Saturday, November 9, 2013

a song from curtis mayfield's final album "new world order"....


november 9, 2013


lately, i find myself being able to relate to this song more and more .... when it first came out, 'round 10 years ago, or so, i remember feeling alienated by the message in its lyrics and thinking that i would never end up in that place .... well - time flies, things change, here i am and .... 

"how did i get so far gone? where do i belong? and where in the world did i ever go wrong?"


have a listen:

"here but i'm gone" by Curtis Mayfield



Monday, November 4, 2013

soldiers song...... no offense intended!!

over the years, in this or that movie about war, soldiers, training camps and such, i've seen quite a few scenes of marines jogging in formation, singing a certain kind of song...u know da one i mean?

it always starts with these two lines:


I DON'T KNOW BUT 
I'VE BEEN TOLD...

i always enjoyed making up the rest myself...been doing it in my head for ages...
and, finally wrote it down:

i don't know but 
i've been told
pizza can be 
eaten cold

master sarge
he told us so
'cause we must 
eat on da go...

dat's just one thing
our sarge said
one of tons
we won't forget

every day 
he tells us more
he's got no clue
dat he's a bore

no one dares
to let him know
'cause he'd kick u
out dat door

it's da way we 
spend our time
we're supposed
to like it fine

if u asked me
how i feel
i'd say it's a
damn good deal

soon i'll be
a real marine
and go where
i've never been

meet new folks
'n if they're bad
sarge says we can 
shoot'em dead

dat sounds like
a lot of fun
can't wait till
i'll use my gun

'n if i make 
it back alive
i'll look u up
so we can jive

i'll have lots of
tales to tell
if u don't like'em
then go to hell

this is all 
i've got to say
this song's over
enjoy ur day!

© Corinne Wesley 17. June 2013



Sunday, November 3, 2013

POEM ABOUT A WOMAN

The Woman

endlessly she has been sitting 
alone on her bed's very edge
sharp like a knife it cuts her thighs
she wonders why she cannot feel a thing
and watches the absurd parade of hours 
that swiftly pass beyond her grasp
night's turning into dawn too soon
announcing a new unwelcome day
outside the raven calls for her
reminds her that she's not forgotten
not altogether lost or disappeared
when she replies the raven answers
and they go on this way in harmony
performing their familiar back and forth
until it's time to part and say farewell
she's left to stay behind in silence 
and overwhelmed by dreadful fear
of being forced to face once more 
the angry stranger who she has become

(copyright corinne wesley, november 3, 2013)







poem from santa cruz







JUST rules

just RULES
  
__________________


GOOD is bad 

yet - BAD is good

it don't MATTER

what's Ur hood

i DID see IT all B4 

us ALL passin' 

thru dem DOORS

WHEN it's U

IT'S where'n WHAT 

'n WHEN i've been

when ME i'm TOLD

that BLU = GREEN

(:?) ... (:o) ... (:|) ... (:!)..

copyright corinne wesley 9-18-13

Stefany posted this on FB.....




Wild Geese

You do not have to be good

You do not have to walk on your knees 

For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting 

You only have to let the soft animal of your body 

love what it loves 

Tell me about despair YOURS and I will tell you MINE 

Meanwhile the world goes on 

Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain 

are moving across the landscapes 

over the prairies and the deep trees 

the mountains and the rivers 

Meanwhile the wild geese high in the clean blue air 

are heading home again 

Whoever you are no matter how lonely 

the world offers itself to your imagination 

calls to you like the wild geese harsh and exciting  

over and over announcing your place 

in the family of things 


~ Mary Oliver ~

Monday, August 12, 2013

Stufen (Steps) by Hermann Hesse sent to me by Helga for my birthday :)

Stufen


Wie jede Blüte welkt und jede Jugend
Dem Alter weicht, blüht jede Lebensstufe,
Blüht jede Weisheit auch und jede Tugend
Zu ihrer Zeit und darf nicht ewig dauern.
Es muß das Herz bei jedem Lebensrufe
Bereit zum Abschied sein und Neubeginne,
Um sich in Tapferkeit und ohne Trauern

In andre, neue Bindungen zu geben.
Und jedem Anfang wohnt ein Zauber inne,
Der uns beschützt und der uns hilft, zu leben.
Wir sollen heiter Raum um Raum durchschreiten,
An keinem wie an einer Heimat hängen,
Der Weltgeist will nicht fesseln uns und engen,
Er will uns Stuf' um Stufe heben, weiten.
Kaum sind wir heimisch einem Lebenskreise
Und traulich eingewohnt, so droht Erschlaffen,
Nur wer bereit zu Aufbruch ist und Reise,
Mag lähmender Gewöhnung sich entraffen.
Es wird vielleicht auch noch die Todesstunde
Uns neuen Räumen jung entgegen senden,
Des Lebens Ruf an uns wird niemals enden...
Wohlan denn, Herz, nimm Abschied und gesunde!

