Thursday, March 19, 2026
91. Billionaires
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
90. Project 365
I posted this a while back on FB, but I'll post it here too, for posterity. Here's what I wrote on FB:
Almost 18 years ago, I completed my first photo-a-day project (Project 365), which I posted daily on Flickr. Back in December, I started my fifth such project—after a gap of 13 years. Here it is so far, 88 days in. It's simple enough: take a photo every day, and post it, with a bit of explanation of why or what. I find it a fascinating (I guess I'm easily fascinated!) record of the mostly tiny moments that make up my days, my life.
Since then, a couple of weeks have passed. And yes, more pictures!
I'm up to day 107 now—almost a third of the way along. Some days I completely forget to take a picture—days when I'm busy at home, with a work project usually (currently: editing a book about an early woman lawyer)—and then have to find something, anything, in my immediate surroundings to document (a cat, for example; cats are easy targets).
It's strange and lovely to go back, even all the way back to 2008 and the first Project 365, and remember that very moment, where I was, what I was struck by to take that shot. I do sometimes wish I were better at embracing moments without the aid of a photograph. But I'm also glad I have all these photos to remind me of the wealth of my experience.
Here are the photos I've taken the last seven days, complete with their Flickr captions:
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| Trail closed. But that doesn’t stop us, outlaws that we are. Or judging from the well-defined groove in the grass, others either. |
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| Morning light on shells. This sight made me happy this morning as I started one of two poetry Zooms for today. Sometimes it’s the little things… |
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| Oh Canada. This guy was very calm—though he never took that eye off me as I made my way past on my afternoon walk. |
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| Great egret. A frog pond visitor. From the sound of the frogs singing in the evenings, s/he is probably finding plenty to snack on. |
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
89. Ross Gay and Gwendolyn Brooks, poets
Yesterday on FB I ran into a poem by Ross Gay, a sparkle of a man whose writing I enjoy so much.
Sorrow Is Not My Name
—after Gwendolyn BrooksNo matter the pull toward brink. No
matter the florid, deep sleep awaits.
There is a time for everything. Look,
just this morning a vulture
nodded his red, grizzled head at me,
and I looked at him, admiring
the sickle of his beak.
Then the wind kicked up, and,
after arranging that good suit of feathers
he up and took off.
Just like that. And to boot,
there are, on this planet alone, something like two
million naturally occurring sweet things,
some with names so generous as to kick
the steel from my knees: agave, persimmon,
stick ball, the purple okra I bought for two bucks
at the market. Think of that. The long night,
the skeleton in the mirror, the man behind me
on the bus taking notes, yeah, yeah.
But look; my niece is running through a field
calling my name. My neighbor sings like an angel
and at the end of my block is a basketball court.
I remember. My color's green. I'm spring.
—for Walter Aikens
Well, that just got me curious about the epigraph: "after Gwendolyn Brooks." Fortunately, others have gotten curious too, and I quickly found an essay in the Paris Review that unlocks the secret. In it, the author references the poem that Gay was responding to:
To The Young Who Want To Die
Sit down. Inhale. Exhale.The gun will wait. The lake will wait.
The tall gall in the small seductive vial
will wait will wait:
will wait a week: will wait through April.
You do not have to die this certain day.
Death will abide, will pamper your postponement.
I assure you death will wait. Death has
a lot of time. Death can
attend to you tomorrow. Or next week. Death is
just down the street; is most obliging neighbor;
can meet you any moment.
You need not die today.
Stay here—through pout or pain or peskyness.
Stay here. See what the news is going to be tomorrow.
Graves grow no green that you can use.
Remember, green's your color. You are Spring.
I have had less luck learning who Walter Aikens is. A young friend of Gay's, perhaps, who was battling his own sorrows. No telling, and not important—except for the connection that the two of them had (the poem was published in 2011) and hopefully still have.
88. Death
The past two days I've kept running into death.
In a sense, lately, death is all around me—in the continued (eternal) absence of our Milo. No more early morning walk, no more breakfast to be portioned out (kibble + a few spoonfuls of canned food), no more exuberant greeting when we arrive home from running errands, no more afternoon walk, no more tossing of the increasingly vanishing dog toy (his last two, a llama and a red panda, remain rather sadly intact), no more sticks thrown, no more river swims, no more evening meal (which increasingly became whatever he would eat, chiefly roast chicken, and salmon skin when we had salmon for dinner, and freeze-dried duck), no more neck scritches, no more sigh-and-thump as he settled onto his bed by ours. No more forbidden licking of my toes.
