All you mean to me

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Happy Mother’s Day.

I thought I’d give you some flowers.

Some from my garden.

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And some from the neighborhood.

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And some from a tree along the mountain ridge.

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And some from rocky ledges near the mountain peak.

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And some from the side of the road. (Don’t call them weeds! This is my favorite picture of the bunch!)

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And since it’s Mother’s Day, I figured you’d want a picture of me. So here I am, atop the local mountain, contemplating . . . just about everything.

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I thought I’d give you these flowers—and a song. Turn the volume down a bit and everything will be all right.

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ALL YOU MEAN TO ME

I live so far away

I’m not sure how it got this way

But today what I want to say

Is have a lovely Mother’s Day.

And I suppose

We can share the beauty of a rose.

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We can stand beside the sea.

Yes both you and me.

We can gaze upon the moon

And we can share this tune.

And you’ll know what I can be

And all you mean to me.

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I live so far away

I’m not sure how it got this way

But today what I want to say

Is have a lovely, lovely day.

And you’ll know what I can be

And all you mean to me.

And all you mean to me.

And all you mean to me.

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Wrench and my shaga

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I was out in back again, a few weeks ago, this time taking pictures of my shaga—when I heard yet again Wrench’s left shoe come slamming down atop the tiny aluminum rail fence (remember, that neither of us own) that separates his bit of rented outdoor space from mine. 

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“Hey, bud,” he said, “let me ask you this. Aren’t you worried just a little bit about a volcanic apocalypse? I mean, you seem to be one of those types that like to try to figure out  the big picture. You’re one of those, aren’t you?”

“I wouldn’t say so,” I said.

“I wouldn’t say so to which? I asked you two questions.”

“I don’t think I’m particularly interested in what you call the ‘big’ picture. I mean, I’m more interested in these shaga. They’re not so big—just lovely . . . don’t you think?”

It may sound as if I were not terrified by Wrench—but I was, absolutely. If I had said nothing, though, if I had just took his abuse 100 percent, well, I thought that it would have only encouraged him to come roaring over our tiny fence and flatten me. I wasn’t much of an out-on-the-town-late-into-the-night kind of guy, but a great deal of talk here and there had it that Wrench was—and that when he felt he was being ignored, when he couldn’t get total strangers to join him on the dance floor, he was sure to pick a fight—not too infrequently, the rumors had it, leading to a quick and overwhelming show of force—awe and thunder, you might say.

Me, I’m a wimp—as you know. No way I’d ever fight this guy. So I did what I could to comment, hoping not to let show what I was sure all the insects in my garden could easily tell—I was trembling in my plastic clogs. 

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“So what about the other question?” he went on. “About the volcanic apocalypse? The guts of this earth we’re tredding on are trembling all the time. Sometimes it gets to doing a pretty rowdy dance. Earthquakes. People buried in rubble. Don’t you think that’s kind of a warning? For the volcanic apocalypse? First you get a big spew. Then salt deposits bake.  Gunk rises up into the ozone layer and wipes it out. Then the lovely, glimmering, shining radiation comes pouring in. It’s a brutal, take-no-prisoners frontal assault. It fries us.”

“No,” I said, “I’m not worried about that.” I’d been down on my haunches trying to get a good picture from below two particular flowers, and now I’d gone all the way down onto the ground, laid out, and found just the angle I’d been searching for.

“Yes,” I said. “This is it.”

That, of course, had two meanings. One was that I knew it was going to get the shot I was after. The other was that I’d seemed to have found the perfect defense—surely, he wouldn’t find much fun in flattening me if I were already down on my back pretty much flattened already.

He huffed a bit—and turned to go inside.

150410_shaga2_450And then he surprised me. He stopped. Walked back over to the fence. This time he kept both of his feet planted in his own rented ground.

“The way those petals are frayed,” he said. “I mean, don’t you think they know? Know that the volcanic apocalypse is coming? Don’t you think that that’s why they’re born frayed? See, they were born to die.  Born to face the apocalypse.”

