Wind

Aug. 23rd, 2021 02:45 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“I am a boat
without wind.
You were the wind.
Was that the direction I wanted to go?
Who cares about directions
with a wind like that!

—Olav H. Hauge, “You Are The Wind” (tr. Robert Bly)



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Desus and Mero, Beyoncé, or the Marine Corps Marching Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Quarrels

Apr. 29th, 2021 02:25 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“Day belongs to family quarrels, but with the night he who has quarreled finds love again. For love is greater than any wind of words.”

—Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Flight to Arras (tr. Lewis Galantière)



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Desus and Mero, Beyoncé, or the Marine Corps Marching Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Pirates

Apr. 8th, 2021 01:47 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“It was easy for me to go to war without much strong emotion, simply because I was young, and over all young men, a wind was blowing the scent of sails and pirates.”

—Jean Giono, Jean le Bleu



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Desus and Mero, Beyoncé, or the Marine Corps Marching Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Musings

Oct. 30th, 2019 01:51 pm
pjthompson: (musings)
In 1901, two English ladies—Miss Moberly and Miss Jourdain—experienced a timeslip while visiting Versailles, going back for an interlude to the time of Marie Antoinette. They detailed this story in a book called An Adventure. You can read about it here: xenophon.org.uk/adventure.html

If you click on the link, then click on "The Music of An Adventure" you can hear a transcription one of the ladies, Ms. Jourdain, a talented musician, made of a strain of music she heard while "there." Not surprisingly, they received much ridicule from the male establishment of the time, but they clung to their accounts for the rest of their lives. There are inconsistencies in their stories, but other things they reported would have taken a great deal of research on their part to get right. So the account remains controversial even today.

Still, it's a cranking great yarn. And I say, all cranking great yarns should be true, even if they aren't.
*

The Getty Fire was still quite a ways from me but it got perilously close to the LA Basin. The LA Basin isn't more important than the other areas that have burned but it's densely packed. If the fires get into the Basin I don't know how they'll stop them. It's something to worry about every time fire gets close to the really crowded areas. Fire departments are stretched so thin right now. They heroically got on top of the Getty fire this time, but we’re still burning, homes are still being lost.

California is a trend leader in many ways. But I would rather not be on the front lines of the devastation caused by global warming. Californians are sharing that with our brethren in hurricane, tornado, and typhoon country. But make no mistake: global warming is coming for us all.
*

I changed my alarm sound from the annoying ding ding ding ding ding ding a-ding to the sound of a hooting owl echoing in a forest. It's eerie and wondrous when it drops into the silence of my room.
*

Someone was talking about animism the other day and it made me think of Ayahuasca, the visionary drug processed by the Quechua people of the Amazon. It's an arduous process to bring forth the drug, involving many steps, and not at all intuitive. When a Westerner asked the shaman how his people learned to process it he said, "The spirit of the plant told us."
*

Trust the road
no matter where it
takes you, how many
forks and crossroads.
Wherever it leads,
in any direction,
is the path you must follow.
*

Looks like the giant Tick fire was started by a guy who was living in junkyard like conditions and decided to cook his lunch outside on the barbecue. In Santana wind conditions. Florida had nothing to do with it.
*

I finished the old compilation novel (Beneath a Hollow Moon) and put it in a trunk where it will get moldy or will come back out again and I can make it new. I've started another novel, one I'd written a couple of chapters on a long time ago. In fact, chapter one was the last Editor's Choice I received from the Online Writing Workshop for SFF (OWW) before I left it. Carmina. It's been doing a siren call to me for the last couple of months, and so far the writing's been going well. Except for those two previously written chapters it's completely new writing and that feels really good. Also, a completely different universe from the previous novel, and that also feels good. And the best part? I know the end but have no idea how I’ll get there! I'm stumbling around, but I feel like I've finally come home again.

