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HACKED ... WHY?
I haven't posted anything here for several months because -- as incredible as it initially seemed (leading me to believe that it was I who was paranoid) my page has been repeatedly hacked and, since then, I get email notices about "your most recent post" .... when I have posted nothing at all. Yet. I log onto Posterous and discover that there have been serial posts made in my name that are, variously: ads touting the ability of the poster to "place" my page, advantageously; or, I see, much to my amazement, a post I did make a year or more ago but that I have since deleted because its timeliness is over and there would be no point in it being posted now (Gulf Oil spill,etc.) and, finally, I see postings in Mandarin characters that say ... whatever they say, but the point is that these are not my posts and these are not my words. WHICH IS DISTRESSING. To wit:
| 19 subscribers // 17 posts // 5,093 site views // 3 contributors | ||||
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| Hand Made 手工製造
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| Bayou Tapestries |
Yes. I can still go into the "manage" page and delete these postings before they are published. But that begs the disturbing question of why this is happening? As it begs the question of why Posterous seems to be hamstrung in terms of helping me eradicate this problem from their home plate end.
What is Posterous doing about this, you may ask? Basically, nothing. I had an exchange of emails with a very nice person in Customer Service who advised me to "change your Posterous password" ..... so I did that, with no positive result; in fact, it was after that that the Mandarin posts started; go figure. And, after that, I received an email which thanked me for signing up with Posterous as a "new account" which email encouraged me to "Email us your first post" .... etc.. After I protested that, there has been an ongoing, intermittent dialogue with the very nice woman who later apologized for "not appreciating what has really happened" who then advised me to "be safe: change all your passwords, everywhere you're registered."
Really? That covers a lot of accounts -- A LOT of accounts. So my question is this: instead, why can't Posterous look at my page, see what the problem is and then ban or delete or banish to Hell whomever has gained access to my files, from wherever, for whatever purpose????
Just registering what I believe to be a legitimate complaint about a fall-through-the-crack vulnerability of this otherwise truly wonderful site. Any other suggestions for handling this, from any one of you, would be greatly appreciated.
And just so you know -- I am missing all of you. For the give and take. My thanks to each of you for that.
So. Best regards to y'all from me, and from my battle-scarred friend, Queenie, whom I have learned to care for and respect for her ability to deal with what is, rather that what should be.
Bayou Tapestries
(all images © W.W. Staebler 2010)
The landscapes portrayed in French and Flemish tapestries, though exquisitely rendered, always struck me as idealized, fantasy images.
What do you think?
Queenie’s Rules
© W.W. Staebler 2010
Two months ago, after considerable vacillation, I made what was, for me, a difficult decision: to move from Charleston (civilization as I know it) to a remote cottage on a barrier island lagoon (that's Carolina speak for bayou.)
In a world off the beaten path, my new neighbors quickly introduced themselves. At sunrise: early morning walkabouts by indigenous small deer, mainly shy does and fawns. Throughout the day: the take-offs, landings and preenings of beautiful wading birds -- Ibis, Snowy Whites, White Morphs, Wood Storks, Great Blues and Coromant. In the indolent heat of the afternoon: yes, a few large, if harmless snakes have dropped by (literally) -- disconcerting, really, only when they show off, flirtatiously, by dangling from trees. All this activity underscored by the palpable vibrations of dragonflies and hummingbirds; the chirping, hopping and dust bathing of wrens, finches and titmice; the constant scurry of industrious creatures of enchantment – squirrels, tree frogs and geckos -- everywhere. None of the above representing any threat to pets or vice versa ….Well, ok, not quite true; there is the threat the cats represent to said small birds, tree frogs and geckos. But …. it’s a food chain, isn’t it?
But it is that -- the implacable food chain -- wherein lies the rub.
It's all good during the day. But there is the more worrisome matter of predatory wildlife at night -- at twilight, the cats simply must come inside. Thereby avoiding any possibility of lethal assault by a great horned owl or the occasional though increasingly rare bobcat. Not to mention avoiding the tangles that might ensue from taking part in the late night carousing of foxes and raccoons – creatures I truly love, having lived in harmony with families of them (and of weasels) in the past, but creatures, vis a vis the pets, whose idea of play -- given sharp teeth, serious claws and lack of vet clearances -- might, then, be problematic.