Saturday, June 22, 2013

From Website: Chapter 1 of my Novel "AS TIME RUNS OUT"

Chapter1

FRANZ 

 Despite the fact that Franz was not a small man, the grey coat he wore looked somewhat large on him. It was by no means a shabby coat, of good cut and material, fitting his slender figure perfectly, yet hinting at times long gone by, when he had been its master, younger, stronger and taller. Now, since the coat covered him almost entirely, one had the choice of either looking at his head, or else at the bottoms of his sharply creased, black pants, spilling onto well-worn, dark patent leather shoes , which conveyed the sense of having accompanied Franz, alongside the coat, for many years. His skull, topped with thin, yet full, silver hair, was shaped like that of a bird of prey, his nose sharp and beak-like. Gently smiling blue eyes lit up his face, which was pale due to the unevenly spread layer of 50+ Sunscreen, he applied each morning for protection against all those harmful rays listed on the bottle. 
 Franz had much to fear. He was 95 years old, in perfect shape and, while people would tell him so constantly, this only added to his secret apprehension that, no matter how good you look and feel at this age, time was running out. He could hardly think of anything else these days, although he tried to live his life as if this were not the case.
Franz loved the city he lived in. He was not a rich man but well off enough to afford a good lifestyle. His comfortable apartment, situated in a fashionable part of town, was surrounded by small shops, decent restaurants, and several coffee-shops, one of which he visited like clockwork every morning, to indulge in one of his simple pleasures, a fresh Espresso, or two.
He had many friends and acquaintances, with whom he met for dinners and leisurely luncheons. He went to the opera regularly. On weekends he took his well-cared-for town car out of the underground garage and drove to his house in the country, where he would rest, in order to be ready for another week full of wonderful things to do.
To keep busy, Franz spent his time writing book reviews, essays and the occasional witty speech, which he delivered with great charm, whenever he was invited to attend special events honoring his lifetime of academic and literary accomplishments. Plus, in response to a number of requests made by several of his closest friends over the years, he had finally begun working on his memoirs. This was not an easy task and, until now, he had always managed to avoid it. But, feeling obliged to honor his promise, which he had regretted the moment he made it, there was no escape.
At first, Franz considered writing about everything: his youth inEurope, his narrow escape from the horrors of the Nazi regime, his brilliant rise through the ranks of American Academia, his wife Amelia, who had died several years earlier, their children, their children’s children and all the rest of it. What a splendid book this could be, filled with adventures, successes, setbacks followed by triumphs, both intellectual and physical as well, because here he still was, in command of all his faculties, at an age most people dreamed of ever reaching. At the same time, though, he felt overwhelmed by having to revisit so many memories. He tried sorting through them, getting them lined up correctly in his mind and found that he could not do it. The more he tried to place them along the time-line of his life, amounting to almost a century, the more confused Franz became. Being of a tidy Germanic nature and, thus, unable to accept a flawed account of what had happened, and when, he drove himself into a state of utter hysterics, while trying to remember things in the order they had occurred. He soon reached a point where he could no longer be sure whether certain events had really happened at all. For the first time in his life he experienced a profound sense of self-doubt and the misery that is its companion.
Alas, those were not the only reasons he eventually decided on writing his memoirs as a set of vignettes. He also realized that he probably did not have enough time left for a substantial book and he did not want to leave an unfinished work behind. That would be unacceptable for a man like him, who had always finished what he started, and proudly so. Hence, having already wrestled with this dilemma for too many weeks, Franz settled on writing a collection of short narratives, depicting only the highlights of his life he felt were worth mentioning.
 Having arrived at this practical solution, for a predicament which he felt he should not have had to deal with in the first place, he started writing. At this point it should be mentioned that Franz did not believe for one instant that his obvious and imminent death was deserved or even fair and this drove him quite mad. He hated dealing with the past instead of planning for the future. In his mind, plenty of other brand new projects were being developed constantly. As far as he was concerned, he could have filled another lifetime with contributions of equal value those he had produced until now. The awareness of this fact frustrated him deeply. Therefore, his memoir’s progress was slow and often very unsatisfying. Some days, he would cynically try to reduce a story he was writing to its absolute bare bones because he thought, since he could drop dead at any moment, it was best not to waste any time. At other times, he stayed up till the early morning hours, desperately typing even the tiniest details in long, winding sentences because he was afraid to leave something out that would later reveal itself as a significant aspect, without which the whole story would lose its significance.
Forever having to balance between these two extremes now seemed to rule Franz’s life. He never knew ahead of time what sort of a day he was embarking upon, when he swung his ancient legs energetically over the edge of his narrow Spartan bed. Later, on his way back from that much needed Espresso, walking along the pavement purposefully like a grey heron that had seen movement along the water’s edge promising a possible catch, he would arrive at the spot where the decision was inevitably made for him.
Since he was used to walking uphill on one side of the street to the coffee shop and then coming downhill on the other, in order to avoid the sun in his face, he would pass an old watchmaker’s shop. It had a smallish window with shelves full of clocks, all displaying the exact same time. Franz could not help but stop to look at them every day. And, for some strange reason, he always hoped to find one clock amongst the whole array that would be even just one minute off. But, so far, that had never happened.
Over the years, as Franz got older and became increasingly conscious of the impact of time and his own hopeless quest not to run out of it before he was done, the watch-shop had turned into a symbol of the elusive stuff. There, in the window, time was being counted painstakingly by all these different time-pieces, ticking away. It turned into an obsession for him, to see his own life reflected in the rapid forward movement of countless spindly second hands racing across those clock faces.
Franz thought that he appeared to have lived just like that, in circles, always punctual, never late, with every minute final it its passing. Even worse, each time he came upon the window, he was driven by an icy fear that the clocks would not be in motion any more. All of them stopped, for lack of winding. Forgotten by the watchmaker who, truth be told, looked like he could drop dead at any moment too. Who would wind them once the old man was gone?
Franz suffered from a nightmare about this scenario. In the dream, he walked up to the window, found not a single clock ticking and, when he looked closer to search for his reflection in the glass, he saw nothing. Absolutely nothing! At this point, he would wake up sweating and breathing hard, casting a terrified glance at his digital glow- in- the- dark alarm clock. He would have to wait until the soothing red digits changed onward, before he could close his eyes again. On days following the nightmare, he would walk up to the watch-shop with more apprehension than on days when he had managed to sleep dreamlessly, and his decision on how to write the next pages of his memoirs was based on what he felt, after watching time pass on those clocks for a while. Not that there were many good feelings to be extricated from staring at the window. It either depressed him to the point where he would, after returning to his apartment, sit down at the computer and get his writing done as quickly as he could, fearfully sensitive to every little ache, pain and discomfort. Or else, he would stay up far too late, lost in the melancholic recall of youthful memories. In either case, the creation of his memoirs had turned out to be a Greek drama of the worst kind and, on this particular day, as he walked towards the fateful little shop, he wished suddenly that, for once, time could be on his side.
 © Corinne Wesley

