Thursday, March 22, 2012

King Lear himself was no match for Scott Owens tonight as lightning flashed across the heath of the piedmont and thunder raced down the street of Hickory rattling the windows and doors of those who don't believe in Poetry. 

For the True Believers though, it was a night with a secret entrance into another world – one which no longer REALLY exists – except within our own suppressed memories. Ah yes, we were different people when we left than we were when we entered, which was a lifetime ago. 

Tonight was a launch into a new universe as Scott shared some of his latest books with us.  And that's what poetry does. It's our spaceship.  And Scott Owens was our pilot on our night's flight.


Wednesday, March 07, 2012

Belfast Boys

Went to see an amazing performance of The Belfast Boys.  Beautiful. Marvelous.  An entry into a different world of beauty.  I went there without my camera.  (All my friends who know me well just suffered  a lower jaw injury from their jaw hitting the floor.)  But the Belfast Boys really didn't need any cameras.  They were SO good that their image and music became a part or our permanent memories.   Next day my pen ran out of control trying to conjour them back.  No luck.  Although Adrian has probably never looked better, and Alyn – well Alyn is always busy making love to his guitar, anyway.

But if you have a chance – and you will – to see them, don't miss it!

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Elliott Engel in Lenoir, NC


Went up to Lenoir last night to see Professor Elliott Engel and listen to his talk on Edward Thatch, a distant relative of Margret Thatcher.   Edward was perhaps better known by his nickname, “Blackbeard”.  Edward became a pirate although he didn’t really intend to, he just wanted to be a privateer.  What’s the difference?  And how many people did he kill?  Really?  Wow!  And why did he live in North Carolina?  And what is a “swash-buckler”?   Or “kit and caboodle”?   Ever wondered about any of these things?  And which is proper when referring to the Caribbean Sea:  cara BEE an, or ca RIB ian?  Huh?

Well, let me tell you. Gather ‘round.  Actually – now that I think about it for a moment, you really need to see professor Elliott Engel.  He held a large crowd in the palm of his hand in the Broyhill Civic Center last night as they (we) listened in rapture to his revelations.  It’s not often you see an entire auditorium filled with people who have their eyebrows raised and their mouths open.  Professor Engel is probably used to that.
Dr. Engel lives in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he has taught at the University of North Carolina, North Carolina State University, and Duke University. He earned his M.A. and Ph.D. as a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at UCLA. While at UCLA he won that university’s Outstanding Teacher Award.  His lecture series on Charles Dickens ran on PBS television stations around the country.
If you missed him, he will be back next February.  He has spoken in Lenoir every year for the past 20 years.  See you there.

Monday, February 20, 2012

John Rambo Strikes Again! – By a Flared Nostril




And he has obviously upset this young lady (played by Kelly Dowless) who clearly has a flared nostril.  Or two.  Maybe more.  What’s wrong with this guy?  I’ve talked to him before and he always seemed unusually quiet and withdrawn, a meek, mild-mannered gentleman.  He spoke to my wife yesterday and hesitatingly admitted that he played a tiny bit part in the play and that if we looked carefully we might possibly see him.  Hah!







And then!  Just as we were beginning to get a handle on the play, a head suddenly appeared out of a small hidden “door” on the wall.  And it was RAMBO!  Back again!   And he was shouting at everybody in the audience!  Now, EVERYbody had flared nostrils!  








Wow.  What a night at the Hickory Community Theatre.  I sure hope they find John.  He used to be a nice guy.  Maybe somebody can help him.  He certainly deserves another look.


Of course nobody will know what to do with him now.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Portrait of a Writer



Portrait of a writer in the internal agony of actually writing.  As you can see the body is fully consumed by the process.  The arms, instead of writing intelligible words are waving wildly, pointing nowhere.  The skull has shrunk down to fit the size of the brain.  BUT – one foot has got a hell of an idea – maybe, maybe . . . Hey!