And so, in fact, the only truly worrisome encounters for the cats in this natural paradise are with …. alligators. Which, depending on age, gender and season, do represent what might be called, as an understatement, a serious health hazard. For it is impossible to forget that day -- in another small cottage beside another lagoon -- when my son came home from his summer job on a grounds maintenance crew, looking a bit wild-eyed. Explaining that early that morning, he had seen an alligator take down …. an adult deer. “It was awesome,” he said, obviously torn between revulsion and atavistic fascination. I must have looked stricken. Because he quickly added: “Of course I don’t mean awesome in a good way, Ma.”
So here I was, years later, lured by the combination of a lower cost of living and the bonus of back-to-nature joy …. thereby putting the burden of risk on Tess, Hermione and Harry. Cats who had not lived by that long ago lagoon; who, rather, had spent their entire lives in more sedate environs, free to be indoors or out, as they preferred, wherever. Cats who were definitely not well pleased, after the move, by a stay-in-while-I-look-see period of confinement. Particularly when, through the windows and doors, they could see, by day, the aforementioned huge birds and endless geckos and squirrels obviously demanding their attention. As they could feel, at night, the love/hate allure of the fox who wandered into view in the company of a raccoon, as if they were friends, with whom the cats might be friends or friendly foes. And the bobcat, who seemed to them to be amiable enough as, through the glass door, they had established eye contact and the bobcat, after offering a half-hearted growl -- as if for the sake of species one-upsmanship -- had ambled away.
The cats, then, had assessed their own risk and found it negligible. And so they were incensed; were they not mature, seasoned, multi-national cats who had lived in the city, in the suburbs, in the country and at the beach? Who, then, was I to challenge their judgment? I was just a humanoid who was -- dare they say it – a scaredty cat. And so they prowled the cottage, scratched at doors, batted my face as I attempted to sleep and otherwise made it known that the current terms of confinement WERE NOT ACCEPTABLE.
Who was in charge here? Of course you know the answer: like Prince Charles, my motto is “Ich Dein” except that, in my case, I mean it. Thus, because I had seen neither scaly hide nor twitching tail, nor yellow eyes protruding from the water in over a week’s time, I decided that alligators might abound in the area, but apparently not round my place.
So I let the cats out. Who were overjoyed. Climbing trees, hunting geckos to their hearts’ content, stalking the Ibis and Great Blues who looked at them with complete disdain, flapping away only if the cats got too close. Finally encountering a very small, in training alligator who was confused, not only by the number of them but also by their surprising response; instantly they aligned, in central and flanking positions, intent on tag teaming their prey.
Because it was a young alligator? Who was also distracted by a squirrel? No harm, no foul. But my weather eye was now open, an ear cocked, because so far this had been too good to be true and I knew it.
And so it was that one night -- at 4am -- I woke to ….what? Something that sounded remarkably like a lion’s roar. Or maybe more than one lion’s roar? …. Never mind. All three cats were inside. Tess, as Alpha Cat, as usual, at the foot of the bed; Harry, as usual -- for inexplicable reasons of his own – stretched out on his back, legs akimbo, in the bathtub; but Hermione, not on her favorite wicker chair but, in this instance, prowling, door to door, agitated.
Had I imagined those roars? I listened intently. At 4am it’s impossible to hear such gutteral sounds and imagine that they are the thrummings of, say, logging equipment -- chainsaws for example. No. These sounds were definitely animal, not vegetable or mineral. And they were not echoing from afar; they were right outside, on or near the lagoon or maybe coming from the adjacent bamboo thicket.
Without turning on any lights, I peered outside. Between me and the lagoon were two alligators, one of which was approximately seven feet long, and the other at least nine. Their serious size indicating that they were mature males. But were they roaring at each other? Or roaring together at something else? I was not about to go outside to find out; this was a problem I was not equipped to handle. I went back to bed, not to sleep but to read until dawn.
In the early morning they were still at it. So -- at 8am I called the wildlife line at the county office and firmly requested a visit from “alligator patrol.”
That afternoon – long after the two bickering alligators had splashed back into the lagoon and disappeared -- a two-man team of humans showed up. And they were in fine spirits – no bickering there -- both laughing.This response, I felt, was rather untoward, under the circumstances. Not only to my own pride, but also to the pride of my cats, or my pride of cats, imprisoned inside. These men obviously knew something I didn’t, so it was time for them to let me in on the joke which was not immediately apparent to me. For starters, did I look, to them, like the sort of person who would have in my possession and on my person a dart gun, a rifle, a cosh and a lariat, as each of them so obviously did?
