Wednesday, July 27, 2011

A Long Walk


Sixty Paces etched in time will test the demands on body and mind.
No matter the elements, terrain or aptitude;
traversing the course requires a fit attitude.
Along the way sojourners happen by,
some just wave and others stop to say hi.
The best companions on a long walk are similar in kind
and may be connected by blood or a contemplative mind.

Smart travelers on a long walk take pause
 and glean lessons that give life cause.
To mention;
Nature gives canvas to philosophic theme
and points to discussions of
The Supreme Being.
Or
An expression or two weave a web
through well traveled terrain
and some get lost on a path
between thoughts and a dream.

                                            But

Young and old on a long walk will ponder this question from time to time,
"How many paces have I till trails end?"
In causerie fashion they wonder,
"It could be a long haul or just around the bend."



For those in the know,
A long walk lends an open view to years and
measured time that focuses on true substance
and how to use the one's supplied.
Chandra Brown
"Don't just count your years,
make your years count."
Ernest Meyer


Dedicated to my Father on his 60th birthday celebration. Thanks Dad for setting the pace and showing us how it's done!
 

The Man From Dunn County

John, The Man from Dunn County and his wife

This is a tale of a man named John Robert
who in 1951 was born a twin
among a handful of other kin.

He is an all star athlete from Menomonie
who broke a leg
then asked Susan Jane to become a Debee.

Being a graduate of UW Stout
it was hightime they traveled about.
So they packed a U-Haul and drove 1,000 miles
ended up in Colorado and decided to stay for awhile.

Along comes Chandra in the August heat
and four yours later, Johnna;
a happy repeat.

Plasticrafts, night shifts, apartment care,
Alexander Dawson; the boys school for nightmares.
Beth Eden Baptist, super hero Dad;
by day a teacher, by night pushing a floor shining pad.

Rocky Flats, nuclear bombs and plutonium,
he has to keep those secrets
hush, hush and mum!

Recreation on the weekend with the boys from church league
throwing touch down passes, running the field in
"Get the Old Man" speed.

Deli owning is no vacation,
it works you to the nub
especially when ordering enough meat
to make a turkey, bacon club.

John Robert is now sixty and living life just fine
he's working on his projects
or making delicious juice from the vine.

Today we honor him with friends and family
that help add to the happy memory
and the tale of
The Man From Dunn County.

"Youth is a gift of nature, but age is a work of art." Garson Kanin

"As we grow older our bodies get shorter and our anecdotes longer." Robert Quillen


Happy 60th Birthday,
Love Your Girls


Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Cactus Flower



photos by: Chandra Brown

Cactus Flower

Bud to bloom
Brief is life;
Capture beauty
In eternities time
 Fleeting moments
Cause rapturous sublime

Pistil, Stamen, Pollinate
Wilting quickly
Death; law of nature
Seasons dictate bloom or dust
thus,
contemplate conundrum;
 from this death comes life again.

Chandra Brown



Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Tend Your Garden Post #5: Fruit of the Vine

Growth takes time. Be patient.
And while you're waiting, pull a weed. 

saying by Emilie Barnes

We were starting to get impatient, "When are we going to see something we can eat?" We'd grumble. Then the other day we saw these peas, so Alex picked them and I ate them. They were sweet, crisp and crunchy. I claimed to not like peas, probably because the ones I'm used to eating are frozen. Those taste soft, mushy, kind of like a bland paste. What a difference growing them yourself makes. I could just stand there and pick and eat and be satisfied.

We've had to make adjustments in our "learning" garden. I had to prune away tree limbs so the plants could get enough sun. I had to transplant a squash plant, it made it through the move and is doing well but I wonder if this will hinder its fruit. Our strawberries are trying to burst out but birds just love them too much! I need to buy a net.

This experiement has taught us many things, one lesson that currently comes to mind is patience. In due time the fruit will be there we just have to learn to wait and let nature do its thing, in the meantime just watch the process, take care of what you can and rejoice in the harvest when the time comes. Funny how this garden lesson parallels the happenings in our personal life too!

 

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Progression Of The Cone

A pictorial review of the cone's fashion statement in history.
by: petercat.harris

The Ancients: Elongated Skulls were the FAB FAD

Practiced through cultures worldwide by binding the head to a board.  Notables such as the Incans, Mayans, Egyptians, Native Americans and Siberians left evidence of this coveted high verticed look. If you wanted that 'smarter than a bookworm' look, nix Coco Chanel and sport a board.
Image 120027, from Professor Giuseppe Orefici's research at Cahuachi (Peru), courtesy BBC Horizon (1998 program).

Nefertiti: Egyptian Queen


The Modish Medieval Model: When women shaving their bangs off for that elongated look was 'wenchin' 

                                                                     Portrait by: Rogier Ven Der Weyden

AND THEN... Cone fashion revisited the Dark Ages only to resurface again in the 20th Century with a downward spiral attached to its legendary fame surrounding superior intelligence. The cone now had an uncanny semblance to a waste basket.

Circa 1960: When rotating your hips to "The Twist" and sporting a Rocket hat was Hip; the cone makes a comeback, but as comebacks usually do, it flopped. Can you spot the infamous cone in this fashion spread?



                                                                                         Yeah, Baby!

