(Time and experience can soften the armor of anything and everything. Steel takes a long time to soften. The soft overcomes the hard. Willingness matters.)
keeping it simple....reflecting on life with pictures and poems in the Japanese tradition of Zen
508. soft & hard
(Time and experience can soften the armor of anything and everything. Steel takes a long time to soften. The soft overcomes the hard. Willingness matters.)
507. greater than great
506. quiet beauty
505. finding money
504. surprise! surprise!
(Just looking around in the woods….then a flash of color appeared and fluttered up and up then settled down over there on the fallen tree, as though it was waiting just long enough for me to take this picture. Do butterflies think, I wonder—do they begin to wonder what, and who, and why? Anyway, I’m sure that, like me, they must try their very best to stay alive and thrive.)
502. rocks
(Like I was saying just the other day, poetry lies in wait everywhere, even in rocks, little ones or big. This reminds me of a good book, which was so good that I read it twice, back-to-back. “Tying Rocks to Clouds”
501. inside out
500. eye-to-eye
(Poetry lies in wait everywhere, even or especially in a tree. That tree with the upstairs window caught my eye. I stepped closer, then saw what it had to say. A tree is more than just a tree when you take the time to look, really look, and see what it has to say. Things look different close up.)
499. after all
(Every tree has a story, it’s own story, to tell—just look….just listen.)
498. zoom
497. the last snow
(Clearly, the snow was melting away. This may be the last snow this winter, I thought to myself on yesterday's walk in the woods, let me take a pretty picture to remember. So I began to walk slowly and mindfully, stopping from time to time to look around. One time off in the distance, I glimpsed a deer darting away, and then another….and then maybe seven or eight more deer prancing across the snow.
We never know if this, whatever the “this” may be, will be the last time. Every moment is a gift. I’m grateful that I remembered to slow down and look around, and now had a lovely memory to bring home and share.)
496. the long road ahead
(Drive My Car, is a bold movie that is quiet and stirring. It takes you on a three-hour journey, slowly giving a visual language to who we are as a people. Nominated this year for Best Film, Best Director, Best Foreign Film Oscars, it may well be the best film I’ve ever seen.)
495. transformation
(Oak feathers. Nature is always transforming itself or allowing itself to be transformed. The work of Miriam Carpenter is currently on exhibit at the Michener Museum in Doylestown. Her work is remarkable. To see more, google: miriam carpenter woodturner)
494. captain jack
(I used to think that only dogs loved to play in the snow. On my neighborhood walk yesterday, Captain Jack showed me another way. Just goes to show you, don’t believe everything you think!)
493. zoom! ✈️
(Beyond today’s Super Bowl another Bowl will be going on, somewhere. If you’re lucky you may get to see it. Jet airlines fly an average of 600 mph; others can go faster, even 2000 mph….zoom!)
492. the long road to peace
(Every leaf matters….every step matters….we’re all in this life together.)
491. purr and be happy
490. blue
(This is an origami picture that I made years ago. It’s blue loveliness makes me feel both happy and sad together.)
489. marking time
488. near and far
487. a puppy is a poem
(I smile to myself for being such an old dog.)
486. cats & buddhas
485. the sky
484. reminiscing
(Once, many years ago, I entered a poetry contest with this senryu, which is a genre of Japanese verse. I won a tee shirt! It looked something like this one….wish I still had it.
Senryu are written in abbreviated style similar to haiku. In times past, people would gather together to compose and share senryu, which highlighted the human condition, human nature in its many faces. These poems often were humorous, amusing, even sexually suggestive.)
482. a short, short story
481. sweet
(It was a blustery walk in the neighborhood. Snow, wind, close-to-zero degrees. I like being out in all kinds of weather; a heightened sense of aliveness kicks in. I was doing my best to plod along and keep from sliding when something caught my eye. I stopped and looked up and there it was—a red and white bow tied to the fence. Hmm. I remember thinking: sweet….who did this?….why?….what does it mean?)