HUSK, SHELL, REMAINS: LETTING IN THE LIGHT, VACATING OUR LIVES TO LIVE: THE ABC’s of A Way to Be and See for Infinity, Featuring Mark Doty’s Reading of a Green Crab Shell

Thanking you, Poetry Slow Down, for joining me on this summer day, for an hour away, a way, as we go on vacation, for more poetry of the tourist kind, the tourist mind, perhaps disoriented, as Billy Collins wants to hijack us and take us out of town and drop us off in a cornfield . . . on our program theme today of how we honor life by living it now, paying attention so consciously, a way that requires going away, going outside, out of the normal workaday world. Let’s step outside, this summer day, and get down with it: literally, down to it, at ground level, with Walt Whitman’s Preface to Leaves of Grass, and Mary Oliver’s “The Summer Day,” –“Doesn’t everything die at last, and too soon?

Tell me, what is it you plan to do
with your one wild and precious life?” That’s our question, isn’t it? Our one wild and precious life? And the paradox is that being present in our world requires or is a function of leaving it, in this sense, to spend time as Oliver does, so-called wasting time, unproductively in a field at grass level, eyeing a grasshopper, leaves of grass, eye to eye, and it is having to leave our daily routine, to vacate our world, vacate—the root world of vacation we were exploring in last week’s show together—to be empty, getting us away, in order to be . . . more fully present in our world. E.e. cummings pledges in our show’s favorite sonnet, i thank You God for most this amazing day  . . . i who have died am alive again today, in the spirit of gratitude Oliver expresses, for a sense of life, in the face of all of us dying, too soon, “now the eyes of my eyes are awake and now the ears of my ears are opened.” The emphasis on now, now, living and being present now–that’s what Oliver is talking about, and seeing, hearing, June Jordan, on ears opened, being present: Listening—a good way to hear . . . So today we are listening to poets taking us on vacation, vacating our normal lives, as they share their experiences of being AWAY, and what they see, and how they be, A way to be and see . . .

So let’s walk down the beach with Mark Doty, and see what there is to see, and like Mary Oliver, looking at the grasshopper in the grass, up close and personal, he’s at ground level, and he sees a crab shell fragment, what remains, and how enduring remains remind us of life within now, and what miraculous beauty is possible even now . . . in the precision of notice of our world.

So our line up for today, listening to poets taking us away and writing home, making us see our world with fresh eyes and appreciation for this world and our minds, which make the perception of this world possible: don’t you think our world created our minds out of vanity, wanting to be noticed and appreciated, why eyes evolved. . . and ears . .  .and brains, to conceive, this is . . . beautiful . . . marvelous . .  .what is this . . . we’ll hear W.B. Yeats, W.H. Auden, Rita Dove, Charles Wright in his garden, Pablo Neruda being corny, Linda Gregg—a poem that will carry you away, open you to life’s possibilities, your own role in letting in life, giving permission to what is wild and precious in you, one of my Union Institute and University colleagues where I’m broadcasting today, David Young, a marvelous poem about Adlai Stevenson and Yellow Jackets, outdoors pieces, Lois Melina, my Union Institute & University colleague in the Ethical and Creative Leadership Ph.D. program where we’re teaching, calling out my own response in Night Hunger, Wild Hunger, speaking of being outside, outing my ambivalence about being out there, but how necessary it is to being alive inside, inside our ice-chest–and what poetry has to do with it:

So Poetry Slow Down, let’s walk on the beach, wear your mental suntan lotion and glasses, because he’s got neural heat going on . . .

© Barbara Mossberg 2011

Yay! News!

Benicia Newspaper Article

Friends:

Another article on I READ THE NEWS TODAY. OH BOY  in the Vallejo Times Herald this morning. I hope you can get a copy since it has two photos that aren’t shown on the web site version below.

A couple of you pointed out that the link I sent for the Contra Costa Times article on June 23rd directed or pointed to the Patch article instead. The Contra Costs Times also appeared in the OAKLAND TRIBUNE and the SAN JOSE MECURY NEWS.  Just in case you didn’t see the Contra Costa Times article, I am repeating the link here as well

We are very fortunate to have had such a positive response to our exhibit. This is all thanks to Jady Montgomery our publicity person for this program and a loyal member of the FIRST TUESDAY POETRY GROUP here in Benicia.

I am thinking we may have over 100 people at the Opening Reception on Thursday. Artists and Poets, please be generous with those snacks you are bringing!  You’ll have a name tag ready for you when you arrive. Please wear it and let people know who you are so they can ask you questions about your topic and your work for this show. I am proud of this show and I hope you are proud and pleased as well.