Friday, January 13, 2012

Movie - "The Guard"

Brendan Gleeson, Irish Sheriff, on left,
and DonCheadle, FBI on right
This was billed as a dark comedy.  It was dark all right, but as far as being comedic – well, that required a bit of viewer participation.  The movie was seriously hurt by not having a story to tell. There was no plot, no flow, no character development or growth,  It was simply a platform for the actors to portray a limited amount of acting skill.  
The FBI was there, in name only, portrayed as the F-ing Bumbling Idiots.  And the reason I used the “F-word” there is because it was used in the movie 1,643.5 times.  (Anybody get a different count?)  And the one-half time was when one of the f-ers got shot while trying to get the word out of his own mouth.  
There was love, kind of.  But it was a strange love.  All three times.  And there was a lot death in the movie, but nobody important. There was even an angel in there, with his dog and a bicycle and a bit of mystery around all that.  There was a lot of drinking, even double-drinking.  BUT not much smoking of cigarettes.
It was filmed in Galway, Ireland.  That’s what somebody said, although we didn’t see it in the credits.  Didn’t really matter because probably less than 120 seconds of landscape was shown. 
Best thing about the movie was its closing credits. 
Worst thing about the movie was that it didn’t end 

Friday, December 02, 2011

Paul Simon in Durham


What God did with light, Paul Simon did Thursday night with sound.

Ah yes, the sound of silence indeed was present in the Performing Arts Center as December descended on Durham.  But this awesome sound was blown away by our legendary host who introduced us to noises and thumps and clicks and ethereal vibrations which repeated and teased and slowly revealed to us suddenly discovered rhythms which then turned into beats themselves and they grew and found other beautiful beats and merged and fondled each other and thumped together doing wild and crazy, and even erotic things, creating new tunes and new rhythms which flew like freed birds into places where beats and tunes and the pulse of life itself had never been seen or heard before.  Much consternation resulted!  Beats like this and tunes like these had never been seen and never together before, especially in public!

New worlds were created and tossed whirling around all over the place.  It was a mess.  People screamed and shouted, they leaped to their feet!  But sadly it was no use.  Large numbers of those attending were captured, apparently they endured much suffering as they writhed and tried to wiggle and squirm away.  Ah, it was indeed a sight probably not intended for human eyes to view.  The only way to survive was to relax, close your eyes, abandon your feet to their own spasmodic reflexes and let the sounds grab you from your seat and take you away to places you did not know even existed!

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Atlas Shrugged – the Movie!

Never thought I would ever be the kind of person who, upon finding an injured animal or human lying in a ditch, crying and begging for help, would jump in and start kicking the pitiful thing.  But that was before I saw “Atlas Shrugged – The Movie:  Part (believe it or not) One of Three”.
It did not receive good reviews and that is understating the obvious.  But I was still thought it would be interesting to see some of the characters “come to life”.  Well, forget that.    Ellis Wyatt looked believable but all the others were simply TOO precious and too cardboardy.  
The movie began with a confusing introduction.  It was attempting to show that the country was in a catastrophic condition, but instead it simply showed the movie was in a catastrophic condition.  It was hurried and when it tried to show the country was, for example out of gasoline, the screen showed a battered sign saying “No Petrol”, then segued to a gasoline pump nozzle lying on the concrete all alone with gasoline pouring out of it.  Huh?
The actors were a little like Frankenstein zombies who had almost come to life.  You could see them reading lines as if focused on a teleprompter or trying to remember which word came next.  
It tuned out that airplanes cost too much to fly, so companies had to build railroads to carry heavy cargo.  Huh?  That’s one place where I pinched myself to see if I was still awake or just having a strange dream.
At one point, after an amazing train run – obviously filmed in Europe where these trains really do run everyday at speeds of up to 200 mph – the “Legislature” passed a law restricting trains to no more than 60 miles per hour.  The “Legislature”?  Colorado’s? Hey – this is interstate commerce.  Did they mean the Congress?  Well, just a detail.
They did film some of it in Colorado – beautiful scenery.  But then why not?  Turns out that  – according to the reliable Ellis Wyatt there was more oil under those mountains than in the Saudi peninsula, and also an “ocean of natural gas”.  Well, whoop-de-do.  Our problems are all over.
  
