all (and I mean all) libido. Weight gain.
And I've experienced all of them. I now eat very little because weight arrives the next day--like a big, heavy box from Amazon Prime--if I eat the way I did pre-Lupron. If I eat the way I want to!
Some years passed. I went through immunotherapy and another round of radiation treatments. (By then, the cancer had metastasized into my bones--and the radiation zapped several spots on my spine.) My numbers calmed down.
But my Evil Numbers have started edging up again, so my oncologist at University Hospitals wants to stop that before it gets out of hand. So ... a new med ... an expensive one (as I posted on Facebook the other day, I got some financial help from a UH office, and I will have no co-pays, which would have cost thousands a year).
The drug is Xtandi, and many of its side effects mimic/intensify those of Lupron. With some others thrown into the mix--like dizziness (which is among the less common ones, but it worries me because I'm already dealing with it).
I'll take four pills a day (large capsules), and I will start today at noon. They actually arrived yesterday, but that was our son's birthday, and because he came up with his family to celebrate (masked/socially-distanced on our front porch), I didn't want to be dealing with anything odd, different, frightening while they were here.
I've already made some ... adjustments. As I wrote here last week (I think), I have resigned from my book-reviewing gig at Kirkus Reviews--a gig I've enjoyed for twenty-one years. I just didn't want to have before me an assignment that I couldn't finish. I never missed a deadline with them--didn't want to end my career by doing so.
And until I see what the effects are, Joyce will do all our driving--I don't want to have an "episode" of some sort while I'm behind the wheel.
So ... we shall see.
I hope there's nothing much but some "adjustments" to make in my life--nothing transformational. And I hope I can keep writing and reading and spending every possible second with Joyce.