patches the horse


poem from website # 2

RAZORS PAIN YOU
RIVERS ARE DAMP
ACIDS STAIN YOU 
DRUGS CAUSE A CRAMP
GUNS AREN'T LAWFUL
NOOSES GIVE
GAS SMELLS AWFUL
YOU MIGHT AS WELL LIVE

Poem by Dorothy Parker

poem from website # 1

Talking About It II
 They say
Forgive yourself
And all will be well
For your own sake
Give up your scars
For our comfort
Give in now
For nothing else can
Give us relief

You say if
You accept yourself
All will be soothed
Care no more to
Carry the load
Empty out all that
Provokes such turmoil
All you were then
You are not now
Cut off these
Endless reruns

I say it’s hard
To be safe
from myself
Outcast amidst
 all those who are me
Entrapped by the past
Denied access
to what is present

You say that I
Could bloom again
In years to come
And fuse together
Be whole as one
I find myself wond’ring
Whether all these words
Can lead me there

© By Corinne Wesley

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Strong One

The Strong One

i've always been
the strong one
my whole life
i must've been
‘cause people said so
a thousand times
i thought it was
a compliment
it felt like praise
until one day and
after many years
its own true nature
was finally revealed
as being all but
favorable to me
not meant to motivate
designed to bind just
as a verdict would
once pronounced strong
it is forever so and
room for weakness
there is none
so when it's time
and all that strength
is growing dim
beware i warn you
don't let it tell
'cause no one
can imagine
such a thing
and no one
gives a damn

© Corinne Wesley


june 19, 2013

Monday, May 20, 2013

POEM FOR MY SIS...


