Anvil Heads I-40 New Mexico

Anvil Heads I-40 New Mexico

Storm Running

Storm Running
Interstate 40 West New Mexico April 2009

Lady Bug on Cactus

Lady Bug on Cactus
While at work, I noticed a tiny red dot on a green prickly pear cactus. Without any others was this single tiny lady bug a metaphor of loneliness? Where did she come from? Why was there only one? I will return later to see if she remains.

Invisible Life

Invisible Life
Invisible life could be what is unknown about any one of us. It also speaks of a scale that hides in plain sight. Everywhere small things go unnoticed and like a good book, remain invisible until read. Life is a powerful force that is often veiled in scale until we take the time to discover its secrets.

The Bench

The Bench
Bolted to a sidewalk, it is easy to blend in to observe the passing days and nights. In fact being a street bench doesn’t allow much else. Being alone with a vitamin store and lamp post for company might, to a casual observer appear to be a lonely way to mark time. Everyone has heard, “…if these walls could talk.” If walls could talk, would that be something a street bench might do? What would a street bench say? This street bench sits near a tidy corner on Pine Street. There is a phone booth near by when most people do their talking on cell phones, being a phone booth doesn’t require much more effort than keeping a street bench, vitamin store and a lamp post company.... to be continued

Into the Night

Into the Night
Alone at night on a dark street that keeps its secrets. What fate will she encounter, what evil lurks…only darkness knows the night.

Nightlife

Nightlife
The full moon, marble like, rolls across a star blanket, a celestial mirror reflecting soft distant solar beams back to earth to give poets something to do with their insomnia.

Oak Sunset

Oak Sunset
The gift of twilight colors give way to shades of grey and black, an interlude to await the celebration of dawn and the colors of the new day.

Grape Jam

Grape Jam
A bee is not aware of color beyond what the hues say in a language only bees understand. It is all about the work of gathering; a selfless, brief existence that is driven by duty and knows only its small part but is a supreme master of its niche. In that course, that single task generates goodness in ways diverse, complex, and vital to so many realms beyond its own. The end result is that one single bee blind to anything but his duty confers a promise. It is all about small things that allow our existence the luxury of being able to take for granted this and many other small things. Could it be that everything we do in our daily existence has effects unknown to us in ways similar to that of a bee?

Factual answers from structured data.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

A gift

There is more to the night than things that go "bump" this tale is of one of those things;

As I may have mentioned, we have a ferrell cat, "Mama Kitty" that has been a fixture for about three years. She lives outside year round but except for kitty food we put out for her, she remains mostly wild and self sufficient, a very capable huntress. Most my efforts to domesticate her had till recently, resulted in kitty evasion of the predator, prey kind. With patience and persistence she has warmed to me in small steps to the point now of openly displaying affection towards me. The most recent such display however is somewhat over the top.

She now will approach for a head scratch or tummy rub if she is in the mood. When I come home at night, she is often there because she knows I will invite her in for a munch from her feed dish which is brought in to protect from freeloading possums, skunks and other night creatures. A couple weeks ago I brought her and her food dish into my room so she could munch then spend the night cuddled with me. This ritual has been repeated often since. Because the weather has warmed, I have taken to leaving the sliding glass door of my room open. She has discovered how to pull the screen open just enough for her to come and go as she pleases. It is not unusual for her to leave and return several times through the night.

Last night was no different, that is, until the morning. When I awoke, she was gone. I climbed out of bed and saw something on the floor in the dim colorless first light of dawn. It was just far enough from my bed that it was safe from being stepped on. It was small, and about the size and shape of the closed fist of a child. There was something at one end that gave an odd outline. Laying there by itself, it prompted a closer inspection. Stepping over, reaching to the light on my desk, I was startled by its suddenly lit discovery.

You may have guessed by now that it was a medium sized mouse, quite immobile but not yet effected by the rigor that follows a fresh fatal kitty encounter. The scene unique and bizarre caused a startled moment of panic followed by a stifled laugh; Arrayed at rodent posterior was a sprig of what appeared to be basil or some green herb artfully placed as if waiting to be featured on the cover of Gourmet Magazine. I was tempted to photograph it but my revulsion won out, the prize was quickly dispatched to the trash can.

After all it is the thought that counts.