There were a few technical problems too.  I noticed that the “white balance” was still set on “daylight” when filming was done under artificial light.  First time I saw that I thought, “how clever - makes it look a little spooky”.  But then they did that every time artificial light intruded, – we always went back to that “spooky” effect.  So.  I’m thinking, 1) the camera man doesn’t know about this? 2) they’re in a really big hurry?  3) they are running very short of money? 4) the movie needs to be done quick – changing the White Balance four or five times would take almost a minute?
Must confess that one of the reasons I really went to see this movie was to record how many times a cigarette was lit and smoked.  Ayn Rand was a smoker (had lung cancer surgery and died of heart problems) and cigarette smoking was repeated throughout her book.  I was amazed.  One cigarette was lit – right at the end.  One cigar was also lit in the movie and the guy obviously didn’t know how to do cigars.  But there was a LOT of drinking in the movie.  I tried to count but had to give up because it was so overpowering.  I did mark 42 occurrences when wine or liquor was poured, presented or drunk but that was overlooking the total story.
On my way out I encountered a great man, huge and old, with a great shock of white hair and a white beard, rolling from side to side as he labored up the aisle, and he said to me, referring to a character in the movie who represented a government official who was for Total Equality,  “I wonder if he was also born in Keyna?”

I looked at him and started to say something.  Then I shrugged my shoulders, and we went our separate ways

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Footcandle Movie, Project Nims


Best part was the Chimp smoking a joint.
Other than than that it was a very depressing movie.
There were no bright spots,
no hope,
then it got worse.
     Then it got worse yet.
Then it seemed like it might 
           get better . . .
              but then it got even worse 
                than 
                 you had even
                  thought anything could 
                    ever get.
                     And then it got worse yet.
                      It was a masterful study in 
                        scientific stupidity of little-bitty gods
                            who played with life.  And they
                                lost, and life lost.  All that was left
                                    was the audience sitting there holding themselves.

It started out as a study of chimps.
Wound up as an exposé of scientists who were supposedly trying to find out if chimps were smart enough to put words together to form a complete sentence. 

It proved that scientists were not able to understand what they had just walked through and gotten all over themselves.  

Darwin would have been aghast.  Again.
Other than that, the music was "hoppy", characters were introduced in unusual ways, and the use of graphics and titles was very playful.  

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Michele, ma belle, que vous dire des blagues . . .

On one of our trips down to Florida last week we passed Michele Bachmann on her way to tell the Old Folks at Home  how Obama made God so mad that He tore up a lot of roads in NJ and Delaware and killed 45 people in Vermont and elsewhere.  Then she said it was just a joke.  Ha?
She was driving slowly in the far right lane and we passed her WAY off to the left.
Michelle, ma belle, 
sont les mots qui vont tres bien ensemble, 
Mais quand je dis que vous avez raison,
Je veux dire que vous êtes TROP LOIN droit!

Friday, August 12, 2011

The Tree of Life at Footcandle

Not the kind of movie I would have seen on my own had I known anything about it before I came in.  The part I enjoyed the most about the entire evening was the discussion afterward.  A lot of people saw things I didn’t notice and they put them together in ways I didn’t even think of.  Almost makes me want to see the movie again.  “Almost”, I said.  Don’t think I will try for a second viewing, but that feeling may well persist and affect the way I look at the next movies I see.  More than that, I now have new things to think about next time something “strange” seems to be happening in my own life.  


Maybe life is really just a mystery in which we only partly participate. We see segments of it unfolding around us, and when we “finally get our life put together right”, perhaps that is really a sign that we have closed our eyes somewhat, or averted our gaze a bit, or restricted our vision.  Maybe, instead of “living” our lives, we are really telling ourselves stories about some of the things we imagine we have noticed.


At any rate, the movie, the discussion and the evening itself all adds up to one more reason I am proud to be a member of Footcandle, and glad I live in Hickory, the Friendly City.

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Into the Sun

Into the Sun: Air Force Memories, 1957-1976, The Rise to Power.

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Paperback, 348 pages


Into the Sun:  Air Force Memories, 1957-1976, The Rise to Power.

$19.95
Ships in 3–5 business days
INTO THE SUN is a collection of stories about friends of mine. It will carry you off to Boca Chica in 1963 to look for Russian MiGs and have them find you six years later over the Gulf of Tonkin. You can listen in on a confidential conversation with the Commander of the Strategic Air Command, investigate a death-ray machine in a small college town, participate in the launch of a Titan II ICBM, and meet antiaircraft fire over Skyline Ridge. The book shows the United States Air Force in action as it developed from a stepchild of the Army into the dominant force of modern battle. It is a book for people who did not serve in the Air Force and wonder what they missed. Those who did serve will recognize many familiar circumstances, and they may even find themselves in its pages!


