Monday, January 16, 2012

Guest Post from Lorane Leavy!

Blogaholic Designs”=I am proud to welcome Lorane Leavy as my guest post-er for the day! I know you will enjoy her post! Remember, comments are encouraged and welcomed. Lorane's blog is called "Last Seen Wearing Thin" and can be found at http://loraneleavy.blogspot.com/. Today's post is entitled "Resolutions, Revelations, Rallies", and was originally posted on her blog on December 31, 2011.
**************************************************************************
     Been hearing all manner of change - that will debut tomorrow. Hardly a joiner, I most definitely am a muller. My musings took me from "Remembering" yesterday to 'and now?' today. We have scanned, eye to mind, mind touching mind, with all the reverent anticipation of "Looking for Mr. Goodbar", through the frenzied yet purposeful jungle that we call mankind. If one subscribes to the concept - and I daresay I do - of the 'Whole' of Mankind, then one accepts the thesis (count me in) that mankind is indivisible and the 'mysteries' not yet solved speak not to Nature's disorder but to man's intellectual immaturity.
     Please forgive me the bromides indispensable to pragmatically applying this thesis to my advocacy of the rights to which, I believe, mankind is entitled. First, you gotta believe that injury to any part of mankind injures - in part - all of mankind.
     (John Donne drove this home with: "No man is an island. Each man's death diminishes me for I am involved in mankind. So, ask not for whom the bell tolls. It tolls for thee." The boy indeed had a knack.)

     Next, survival in today's world is made tolerable by the enjoyment of living. This enjoyment is markedly decreased by emotional and psychic disabilities. Dear Dorothy Parker had a bead on this one in "Coda".

(There's little in taking or giving,
There's little in water or wine;
This living, this living, this living
Was never a project of mine.
Oh hard is the struggle, and sparse is
The gain of the one at the top.
For art is a form of catharsis,
And love is a permanent flop.
And work is the province of cattle,
And rest's for a clam in a shell,
So I'm thinking of throwing the battle-
Would you kindly direct me to hell?")

