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This collection of photographs and stories springs from the egocentric notion that others might enjoy reading a crone’s tales of a life lived somewhat off the beaten path. The stories are all true (unless noted otherwise). All WizenedEye.com photographs accompanying these pieces are my own work and are © copyrighted, as are the fiction pieces and fictional personae.
Posted by
Judy
on
Sunday, February 18, 2007
11
wise owls hooted in the forest
Cold Blood
Posted by
Judy
on
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
11
wise owls hooted in the forest
The Wild Heart
howls in woods near by
footprints in snow make heart shape
call from valentine
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haiku by Becky Harblin © copyright 2007
photo by WizenedEye © copyright 2007
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From Coyote, Shaman and Wizard, Happy Valentine's Day!
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Posted by
Judy
on
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
22
wise owls hooted in the forest
From the Playground
Shaman's words float into the forest, fall like snowflakes, and pile up on my computer in a lovely drift. Often they are the inspiration for a photograph, a pleasant prod that causes me to don my barn parka (because it's big enough for the camera to fit under) and skis or snowshoes and go off in search of something that will reflect or illustrate her poetic creation. It's a game we're playing. Our playground is a secret blog known only to us, where her words and my images mingle and balance, teeter-tottering together.
Crows have been scarce lately. "The King's Trees" has been hanging around my desk for a couple of weeks, waiting for me to get a shot at their "black and primal selves," and then, yesterday morning they finally heard their cue.
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The King's Trees
One crow
rests
on top of an oak tree,
another crow
sits, alert too,
on the neighbor tree,
a maple.
Comfortable,
on the highest branches
their outstretched heads,
with penetrating eyes
focus
on whatever suits
their black and primal selves.
Or maybe,
they are simply half asleep,
each humming a favorite tune.
As I used to do
as a child
who climbed and sat
in beautiful trees,
feeling
like the king.
By Becky Harblin © copyright 2007
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Posted by
Judy
on
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
7
wise owls hooted in the forest
Need
For as long as I can remember, I’ve wanted to perform. As a kid, my love of horses took me to rodeos and horse shows, and maybe because I was female and females had pretty limited career paths in the middle of the last century, I aspired to be a trick-rider in the rodeo. (When Ringling Brothers came to town I also wondered how I might become the bareback rider in the circus).
I painted and drew pictures too, almost always of horses and cowboys, and early in my grade-school years was recommended for Saturday art lessons at the city art museum, but my parents and I both decided that Saturday’s hours were better spent outdoors. My classmate who did attend the museum classes became a successful painter.
My mother thought to correct my pigeon-toes – and maybe derail my tom-boy leanings – by enrolling me in dancing lessons. I took tap, ballet, “modern jazz”, and acrobatic for years, and they put me on the stage for the first time. The excitement of costumes, bright lights and applause fanned the fire deep within me.
Cowboys played guitars, so I managed to get one on loan and talked my mother into paying for lessons, then convinced my dancing teacher to let me perform a couple of numbers during the intermission of a dance recital. I was probably the oldest dancer in the recital that night, and although I still enjoyed tapping around the stage, the singing was what I would remember. The songs I chose were “Tall Paul” (which had been a hit by every girl’s favorite Mouseketeer, Annette Funicello) and a G-Em-C-D7 tune (you musicians recognize that as the chord progression used in about half of all early rock’n’roll “hits”) called “Hand in Hand.” No doubt I was awful, but I sang and played my heart out...and people applauded.
There was another music genre rising in the 1950s. The Kingston Trio took “folk” music in a new direction, their acoustic instruments and voices speaking to me in a more meaningful way than the dance music that was rock’n’roll or the traditional (and boring) subject matter of “Go Tell Aunt Rhody” or “Frog Went a-Courting” (everyone’s first guitar songs), then one Saturday morning in 1962 a friend came to my house with an album entitled “Peter, Paul & Mary.” The hair on my arms rose as I listened, and on that day, unrecognized passions stored deep within me found a voice. By the next day I had learned every song on the record, and although I never thought about it, my rodeo or bareback riding career was a thing of the past. I have been a “folksinger” ever since.