To order, go to      http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/into-the-sun-air-force-memories-1957-1976-the-rise-to-power/15899899?productTrackingContext=search_results/search_shelf/center/7

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Quick as a Flash!


She took my left hand in both of hers and held it warmly for a moment squeezing it tightly twice.   Then she stroked it carefully, gently, tenderly.   She looked up at me, still holding my hand and opened her mouth.
“It’s gout.”  She said softly.
“Gout?” I responded incredulously,  “I thought that was for feet!”
“It can occur in any joint, I will write you a prescription for medication that you can begin tomorrow.”  She made a note or two then stood up to leave.
“Wait a minute – how can you be sure?”  I asked.
“Well, we will do a blood test to confirm the uric acid levels and then proceed with the treatment.”  She opened the door and left.  She had been in the exam room for three and one-half minutes.
So.  I went to the lab where two immensely obese young women padded and wobbled about like great bubbles of fat that softly and slowly bounced across the floor.  One of them reeked of stale cigarette smoke. I had the blood test and went home.  They would call me in thirty minutes and I could go to Walgreens and pick up my medication.

The next afternoon one of the young women at the office called.  “Your  uric acid levels are completely normal.”
“What does that mean?”  
“You don’t have gout.”
“What do I have?”
“Oh, I don’t know.”  There was a pause on the other end.  “But your medication has been cancelled so don’t go by to try to get it.”
“I didn’t want it anyway.”  I responded.  “So what should I actually do?”
“Just continue with the medication you were already taking.”
“I wasn’t taking any medication.”
“Then just use the ointment you were using before.”
“I wasn’t using any ointment.”
After a long silence the voice returned, now with a slight aura of irritation,  “Well, I guess then that I will have to go back and check with the doctor and we will call you tomorrow!  You will probably have to come back for another examination.”  
“No, don’t bother.  She obviously has more important things to do.”  I hung up.

The hand already felt better.  I had gone to the doctor because I thought I might have broken the thumb out in the garden the day before, and the whole arm was red and swollen, and I expected x-rays would be taken at the very least.  I also knew that her bill for just her 3.5 minute experience would probably  be about $145 and that Medicare would probably approve about $48 or 1/3 of the charge.  Well, that’s OK, I figured, I probably got about 1/3 of a diagonosis.
I reflected back on the visit now, and about how it seemed to fit pretty well into what I have started to call  my encounter with "The Flash Card Generation".  That’s seems to be where I have arrived in my life, and going to the doctor is a perfect example.  The doctor comes in and stares at me like a child waiting for a new flash card.  I get the feeling that my "flash card" says maybe something like, “2 + 2”.  The doctor quickly says “four” and writes a prescription, gets up and leaves, and the great computer will send me a bill. I go back another time and apparently show “C - A - T“.  The doctor says “cat” and writes a prescription, walks out, and the bill will come later.  Maybe I go in with something different, like “A - I  - L - E - Y - F - A - Y - N - T”.  The doctor may look puzzled and then write out a prescription as he quietly says to himself “elephant?”.  Or if I go in with a”card” that reads something like “43.78÷12.3 to the 4th power X 12.732 “,  I will get an appointment with a Specialist.  

Fortunately, the human body is a wonderful creation capable of correcting many of its own problems.  So, as long as the doctor doesn’t do too much damage, it will probably return to its state of normalcy in a couple of weeks.  Obviously, serious illness or injury are very different matters, and I suspect most doctors really enjoy bringing about an important healing.  But most of the things they deal with are really kind of strange,  most of the people who come to see a doctor feel strange just being there. And the examination rooms are very strange too, so it figures that the doctors would have to be kind of strange in order to exist in this strange world, and they have large bills to pay, high costs of operation, insurance, and other overhead, so they have to make their time really add up.  Perhaps they suffer more than the rest of us do, and probably have developed their own coping strategies. My take on the matter is that the doctor takes a quick look at your record before entering the exam room.  One item which apparently stands out is whether or not you are covered by Medicare.  If you are a Medicare recipient, then when the doctor comes in the room his mind is already elsewhere.  He may shake  your hand he but will be looking for your flash card.