For a few seconds we looked each other in the eye. Not a show of manliness, but a deep searching. We each peered in, focusing, trying to fathom what made the other tick. Until that moment, I’d had a theory about Wrench. I had imagined that he was terribly near-sighted, but always did everything he could not to let it show. I’d thought the only reason he could not be subject to the bountiful beauty of my rented garden space was that he couldn’t see it. That it was all just a big blur to him. That it angered him that he couldn’t see it.

But he could. He could see those frayed petals. It was something I was going to have to think about.

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The best way to “pluck” new tea leaves

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First, go to Ryoshinji Zen Temple. With a good group of people. With good cooks among them. On a bright, bright sun shiny day.

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Then press your thumbnail into a new and soft green stem—and pluck!

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When you pluck, aim for three or so fresh green leaves.

And then pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck—hopefully until you’ve plucked enough tea so that everyone in the world can relax with at least a cup or two. Or until the field’s all plucked up. Or until you get tired. Or until whoever’s in charge tells you to stop.

And then look around . . . and pluck! Pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck, pluck.

Like this.

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

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Pluck!

And then pat yourself on the back. You did a good job. Think about all the things you plucked. Think about all the smiling faces on all those who drink what you plucked. . . . And realize that there are always going to be more leaves to pluck. This day or another.

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二人の歌 (A Song for the Two of Us)

150426_dandelion_catepillar2b_600You have a relationship with nature. And you have a relationship with many people. You may have a special relationship with a special person and one day the two of you might get married.

But you can divorce a person. You cannot divorce nature. So it’s good to get along with nature as best you can. You’ll be together to the end. With nature, there are no exceptions.

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It’s best to get along with the person you marry, too, and maybe you’ll be together for your entire lifetime . . . but truth compels me to tell you that marriages don’t always last a lifetime.

But, I repeat, your marriage with nature will. So take it seriously, by which I mean cherish it.

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Yeah, here, in the neighborhood, along this street . . .

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. . . now, around and about on your bicycle . . .

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. . . wherever, even among the weeds, the two of you, together always.

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Obey the “signs,” especially among the weeds: Go Slow! Look!

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Yeah, here in this ditch . . .

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. . . now, wherever, and with whomever—even with the weeds,

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. . . always together.

二人の歌      Futari no Uta      (A Song for the Two of Us)

(lyrics and love from our dear friend Tammy Tam)

 

キミは何を見ているの   kimi ha nani wo miteiru no       What are you looking at?

戻らない過去        modoranai kako       a past that’ll never come back

それとも未来         soretomo mirai       or the not-yet-now future?

キミは何を歌うの       kimi ha nani wo utau no       What are you singing of,

嘆き、悲しみ        nageki, kanashimi        sadness and lament

それとも喜び       soretomo yorokobi        or maybe a grateful joy?

知っているよね       shitteiru yo ne          You know this, right?

わかっているよね       wakatteiru yo ne       You understand this, right?

すべてはいまに在ること        subete ha ima ni aru koto        What is now is everything.

すべてはここにあること        subete ha koko ni aru koto        What is here is everything.

キミを信じることを       kimi wo shinjiru koto wo

思い出して       omoidashite       Remembering . . .  To believe in yourself

ありのままで  ari no mama de

大好きだから       daisuki dakara        Because . . . I love you just the way you are,

ずっと一緒にいるよ       zutto issho ni iru yo       We’ll be together always.

ずっと一緒にいるよ       zutto issho ni iru yo       We’ll be together always.

ずっと一緒にいるよ       zutto issho ni iru yo       We’ll be together always.

Clear trail markers for a climb up Mt. Hamaishi

 

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“Steve,” I’ve been told again recently, “You seem to go on some nice hikes, but it’s a bit difficult to follow your train of track of train sometimes, so if possible, could you be a bit more literal, you know, provide a bit better ‘physical description of the trail,’ especially as in regard to landmarks and trail markers, so that we can find our way to the top of the mountain, as you did, without losing our way.”

Okay, this time, I’ll do my best.

Get yourself to the parking lot of the Satta Pass. By 8:00 AM. There’s a restroom there. Use it. . . . Hey, I’m taking this seriously.