So many things I’ve done have been for an audience of one kind or another: acting in a play or musical, displaying a photograph, doing a dramatic public reading of one of my husband’s poems; and now I’m blogging.
The need to create is a driving passion, an often urgent, aching need to express thoughts and emotions. It is a longing for connection, for the sharing of these passions with another human being. For me it is undoubtedly wrapped in complex, insecure egocentricity. My words, my photographs, the songs I sing and the roles I play give expression to an internal energy that aches to be released and recognized. I don’t fully understand why, and I have no choice: I am an artist.
Posted by
Judy
on
Saturday, February 10, 2007
9
wise owls hooted in the forest
Note from the Wizened Wizard: The next few posts will be stories about life on one North Country farm. Although they are not in chronological order, it is probably best to read them in the order listed here. So far, the stories are:
......... Farmer Boy
....... A Black Hat and a Buggy.
......... Haying
......... Farm Therapy
......... Some Scenes from the "New Farm"
......... July 4th
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Posted by
Judy
on
Friday, February 09, 2007
7
wise owls hooted in the forest
July 4th
Posted by
Judy
on
Thursday, February 08, 2007
5
wise owls hooted in the forest
Some Scenes from the "New" Farm
Posted by
Judy
on
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
4
wise owls hooted in the forest
Farm Therapy
She died in April. He remembered that the lilacs had been in bloom. He remembered her laughter; he remembered his helplessness. He could still smell a trace of her perfume when he entered her room, as he did too often. He could still see her in her place at the table; his daily wanderings through the house put him in confrontation with a hundred ghosts of her.
Raymond swung onto the ramp and piloted the RV northward. It was a straight shot from Allentown to New York’s North Country, and except for navigating the perpetual summer reconstruction of Rte 81 through the Poconos, the drive was mindless. Her face came to him again and he let it: the athlete, the scholar, the apple of his eye, the perfect daughter.
A few days earlier, Pierce called from the farm and asked for his help. Now that Matt had finished Penn State and left the farm for good, an extra hand would be a godsend during haying. “We just need somebody who can drive one of the tractors,” Pierce had said. Both knew the real need was Raymond’s, but neither cousin spoke of that.
You can’t be too self-absorbed and bring in hay. It’s hard work: hot, dusty, sweaty and exhausting, and Pierce’s crew approached it in good humor. They also approached it with care and caution, mindful of safety and efficiency, so for Raymond there was little time to dwell on his personal sorrow.
As the day’s heat began to abate and the sun was sinking, one of Sarah’s meals waited. Like so many farm wives these days, she worked off the farm as well as on it. She was a teacher and had summers off, the pay was pretty good (by North Country standards) and the health insurance, retirement and other benefits she earned removed a further burden from Pierce. She could milk the herd when needed (in fact, she and Pierce used to do all of the milking), and she sure could cook. There’s nothing finer after a day of hard work than a good meal seasoned with laughter and a sharing of the day’s events. Raymond felt comfortable at Pierce and Sarah’s table, sated by good food and the knowledge that he had been of use.
At the end of the week, the hayloft held 12,000 bales, the food that would sustain the cows who in turn would fill the bulk tank milking after milking through the long North Country winter. In a world where it’s sometimes hard to see how you can make a difference, 12,000 bales from the field to the loft is a significant bit of work. The experience filled Raymond’s thoughts as he headed south. It wasn’t until he neared home that her memory painfully reasserted itself in his consciousness.
Posted by
Judy
on
Wednesday, February 07, 2007
4
wise owls hooted in the forest
Haying - part 3 of a story of life on one North Country farm
Posted by
Judy
on
Sunday, February 04, 2007
2
wise owls hooted in the forest