One of the officers stopped chuckling long enough to extend his hand to shake mine; the other tipped his hat. The one who shook my hand introduced himself as “Officer Todd “ while, at his nod, his partner, “Officer Tim,” moseyed off into the bamboo thicket and back again.
Officer Todd looked at Officer Tim enquiringly. Officer Tim nodded, and then they both laughed again. The more relaxed they seemed, the more indignant I became. Finally the first officer spoke:
“So sorry, Ma’am; it’s just that as soon as we got the call to this address we knew what the problem would be…”
“The problem,” I said (I hoped with some dignity) “is that suddenly there are at least two big alligators coming round, and this is alarming. At least to me. ”
Both officers nodded, not laughing now, but still indicating by various facial twitches that there was a degree of underlying hilarity in the circumstance, which eluded me. At last Officer Todd leaned toward me, elbows out, thumbs hooked in his belt, and said: “Here’s the thing, Ma’am, and there’s no getting around it -- this lagoon belongs to a thirty year old female alligator named ‘Queenie.’ And Queenie has rules.” He turned to his partner. “Doesn’t she, Tim?”
Tim nodded his agreement and then held up his right hand for me to see … on which one of his five fingers was missing at the knuckle.
Jovial Officer Todd then explained: “See" ..... he allowed himself another chuckle ....." every time somebody new moves into your cottage, sooner or later we get the call to come “do something.” When Queenie was younger and smaller, we’d grab her and move her to another lagoon, not so close to where people live. But Queenie likes THIS lagoon. And so, sooner or later, she’d find her way back.
“Then, a few years ago, Queenie made what you might call a mistake; she took down someone’s Lab, from that cottage just over there.” He pointed and then said: “Thing is, that dog was not just someone’s pet, he was a field trial champion. And his owner was beside himself, bawling like a baby but mad as hell. He wanted us to find Queenie and shoot her; and, when we informed him we were not permitted to do that unless a human being was in immediate danger, he said he was going to shoot her himself. Which we were afraid he might actually do when, a few days later, he called to say he could see what looked to him like it might be – and, of course, it was …. the bloated body of his dog, across the lagoon, wedged into the root system underneath the bamboo thicket. Yep, that thicket right there at the edge of your clearing .…
Officer Tim interjected, helpfully: “You see, Ma’am, as you may or may not know, alligators drown their prey, and then they age them, for a few days, because they like their meat sun–ripened, sort of rotten by our standards, but warm.”
“Really?” I answered, feeling decidedly green.
Officer Todd took over the narrative again: "Tim and I talked about it, and we knew that a man like your neighbor wasn't going to be able to handle watching Queenie ripen and then eat his dog, so -- to avoid a shooting, and then a required arrest, which was sure to escalate the problem -- we decided to try to move her one more time.
"But Queenie wasn't having it. Even after we darted her, got her looped and were just starting to drag her to the truck, she started thrashing and snapping again, which took us by surprise and Tim didn't move quite fast enough, and lost his finger...."
Officer Tim stepped forward, eager to tell his part of the story: "Now, at that point, I was within my rights to shoot her. Or to ask Todd to shoot her, 'cause I was bleeding like a stuck pig, if you'll pardon the expression. But, to be honest, I was more interested in seeing if I could get my finger sewn back on, 'cause it was just lying there on the ground and if I could get to the hospital with it, there was a chance they could save it. But Queenie was roaring over it , protecting it .... So Todd darted her again, which gave her a double dose and she was out for the count. I grabbed my finger, Todd tied me a tourniquet and we just left her there, and hightailed it to the hospital. Unfortunately, there was too much damage to the finger, and it wouldn't take ....."
"I'm so sorry," I murmurred. "I'm surprised you still do this work..."
"Aw, heck, I love my job, Ma'am. And I sure can't blame Queenie. From her point of view, she was just doing what comes natural, and we were attacking her."
Officer Todd looked at his watch and decided it was time to wind up the conversation by offering me what he referred to as the "Newcomer's Need to Know" list; he said:
"OK. Now, sorry, Ma’am, but here's the deal:
1) We're not going to try to move Queenie, ever again.