I'll forever be grateful for the things I learned from OWW, the community I was a part of, and the encouragement I received there. Invaluable.
*

It’s a process of letting go:
of youth,
resentments,
of those we love,
of seasons of
grief and joy.
Let them go, let them fly.
Let them find new homes,
or sink away into the earth,
away from my fading heart,
my lightening soul.
Away, now!
*

Musings

Jun. 5th, 2019 04:24 pm
pjthompson: (musings)
My problem as a fantasy writer is that I'm too logically-minded for dragons. I swore I would never use them, but I went back on that promise to myself for one novel and it didn’t work out so well.

Someone suggested that it might be interesting to do a story from the POV of a very logical/intellectual dragon. I tried doing such a creature but reached the inevitable scene where someone needed to ride it and my mind rebelled against the usual scenario. It’s scientifically impossible for a human to ride on a dragon’s back. They'd be killed instantly, torn off the beast by wind velocity and g-forces. I couldn't suspend my own disbelief in that regard and the alternate solution I came up with was utterly ridiculous.

So, an otherwise good novel was ruined in the third act. Alas, I didn't have the heart for a complete rewrite at that point. And as time went on I realized there were other problems. (I tried to write a trilogy in one book, for one.) The dragon was just the most egregious.

Lesson learned: if you're going to pull the dragon trigger, you've got to go all in, suspend your disbelief and have humans ride them in defiance of all laws of physics. Or don't pull that trigger.

*

I hate it when a trilogy is just good enough that you need to keep going but not good enough to be enthusiastic about it.

*

It's always a toss-up whether the Science Channel is going to inform me or scare the crap out of me.

*

Maybe our alien overlords will impeach Trump. Then again, I don't think even they could get it through the GOP-controlled Senate.

*

Finally worked up enough nerve to open this box.



 

When in conversation I mention that I never really wanted children there is a certain species of woman who goes on about missing out on the miracle of birth and I want to say to them, "What a bunch of sexist crap." It's about choice, ladies, not about being brainwashed by social norms. I even had one tell me, "I'm sure you console yourself with that." Believe me, if I really wanted to get knocked up it’s the easiest thing in the world. I just didn't want it.

*

The crows around here get most of my table scraps and leftovers that are past their prime. There's one crow who sits atop the telephone pole near my house as a lookout. His job is to caw-caw-caw really loudly if I (or anyone else) throw things out into the yard. But before he does that he first comes down to help himself to a nice snack. Then he flies back to the telephone pole or the roof of my house and sends out the alert to the other crows. He ain't no crow's fool.

*

You know, even if you roast troll meat in olive oil and garlic with some fine herbes it still tastes like sweat and urine.

*

"Primitive" is such a Western-o-centric word, don't you think?

Suddenly

Jul. 2nd, 2018 12:01 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“A sudden death clears away fog as in a violent wind. For a while you see clearly—too clearly. Then the fog returns. This is ‘real life.’”

—Joyce Carol Oates, Twitterfeed, August 19, 2013

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Orville and Wilbur, Katy Perry, or the Avengers. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

Change

Dec. 9th, 2016 01:26 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“Men do change, and change comes like a little wind that ruffles the curtains at dawn, and it comes like the stealthy perfume of wildflowers hidden in the grass.”

—John Steinbeck, Sweet Thursday

 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Lucy and Ethel, Justin Bieber, or the Kardashian Klan. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

 

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (TheSiren)

Green Men are found in many cultures. They are commonly a symbol of rebirth and regeneration, the spring greening that inevitably follows the dying of winter. I’m fascinated with them. I have two of them, one in the back yard garden near the peach tree:

IF

The lovely lady to the left of him is the Roman goddess Flora, and the lady on the right is simply named Ivy. The man himself is cast iron and ages gracefully, rusting in interesting patterns.

I also have a Green Man inside:

greenmancloseup-sm-1

He’s smaller, also made of metal, but I doubt he’s copper as the green of him suggests. I believe the “aging” on this one is artificial—but I still think he’s rather cool. I’d have more Green Men if I had the space and money (so it’s probably a good thing I don’t). I like the ones with serious and slightly sinister expressions, and I like them to be made of serious natural materials like metal, not these comical cast resin ones that you see here and there and everywhere (though I admit, Flora and Ivy are cast resin). Why am I so fascinated with these Green Man images?