8:15 AM: Gaze out over the ocean. Get your bearings. Confirm things. You’re near the ocean. You’re in the parking lot at the Satta Pass. Now turn around. Go forward. Go up.

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8:24: When you get to the biwa trees (you’ll imagine yourself reaching out and touching their soft grey-green velvety leaves), biwa trees tucked just in front of a cherry tree with deep pink blossoms and new leaves, you’ll look out and see, again, the glimmering sea. There will be a boat. If you listen closely, you might hear the two guys on the boat saying, “Ii ne, kyou” (ROUGH TRANSLATION: “Pretty good day, today.”  Yes, you are right where you’re supposed to be.

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8:29 AM: You’ll come to this shaga, a Japanese iris. There’s a wooden structure nearby that creates a bit of dark shade, and accents the sunlight that slams into this guy. You cannot miss this bit of bright, shiny color.

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8:32 AM: You’ll come to these wild green bell-bottomed dolls, dandelions, heads and scruffy hair all yellow. Notice how they rise up in a row along with the trail. They are asking you to rise up, too. I hope, given the service they provide you, you won’t think them mere weeds—but regardless, don’t call them weeds if you pass all this info on to others who are planning climbs. If you instruct others to go past the green bell-bottomed weeds with the scruffy yellow hair, they will definitely get lost.

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8:35 AM: Here you’ll find what I’ve heard a variety of people call a variety of things: the cobra lily, the owl, the black cat flower, the panther flower,  the masked avenger, the black menace, Jack-in-the-Pulpit (or, for one rather literary friend, WhatChillingsworth-would-have-looked-like-in-the-pulpit-had-he-shoved-Dimmesdale-out-of-it). Some people seem to mistake it for the infamous mamushiso, that is, the “pit viper grass,” but trust me, you have no need to worry to fear anything as terrifying as its striking and sinking its fangs into your soft-skinned hand.

By the way, have you spotted it yet, there, beneath some of that frondy-like green?

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Here the cute little fellow is. Not at all like Chillingsworth, I say, when you really look close. He is properly called (or at least those guys in the botany division of Persimmon Dreams tell me he is called) Urashimaso or “The grass that looks like Mr. Taro Urashima fishing near the sea” (notice the fishing pole he’s holding). Which will certainly make those of you versed in Japanese literature wonder if he doesn’t possess a certain danger , though more subtle than that of the pit viper, all his own. For those of you on the out, a common version of Taro Urashima’s tale goes something like this: He is fishing by the sea one day when he saves a turtle from some young boys’ cruelty. The turtle rewards him with a trip to a magical kingdom at the bottom of the sea. After a while, he begins to long for home, but when he gets back, everything he’s ever known has passed away. Time passed for them, but not for him, not while he remained at the bottom of the sea.

For the moment, let’s leave our understanding of this—I admit—intense little black and white philosopher like this: he is telling us that we are on the trail–and that we’ll be rewarded for our good impulses. But there is danger. For better or worse things may look a bit different when we come back down from the rarefied air.

But for what it’s worth, I’ve never seen anyone come across this fellow—and turn back. They’ve all just stopped, studied him a bit, taken a few pictures, wondered if he’s poisonous when ingested (he is), and then just concluded, “Yes, this is the right way.”

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8:36 AM: It’s hard for me to imagine but even were you to miss the Urashimaso, you’d not likely wander off the trail in the minute it takes to get to this bright dapper fellow hovering above the grass. You really can’t miss him.

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8:46 AM: This new bit of toupee green you’ll find upon a branchless, skinny trunk some eight or nine feet in height. It’s kind of like the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock, my literary friend tells me. As Gatsby did, you’ll know it is beckoning to you.

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8:48 AM: This young lass is not exactly a trail marker, but I thought she was pretty so I put her in. Look for her. If you do happen to find yourself gazing at her, give her my best.

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8:49 AM: There’s lots of sawed-off cedar trunks like this, and many of them are covered with ivy like this, but this is the only one leaning at this particular angle and possessing this particular girth. It is, more or less, a cannon . . . and it is there to shoot you up the mountain . . . or at least to let you know the best projectory for letting you shoot yourself up. You’re absolutely in the right position.