2) You need to give that thicket a wide berth because that's Queenie’s nest, right there, between you and the cottage next door. Makes sense, that nest does – your cottage has been empty for long stretches of time and your next door neighbors are only here for a few weeks during the winter, and that's when Queenie’s hibernating, so from her point of view, this is an A-one nesting site -- it’s real quiet; she picked her a good spot, I’ll give her that.”
“She's a smart one,” Officer Tim agreed, adding:
3) "You should also know that one of Queenie’s rules is that, when she takes down something big – a deer, or a bobcat, or even a big heron – she won't share. Which drives the other alligators crazy – especially the males; it wounds their pride that she is sometimes a better hunter than they are. So they complain; usually in a group but at least in a pair --- that’s definitely what happened here last night as, uhmm, there's a new carcass in the root web …. I wouldn't advise you to look at it, Ma'am, as it's not too appetizing. Anyway, the males complain while Queenie tells ‘em in no uncertain terms to get their own goddamn dinner -- and then they have to bray for the sake of it before they slink off….."
“So" Officer Todd concluded: "Do you understand the big picture, Ma’am? Queenie's definitely in charge. Which means that everything’s in balance, from her point of view, and out of balance, from the point of view of you and your few neighbors, sort of simultaneously. But what is, is, if you know what I mean?”
I thought about it. Digested it, so to speak.
And then I said: “Yes, I get it. You’re not going to move her again. It’s her turf and she’s earned it, over time. She’s here for the long haul, and we – the people who come and go, and our pets, and the less industrious alligators – need to see that what is, is …..”
Officer Todd beamed his approval, feeling that he’d done a good day’s work in education. Officer Tim smiled, waving his missing digit hand as some sort of blessing or benediction.
Perhaps hearing familiar voices, Queenie rose from the lagoon until her eyes, like the sights of a periscope on a submarine, focused on us, intently, for a moment. And then she submerged, and her powerful wake ripples fanned out across the lagoon until they gradually stilled. Soon the turtles and the Mullet created new ripples. The dragonflies buzzed.
And the cats howled, behind locked doors.
Book It
Excerpts from JACKIE’S PORCH © W.W. Staebler 2010
BOOK IT – part one
Seven women -- drawn together, seven years ago, by their love of books -- observed, tonight, that the candles illuminating Jackie’s porch were beginning to gutter. That meant it was getting late, that it was time to go home. Still the friends sat on together, united by a lingering paralysis of pleasure. As the candles flickered, one of the overhead fans whirred, then tic’d, then whirred again -- whirr/tic, whirr/tic, on and on, enveloping them in the signature sound of southern summer -- the background music to any occasion on any well-used porch or piazza.
Suddenly Livy sat up, leaned forward and asked, abruptly: “Have y’all been listening to that fan? I hope so, because it’s telling us something important -- that tic might as well be a tick tock telling us time is passing us by. I’m sorry, but it’s not good that we sit here, week after week, spinning our wheels just like that fan.
“I’m asking you -- are we content not to go anywhere anymore”?
Given the surprising intensity of her tone, it was clear that Livy’s question was not rhetorical.
“I, for one, say no. I say we have to start traveling again, and that means that we need to make plans.”
Her friends roused themselves, each reacting according to her natural temperament: Jackie shifted only slightly in her chair and lifted only one eyebrow in enquiry; Charlotte reached for her cigarettes and lit one; Marshall murmured a soft protest, hating the smoke and reluctant to be recalled from whatever reverie she had been indulging; Ella frowned and tsk’d her disapproval of the change in mood while Kate sat up, smoothed her skirt and turned her composed face attentively in Livy’s direction. Susanna didn’t move at all, offering only a smile and wave of acknowledgment without opening her eyes. But Abigail, as if a switch had been thrown, stood up, picked up the tray of glasses and turned toward the kitchen door.
Livy’s voice was sharp in the darkness: “Abby, put that tray down, this minute. And sit down, goddammit. There’s more to life than good housekeeping and we need to talk about what that Is – however briefly -- right now. So, Marshall, adjust. And Susanna – open your eyes and pay attention.”
Abby obediently put the tray back on the table and sat down; Marshall quieted and Susanna opened her eyes.
Then Livy smiled at all of them. Tenderly. She said, and her husky voice was softer now: “The thing is, y’all, we are – none of us -- getting any younger …. I’m sorry, Marshall; I know that you, in particular, are in chronic denial on this subject. But it’s a fact.