I’m a city girl, born and raised. If I want to get in touch with Serious Nature, I have to drive quite a ways out of town, and when I was a kid we never left town, unless it was to drive to Pomona for the county fair or to Disneyland in Anaheim. There wasn’t enough money for anything else, nor any time and inclination with my parents working hard. It just wasn’t in the program. As a consequence, I was 18 before I ever went on a real vacation, and as for nature spots? Mom didn’t see much sense in going places where you had to sleep on the ground and cook over campfires. She’d had enough of that “nonsense” in her roughing-it country girl days and found no romance in the experience. Why would any sensible human being want to give up modern conveniences?

So I grew up having to take nature where I found it. Fortunately, back in the olden days of Los Angeles, there still existed patches of it here and there. An immense vacant lot existed on my block on Fourth Avenue in Venice, for one. (It is now a public storage facility.) For another, my father planted a magical garden every year, a place of communion and nourishment. (I’ll discuss that another time, in The Green Man, Part II.) Occasionally, I got to visit my older brother in the Santa Monica mountains, where my nieces and nephews (all mostly older than me) would lead me on fantastical trips over the hill and through the woods following streams…until we popped out of the rough onto the manicured lawns of the Bel Air Country Club golf course. Then we’d hightail it back into the woods. These things were extremely important to me, as were long walks on the beach, about five blocks west of where we lived.

I loved the beach best when it was cold and rainy, partly because the things that drifted up on shore—the glass, the driftwood, the truly odd and puzzling things, were more interesting and less picked over by other beach walkers. Mostly, though, it was because I could walk there on cold days without much interference from other people, thinking my thoughts, communing with the vast rolling heart of the sea, feeling the chill pierce me to the bones. That chill always felt purifying rather than cold. I could not return from those walks with any black spots in my spirit. The wind off the sea blew them all away and gave me bliss in return.

That garden and that vacant lot saved my sanity during childhood; those walks along the sea saved my adolescence. Nature, my small neighborhood version of it, never failed to renew me. That, I think, is part of why I am so fascinated with the symbolic representation of nature: I want to recapture, to remind myself, of that need for renewal, that need to physically get out and get in touch with something green and greater than the mere mortal.

In my twenties I went on long hikes in the Angeles Crest. It’s a great, sprawling wilderness within easy driving distance of Los Angeles. Some of it, like Dart Canyon, is at a low enough elevation that on smoggy L.A. days the bad air penetrates them. You have to hike higher up if you want to avoid the city pollution. But on lovely, clear days Dart Canyon is a enchanted place, with maple and sycamore trees, waterfalls, the ruins of cabins and of a lodge destroyed in a great destructive flood in the 1930s. Higher up, there’s pine forest, ski summits, abandoned mines, and scrambling over big boulders to cross streams.

Those hikes were literally peak experiences for me: cleansing, renewing, exhilarating.

My favorite parts of any vacation, whether in this country or another, have been those times when I get into the countryside, touch the green, listen to the birds, feel the wind sweep through my spirit and blow away the black clouds. Nature is my touchstone.

These days—and in the long years of caregiving—that touchstone is mostly limited to the back yard. There wasn’t much time for anything else when Mom was alive; these days I still seem to be decompressing from that experience, trying to recoup my energy and my creativity. I’m far enough away from the beach that I’d have to drive, find parking, and my legs…no.

But the funny thing is, it doesn’t really take Grand Nature for me to get that sense of renewal. The Green Man is alive, curling in every leaf and bud; his skin is easy beneath my palm in the smooth trunk of my peach tree; he dances in the swaying branches of the white willow that volunteered to grow in my yard. All I have to do is sit for a few minutes, enclosed by walls and trees and wildish overgrown patches, listening to the birds, smelling peach blossoms, feeling the earth and grass under my bare feet…and the magic still happens. I am there. He is there. I am lifted up, I am renewed. Maybe the Green Man is watching over me, I don’t know. All I know is that I am grateful.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)

PHOTO REMOVED AT THE PHOTOGRAPHER’S REQUEST

While recently reading American Folklore by Richard M. Dorson, I came upon a passage relating the curious testimony of John Josselyn from 1638. He’d taken ship to New England and upon arriving in Massachusetts Bay, was catching up on news from those he met on shore, including prodigious tales of earthquakes, mermen, monster births. He went on to say:

Mr. Foxwell came forth and related how he had passed a night at sea in a small shallop, hugging the shore but afraid to land; suddenly at midnight a loud voice called him, “Foxwell, Foxwell, come ashore,” and upon the beach he beheld a great fire ringed by dancing men and women. After an hour they vanished, and next morning Foxwell put ashore and found their footprints and brands’ ends on the sand. But no living Englishman or Indian could he find on shore or in the woods.