Monday, April 04, 2011

The Wild April Wind




The smell of fresh earth and the sound of rain drops falling. Cold icy winds in the morning and the warmth of sunshine in the evening. Ah, that's April in the mountains!


The  chill of winter has fled these hills,
Scared away 
by the Wild April Wind,
Which now sits purring up in the trees
As if to say: 
“I don’t know if we’ll even HAVE a summer,  
You’ll have to wait and see.
It all depends on me.”

A white oak leaf
brand new and bright green; 
half an inch long and half a day old,
lies dead on my cold, windy deck,
it was killed and brought home
by the Wild April Wind
Which now sits purring 
up in the trees.

The path to the woods has tiny green leaves
the leaves of the flowers of summer,
 but the flowers still stay 
safe in the earth 
  with an eye to the sky –
for the Wild April Wind
which is watching and purring 
up in the trees.

From "To Please the Bees: Poems and Glimpses", Writing and art by John Womack.
© John Womack, 2010.  All rights reserved.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Adrian Rice & Fanjoy-Labrenz at Hickory Museum of Art

These two artists joined together to light the candle of wonder again in Hickory last night   Actually, they set the stage for a couple of stunning performances.  One by a High School student, Katya Bengston, who opened the door for the evening, with her poem that set the bar extremely high for those who followed.  Then came the virtuoso work of Alyn Mearns who interpreted Chopin’s mazurkas on his acoustic guitar and escorted patrons of the show along with him into a slightly different dimension.




The other high school students, led by their instructor, Molly Rice, presented professional performances of their own original poetry written in response to the pictures of the exhibition.  Finally, Adrian Rice, Writer-in-Residence of Cataba Valley Community College, and now associate professor at Lenoir-Rhyne University, both in Hickory, read from his published work in “Hickory Haiku” interspersed with observations of some of the differences he notices between the United States and Ireland, such as our “wonderful” weather and  our beautiful skies that we don’t have to keep lifting up as we walk beneath them, and of course, our militant robins, huge birds that are apparently much larger than their Irish counterparts, along with many, many other amazing and delightful differences.   
Katya Bengston

At any rate it was a good evening, followed by a quick stop at the Crescent Moon for craft beers and burrito sandwiches.  Another good night in Hickory.                                      



Thursday, March 24, 2011

Joara Discussion in Hickory, NC.

David Moore, professor of archaeology at Warren Wilson College in Black Mountain, NC,  came to Hickory March 23, 2011, to talk about the excavation in progress at Joara (ge WAR ruh), which is near Hickory.

The talk took place at the Catawby Science Center near the "practice ruins" in the center which is used by children to learn archaeological concepts and begin developing the practice of those skills.

Joara was a Catawba Indian settlement which was occupied by Spanish expeditionary forces in the 1500's.  It has been largely "worked" by volunteers with grants from the National Science Foundation and other agencies.  People from around Hickory have volunteered to work at the mounds of Joara each summer and have learned and contributed to discoveries there.

Doug Ammons in Hickory, NC, at CVCC


Doug Ammons was here in Hickory this week at CVCC speaking of some of his experiences.
I saw his presentations titled:  "Spirituality and the Natural World" and 
"Adventure as Art:  The psychology of creating with words, photos and film."  
It was an experience for all of us.  My memories of Doug Ammons:

Intensely reflective
Quietly expressive
daringly understanding
Hot as blazes, yet so dam cooool

A plain ole’ country boy, or at least he seems so,
with a black belt in karate and a classical guitar or so,
and a whole lot of academic degrees including at least one Ph.D.
And oh yes, he drives a kayak too.  
Did I mention that?  And a camera or two and a movie machine
and TV sets for Outdoors, and National Geographic and a
whole lot more.


Speaking and listening
he does both
focused and open.

He is a why-asker.   One who looks behind the answers, turns over facts to see where they rest and ask them if they really mean what they seem to say – and then he listens to them.  And they talk to him.   

