Fog rolls in with authority
mysteriously steps back
affording us a mystical view
of the silvery water
that has no horizon
above the fog
a footlit display
of puffy clouds
and the blue sky
8.02.01
©Steven B. Eulberg
Friday, June 06, 2008
Radical Change
"There are two basic ways to experience a radical change: to undergo a nervous breakdown, and to fall in love. And love is preferable. love, if we can move beyond projecting onto another person and see them as they really are, also makes us more aware of who we are."
Kathleen Norris, "The Cloister Walk" (Riverhead, 1996)
Kathleen Norris, "The Cloister Walk" (Riverhead, 1996)
Strange Footprint
"We have found a strange footprint on the shores of the unknown. We have devised prodound theories, one after another, to account for its origin. At last we have succeeded in reconstructing the creature that made the footprint. And lo! It is our own."
From Arthur Eddington, English Astronomer, cited in Dennis Overbye's thoughful and well-written book, "Einstein in Love: A Scientific Romance" (Viking, 2000).
From Arthur Eddington, English Astronomer, cited in Dennis Overbye's thoughful and well-written book, "Einstein in Love: A Scientific Romance" (Viking, 2000).
Butterfly, Flutterby
Butterfly, flutterby
delicate, fragile
weightless beauty
so unlike me
your mechanics for flight
mine for swimming
neither at home on land.
Lake Michigan, 8.3.01
©Steven B. Eulberg
delicate, fragile
weightless beauty
so unlike me
your mechanics for flight
mine for swimming
neither at home on land.
Lake Michigan, 8.3.01
©Steven B. Eulberg
Randomness is rampant
Randomness is rampant
we assume
Yet light chooses how to appear
depending on how
the observers expects it to act
Photons "choose"
through which slit to slide
Seems incredible
until I consider us on the road
driving like blood corpuscles on
the capillaries and arteries of US highways
We have purpose--
a final destination, many days hence
but along the way we stop
for gas
for restroom relief
for food
for ice
for drink
for exercise
But to an outside observer
all of the other travellers with us
follow a flow and pattern,
perhaps predictable,
always purposeful
8.08.01
©Steven B. Eulberg
we assume
Yet light chooses how to appear
depending on how
the observers expects it to act
Photons "choose"
through which slit to slide
Seems incredible
until I consider us on the road
driving like blood corpuscles on
the capillaries and arteries of US highways
We have purpose--
a final destination, many days hence
but along the way we stop
for gas
for restroom relief
for food
for ice
for drink
for exercise
But to an outside observer
all of the other travellers with us
follow a flow and pattern,
perhaps predictable,
always purposeful
8.08.01
©Steven B. Eulberg
Hearkening
He is now treading tenderly
traversing nightly
the pathway of my dreams
At odd moments
my name rings out
in his young, yet-unfeebled voice:
"Steven"
Not angry
nor hurried nor proud
just
"Steven"
a matter-of-fact attention-gatherer.
And I stop, mid-thought,
turning to look over my shoulder
around the next corner
in the midst of my waking reverie
or my busy slumber
And I hearken to the voice
that calls from a self-imposed distance
a gap seldom spanned
a chasm created by
a long train of estranging shovels-full of resentment,
of misunderstanding, of fear, defensiveness and regret.
I hearken and linger
Longingly fingering the memories of his guidance:
-The antiseptic whiff of isopropyl that chased him home
from his daily doses of patient visits
and lingered on the new one
of thick, double-book, storybooks that he
had mail-ordered for me to read
(The Wizard of Oz!)
-The aroma of freshly cut lumber,
the eye-blinking grit of sawdust
spit from a whining, woodshop wheel.
-The ache of sun-burned skin
(chilled by his prescription of
icy dill pickle juice)
from a stooping day of picking rocks found
by his riding roto-tiller.
-The sting of sweat
on the raw pink skin
beneath a newly-torn blister
and that same voice,
in then-seeming harsh reassurance,
" 's good--it'll give you a callous."