The passage is odd in itself, to be sure, and although logical reasons might be found to explain it, they are no fun at all. I reject them soundly. I love the fairy-like creepiness of it, and think it’s a good thing Mr. Foxwell was too timid to put ashore. The story really sets my imagination to quivering.

But the passage has extra resonance, extra quiveration, because it reminds me of a more famous passage, this one from Plutarch, On the Failure of Oracles, 17-1:

The father of Aemilianus the orator, to whom some of you have listened, was Epitherses, who lived in our town and was my teacher in grammar. He said that once upon a time in making a voyage to Italy he embarked on a ship carrying freight and many passengers. It was already evening when, near the Echinades Islands, the wind dropped, and the ship drifted near Paxi. Almost everybody was awake, and a good many had not finished their after-dinner wine. Suddenly from the island of Paxi was heard the voice of someone loudly calling Thamus, so that all were amazed. Thamus was an Egyptian pilot, not known by name even to many on board. Twice he was called and made no reply, but the third time he answered; and the caller, raising his voice, said, ‘When you come opposite to Palodes, announce that Great Pan is dead.’ On hearing this, all, said Epitherses, were astounded and reasoned among themselves whether it were better to carry out the order or to refuse to meddle and let the matter go. Under the circumstances Thamus made up his mind that if there should be a breeze, he would sail past and keep quiet, but with no wind and a smooth sea about the place he would announce what he had heard. So, when he came opposite Palodes, and there was neither wind nor wave, Thamus from the stern, looking toward the land, said the words as he had heard them: ‘Great Pan is dead.’ Even before he had finished there was a great cry of lamentation, not of one person, but of many, mingled with exclamations of amazement.

The sea holds many mysteries and dangers, but let’s not forget that strange shores do as well.

You can find the rest of this Loeb Classics Library translation of Plutarch here.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

The stars

Jan. 16th, 2014 10:37 am
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“When I lie on the beach there naked, which I do sometimes, and I feel the wind coming over me and I see the stars up above and I am looking into this very deep, indescribable night, it is something that escapes my vocabulary to describe. Then I think: ‘God, I have no importance. Whatever I do or don’t do, or what anybody does, is not more important than the grains of sand that I am lying on, or the coconut that I am using for my pillow.’ So I really don’t think in the long sense.”

—Marlon Brando, New York Times, July 2, 2004

 stars4WP@@@

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

 

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: poetry (redrose)

To enjoy once your power comes back on.

I’m slowly going through every ancient Word file I have to make them openable by the newer versions of Word.  It’s been a painful lesson in keeping things current, but every once in a while I come across a gem that makes the whole process worthwhile.  I came across this one today.

Of course, this is about a cold storm, not violent winds with heat, but…

 

After the Storm

by Billy Collins

Soft yellow-gray light of early morning,
butter and wool,
the two bedroom windows
still beaded and streaked with rain.

The world calm again, routine with traffic,
after its night of convulsions,
when storm drains closed at the throat,
and trees shook in the wind like the hair of dryads.

In the silent house, its roof still on,
too early for the heat to come whistling up
and the guest room doors still closed,
I am propped up on these pillows,

a gray, moth-eaten cashmere jersey
wrapped around my neck
against the unbroken cold of last night.
I am thinking about the dinner party,

the long table, dark bottles of Merlot,
the odd duck and brussels sprouts,
and how, after midnight,
with all of us sprawled on the couch and floor,

the power suddenly went out
leaving us to feel our way around
in the tenth-century darkness
until we found and lit a stash of candles

then drew the circle of ourselves a little tighter
in this softer hula of lights
that gleamed in mirrors and on rims of glasses
while the shutters banged and the rain lashed down.