“Tonight we celebrated your birthday. We had a good time. However. Did you ask yourself why we didn’t put the correct number of candles on your cake? But, instead, just used one for every decade of your life and added one for you to grow on?
“….I assumed,” Marshall said, agreeably, “that it was because sixty candles would have completely obliterated the fondant lilies on the top of my beautiful cake.”
“That is correct,” Livy agreed. “But have you asked yourself why that expensive cake you wanted was so important to you, this year? And why we bought it for you without a quibble?
“Don’t bother to answer, Darlin'. ‘Cause it’s a simple answer: you wanted it, and we bought it for you because we all know -- whether we talk about it or not -- that time is unreliable now. And that means we’ve got to stop wasting it.”
She gave each of them a searching look.
“Here’s what I was just thinking about while we each went into our late night coma phase …. I was in Barnes & Noble today, primarily to pick out a card for Marshall but, after I did that, I picked up a book titled '1000 Things to See Before You Die' ….
”Now, I almost didn’t buy it because the title seemed like such a downer; it reminded me too much of that crap movie that came out a year or so ago about two guys and their ‘bucket lists.’ But when I got home I looked at it and, as it turns out, that book doesn’t have a sappy tone at all. Instead, it’s fascinating, engrossing; it talks about the kinds of places all of us used to make it a point to travel to, to see, with our own eyes….”
She looked around the circle. Everyone was wide awake, watching her, listening carefully.
“The thing is,” she said, “in the last few years all of us have lost that sense of adventure, that drive to really live and explore, to learn new things rather than to just be content with what we’ve already done and already know."
Ella protested: “There have been good reasons for that, Livy : some of you have had medical issues, and some of us have less money than we once had….”
“Of course that's true, Ella. But some of you – Livy interrupted, looking around, accusingly-- “some of you have had no crises, yet you have lost your spark, your energy, your motivation, for no good reason that I can see, whatsoever.”
She paused, lost in internal thought for a moment, then nodded, apparently having made a decision.
“It’s late tonight, to talk about this in any detail. So here’s what I want every one of you to think about for next week. So that when we get together next Wednesday night we can talk turkey about where we’re going – together or separately – THIS year. Not next year or the year after.
“I want you to think about YOUR list -- your short list -- of places you’ve always wanted to go, wherever in the world that might be. When we were traveling on a regular basis, we used to talk about this all the time, and then do it. Then we started talking about it more abstractly – where would we go if money were no object …. but, of course, because money was an increasing issue for some, those conversations were just a face-saving way to justify sitting still, doing nothing, going nowhere.
“Well, we’re not sitting around, anymore. We’re going to figure out how to do a trip, this year, every one of us. ‘Cause I’m telling you right now: if any of y’all think you’re going to find me on deathbed watch, holding your hands while you moan and cry about missing your chance to live in Paris, or to go on a photo safari, or to take your grandchildren to watch whales – you are mistaken.
“You hear me?
“So. Next Wednesday night I want you to tell me the destination that is at the top of your list, and I want you to be able explain why that’s the number one place rather than somewhere else. I want to know who you want to go with you, and when you would like to go. I want you to do some preliminary research about costs – airfares and hotels. And on Wednesday we’re going to start a spread sheet, filling in the blanks over the next few weeks.
“And before we go home tonight …... about the money -- I don’t care if we have to pretend we’re teenagers again to raise money if it’s needed. By which I mean that I don’t care if we have to have a hundred yard sales, bake sales and carwashes -- we’re going to do whatever it takes to guarantee that all of us are going someplace, this year. If you have to sell your blood or your first born at the last minute, so be it.”
She turned to Jackie: “Jackster, I want you to call the Apple store tomorrow morning, and make an appointment to get your laptop fixed. Cause we’re going to have to use it Wednesday night and thereafter to fill in the blanks on Excel. And if you aren’t willing to spend the money on that repair, then, Darlin’, you probably don’t want to go to Paris as much as you keep saying you do. So get on it….."
Hearing a murmur in the far corner, Livy turned toward it: “Who is that whispering while I’m trying to talk sense into you people? Was that you, Marshall, or was it you, Abby? Abby? Oh, alright, Darlin’, I can see that the only trip you can focus on right now is the one to the kitchen. So have at it. And the rest of y’all snap to it and help her, so we can go home, and tomorrow we can start implementing the first steps in our plan.”
