Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Stay a while and listen

In ancient times, there was a man who wanted to make a fine cart. But, instead of learning how to do it form experts, he shut shimself up at home and worked at it. Despite the time and effort he spent on it, the cart was useless. This chinese idiom means to make a cart behind closed doors or to work behind closed doors; divorce oneself from the masses and from reality; act blindly. It is also used metahhorically to mean being too subjective and disregrading the rest of the world.

古时候,有个人想造一辆很精巧的车子。他不去学习别人制造车子的实际经验,却把自己关在家里冥思苦想。费了很多功夫,车子虽然造好了,但是推出去却不能使用。至于我们现在所说的“闭门造车”,则是形容不顾实际,也不吸取别人的经验,一味主观地杜撰瞎造的意思,好比关起门来在家里制造车子,而完全不考虑门外的实际情况和实际需要,结果就不合规格,不能适用。

闭门造车 (bi men zao che)
【翻译】To build a cart behind closed doors
【释义】关起门来造车子。比喻脱离实际,只凭主观办事。
【例句】正所谓天外有天,人外有人,与其自己闭门造车,不如让大家来帮我们一起想。
【近义词】拒谏饰非、独断专行
【反义词】集思广益、群策群力

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Rain on my window

Ever stare out the window
and watch the raindrops
drip down the pane

Drip.
Drip.
Drip.

Ever notice how one drop joins another
and another and forms a bigger drop

Follow the drop as it drips down the pane
As it trickles like a tear.
As a river bursts its banks

Some days are awash with emotion.
With sadness.
With grief

Thoughts drip drown
like rain
on
the pane.

Drip.
Drip.
Drip.

Make not your thoughts of sadness and loss
Make them of joy and being
Dream not of what should be
Dream of what
you
have
and
hold
in
your


Heart

(Image supplied by www.photoeveywhere.co.uk

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Why do people think....


Why do people think of death
When they are close to life


Of a loved one lost long ago
As if yesteryear were yesterday
And there was here
And they were here

Right now
Beside us
For just
one
moment

Those thoughts come flying in
Like sky-high seagulls screaming
And suddenly

A thought
A place
A time
Brings tears to eyes
And with a sigh
We remember them

Why do people think of death
When they are close to life

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Head East young man

Forget Latin or French, take Asian languages.

Learn Chinese and go to
Asia.
That’s the future for growth,” said Silas Chou, president and chief executive of Novel Enterprises, a Hong Kong-based textile and clothing maker.

Read more here...

Interesting thought though as the European/American economies contract.

What are your thoughts on the recession? Your job? Your future?

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

How Writing overcame grief


From the vale of sorrow come words of strength, words of hope, words of tomorrow.

Dad I miss you , Dad I miss you, I want to say those words “ I found myself saying these words shortly after my father’s death in September 2007. Sitting on the sidewalk, the sun spun long shadowed trees and I lost in the fog of grief. Consumed, drowning in waves of anguish as I struggled to cope.


I had arrived at a crossroads in my life, the one we fear the most, and I was totally dis-oriented. The passing of our parents. The buffer between myself and my own mortality had been swept away. The passing of my parents brought me closer to that void, that chasm, that emptiness, that darkness.

We seldom encounter death in our lifetime, a favourite aunt, a long lost friend, an accident victim We skirt around the theme. We try to handle it ‘antiseptically’. We try to avoid the term. Death. And grief follows as sure as day follows night.

The few times we suffer grief is insufficient in helping us become accustomed to it. We can’t practice grieving. We can’t take tests in grieving. We can’t prepare for grieving. It comes unannounced. Knocking. Ringing. Unwelcome.

Each of us deals with grieving in our own private way. We keep it a secret. We contain it. Tears and expressions of sorrow are merely ripples on a turbulent sea. Beneath it lies a profound sorrow. Waves of anguish wash over us and we yearn to be flung, found on some faraway, friendly shore.

Several days before my father died, I read him poetry on his death-bed. Keats, Tennyson, Yeats, Kipling. All the stuff he loved.

I read and I cried. I couldn’t get the words out. I stumbled and stopped and started again. My father was conscious and I leant across the bed to hear his last words to me. “Gunga Din”

And then I came across a piece of poetry I had never read before as it stared up at me from the pages of my sons’ GSCE poetry book. Cristina Rossetti’s ‘Remember Me’

Remember me when I am gone away,
Gone far away into the silent land;
When you can no more hold me by the hand,
Nor I half turn to go yet turning stay….

Better by far you should forget and smile
Than that you should remember and be sad.”

I thought how could someone write something so beautiful?

I turned to go, not wanting to stay, not wanting to go, and watched a group of bees busy about their nectar tea on that warm September eve. They all moved away save one who sought a different path.

And then words came. Not at once. Not flowing. Not constant. Not when. But stuttering and stumbling and staggering through this fog of grief. Stop. Start. Write. Wrong.

“…. bright Irish days of hay-time and harvest
….. days of woods and walks and wild, west winds…..”
... we were kings for many a day"

Through writing I had found an outlet for my grief. Through writing I have been able to recollect my childhood in South Derry. Through writing I have been able to visit the fields, the farms, the woods, the village and my boyhood haunts. Through my writing I have found peace.

I have met my father again in the hazy light of those sun-filled evenings in the hayfield. I have met him up the woods. I have held his hand. I hold him in my heart. At rest and at peace.

The little boy in the picture fifty years ago was unsure of his place in the world. He still is.

You the reader too may well find comfort.

If the following words cause you to stop and stare and see what you have, hold it more closer, more dearer, more precious, then that’s good. If they cause you to reflect, to question, to wonder where you are on your journey, then that’s good.

If they cause you to reminisce, to recollect someone or sometime in your life, to smile, to laugh, to shed a tear, then that’s good too.

If that happens pass these words on.

Any comments to mervyn_cooke@hotmail.com

Thursday, December 11, 2008

COMING SOON


.... we were kings for many a day

Thoughts from a potato field in rural Ireland

We ate that day with grubby hands

Silken- floured farls straight from the griddle

The earth our table, the sky our roof

The farmer’s wife rough-red and rude

Poured liquid from a billy can


Golden tea fired our bellies and strengthened our spines

As we stooped and skimmed and shook the soil from

Those golden nuggets

Raped in the virgin furrow


At close of day we bumped along

Tired on the tail end of the tractor trailer

Grasping the crumpled, brown, ten-shilling note

Raced home with field laid bare

Nay not a backward glance

For we were kings for many a day


Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Recollections




... we were boys in the spring of our lives


Thoughts from a hayfield in rural Ireland

We laid our backs against the stack

And raised our hats to wipe the sweat

and hayseeds from our brow

Caps cocked to shield the sun

thirsts slain in the billy-can


We squinted at swallows in their drunken dives

With no rhyme nor reason nor route to roost


Our limbs tired and toiled those fields

till sun set where stacks , some small

gave birth to bigger ones


The day the baler came with reverence we accepted

Its offspring into our blistered hands

And hauled the golden crop home,

With many a shout ‘Watch out’

as one bale tumbled from the trailer

into the pressure cooker barn


And we built castles that autumn eve'

Tight to the tin high heaven roof

Castles for cattle whose winter weary days

Were bunged up in dunged-up, silent byres


and they would chew the cud

And chew the cud and sip the summer dew

when winter froze the ground

While we were boys in the spring of our lives