A sweet nut of memory—
but the part that sends me whirring
in little ovals of wonder,
as the leftover clouds break apart

and the sun brightly stripes these walls,
is the part that came later,
hours after we had each carried a candle
up the shadowy staircase and gone to bed.

It was three, maybe four in the morning
when the power surged back on,
and, as if a bookmark
had been inserted into the party

when the lamps went dark,
now all the lights downstairs flared again,
and from the stereo speakers
up through the heat register

into our bedroom and our sleep
blared the sound of Jimmy Reed
singing “Baby What You Want Me to Do”
just where he had left off.

So the party resumed without us,
the room again aglow with a life of its own,
the night air charged
with guitar and harmonica,

until one of us put on slippers,
went down to that blazing, festive emptiness,
and turned everything off.
Then, without lights or music,

even the ghosts of ourselves
had to break up their party,
snub out their cigarettes,
carry their wineglasses to the kitchen,

where they kissed each other good night,
and with nowhere else to go,
floated vaguely upstairs
to lie down beside us in our dark and quiet beds.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)
I ran across this passage in Women Who Run With the Wolves the other day:

The most important thing is to hold on, hold out, for your creative life, for your solitude, for your time to be and do, for your very life; hold on, for the promise from the wild nature is this: after winter, spring always comes.


For me, it's autumn.

I shake my feathers and the dust of the summer doldrums shifts away from them. Soon I'll step into the cool, crisp waters of Fall and it will be washed away completely. I'll slap my wings into the bath of autumn winds, dip my head, ruffle my feathers, and be off, on the wing again.

Summer has always been a trial for me. You know that Seasonal Affective Disorder thing? I always knew there was a summertime version of it, long before science tumbled to the fact. Every year, starting about late spring, I'd feel myself sinking. By full summer, I'd be slogging along through hot molasses. Then the seasons turned again and I'd be filled with incredible new energy that lasted through the winter and into early spring. I have always started new novels in the fall. That's when they burgeoned inside me most naturally.

This year we had a mild summer, but the doldrums came anyway. It's been a difficult year in other ways and I've been so exhausted I have hardly had time for that creative life. I thought many times of quitting altogether—but hey, anyone who's known me long knows I've been down that path before. I spent most of the year doing revisions rather than creating new works. That weighed me down, too. But the spark always refuses to die, no matter how convinced I am that this time it will finally be extinguished. No matter how desperate I feel, how pushed into the earth I feel, that little light remains—and probably will until my bones are pushed into the earth.

I don't yet know for sure that things will be okay, but I trust that little light. And I'm rising again. The wind may be crisp and cold, but once more it promises sure flight.
pjthompson: (Default)
Green Men are found in many cultures. They are commonly a symbol of rebirth and regeneration, the spring greening that inevitably follows the dying of winter.

I'm fascinated with them. I have two of them, one in the back yard garden near the peach tree:

Photobucket

The lovely lady to the left of him is the Roman goddess Flora, and the lady on the right is simply named Ivy. The man himself is cast iron and he is aging gracefully, starting to rust in interesting patterns.

I also have a Green Man inside, in my room:

Photobucket

He's smaller, also made of metal, but I doubt he's copper as the green of him suggests. I believe the "aging" on this one is artificial—but I still think he's rather cool. Here's the grouping in which he sits, right next to Freya and the prayer sticks, which you may remember from past entries:

Photobucket

Truth is, I'd have more Green Men if I had the space and money (so it's probably a good thing that I don't). I like the ones with serious and slightly sinister expressions, and I like them to be made of serious natural materials like metal, not these comical cast resin ones that you see here and there and everywhere (though I admit, Flora and Ivy are cast resin). Why am I so fascinated with these Green Man images?

This post is really about Nature. )

Hurricane

Mar. 15th, 2010 12:00 pm
pjthompson: (Default)
From the notebooks, September 20, 1997:


Hurricane

The winds are gentle,
but persistent. You cloud up,
they push you slowly
to the opposite horizon,
and all I can do
is watch and grieve.