A guy who loves mysteries and regales the muses, and they love him and hang around him.  Together they explore a lot of mysteries and have ball after ball.

He dives deeply into the depths of life and discovers new horizons down there then rises swiftly, bubbling up  beyond the surface into a world which didn’t exist until just now.  The old world cascades off of his new vision like water leaving the prow of a kayak which is headed somewhere else.  Spirituality can finally shed the anchors and drag lines of religion and become something no prophet ever dreamed of.

To him "Learning" is finding out what lies beyond what you "learn"; it's not a thing you "do", it is a river you ride.  A river of no return, because you are not really "learning",  you are developing into a new being.  

Mind, body, spirit all are a three-dimensional being that is being created by you - and let me quote Doug Ammons as he spoke to us before he left:  "the greatest work of art that will ever be is what you will become.  And you are that great artist."

He is what a normal human being may look like in 500 more years.  

Monday, March 21, 2011

Mamatown – Get a Taste of Glory

When you first walk in to Mamatown you think “everybody’s squinting”, but then you realize that they’re sitting and chewing and their eyes are half closed.  Most of Mamatown’s food just slides right on down.  The rest requires a little chewing to explode those rich flavors of grilled meat and gravy from small morsels already afloat in dark, rich, saltiness.    There are  illusive hints of spices  that you know well, but can’t quite identify, until it  dawns upon you they are something perhaps known as “Thinking of Wasabi”, or  “Memories of Ginger” and  other flavors that we have all played with in our own cooking, but here in Mamatown we find them all woven into the same fabric which now lies upon our plate.

The food is not only good, but it is quick and inexpensive.  Where else can you stride through the door, go through the  buffet line, eat a meal and pay only $6.00 for all that goodness.  There are problems though:  1)  I found our waitress to be severely English-challenged (but it’s a buffet and all the entrées are well identified so that’s no big deal),   2)  No beer or wine is served but never mind, I found the food intoxicating enough.  It’s not really Fast Food.  It may start out that way but as your eyelids begin to slide on down, you start thinking of your next trip through the buffet, and then of desert, and begin to realize there is nothing more important anywhere else.

Mamatown of Hickory.  http://www.superpages.com/bp/Hickory-NC/Ye-Wei-GUAN-Chinese-Buffet-L0503093580.htm

Friday, February 18, 2011

Charlie Cox in Hickory Community Theatre

Charlie Cox ran with scissors tonight in the Fireman’s Kitchen and everybody had a blast.  

We thought we were watching Charlie work with a problem he had, and that we were watching him deal with his own issue when we began to become aware of the fact that we weren’t watching Charlie Cox anymore, that we were really watching ourselves.

And it gradually began to dawn upon us that were not watching some rare disease that strikes a few people from time to time rack up one more poor soul, we were really watching ourselves deal with a lot of different problems that each of us wrestle with every day, all day long.  

Charlie Cox woke up as the play developed and so did some other people in the audience.  It’s a play with a great message and besides, it’s a hoot.

Ted Eltzroth played Charlie, and he carried the message very well.  Michael Woody played Wally and mesmerized everybody in the cabaret with his facial expressions - when you can show THAT much in your face you shouldn’t even need to speak, but he spoke well too.  Charlie Chaplin would be jealous!  John Gann played about half the guys I grew up with throughout the south, and he brought back memories that went far, far beyond the Kitchen - and far beyond tonight too.  Leanna Teague played Nell Todd and made that difficult role work very well, and Tammy Lail who, as Kiki, came in and changed the whole world.  I liked Kiki.  I liked her very much.  I think I fell in love with Kiki.  

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Dreaming at the Crescent Moon

Catawba Science Center explored the "Science of Dreams" during a Science Café Program at Crescent Moon Café in downtown Hickory.  Dr. Gordon Cappelletty, Jungian-trained psychotherapist and adjunct professor at Lenoir-Rhyne University, presented a discussion of the changes our brain goes through when we sleep and how that helps us develop into that creature we will call our "self".  

What happens when you sleep?  Are you "supposed" to remember your dreams?  What will a good night's sleep leave with you?  What about sleeping pills?  All these questions were answered tonight at the Crescent Moon Cafe in Hickory, along with sandwiches and nachos and good micro-brewed beers.