………………………………………………………………………………………………………
(To Be Continued)
The Marshall Plan
Aging gracefully in our youth-obsessed American culture is a brutal business -- especially for women.
Some women don't take it lying down. That's because they can't lie down -- they've had too many surgical procedures too close together to permit the luxury of a good night's sleep.
The Marshall Plan is fiction; obviously there is not a 12-step program for recovering addicts of youth obsession and/or plastic surgery .... although given more time, there may be one soon.
(Note: the photograph is of a friend of 58 whose sole concession to aging -- so far -- has been to "blonde" her graying hair. But she is talking seriously about starting the nip and tuck process. How can one possibly convince a woman who is used to being praised for her looks that she risks becoming a grotesque Barbie?)
Wedding Belle Blues
One of the great joys in life is storytelling -- whether as the narrator or as the listener.
Dollarweed Wars
© Wendy Staebler 2010
Dollarweed. That it was targeted for indiscriminant extinction in the US -- across the South and up the East coast in which regions it proliferated -- made no sense to Zoe at all.
Zoe loved dollarweed -- first, as a matter of aesthetics. Because it was, when looked at without negative cultural bias, really beautiful. A prolific runner that sprouted verdant, densely-spaced umbrella leaves that were miniaturized versions of those which cradled water lily blossoms. Why, then, when water lilies were so revered, were their tiny lookalikes so reviled?
She was also awed by the number of ways in which dollarweed exemplified evolutionary excellence: it required neither seeding and netting, nor cultivation in sod to take root; it was so adaptive that it could thrive in arid, sun-baked soil and even in sand, or in shaded, over-watered conditions; and it was so resilient that it had faced down and survived ruthless assault by its enemies that came in serial waves with remorseless intent to kill it. Yet, not one of the forces ranged against it had ultimately prevailed: not obsessed suburbanites angrily ripping out its root tendrils; not landscape gardeners methodically saturating it with pesticides; not acid rain and tainted ground waters that assaulted its root system – nor even the gods themselves who, in episodic temper trantrums, hurled flood and hurricane-driven surges of salt water across it which drowned or burned every other plant in sight. Dollarweed's response? Within weeks, according to its own imprinted instructions for recovery, tiny new shoots tipped with furled leaves quietly emerged again.
There was, then -- so far as she knew -- no other groundcover on the planet as flexible or as patient in its quiet determination to survive, long-term....with the possible exception of Kudzu. Dollarweed simply and quietly affirmed not only its right but its choice to be. It asked nothing in return but to be left alone to live, prosper and propagate.
Zoe wondered whether or not the parallels she saw so clearly between America's futile attacks on dollarweed and its attacks on Middle Eastern populations might be impressed on the current administration, the Department of the Interior, the EPA and the Pentagon. What person in what relevant department might be convinced that these were both ill-conceived, ill-advised, immoral no-win wars?
As Zoe considered these issues, dollarweed vines stretched and extended, celebrating their reclaimed autonomy ..…
keel-hauled redemption
Keel-hauled Redemption
A fog-bound sloop, trapped in dense soup, ran deep aground;
Broached mast abeam, she foundered fast, and then was down’d;
None but the gulls could hear her hull’s now muffled sound
As sharp-toothed shoals tore gruesome holes where she lay bound.
A reclaimed wreck, keelhauled ashore, her hulk was driven
To boatyard hell, where dire neglect would be a given
This graceful ghost, once so admired, now gored and shriven
Her paint apeel on blistered steel, her screw rust-riven.
A sailor’s heart was torn apart, by her condition;
He vowed to plate, and seal and paint her from perdition.
He would not rest, until her best, found new edition --
She was his dream, his Lorelei, his apparition.
A year went by, and every day, her lover labored;
His goal was clear, his eye was sharp, and he had majored
In boat design, marine repair and skills that favored
Resurrection of lost dreams that might be savored.
I saw them last, when from her mast, he draped a banner
Which unfurled, flapped, then caught the wind, and in the manner
Of yachts or yore, proclaimed her name, plus his, as planner
Of trips to come, to ports unknown, mapped by the scanner.
The lesson learned? Why do we wait, when life is quirky?
When choosing life, or chasing death, is all that’s murky?