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8:51 AM: Oh my!

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8:49 AM: The ferns. You may have some difficulty reading them at first. That’s why I’m here.

Yes, this is a young, unfurling fern, but at the same time, it’s much, much more than that. Actually, it’s a key. Or more precisely, it’s the key. The key to everything. If you let your hand hover over it for two or three seconds, all the time staring into its heart, then give your hand, still above it, a little twist, you’ll open the door.  Go ahead. Open it. Walk through.150418_strawberry2_600

9:02 AM: Now, honestly speaking, for a bit of time, it will get a bit complicated. You’ll be in the strawberries, and you might, momentarily, feel as if you’ve been thrust into the pages of a Russian novel—you know, one you read just hoping to be able to keep the names of the characters straight.

First you’ll see the strawberry flower above. You’ll know it by the young, tender, red-tipped leaves just behind it, off a smidgen to the left. Yes, you may see some flowers with some sets of new leaves behind and wonder which actually are the trail marker/landmark. Just keep the following details straight and you’ll be fine. The flower above, the true landmark, will be about eighteen inches  to the left of . . .

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the flower with a bee sinking down, front and center, into the ringed cushion of pollen-bearing stamens, sucking at the source for her life and the life of all her people . . . a flower which will be about 30 inches in front of . . .

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. . . the leaf beneath which a sister has tucked in all but her ample rear end . . . which in turn will be about 60 inches to the left of . . .

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the gal at work in the flower tilted at forty-five degrees.

But you don’t need to let these difficult details overwhelm you. Just remember this.

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As long as you are seeing strawberry flowers, you are still somewhere on the mountain. You are in a good place and are going to be fine.

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9:09 AM: Next, the leopard stick. This, too, hard to miss.

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9:12 AM: And then more keys—only these are a bit different from the single one you saw before. These are actually the “keys” to understanding the mountain’s linguistic abilities. Here, I admit that I’m relying on the expertise of the only lingua-botanical specialist on our Persimmon Dreams staff, and he’s only been with us a short time, but he did write his PhD dissertation on how to read the curves and lengths of these “letters,” as well as on how to ascertain the significance of the angles the various shoots form, and he tells me with great confidence that this is the classic way in which the mountain writes, “WELCOME.” I want to trust him, and hope you will, too—although after he’s had a couple of beers, he often tells of a guy he went to graduate school with (a guy currently unemployed) who read this same particular grouping of letters like this: “HE WHO ISN’T BUSY BEING BORN IS BUSY DYING.” I just add that to fill out this paragraph—and to remind you that it’s hard to interpret any piece of writing definitively.

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9:27 AM: You come to these four white violets. You cannot mistake them. They protrude from an elaborate lavender candelabra (a grouping of stems and “sepals”—a word you may have learned in school). You’ll see an M-shaped piece of straw right in front. Now tell me, really, is there any doubt but that you’re on the right track?

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9:37 AM: Here things get interesting. Stand over and peer down into this fern. Soon you’ll experience a spinning sensation. Some people find it helps to squint a bit. Before you know it, you’ll feel you are beginning to hover. You’ll  begin to feel you no longer need trail markers. For the rest of the way, when you do see markers, you’ll shout, perhaps quietly, but for sure with glee, “But of course!”

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9:39 AM: Then you’ll reach one of the best parts of what is fast becoming a magical mystery tour. Here we have the mystery keys themselves. At first, you’ll think, Steve, you’ve been doing pretty good so far, but this time you didn’t get your camera quite in focus—-but no, no, no, no, no, that is not the case. When you yourself are actually standing in front of them, you’ll see and understand the truth. They don’t come into complete focus. They won’t come into focus, no matter how hard you try to see them clearly. It’s their magical-mystery nature. You stare in, and you think you see the beginnings of all life, you can almost hear a birth cry, you think, but the image never comes quite perfectly into focus, and you cannot stop looking for the clarity. Eventually, someone in your party will call back to you, to tell you to gitty-up, but it won’t be easy to pull yourself away.