     Now these imbalances - and their Siamese twin, physical limitation - rob mankind's life of its pleasures. The Bard provides but one example.
     ("Ah, sleep, that knits up the raveled sleeve of care.")
     And at the very heart of mankind's dilemma, bypassing the pulmonary artery - and, therefore, lungs - and hopping right over to the left ventricle (you don't tug on left ventricle's cape, if you get my drift) which launches gallons of weakness through mankind's system per diem, is the loss of what I call the 'sharing experience'. This because the ability to create and SHARE the creation in communal productivity is a source of great pride. Losing it leaves a large blank page in our book, "The Pleasure of Living". You're on your own. Living isn't pleasing. It's a crap shoot.
     (As Groucho Marx opined when his "You Bet Your Life" TV program was challenged on a different network with the very engaging/amusing Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, "Well folks, I guess now you can bet your life or better your life." Re: Marx, nobody could top him when it came to speedy, snappy repartee.)
     It is therefore up to us, dear readers, to ensure mankind's entitlements, overcome this inchoate mentality, facilitate and preserve mankind's pleasure in living. I know you've all been a-tasking to the nth 'multi' of late, so I have set about fixing the problem. Mankind's life, I am resolved, shall NOT be robbed of its pleasure! Debuting on the morrow, I will do the man proud.
     (I refer, of course, to Clint Eastwood/Ronald Reagan's "Go ahead. Make my day.")
     Tutorially speaking, I refer you first to the parentheticals above. Cherished pearls of wisdom - cast NOT before swine but enshrined, etched, inscribed (any guesses where I'm going with this?) ON PAPYRUS, PARCHMENT, PAPER, then having been marked with 'P', tossed in the oven for you and me. Obviously, in this scenario, 'oven' is used metaphorically for book/library/collections and the like. Yes, I READ them. They were gifts from my friends. Gifts I could take to bed, a grassy knoll, a sofa by the window, watching the snow fall -quietly, so as not to disturb my READING.
     I'd seen them neatly arranged in book cases with doors made of crafted leaded glass; on shelves over mantels, Moroccan-leather-bound, gilded-edged pages announcing "The Royals are 'IN'"; on the desks of my children in their rooms; the bedside tables of octogenarian nuns; in stores, on subways at launches, the proud author beaming as the lines formed, waiting a turn to have the newly-purchased treasure touched by, actually written in, by its creator. That, dear reader is the penultimate 'sharing experience', the ultimate delayed so as to be a very private affair to remember - perhaps a soupcon of crackling wood in the fireplace, a fragrant magnolia floating in a Waterford bowl on a nearby Deco ottoman, hints of Beethoven surround-sounding softly, almost a whisper of puppy's breathing, curling up from your feet.
     And, like the cradle, the curtain will fall. Bidden or not bidden, the parting will be sweet sorrow. Sweet because 1) you now become tachycardic, perhaps do some anticipatory panting even, at the very thought of a brand new 'sharing experience', IE, telling all comers about 'this book I just read," and 2) you know that I'll be sooo happy for you and the chosen-to-be-sharees, that I'll not use ONE MORE HACKNEYED cliché in this post!
     (To be sure, I really did see/admire one such book case when I first visited my husband's home. Their living room was forty feet long (the baby grand looked like a preemie) and at one end the wall WAS the book case. He morphed it into an apprentice-piece by lounging over the top shelf - home to every sports trophy he'd ever earned - until the hapless visitor HAD to say, "Gee, Phil, what're all those shiny statues in the book case?"
     And around our home, each dedicated community of books had different bookends. Some were bona fide antiquities; some were from my family or bought by me. But they have SUCH personality. Huge solid brass elephants (trunks UP, good luck, you know) support my cookbook collection (remember cooking, Lorene?); carved wood Civil War cannons embrace Phil's sister's collection. Her ashes were scattered and you'll be as well if you mess with her books; bulbous, contradictory, IRON wing-back chairs support the law books in my study (Contradictory in that you will never find a comfortable chair in a courtroom - save the 'bench' on which his honor perches); Stone, squares, sporting embedded brass ducks support my husband's medical tomes; our son's desk sported leather, 3-D slices of the globe (which always said 'basketballs' to me); one of our daughters used flat, brass squares imprinted with Rodin's "The Thinker" (I suspect, is was the male anatomical precision, not the artistic value that attracted her) and our other little lady had clowns - silent commentary on how she viewed the entire educational 'drill'.
     Whatever shall I do with them? What will they embrace, adorn? Whence functionality when 'The Trend' finally becomes 'The Only' means of accruing knowledge, favorite quotes, maps, recipes, fables, bed-time stories? When dawns the day during which what was once known as 'reading material' is generated by robotic, computerized chips or multi-channel analytic towers, information to be characterized, disseminated and osmotically absorbed by the 'end user', AKA humans.
     The very embodiment (rather, mechanization) of efficiency, its applications have no limits; its productivity matchless as well as eviscerated. As will be the humans forced to rely upon them. Is THAT the world we want? You-show-me-your-new-template-I'll-show-you-mine relationships? Nay, say I. Fie on curling up with metallic, meditationally-transmitted data. Dam Data. Any day. I love dairy products but never wished my parents had been Guernseys. I thrive on the written word, thought, emotion but would not have traded my folks for a pair of matching, fluorescent transducers.)
     Soooo. Here's the plan. Remember those queues, populated with humans, happily, willingly awaiting their turn for hours JUST to 'meet the press', as it were. Touch the hem. Perfume the washed feet of the creator. No holds barred when it comes to that 'shared experience'. That fulcrum upon which mankind balances its pleasure of living with its wholeness.
     Well, we're going to bring those lines back. Introduce the reader to his writer. Save the jobs of ALL of the workers who perform ALL of the tasks involved in producing ALL of the books produced by ALL of those publishers. Once again, the writer will stop by, say "Hi" and leave a smidgen of who-what-where-when-why, then SIGN the book, using the same nimble fingers that caressed the keyboard whilst forming the words that, when strung together, formed sentences that built paragraphs which marched step-lock-style across the paper pages, telling a story, drawing a picture, birthing another "shared experience'.
     I've 'named the baby'. Stop by the nursery. The nurse will wheel it over. Just ask for "Calling Card". Cute as it can be. And starting tomorrow, I shall embark on a journey of "Deliverance". I'll still be based on this page, of course. But here's hopin' NEXT year, if you buy a book for you or as a gift (same thing, really), when you open the cover you'll see an affixed note to you, from the writer. And if you do, tell your friends about it. And please tell me. Like I said, I'll be here; and like Mae West said, "Come up and see me sometime."