I hearken with wistful sorrow
and run my fingers over the stumbling surface
of one of his impressionistic carvings
fashioned in the community room of the
Community Nursing Home
(his favorite stroke-limited, physical activity
at his last physical address)
in what my sisters and I refer to as his
"Picasso Period."
I hearken and I pause
trying to fathom
whether I can or should
begin to smoothe surfaces
he began to shave
Before sealing his sculpture
from the elements and the ravages of time
that no longer age his body.
Am I, the surviving son,
capable of completing his work?
Am I, the estranged son
able to carry forth his vision
in even such a private way?
Am I, the eldest offspring
willing to step into his
place in the harness,
yielding him,
these many months,
finally to his cremated rest?
My name, in his voice,
is what I now hear
and what I couldn't hear
because he couldn't then speak
in the final post-stroke telephone "conversations"
we held--
me speaking to him
(wondering what words could hold us together
over long miles and rapidly shortening time)
as the nurse said he gripped the phone
with unusual remaining strength
I hearken now to the silence
I heard then, searching for
what he was longing to say
and I begin to anticipate
his return as tonight
I slip beneath my covers
This time, when I hear
my name in his voice
I'll hear his name in mine
as I often hear my own
in the voice of my son
"Hey Dad...want to play a game?"
11/08/03
©Steven B. Eulberg
traversing nightly
the pathway of my dreams
At odd moments
my name rings out
in his young, yet-unfeebled voice:
"Steven"
Not angry
nor hurried nor proud
just
"Steven"
a matter-of-fact attention-gatherer.
And I stop, mid-thought,
turning to look over my shoulder
around the next corner
in the midst of my waking reverie
or my busy slumber
And I hearken to the voice
that calls from a self-imposed distance
a gap seldom spanned
a chasm created by
a long train of estranging shovels-full of resentment,
of misunderstanding, of fear, defensiveness and regret.
I hearken and linger
Longingly fingering the memories of his guidance:
-The antiseptic whiff of isopropyl that chased him home
from his daily doses of patient visits
and lingered on the new one
of thick, double-book, storybooks that he
had mail-ordered for me to read
(The Wizard of Oz!)
-The aroma of freshly cut lumber,
the eye-blinking grit of sawdust
spit from a whining, woodshop wheel.
-The ache of sun-burned skin
(chilled by his prescription of
icy dill pickle juice)
from a stooping day of picking rocks found
by his riding roto-tiller.
-The sting of sweat
on the raw pink skin
beneath a newly-torn blister
and that same voice,
in then-seeming harsh reassurance,
" 's good--it'll give you a callous."
I hearken with wistful sorrow
and run my fingers over the stumbling surface
of one of his impressionistic carvings
fashioned in the community room of the
Community Nursing Home
(his favorite stroke-limited, physical activity
at his last physical address)
in what my sisters and I refer to as his
"Picasso Period."
I hearken and I pause
trying to fathom
whether I can or should
begin to smoothe surfaces
he began to shave
Before sealing his sculpture
from the elements and the ravages of time
that no longer age his body.
Am I, the surviving son,
capable of completing his work?
Am I, the estranged son
able to carry forth his vision
in even such a private way?
Am I, the eldest offspring
willing to step into his
place in the harness,
yielding him,
these many months,
finally to his cremated rest?
My name, in his voice,
is what I now hear
and what I couldn't hear
because he couldn't then speak
in the final post-stroke telephone "conversations"
we held--
me speaking to him
(wondering what words could hold us together
over long miles and rapidly shortening time)
as the nurse said he gripped the phone
with unusual remaining strength
I hearken now to the silence
I heard then, searching for
what he was longing to say
and I begin to anticipate
his return as tonight
I slip beneath my covers
This time, when I hear
my name in his voice
I'll hear his name in mine
as I often hear my own
in the voice of my son
"Hey Dad...want to play a game?"
11/08/03
©Steven B. Eulberg
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