But you will.

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9:51 AM: And you’ll be glad you did when you come to the spring-green-baby-fern keys. These are “keys” of the fourth and final type—more or less, piano keys in key. This will be one of the most fantastic things you ever experience in your life. Take your groups’ metal hiking poles (you’ll need six) and tap them gently upon the heads of these quarter notes. Don’t be too rough. Think of the next hiking group to come along. If you do it just right, if you hit the notes just right, you’ll hear an amazing G chord. You’ll hear the sound travel up the mountain. You’ll hear it reach the summit and then fade away gently into the atmosphere. I may be betraying my humble musical origins, but to me it always sounds like a hundred little elves with their hundred little ukuleles have, at regular intervals along the remaining trail, struck a G chord all together.

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10:18 AM: I have not steered you wrong, believe me. You are without question on the right track.

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10:48 AM: An azaela flower will thrust it’s face into yours. With a curved stamen like a curved index finger, it will encourage you on. It will whisper to you: “You’re almost there.”

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Look closely enough and you’ll see that many of them are encouraging you on.

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10:52 AM: And what do you know, you’ve made it to the top, safe and sound! Maybe you got a bit winded along the way, but your buddies waited for you, didn’t they!

You look around. On a clear day, you’d be staring Mt. Fuji in the face. But of course, what you see at the top cannot be as predictable as what you’ve seen along the way. That’s the nature of a mountain, and you’ll need to learn to accept it.

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But as long as you’re not one of those who tend to think that a lowering sky is a sky lowering down on you, you’ll take a good, long look at the bay—and judge it a fine view, indeed. You might even mumble, “Pretty good day, today.” And if you’ve come with some good people . . .

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. . . more magic will be waiting.

Go ahead! Reward yourself. Stand in front of a cherry tree. Sip from your antique bone china cup of yuzu tea. Chew on a sweet potato.

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Rainbows are you

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Like everybody else, I’ve been going ga-ga over the cherry blossoms. But the spring didn’t begin and will not end with them. The plums always come before—and in May, yes, yes, the yashio will be here.

Well, will be where you can find them if you want to.

And so many others.

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About a month ago, long before the Yoshino buds appeared, I was having a smiley-face, “just look at that“—meaning a sky full of cherry blossoms—sort of moment. I turned to Tammy Tam and said let’s write a song.

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She said sure.

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About what? I asked.

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She didn’t hesitate. About rainbows, she said.

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And that’s why rainbows and cherry blossoms seem quite a bit alike to me right now . . .

150330_sakurai2_600. . .  though rainbows are a bit harder to predict!

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Rainbows Are You

Doesn’t matter if the clouds are gray / If blue skies stretch for miles

Doesn’t matter what the day is today / I just want to see your smile

La la la la la la la / I just want to see your smile

Smile like a star

Star like a dream – amazing me.

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Doesn’t matter if I’m big in the game / Doesn’t matter if I  win the top prize

Doesn’t matter if they know my name  / I just want to look in your eyes

La la la la la la la / I just want to look in your eyes

Eyes like the dawn

Dawn brings the day – out for me.

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Rainbows call you, rainbows feel you / Rainbows love you, rainbows are you.

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Doesn’t matter that I’m getting old / Doesn’t matter that I often feel fear

Doesn’t matter that my feet are cold / I just want to have you here

La la la la la la la / I just want to have you here

Here like the air

Air like a hope – lifting me.

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Rainbows call you, rainbows feel you / Rainbows love you, rainbows are you.

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A wild strawberry flower–and my neighbor Wrench

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When I popped outside one morning a few days ago, I saw that a single white flower had popped out on the west edge of my teeny weeny backyard space. It took me a second to realize that it was a wild strawberry blossom. For just a moment, I’d forgotten that I’d stuck a couple of plants into the ground about seven or eight months ago. I walked over, bent down, and saw that there were thirty or forty buds. I went in for my camera. Then I was back out and down on the ground trying to get the best angle. That’s when Wrench stuck his upper body out his sliding glass door to hang out some laundry. He’s the guy that lives next door. I already knew all to well that my smiling at flowers disgusts him.