It was a hurricane which brought you,
a raging storm that took me
into the whirl of you, into
that deep, still heart at the eye.
I forgot there was another edge
to the storm. We passed through
still intact, but the punishment
we took has loosened all moorings,
and so, gently, easily, inevitably
the storm claims you, even
when it is done. Drifting,
you are gone, and my horizons
are as clear as if you’d never been.

Migrations

Dec. 29th, 2009 12:29 pm
pjthompson: (Default)
I went for a drive Sunday. I hadn't been in the car since Christmas Eve when the roommate and I went out for our annual Christmas Eve dinner. We had seafood. It was lovely. But I'd turned the radio off while we drove so we could talk and forgot to turn it back on.

I drove for several blocks Sunday without realizing the radio was off, lost in my thoughts, traveling far and wide beyond the road and back again. My windows were closed because it was cold, but I could still hear the outside world, albeit as if trapped inside a bubble. Which in a way, I suppose I was. The city is never quiet, but I enjoyed the relative quiet inside my car.

When I reached towards the radio compulsively, I stopped, made myself stay with my silence and contemplation. And I wondered, when did we as a society become so inured against silence and contemplation? We've always got something going, jingling in our ears, jangling at our fingertips, flaring before our eyes: bright entertainments that never cease until we close our eyes at night and force our minds to shut down. When did we become afraid of our own company?

I put my hand back on the wheel and I listened. I heard the sound of the car's engine, the rattling of a crate in the trunk, the engines of other cars near me and their noisy radios, the voices of pedestrians crossing the street in front of my car, the whoosh of the wind against the windshield, the jiggle of the tires over a rough part of the road. And for one heart-stopping moment, a V of about a dozen geese, honking as they flew low over the treetops heading towards the wetlands at Playa Vista. I cracked the window to listen to that stirring, primal sound—so wild yet here in the middle of the city—and watched that V disappear behind the buildings. I followed them, towards the wetlands.

I'm not for a moment suggesting we all need to throw away our iPods and cells, our games and our internets and Kindles. I'm not really a Luddite. I don't think progress is bad. But a respite, now and then, for quiet and contemplation is a good thing. These migrations to silence and solitude help us get in touch with what's really important to us. If we get so bored by wandering the hallways of our own minds without outside stimulation to distract us away from opening doors and exploring, I wonder just who we are? I wonder if we can ever know who we are inside when all we have is the outside penetrating us at every waking moment?

I don't have an answer. I'm Distraction Girl as much as anyone else. But I really enjoyed that drive in my bubble of quiet, just me and my mind, and what my eyes saw, what my ears heard of the natural world. The sunset the geese flew into was gorgeous fuchsia, pale pink, pale orange, grey, blue-black, black. The wind in the tall grasses of the wetlands shushed me as I rode along, whispering: quiet, listen, listen to what's inside.
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


"My daddy told me wind chimes were for stupid people so they’d know when there was a breeze."

—Steven Wright, Leaves Blow Away






Illustrated version. )


Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
The santana winds have kicked up hard today—even blew the screen out of the porch window. Not a good bit of weather to do outside tiling in. First because the winds dry out the mastic (the sticky stuff) too quickly. You can't get the tiles on fast enough if the wind blows hard enough. Added to that, bits of windblown matter adhere to the sticky stuff. No mosaicing done today.

Also this week, the weather at night turned decidedly fallish—at least here near the coast. After sundown, the air has gotten chilly and a bit damp. I had my first hot chocolate of the season last evening. Also not good weather for drying mastic. It's the kind of weather that keeps it wetter and adds to the possibility of the mosaic pieces falling off. That's probably not going to change, even if the santanas calm down. The rainy season here in the South of California is generally between November and about March. It sometimes lasts into April but rarely beyond that. (And we do need the rain, so I'll be glad of it if we get a really drenching winter.) Therefore, I have called off the Great Cinder Block Wall Mosaic Project until the weather gets hot again in late spring. Am sad, but resigned.

