Mountain Shadows
Said to be the sundial of savages, the shadows where one can read the absence of the thing represented. Only during daylight of course.
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Already old.
Monday, May 4, 2026
The man did not want to hear
about "the birth of autonomous warfare". He ducked into a sunfilled room. Window glass so thin the birds outside heralding the end of winter may as well have been inside.
An involuntary grunt-chuckle escaped his chest when people brought the happening to his attention. "Isn't that an oxymoron?" He asked and his thinning lips curled into a snarl and a smile. He looked at family and organization photographs around the room. "I'll need to talk to some of my Army buddies before I have much to say." It was a dismissed, but no one left.
"I cannot tell you
"It was quick and it was forever."
Sunday, May 3, 2026
"Mr. So-and-So, are you
"But, you gave me the pens."
Our Dad had spent the whole ten days of us kids being grounded working, and, being fed and sat like Mr. Cleaver in his recliner with slippers and newspaper in the evenings. His slippers were gigantic, fuzzy affairs with large bear claw appendages that flopped around when he stomped to the bathroom.
It was true that he'd gifted me each pen on a birthday or milestone event at school. But it was also true that he'd conducted a red-faced, lip twisting, almost sweaty raid of every nook and cranny where the precious treasures might be stashed. Our mother stood apart from him, arms crossed, not really looking at any of us, and covering a couldn't-help-but laugh in her shoulder acting as if her nose itched.
"How could you?" He'd hoisted the growing number of pens found into the air. "WE DON'T need you to write about OUR LIVES. WE'RE LIVING IT!!!!!!!"
A deafening silence followed. For a full five days. That was how I fell in with some Asians. Two of us were both ten.
"Pandas don't have pens but they still exist." A big Asian brother told us girls. A slender hand started to reach towards a face swollen with tears but re-directed itself to a box of tissues. His sister clutched the box. Heavy sighs.
I sat on the medium-hard plastic packaging the sofa. Mrs. Asian's decor was very ivory in color with dramatic splashes and jags of deep, dark colors. An ebony-colored vase which looked almost squashed, like it was standing up almost flat had a spray of greenish leaves sticking up out of it. Eucalyptis, the girl named the dried out plant my eyes fell on. An ornate deeply red wooden sitting chair. The dragons on the arms and legs dumb-eyed. Mouths wide open. Soft-edged pieces of jade shades; stone chess pieces on a yellowing bumpy board. Paper lanterns on a snarled up yarn string. No patience, the little girl explained. She and I were the same size, different-looking human features. But we knew each other as pandas.
We'd found each other as such in the woods. We'd each hidden our bicycles. Stashed food and pencil bags. There'd been no paper at my school. And slipped out of wordly cares by imagining the woods like a still, shimmering pool of water. We'd glanced at each other feeling tree bark, scooping catepillars into hands, moving crispy leaves to find lady bugs, and finding bigger and bigger leaves. We just did this. Without talking because we didn't speak the same language. She'd shown me in the Atlas: Cambodia.
The teacher having a hard time with all the rules about Catholic school, like us kids, gave me two panda stickers and I gave one to my panda friend. She opened a big metal desk's top drawer and put the sticker next to the neat row of twisting pencils and click pens. A feather had jumped up when she opened the drawer. She tried to smooth it back in place but it kept sticking to her finger. Then the back of her hand. She shook it. It floated and she pointed it into place. Grown ups were coming so she closed the drawer quickly and opened a square in the wall. We sat Indian-style in the square. We saw legs and heard lots of talking in the "peephole". Then they went out the front door. And we just did our giggling in silence. Like a silent movie.
Saturday, May 2, 2026
"I do not know if I shall wear purple."
Right away someone half-heartedly groaned and tsk'd, so someone else clucked. Some people got up to leave. Couldn't handle another argument session. "That is NOT what this is," a stand-up-straight young black woman assured. "People can disagree without it being an argument." The room fell silent externally.
Our agers were taking a beating. Terrible things were happening "in reality" while money and other resources were being applied to "a public face" in media necessary to survive a "mainstream" that could navigate enemies on all sides.
"To whom and when and where?" Puffy-faced girls had pre-agreed as mission. This was a roomful of stories and experience. All the people in the room were committed to truth. The weight of collision of "worlds" was something crushing if we could not rise above impact "somehow".
As word of "war" filtered into the general population's minds and life-processing, there were those who were using that as permission to war against neighbor. Causes were motivating people to extremes.
Someone had put RoundUp in pet's drinking water. Someone had put abortion drugs in peoples' food. Someone had used old war materials to sicken new people. Someone had raped someone. Someone had chained people into a cellar and lit a fire!
We were poisoning ourselves into toxic environment and writing that off as well, it is a war.
Friday, May 1, 2026
A lot of the fighting got
compressed into smaller debates in wider swaths of pro- and anti- Americanism.
Some of wanting a future took to studying the -ism part, as if, maybe that contained "the energy" and maybe it wasn't either love or hate that was the motivation.
I didn't know much.
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Humans as endangered species was
met with curious looks at each other. It was also a "rights" step-up from collateral damage.
She'd done it.
Already old.
Even the little kids who'd been used as bloodbags. People were propped up on folding wooden chairs, not awake, not asleep. "...
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A couple nights good sleep free from political noise and the sentiment is settle back down. Slogans come and go. So do transitions and ...
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It's not about gender for me. I care about men and women and children doing America as America. I think to be too specific-cause de...