But we've got his little shrine—his ashes-containing box, his consolement cards, his pawprint pendants, his fur—to which I've added a calendar I made, for 2012, of his first year, and I rotate the pages every so often. Little Milo flying along a path! Milo standing tall at Sonora Pass! Milo chewing on his chew toys! Milo at SEATAC on his way to his new home! I intend to make a little book from some of the many, many photos I took of him over the years. He was my muse, my joy.As a friend commented the other day after attending the memorial service for a good friend of hers, "And of course, the unsolved question of what happens to dead people, where are they, where do they go? They seem to suddenly just disappear." Same goes for dogs.
Cats too. We'll be finding out, but hopefully not too soon. That said, I have lost cats—four of them—but only one of those did we "put to sleep." That cat, the empress Tisiphone, I cried buckets over. But that was thirty years ago. The pain has dulled to fond remembrance. (The other three disappeared in the neighborhood. We found the remains of one—the victim of a coyote. I know: we should keep them indoors. I won't argue my case for not doing that here...)
So, the past two days:
On Sunday, my writing group received word that our leader couldn't attend our Monday meeting because her partner was in the hospital, so we were postponing for a week. Yesterday (Monday) evening, she wrote that he had died, at 10:10 p.m. (There is something so poignant about that precise time.) This evening she wrote that we will still meet next week, that "I am in shock but still walking around."
That's the strangeness of it, isn't it? You still walk around. You have to: go to the bathroom, pour a glass of water, make your way to a chair in the sunshine where you cry, eat some food. Somehow, you take yourself to the store and buy groceries (I'd probably go straight to the Ben & Jerry's freezer). You keep going. You just do.
Today, I read on FB of two more deaths: my Antioch U friend Consuelo's kitty Bear Boy, and the longtime companion of the mother of another Antioch friend, Monique. It was moving to me to read their tributes to these important beings in their lives.
Then there's Country Joe McDonald, whose "Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die Rag" was so pertinent then, and seems just as pertinent now. He died on March 7, age 84.
And today my friend Nina's computer died! She's getting a new, modern, much lighter one, and fortunately she had backed up the more important files. But still: even transitioning to a new laptop requires adjustment. Death is never easy.
But the biggest death these past few days happened just a few hours ago: my Howler friend Sherilyn's father, Ron, who suffered a serious stroke nine years ago, finally slipped to the other side. All these nine years, three of us—Sherilyn, Kim, and I—have met pretty much every morning (travel aside) to spend ninety minutes writing or in other creative pursuits (and pretty much all day on weekends). This evening at 6:06 she texted: "Ron has died. He passed away comfortably in his sleep about 15 minutes ago. Thank you for supporting us."
It's strange how in the chest that simple statement hit me. All these years, Sherilyn has been flying back and forth every week between Burbank, where she and her husband, Grant, live, and Santa Clara, where Ron and her mom, Cindy, live, to take care of him. There were caregivers early on, but then the pandemic hit and caregiving became a two-person gig. Though it was mainly Sherilyn on watch. Grant would come up every so often to help out. It was a small, but twenty-four-hour, operation, keeping Ron going.
And now he's gone.
Just this last week, they signed up with hospice. Ron stopped eating several weeks ago; it was but a matter of time. And hospice seemed to spark Cindy into action, making plans. She announced, for example, that she'll be selling the house and moving back to Hawaii, where she's from. She started going through Ron's shirts. Hospice seemed to provide an opening, a new horizon.
And now he's gone. And the new horizon can swim more clearly into view.
I'm excited for Sherilyn, and for Cindy. Sad too, of course, but Ron really went away with that stroke.
I asked Sherilyn if she'd send a picture of Ron, because I'd never seen one. I had this vague image of a man lying in bed, a big man, an Asian American man, but I didn't really know what he looked like. She sent this:
Bellagio Hotel, Las Vegas, 12/2014—a couple of years before the stroke. "We have tons but the fastest search was 'Las Vegas,'" she wrote. "He loved Vegas! Proof he's from Hawaii!"My feelings on death swing… a pendulum, accepting it as the course of all things. An order, a relief, the completion of the wondrous circle... then the arc unfolds personal emptiness and loss. I sit in sadness. Heavy. The weight makes it hard to breathe. And hard not to. Gradually the feelings file into a stack. Sleep seems to help the stack and breathing. Laughter always helps when it's organic. Best to go outside where the world's bigger. Breathing is easier and you see the light and souls in life...