“Oh, Jesus,” he said. “What now? You find some kind of Buddha down there?”

“It’s a wild strawberry flower,” I said. “Right now, it’s just the one. But there’s thirty or forty buds.”

“Are there going to be berries?”

“Yeah, I think so.”

“Geez, I’m sure that’ll get the birds swooping in. You better hope they don’t shit on any of my clothes.”

I didn’t respond.

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It was pretty hard to imagine that any birds that did eye any berries might fly up onto his laundry pole. It was hanging down just a mere two or three inches from the bottom of the eave. Even a tiny sparrow would have had a heck of a time negotiating a perch.

Well, the next thing I knew Wrench had rammed his foot down (in his outdoor “work slippers) on the two-foot-high aluminum fence that separates his little plot from mine—a fence belonging to neither of us. I decided just to pretend that I thought he’d put it there in friendship, like reaching across to shake my hand.

I said, “You think it’s pretty much the same temperature here as it is up on Yatsuyama? I mean, if it’s more or less the same, there must be a thousand of these cute little guys up there right now.”

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“You make me sick,” he said.

“I know,” I replied.

“Listen,” he said. “I’m going to make your life a whole lot easier for you to understand. That flower’s nothing. You are nothing. This bright bit of universe that we live in is less than 0.5 percent of all that’s out there. 99.5% of everything is just darkness–dark matter and dark energy.

I’m not so good at math, but sometimes I remember something from high school.

“You mean the dark stuff is finite?”

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“It’s 99.5%!”

“But if it’s 99.5 percent, it must be finite. If it went on and on and on, it’d have to ninety-nine point nine nine nine nine nine nine forever and ever. . . . Unless the 0.5% part, too, kept going on and on and on at the same rate.”

“Always the wise ass, huh? Either way, you . . . you and that stupid flower . . .  are nothing!”

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(picture of “nothing” (“nothing” seems prepared to fly to the edge of the universe))

That’s exactly what I want to ask you about—about nothing. I mean, if all that dark, that dark energy and dark matter, stops at 99.5%, then, well, it stops. Then what would there be? Beyond the dark, I mean. Would there be something or nothing? Is it kind of like they used to think about the Earth–you know, that it was flat, and if you sailed far enough, you’d eventually fall off?”

“Asshole!”

He gave the fence a kick as he turned away—then went inside.

I went in, too. I stuck my notebook, my camera, and a bottle of water into my shoulder pouch and went out and got on my bicycle.

Wrench stuck his head out a front window. Amazing, that guy.

“Enjoy your flowers,” he said. Tone of voice is everything.

“I will,” I said.

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Paradise west

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I was fortunate to spend a couple of laid-back days with my family in Watkinsville, Georgia.

In the US of A.

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It was rainy or overcast most of the time . . .

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but spring was on the way just the same.

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You could hear it early in the morning with the birds talking up a storm, and . . .

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. . . see it, too. Color was popping out everywhere.

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Once someone saw some of the pictures I’d taken of my own neighborhood—here on the east shore of the Pacific Pond—and told me I was lucky to live in paradise. What I’ve often wondered since then is . . .

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. . . who doesn’t?

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Eyes like the dawn

Dawn brings the day—out for me.

(unknown Shizuoka folk duo)

Stay on the trail

150308_replica_cabin_600 Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.

Ralph Waldo Emerson.

I went to Concord, Massachusetts on March 8th.

I had studied up a bit online, discovered the most direct and discernible route out of town to Walden Pond to be Walden Street ( a mile or so straight shot out from town along a paved road) but then had also discovered that not too long ago, the alleged path that Emerson and Thoreau frequently took—a more winding, not-always-so-discernible-path through the woods—had been marked and was also walkable.

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At first I thought that, yeah, that true still-in-the-woods walk, the one those two guys blazed all those years ago, the one they really walked, sounded most likely to provide the most legitimate “transcendental” experience . . . but then I realized the irony that walking in their footsteps would be.