FOR TAMMY
Tonight
My friend
I cannot find
Neither Delight
Nor joy of
Any other kind
Resembling those
Poetic lines
I’ve come across
So many times
And did then
Like just fine
Despite their sad
Yet true content
How love that is
As deep as mine
Must pay the price
When darkness falls
Without complaint
And leave it all behind

© Corinne Wesley 20. May 2013

Friday, May 10, 2013

Comment from the website from Helga in Germany


Helga Filz
Guten Morgen Corinne
ich schaue mir gerade Deine Seite noch einmal an. Sie ist cool:)))
Bis dann
Helga

Saturday, May 4, 2013

NEW POEM... Mayday...Mayday!!

BETTER DAWG DAYS

Look here
We’re walkin’
Me’n my Dawg
Along a dusty river-bed
It’s almost dark
There’s no one else
My Dawg don’t care
Because she has
Seen better days
Not just a few…
Now, they’re long gone
And, YES, I’ ve seen’ em too
I think, I’m pretty sure
Mind you what I remember
‘Bout them most of all
Is how the two of us
Would sit’n watch
As one by one 
Day after day
They’d end and disappear
Just like the sun
And we’d be left behind
There, where we sat
Surrounded by a deep dark blue…

© Corinne Wesley, May 4. 2013

Monday, April 29, 2013

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Well, today it's been 20 days since i started this Blog.
My "people-counter" tells me that i had 87 views. 
Yet, not a single comment!
What's up with that???
Cat got ur tongue?
...  :|

Monday, April 22, 2013

WEBSITE SHORT STORY # 3 (not yet posted on the website)




Today, April 26. 2013, i shall have the pleasure of reading this story to an audience @ the Sta. Fe Playhouse Theater, as my contribution to Jules' show: JULESWORKS.....FOLLIES....


What she remembered most, about their initial encounter, during that first spring-time walk with her dog, in the small park downtown by the river was, how incredibly content the two of them were in each others company. Being together, was all they cared about. Nothing else mattered very much.
Theirs, was the kind of love poets describe in romantic sonnets, some of which she had read long ago, overcome by embarrassment for secretly wishing to be the one, they were addressed to while, at the same time, telling herself that only fools and poets believed in the existence of such a perfect love.


Yet, here she was, witness to the fact that, indeed, it did exist and, therefore, how foolish and cynical she had been, to doubt it. This realization brought tears to her eyes, not from sadness but from relief. And, whenever she recalled the memory of that overwhelming moment, those tears were always its companion.
Replaying the past in her mind, she could see them now, as they chased each other from tree to tree, across the lawn, dashing, darting and tumbling down, only to rise once more and disappear into the distance in mock pursuit. They were sleek, black and very beautiful. At some point they raced right across the path in front of her, while calling out with delight and looking at her curiously and cautiously.
The excitement of it all, spread through her like fire and, she called back to them, again and again, until they decided to pass her for a second time, intrigued by this stranger, who wanted in on their game.
She gazed into their dark shiny eyes, laughed out loud and introduced herself. On their next return, when they called out to her, as if inviting her to join the mad chase, she realized that she had been accepted. Just like that.
This filled her with such profound happiness, it made her cry and she began to sing a song for them. They stayed close and, listened to her, until she stopped singing. Then, they called out to her, many times and, she knew that she had found two new friends. That’s how it began.
A Raven Tale......
© Corinne Wesley, Monday, January 14, 2013