Sunday, March 8, 2026
87. Travel plans
Thanks to Mr. Trump's war and rising gas prices, I was goosed out of my normal lethargy when it comes to booking airplane tickets, and over the last few days I, yes, booked airplane tickets. In June, to Berlin and Oslo; in August, to Brazil.
It feels good to have that done.
It feels good, too, to have a respite from this benighted country to look forward to.
Not that I'll stop looking at the news, but still. Soon I'll have entirely new universes to explore. Berlin: WWII, the Cold War with its Wall, jazz clubs, walking in the Havelhöhenweg, and more. Oslo: spending time with family and revisiting favorite spots—the Vigeland sculpture park, the Fram polar exploration museum, the new library, the opera house . . . and more! Brazil: São Paulo and then the Pantanal.
Here are a few pictures of the Pantanal. It's a vast wetland I first heard about from a Brazilian fellow traveler in Botswana almost thirty years ago, and it's stuck in my head all this time. Lately, I see more and more stories about its diminishment due to climate change—fires, drought. I am crossing my fingers that this August will be a good season for seeing birds and wildlife—including giant river otters, giant anteaters, jaguars, yacaré caiman, hyacinth macaws, and 650 other bird species.
Humankind is destroying this planet. The government of the country I happen to live in doesn't seem to give a shit. I feel a need to visit the wondrous places while I still can—by which I mean both me, physically, while I can still move around; and while these places still exist, because they won't for long, at this rate.
I am looking forward to my travels. They help me stay buoyed up.
I despair for what the youngest generations will be coming up against. It won't be easy. Even if we have the most innovative, forward-thinking people in charge. Which recent votes have shown isn't particularly likely.
Friday, March 6, 2026
86. This is just to say...
Today's poetry group prompt involved parodying an existing poem. One of the examples was William Carlos William's "This Is Just to Say."
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
And here's a representative parody:
Variations on a Theme
Kenneth Koch1
I chopped down the house that you had been saving to live in next summer.
I am sorry, but it was morning, and I had nothing to do
and its wooden beams were so inviting.
2
We laughed at the hollyhocks together
and then I sprayed them with lye.
Forgive me. I simply do not know what I am doing.
3
I gave away the money that you had been saving to live on for the next ten years.
The man who asked for it was shabby
and the firm March wind on the porch was so juicy and cold.
4
Last evening we went dancing and I broke your leg.
Forgive me. I was clumsy and
I wanted you here in the wards, where I am the doctor!
Our prompter today, Karla, also mentioned that way back when, Garrison Keillor hosted the poet Billy Collins on his Prairie Home Companion, and they had fun with this very same poem. Here is one of the some thirty-four parodies they offered up:
BC: Listen to this poem—
I stand by the window,
Listening to dogs
Barking in the cold rain
That falls like vinegar.
A brown leaf reminds me of my grandmother.
And eating gooseberries in the Piazza Navona
That summer of our first love.
—It's a poem written by a computer!
GK: How can you tell?
BC: By the little sprocket holes on both sides.
(Mind you, this was performed in 2002. But still: AI anyone?)
It (by which I mean WCW's original) is a perfect poem, really. Parody it all you like—you can't defeat it.
But finally, here's a short film about Williams (1883–1963). You really can't help but love him. At least, I can't.
Sunday, March 1, 2026
85. Michael Pollan, conscious human being
My title is a little tongue in cheek, but not much. Michael Pollan, of course, is an author, starting with Second Nature: A Gardener's Education (1991) and including most famously The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the World (2001), The Omnivore's Dilemma (2006), and This Is Your Mind on Plants (2021), about psychedelics. As his interests have evolved he's become a philosopher, and lately has been delving into the question of consciousness—as in his brand-new book A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness. Because of this book, he's been popping up in interviews, on podcasts and on TV. So I thought I'd feature a few of those here, plus a couple of ancillary references.
Stephen Colbert spoke with Pollan last week:


