I knew it was something of a gamble starting this project so late in the year, but here in SoCal the months of September and October are often the hottest of the year. That was not the case this year, so my gamble—and the delays in September, plus having several Saturdays eaten up with other events—didn't pay off.

This mosaic has taught me many lessons about the creative process. I think if you're doing it right and taking chances like you should, every creative process does teach you lessons, even if it's just a reiteration of concepts with which you were already familiar. And so the final lesson of the Great Mosaic Project in one I can readily apply to writing or any other creative endeavor: timing is everything.

Firestorms

Nov. 15th, 2008 01:12 pm
pjthompson: (Default)
The stuff of nightmares, but I am fairly insulated from the sweep of the firestorms through Los Angeles County. Nobody is one hundred percent safe living inside the tinderbox Southern California is this time of year (and especially this year), but it would have to be quite extreme for us to get wiped out here in suburbia near LAX. Not impossible. If the winds were right a common house fire could turn into a major conflagration, but we aren't currently experiencing the same winds as the outlying areas. None, in fact, at the moment. But it is hot. SoCal weather has been so schizo lately. Earlier in the week I was wearing fall clothes and getting out my winter blankets. Now the temps are in the 90s.

I actually spent some time at the mobile home park that was wiped out in Sylmar, at the home of a friend's mom. This was many years ago and I've lost touch so I don't know if she was still there. She would be in her 70's or 80's now. I can only hope her home wasn't destroyed, but it was definitely surreal seeing the news reports, and even if the person I knew wasn't still there, many of the people who did live in that park were retired, older people who've just lost everything. I can't help wondering how much FEMA will help them. They didn't own the land their homes sat upon and I can just see some vulture developer sweeping down on the owners and buying up the land. Prime real estate, you know. Mobile homes parks have some protection here, but if everything's destroyed, I wonder if they have any.

Breathing's been okay so far, but we hear fire engines all the time as they call in the resources from all over the city to throw them onto the fire lines. There's a threat of rolling brownouts, too, because one of the main power corridors is along the 5 and 405 freeways which are in the heart of the Sylmar fire. We're generally semi-protected here in Westchester because we're on the same power grid as the airport. They try to keep that up and running no matter what, but you never know. So if you don't hear from me, that's probably why. If this is still ongoing on Monday, it could definitely affect work.

Regardless, we're still conserving energy so as not to drain the power grid unnecessarily.

Windy days

Feb. 6th, 2008 02:31 pm
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"It was the wind that gave them life. It is the wind that comes out of our mouths now that gives us life. When this ceases to blow, we die. In the skin at the tips of our fingers we see the trail of the wind; it shows us where the wind blew when our ancestors were created."

—Navajo legend, quoted in Of Breath and Earth



Illustrated version. )

Blustering

Jan. 5th, 2007 02:32 pm
pjthompson: (Default)
The big topic this morning was wind: lots of it last night, some of it vicious, and cold, like straight from the North Pole cold. It blew the light scattering of rain we had last night clean out of the area, but it wreaked havoc, as they say. Power outages were scattered throughout the Westside, Westchester included, but fortunately my part of Westchester was spared. The drive to work was interesting, what with signals out and tree limbs, palm fronds, small trees, and fences down all along the route, especially in the Marina and Venice.

I couldn't help but worry about the old stray we feed (the one we think is a genuine stray, not just some cat who likes dining at our house better than at home). We can't save them all, and I know that, but I don't have to be happy about the situation. I'm just glad Min lives in the house now instead of the garage. I told her she should be happy about that, too, but she said, "What are you talking about? I've always lived in the castle."

Whatever gets you through the night, Min.


Random quote of the day:

"Take the universe and grind it down to the finest powder and sieve it through the finest sieve and then show me one atom of justice, one molecule of mercy."

—Terry Pratchett, Hogfather


Of interest?

The spell check on my ancient graphic software, designed originally for architects and interior decorators, suggested "Prosciutto" for Pratchett. That amused me a great deal, especially in conjunction with Hogfather. My Word spellcheck, I note, did not even register prosciutto as a word. Which goes to show, I guess, that architects and designers are hipper than report writers? Or maybe just more culinary?

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