Stone #78
%996 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZarosOur tongues fork into each other. The undersides of clouds splatter slithers of rain meandering down the panes.
Brenda ClewsMy back-up hard drive, 1Terabyte LaCie fried
%956 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZIn a state of shock. My LaCie 1T external hard drive is dead, fried, the data irretrievable (in my budget range), and it was my back-up. I've lost all of my original files for video poems, Final Cut files, Garageband files, Photoshop files, music, I am too numb to remember everything that was on that dear drive.
My cheap drives are all doing fine. Maybe a message in that?
I have it in to a repair shop. The drive, even in another casing, attached to another computer, is not turning. Dead. Like, in the spirit world. Likely the data is still on it, but unaccessible. It would cost a lot to retrieve it (and that shop doesn't offer that service).
And I nearly did Backblaze a few months ago, or CrashPlan, I can't remember, but I am an anti-credit card type, and they don't accept any options to pay cash.
C'est la vie. I've lost so much stuff over the years as computers have died or I've moved and lost all my emails with a service provider, so....
On with the new.
Brenda ClewsThe Science Behind Dreaming: Scientific American
%944 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %Zdreams"...participants who exhibited more low frequency theta waves in the frontal lobes were also more likely to remember their dreams... This finding is interesting because the increased frontal theta activity the researchers observed looks just like the successful encoding and retrieval of autobiographical memories seen while we are awake. That is, it is the same electrical oscillations in the frontal cortex that make the recollection of episodic memories (e.g., things that happened to you) possible. Thus, these findings suggest that the neurophysiological mechanisms that we employ while dreaming (and recalling dreams) are the same as when we construct and retrieve memories while we are awake."
"...dreams help regulate traffic on that fragile bridge which connects our experiences with our emotions and memories."
The Science Behind Dreaming: Scientific American Brenda ClewsStone #77
%020 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %Zarosout of the continual hum, I grasp my fragmentary words, speaking, momentarily, before they slide into the murmur that is everywhere
Brenda ClewsStone #76
%036 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZarosSlow, meticulous cutting of patterns, sewing. Each second is a stitch; each hour a finished seam. Our lives are the garments we wear.
Brenda ClewsStone: #75
%984 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZarosIn the Annex's wealthiest areas, the streets are empty. No cars, no porch-sitters, no children, no-one out watering their front gardens. My dog and I walk. Unencumbered silence.
Brenda ClewsDream: July 25, 2011
%965 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZdreamsAn empty apartment pool, high up, maybe the 20th or 22nd floor. The building is thin, constructed of whitened concrete. Light from the slits of windows shines on the water. My ex makes me swim naked. He is in a bathing suit. He is in his late 40s; I am more like my 20s. It's okay because we are alone. I swim in the blue chlorinated water around the bend. The pool is shaped like a half moon.
Then we walk down the street, where, again, I am naked and he is dressed. I don't like this, am embarrassed.
I rush back to the building, trying to hide my body. We are in the elevator rising. On the screen in the elevator I try to edit the YouTube video. I want to put on the clothes I am carrying. Only I can't. I have to go to the YouTube studio to do that.
Brenda ClewsDaphne Becoming-Tree
%751 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %Zink drawing, Moleskine sketchbook
Daphne, 20.5cm x 20.5cm, 8" x 8", dip pen with India, acrylic and fountain pen inks, Moleskine Folio Sketchbook A4. (Click on image for larger size.)
I hand wrote the words with a dip pen under the image today.
I lay in the park sketching the tree; though invisible to the biological eye, she was there. Neither did the lake exist, nor the rocks. It was sunny and yet I found a sliver of a moon and a star on the paper. The child in me saw her. She is like a paper cut-out, drawn as a child would draw; she is Daphne. Look at her laurel crown. Her arms are turning into branches with leaves. I found her ghostdrawing her myth in the green dreaming imagination of the woman drawing in the book on her lap.
This Daphne is caught, perpetually transforming, as night falls. Apollo, the god of light, long gone. No sign of Cupid's arrow, if it ever flew.
Brenda ClewsStone #74: Daphne
%029 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %Zaros, ink drawing
Daphne, 20.5cm x 20.5cm, 8" x 8", dip pen with India, acrylic and fountain pen inks, Moleskine Folio Sketchbook A4. (Click on image for larger size.)
I lay in the park sketching the tree; though invisible to the biological eye, she was there. Neither did the lake exist, nor the rocks. It was sunny and yet I found a sliver of a moon and a star on the paper. The child in me saw her. She is like a paper cut-out, drawn as a child would draw; she is Daphne. Look at her laurel crown. Her arms are turning into branches with leaves. I found her ghostdrawing her myth in the green dreaming imagination of the woman drawing in the book on her lap.
This Daphne is caught, perpetually transforming, as night falls. Apollo, the god of light, long gone. No sign of Cupid's arrow, if it ever flew.
_
According to Greek myth, Apollo chased the nymph Daphne. From
Ovid's Metamorphoses:
...a heavy numbness seized her limbs, thin bark closed over her breast, her hair turned into leaves, her arms into branches, her feet so swift a moment ago stuck fast in slow-growing roots, her face was lost in the canopy. Only her shining beauty was left.
Brenda ClewsStone #73
%984 %UTC, %2011, %0:%Jul %ZarosRain pounding, my sticky heat-riven body wet-soaked, like the laughing people passing by. Water criss-crosses the drought-white grass.
_
The style here a little 50s, I thought. Post-Joycean, hyphenated word pairs.
Brenda Clews