If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.
Henry David Thoreau
When I got off the train in Concord I had no street map, just a vague image of the town’s layout and the names of three or four main streets in my head, and at first I was a bit discombobulated . . . and finally had to ask someone which street led directly into town. After that, the first major turnoff I came to was Walden Street, so I just made a spur of the moment decision to take the clear, straight-shot out, to try to get a better feel for the lay of the land as I went along, and then to try to return to Emerson’s Mill Brook back yard through the woods via the (I was soon to learn, fairly-well marked) “Emerson-Thoreau Amble.”  And that’s what I did.

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“Stay on Trails.”

That’s what all the signs along the path circling Walden Pond say.

That, too, pretty ironic.

Maybe.

There were also signs warning of deer ticks. I wasn’t completely ignorant when it came to deer ticks, but at the moment wasn’t all that clear on how active they might be on a day on which the temperatures snuck up just slightly above freezing. Later when I checked, I discovered that the cold doesn’t usually bother ticks, but that the snow and ice do, as they are creatures that like to crawl UP UP UP from the ground.

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So those “Stay on Trails” signs, yes, were a bit ironic, and yes, they were mainly intended to keep hikers from contributing to the erosion of the pond bank (that is, creating an unwanted “trail”), but not having a complete and full understanding of how ticks operated, I thought, in this case, it was probably not a good idea to go bashing through unmarked trails, boots sinking deep down into the snow and ice.

 What Emerson says himself, too, is a bit ironic, I think. Follow your own path. Leave a trail. A trail, I assume, that someone else would follow—assumedly so that someone else wouldn’t need to.

Am I missing something?

Recently, I read Into the Wild, a non-fiction account of a young Emory University graduate who decides to take the ultimate challenge—to survive in the frigid Alaska wilderness. In that book, the author calls Thoreau “prissy and staid.”

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Maybe the author was thinking how the Fitchburg railway ran along one side of Walden Pond, how Thoreau could, if he didn’t feel like working up his on fire to cook on, just walk along those tracks and be back at his mother’s house in half an hour, where he’d most likely have a hot meal ready for him.

Me, I don’t call that prissy and staid at all. I mean, the man tended his own bean field. Lots of times he caught his own fish. He read. He wrote. He built a cabin he could live in—for twenty-eight dollars and twelve and a half cents. And at least, when he did take advantage of his nearby family, he walked thirty minutes for his dinner. How many people do you know who’d walk that far for a hot meal—and that being their easiest way to get a meal?

Me, I call what Thoreau did out there at the edge of Walden Pond a reasonable experience living in and exploring and contemplating nature. If you’ve read Into the Wild or seen the movie, you know that the Emory graduate dies. He starves to death in an abandoned bus in the Alaska wilderness. I don’t mean to criticize him. I merely mean to say that if Thoreau was prissy and staid, I don’t think those are very bad things to be at all.

Nature never wears a mean appearance.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

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But I get it. When you get to Walden Pond you can take the trail you like to get around it. Or you can just walk across it. Walk across it whichever way suits you. Or you can ski across.

But if you’re not sure how thick the ice is, then you might want to follow in someone else’s footsteps–or someone else’s ski tracks. It’s not easy, and not necessarily necessary—or wise—to walk in fresh snow two feet deep, when the beaten path will lead you to the same place.

So make your own path when you can. Dance to your own drummer when it seems right. And when necessary, walk back to your mother’s for dinner. Don’t worry that anyone calls you prissy and staid. You’ll be doing just fine.

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The site of Thoreau’s cabin sits above a cove.  A nice level bit of ground. Good view of the pond. Not far off from a good fishing spot. If you find a better place than Thoreau did to build your cabin build it there. If you think he found the best spot, build where he did.

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Seems I remember in Walden, Thoreau saying that he cleared hickory and white pine to make a spot for his cabin, but as I was walking back to town through Walden Wood, along the “Emerson-Thoreau Amble” all I saw was black oak, silver birch, and pitch pine.

Things change.

But it was lovely.

A dog out for a walk came out of nowhere and almost ate me. 