ESSAY FROM WEBSITE # 2


Blue lights over Baltimore
She was excited, as highway 1 carried them toward the city limits. Couldn’t wait to get there! Baltimore had been on her mind, ever since she had faithfully watched every episode of Homicide: Life in the Streets. The show had somehow ended up placing a deep love in her heart, for this town she did not know. But, that was going to change today. While she and her husband entered the beginnings of suburbia in their rented RV, a sense of returning overcame her and she breathlessly tried to see everything at once. At the same time, it reminded her that she was a stranger and a foreigner.
This was another America altogether. They lived in New Mexico, a place filled with great empty deserts and mountains, mostly devoid of humans. She loved it there but felt that it lacked the diversity of people she knew existed elsewhere in the country.
Black people were such an important part of what she considered the “American Experience” and, in New Mexico, their presence was sadly missing, as far as she was concerned.
In the past, when she mentioned her desire to see Baltimore, some of her white friends would ask:
“Why Baltimore?”
They did not have much else to say if she enquired as to the nature of their question.
“It’s a black town and there is a lot of crime.”
This comment was usually followed by a gushing:
“But it’s a great city with wonderful museums.”
Then the conversation would move on, as if nothing else were needed to explain the lack of interest.
For her, though, this reaction only made her more intent and she thought that she wanted to see for herself what Baltimore had to offer to someone who cared to look. The man, who was the creator of Homicide, loved his city, this much was clear. To him, despite all the imperfections and conflicts, it seemed a place well worth mentioning. She had come to see what he saw.
They rolled down the street, emerged in traffic and she watched as people crossed the road, stood at street corners, or entered convenience stores, advertising beer, cigarettes and milk. There wasn’t a white person in sight. To her it was like being in another country. As block after block appeared in front of them, each one less inhabitable, she noticed a strange kind of landmark along the sidewalks. Tall lamp posts with a big blue light flashing on top. After taking a closer look, she realized that there were four cameras attached just below the blue light, pointed at the streets and side-walks below and, just underneath, she saw a sign that read: 24/7 YOU BETTER BELIEVE IT! When she told her husband what she had discovered, he reacted instantly to the message in the intended fearful way. It made her sad to see how easy it was to manipulate people. But, she was not scared by such theatrics.
She just continued watching the inner city of Baltimore, while her heart began to ache. This is unacceptable she thought. No one should have to live like that. As they continued through the remnants of former neighborhoods, with boarded up hostile buildings and lost souls on the sidewalks, she wished they could stop so she could leave the safe capsule of their vehicle. She wanted to talk with the people in the street and ask them what had happened here. It made no sense to her and she asked her husband how something like that was possible in America, today?
He could not answer her question. 
Instead, he steered them onward, frightened and hoping for a turn-off that would get them back to the safety of an interstate. By now, there were blue lights on every block. The place looked deserted, except for the occasional group of young black men with hard faces and single mothers wheeling their offspring bravely toward unknown destinations.
 He swore when, ahead of them, a traffic light turned red and forced him to stop the RV. A homeless-looking man started along the line of waiting cars and her husband rolled up the windows hastily, leaving only a tiny crack open. She was looking for change to give the man, who had reached them. Before he could say anything, her husband told him that nothing could be gotten from them.
The man said:
” Come on, why do you have to be like that?”
Her husband responded:
” I am too afraid. I am sorry. I don’t want to be killed.”
Before the man could answer, the green light appeared and they began to move again. She was intensely embarrassed by what had occurred and wished she could get her husband to abandon his fear, so she could get out into the street and find out what everyone there had to say about the impossible state of their city. But she understood that he could not accommodate her and touched him gently, saying:
” I am sorry it makes you feel this way.”
All of a sudden the ghetto ended. There was no warning, no transitory area to pass through, and no way for those who lived on the edge of the ghetto to cross over to the generic perfection of the houses that were now lining Highway 1.
On one side of the street the boarded up dilapidated architecture, with broken steps and front yards covered in weeds, told a silent sad tale of lost lives and livelihoods, while across the road manicured gardens showed off their abundance as if to say,:
” See here this is the American dream and you will never have it.”
It was shocking to both of them. The brutality and finality of the division left them speechless and she thought of their house back in New Mexico and the beauty of their land. She knew that from now on she would always think of Baltimore and how it could be changed from hopelessness to a new and better place, where people could live their lives in dignity instead of poverty and crime, illuminated by those damn blue scary lights. She had some ideas and decided one day soon she would be back. There was much to do. In her mind, she was sure that it was possible because the way things had been allowed to become was truly intolerable. She thought that, perhaps, she had found her American dream.
© Corinne Wesley 2007