Later, Lorane. . . .

239 comments:

«Oldest   ‹Older   201 – 239 of 239
Anonymous said...

propecia drug propecia cost in canada - propecia side effects prostate cancer

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol online tramadol no prescription usa - buy tramadol online usa

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50 mg discount tramadol no prescription - tramadol gotas

Anonymous said...

buy retin-a buy retin a usa - retin a cream perth

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol cod overnight generic tramadol - best place buy tramadol

Anonymous said...

buy propecia online finasteride mg - buy propecia from boots

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol buy ultram with no prescription - cheap online tramadol no prescription

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol online cheap tramadol online no prescription overnight - order tramadol with money order

Anonymous said...

where can you buy retin-a buy retin-a eu - retin a micro manufacturer coupon

Anonymous said...

tramadol 100 tramadol hcl vs percocet - where should i buy tramadol from online

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol cod online buy tramadol online no prescription usa - tramadol for opiate addiction

Anonymous said...

buy finasteride propecia side effects list - propecia side effects statistics

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol lethal dosage tramadol - buy tramadol united states

Anonymous said...

order tramadol no prescription tramadol interactions - buy tramadol 24x7

Anonymous said...

generic strattera strattera images - buy generic strattera online

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol online generic tramadol images - tramadol dosage sr

Anonymous said...

finasteride 5mg propecia jose theodore - propecia for 6 years

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol cod tramadol questions - tramadol online for cheap

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol tramadol hcl for headache - tramadol 50mg for sale

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol without rx buy tramadol buy cod - break tramadol addiction

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol saturday delivery buyer tramadol online - buy tramadol online pharmacy

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50mg where to buy tramadol forum - tramadol addiction 2010

Anonymous said...

cheap tramadol tramadol 50 mg get you high - tramadol hcl 50 mg cost

Anonymous said...

propecia finasteride generic propecia vs propecia - how to buy propecia cheap

Anonymous said...

buy propecia propecia persistence program - buy propecia lloyds

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50mg tramadol generic - buy tramadol with mastercard

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50mg can you buy tramadol online no prescription - buy tramadol no prescription mastercard

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol online no prescription buy tramadol cod - tramadol time release

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol online buy tramadol usa pharmacy - can you buy tramadol in usa

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50 mg buy tramadol ireland - tramadol buy online no prescription mastercard

Anonymous said...

tramadol 50 mg buy tramadol rx online - tramadol for dogs dose rate

Anonymous said...

tramadol online order+tramadol+online+in+florida - tramadol 50mg usage

Anonymous said...

generic viagra viagra what dosage should i take - buy viagra online in usa

Anonymous said...

tramadol online generic tramadol usa - buy tramadol from trusted pharmacy

Anonymous said...

viagra online without prescription order viagra online us - generic viagra cheap

Anonymous said...

buy tramadol buy tramadol in usa - tramadol withdrawal and depression

Anonymous said...

tramadol online order tramadol pets - buy tramadol online overnight

Anonymous said...

cheap viagra pfizer viagra buy online no prescription - buy viagra online cheap with no prescription

Anonymous said...

generic viagra buy viagra online using paypal - cheap viagra china

«Oldest ‹Older   201 – 239 of 239   Newer› Newest»