The 90's seemed like a long tunnel with no point, the cone was still recovering from the bad rap it got from the 60's but the cone just may have reached its zenith in this decade.
                                                    The Coneheads from SNL

Somewhere on the timeline of human history the cone lost its mojo, it was demoted from its association with superior intelligence only to be cast in utter fashion faux pas for the weekend entertainment seeker.

Now maybe the cone can relate to Oblio, from the land of point.

                                                                        The Cone in the Corner

Monday, May 16, 2011

The "Ergotized" Kingdom And The Farmer Who Saves The Crop

I should be attending my Monday chores of cleaning up the house after the weekend onslaught of messes but I think this is a more important matter. All weekend long I have been reflecting on the Matthew 13 parable Jesus told his disciples about the darnel and the wheat; the word Mercy kept scrolling through my mind as I thought about the story.

As the heading note in The Chronological New Testament states, "It is important to understand the term, "Kingdom of Heaven". Found only in Matthews gospel, it describes the current age in which we live." It is important to understand the wheat is the true followers of Christ and the darnel is the many deceptions that lead one astray. One can list many, many things that fall under the darnel category.

As I read the story and got to verse 29, the reason the word mercy was so prominent in my thoughts made sense. The servants of the field had found out the enemy sowed weeds in the framers field and asked the farmer if they should take care of the problem immediately. The farmer replied, "No, lest perhaps while you gathered up the darnel weeds, you root up the wheat with them."

Darnel is called false wheat, it looks just like real wheat except it has unworthy attributes. (See the amazing facts below taken from botanical.com by Mrs. M Grieve)

1)When Darnel has been given medicinally in a harmful quantity, it is recorded to have produced all the symptoms of drunkenness: a general trembling, followed by inability to walk, hindered speech and vomiting.

2)The ancients supposed it to cause blindness, hence with the Romans, lolio victitare, to live on Darnel, was a phrase applied to a dim-sighted person.

3)The alleged poisonous properties of Darnel are now generally believed to be due to a fungus.

4)It is said that the country people of Cheshire believed Darnel to be 'degenerated wheat'

5) In the East it is a more serious enemy to the farmer, and in the low-lying districts of the Lebanon and other parts of Palestine it becomes alarmingly plentiful. If inadvertently eaten it produces sickness, dizziness, and diarrhoea. It would seem that the 'malice aforethought' of sowing this wild grass deliberately (as in our Lord's parable), was a not unusual practice. The following is a quotation from an old newspaper:
'The Country of Ill-Will is the by-name of a district hard by St. Arnaud, in the north of France. There tenants, when ejected by a landlord, or when they have ended their tenancy on uncomfortable terms, have been in the habit of spoiling the crop to come by vindictively sowing tares, and other coarse strangling weeds, among the wheat, whence has been derived the sinister name of the district. The practice has been made penal, and any man proved to have tampered with any other man's harvest will be dealt with as a criminal.'
6) Chemically the seeds contain an acrid fixed oil and a yellow glucoside, but as far as microscopical appearances indicate, the Darnel contains nothing that is not contained in wheat, and analysis has not yet revealed its poisonous elements.

I find it amazing that even modern science has trouble distinguishing the false from the real and in the case of darnel, a new word to describe its malice has been created in order to describe it. The word is ergotize and means to be poisoned by grain...

Can you see why the farmer said to wait until harvest? Can you see how sneaky the evil sower is trying to"ergotize" the real? (Religion, in ALL sects, forms and denomonations worldwide certainly are candidates for being placed under that "darnel" category.)

Can you see the wonderful act of grace and compassion in the decision of the farmer? He waits until the harvest where only a trained eye can distinguish the real from the fake. Isn't He the only one who knows our hearts? (Jeremiah 17:10)

The good news of the wheat and the darnel parable is this; the farmer; Jesus, came to fulfill the promises given in order to save us from being strangled out by the darnel. If we keep our eyes on Him, take up our cross and follow Him, learn to submit to what His will is through obedience made possible only through a daily relationship, we can be made ready for the harvest and "shine forth like the sun." (Matthew 13:43). The field is the world, the wheat is the real and the darnel is the false.

Jesus and all He has done and IS, is MERCY. He is the "farmer" that constantly tends to the crop, surveying the heart (substance) that seeks His truth. He makes strong those "stalks" of wheat that reject the facade of the darnel as it bides its time growing in the Kingdom of Heaven side by side.

The truth will set you free...(John 8:32) even in a world choked with weeds...

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Shade of Grey: Not So "Shady" Anymore

I'm not really a Sci-Fi junkie but I admittedly watched The Twilight Zone late at night growing up in those adolescent years because frankly, the show titilatted my gray matter, especially the amygdala.

Last night was one of those nights, the kind where your brain will not shut up and keeps you barely hanging on the topics it presents like a chatty cathy. So I wanted to divert my thoughts to a different topic to help bore the issues out of my head, so I got on Youtube and searched The Twilight Zone. I thought a little jaunt down old memory lane might scare my brain into giving me some peace so I could sleep.

Then I saw this clip and all it did was make my brain more alert...

The Obsolete Man

Sounds like today doesn't it!
One word: Surreal

Rod Serling:  "Serling was active in politics, both on and off the screen and helped form television industry standards. He was known as the "angry young man" of Hollywood, clashing with television executives and sponsors over a wide range of issues including censorship, racism, and anti-war politics."