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Just  as I was coming out from the woods, not far from Emerson’s house, it began to snow. It snowed hard, but only for about five minutes. It was a quiet, serene snowfall. A special gift, I took it as.

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Check out the look in that purple finch’s eye. He knew the snowfall was sublime.

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At Emerson’s house, the day went from gray to blue in about ninety seconds. Just coincidence, you think?

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Some of you know, I’m a sucker for blue skies and snow. For me, anyway, it was the perfect day to walk the streets of Concord.

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And it was the perfect day to walk on to the Sleepy Hollow Cemetery. To pay respects to Emerson, the rock, the giant sequoia. 

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But maybe I was more touched by Henry’s tombstone. It was tiny. Like a child’s.

Is this the thought of a child?

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Pleasant Street

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You can walk out of your B & B at 24 Irving Street and into the minus 5 degrees Celsius morning and (having been born deep in the American South and having spent the last fifteen years in one of the most temperate locations in Japan) think that it’s bitterly cold . . . or you can walk out of that B & B and think that it doesn’t really feel that cold at all—you can just think that the sky is about as lovely a blue as you could ask for, the air is crisp and invigorating—and the day will surely prove to be one of the most pleasant ever.150304_Harvard_Hollis_600

You can stand in front of this dormitory and think that it’s irrelevant to the here and now that a young man did some thinking here a long, long time ago,and that that thinking eventually led him to write (still a long, long time ago), simply, “Simplify!” . . . or you can stand there thinking that it really wasn’t all that long ago that that single word—Simplify!—was jumping out from his pencil (and maybe he made the pencil himself!)—and that it might just have the greatest of relevance.

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You can choose to think that sneaking up on this dude and giving his foot a good rub is likely to bring you spectacular luck—or you can just as easily choose to think that anyone who  entertained such a thought for even a fraction of a second will have proved himself the possessor of a huge duffle bag’s worth of loose marbles.

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You can stand in front of this library and think . . . well, let’s say, you’ve been assigned to decipher the twisting, pirouetting, first-madly-roller–coastering-then-flatlining-for-four-or-five-letters handwritten correspondence (oh, those t’s being crossed four or five letters down the word! oh, those frilly capital T’s and F’s and S’s and G’s ALL looking the same! oh, those words with all those u’s all in a row, no, no, those are m’s . . . or maybe l’s . . . or r’s or WHO KNOWS!!!) of the almost forgotten 19th-century novelist John Townsend Trowbridge, an act that would require four days of intense, eye-wearing concentration, at an average of eight hours a day (no lunch break) . . . well, you can stand in front of this library and think that sifting through those letters is going to be one royal pain in the ass — or that it’s going to be one of the most intriguing adventures you’ll ever embark on — one of most pleasant adventures you’ll ever embark on.

If you decide to check out who this Trowbridge guy is,  you’ll probably google him, randomly hit on his 1854 Martin Merrivale, His X Mark, and then travel to a distant libary to find it (doubt your local one does). Then you’ll randomly open the book open to, probably, wait a minute . . . here, I’ve got it . . . page 460, where you’ll sneak up on one noble young man confiding to another something like . . .

“When I arrive at the perception of truth, with the joy it brings comes the desire to communicate it to others. I could not write books from ambition only; first and foremost would be the impulse to pour out generous waters for this thirsty age; to inspire the hearts of men with some little nobility of nature, with love and faith.”

. . . you might think that bit of dialogue the sappiest thing you’ve ever heard—or an important sentiment—and one that could have been written much worse than it is.

When you read letter after letter sent to Trowbridge expressing such refined and gracious (19th-century-ish???) gratitude, letter after letter gushing on and on about what a pleasant time was had at 152 Pleasant Street (the address Trowbridge lived at for a long, long time . . . no, no, I’m not making this up), you may roll your eyes—or you may just smile and wish you’d been there—yeah, just smile and wonder if there might not be a Pleasant Street in your town, or maybe your state or province, or your country (of course, pleasant in the local language will do) that you can move to.

Well, one thing’s for sure, you can only go one way on Pleasant Street—if you can ever get yourself there. 

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