I’ve been checking on the exhibit every day and each time I’ve gone I’ve met people who are excited about what they are seeing and reading. I’ve met a woman who came from Walnut Creek after reading the CC article, a man who has lived in Benicia 45 years who said this is the first exhibit of art in this community he has really enjoyed. A woman in town wrote me to say that she’s been going everyday to really study one by one each of the artist/poet/article sections of the exhibit. Two teenagers stopped (with skateboards underarms)  to see the portrait of Les Overlock that Mike Kimball did because they’d heard about it from their friends and then went deeper into the exhibit looking and exclaiming as they went. More stories of the exhibit when I see you on Thursday.

All the best,
Ronna Leon
‘I read the news today …’

Benicia Library
http://www.benicialibrary.org/gallery

Gallery of Images
http://gallery.me.com/jadymontgomery#100420

Benicia Magazine
http://www.beniciamagazine.com/Blogs/Happenings/July-2011/I-Read-the-News-Today-Oh-Boy-An-Absolute-Must-See-Benicia-Exhibit/


Published By Times Herald
Posted: 06/26/2011 01:00:39 AM PDT
LINK: http://www.timesheraldonline.com/ci_18356554

Benicia exhibit focuses on the headlines
By Jennifer Modenessi
Contra Costa Times
Posted: 06/23/2011 12:00:00 AM PDT
LINK: http://www.mercurynews.com/entertainment/ci_18324456?nclick_check=

GRAND OPENINGS! GREAT BEGINNINGS!

Title: GRAND OPENINGS! GREAT BEGINNINGS!
Location: Pacific Grove Library 550 Central Avenue Pacific Grove CA
Description: Dr. Barbara Mossberg PG Poet-in-Residence

Presents

OPENING LINES THAT MADE HISTORY

A hands-on workshop with an extraordinary poet and teacher who will inspire you to “be bold in your beginnings.”

Cost $15 per person
Contact Lisa Maddalena at 6495760 or LMaddale@pacificgrove.lib.ca.us to make your reservations. Seating is limited
Start Time: 09:00
Date: 2011-04-16
End Time: 12:00

Barbara Mossberg: Changing The World: A Tribute to the Power of Words.

Title: Barbara Mossberg: Changing The World: A Tribute to the Power of Words.
Location: Casa Munras Hotel 700 Munras Avenue Monterey CA
Link out: Click here
Description: We know writing is transformational for the writer, but for the world, the real world? Cultural data from earliest recorded history shows literary arts transforming social, political, civic, and environmental dimensions of our lives for war and peace and civil and human rights. Even–or especially–writers who see themselves or are seen as marginal, save and redeem our planet and our souls.This message may seem like preaching to the choir, but the power in experiencing oneself as a member of a community, not only of one’s profession and region, but of a global and historic enterprise that changes the world, can be a force of resilience and heroic resolve, a la Churchill, to never, never, never, never, never give up.
Start Time: 17:30
Date: 2011-04-19

Problem Solving Through Poetry

Title: Problem Solving Through Poetry
Location: The Pacific Grove Library 550 Central Ave, Pacific Grove California
Description: Poetry Workshop at the Pacific Grove Library
Saturday, March 19, from 9:00 to 12 noon
Problem Solving Through Poetry

Presented by Dr. Barbara Mossberg,
Pacific Grove’s Poet in Residence

From ancient minds to Nobel-prize high-minded physics, astronauts to engineers, poetry has been a way to work things out, to make order of chaos, beauty of darkness, solace of pain, wisdom of the mess of feelings and ideas that blur our hassled, hectic everyday lives. This workshop is an introduction to the practical nature of poetry. We will raise our pens to the proposition that poetry can bring to the everyday mind one’s own remarkable capacity for problem-solving and coming up with new ways of thinking and creative solutions.

Dr. Mossberg has been a proponent of poetry and literature all her life in roles ranging from President of Goddard College, to the U.S. Scholar in Residence for the U. S. State Department as a cultural diplomat representing American culture, to Fulbright scholar, to senior scholar for the American Council on Education, to keynote speaker around the world on the humanities and creativity for leadership. Catch her weekly radio show, The Poetry Slow Down, on radio station, KRXA 540AM, (barbaramossberg.com).

Tea and pastries will be served.



The $15 workshop fee supports the Pacific Grove Poet in Residence fund.

Seating is limited, call Lisa Maddalena at 649-5760 or email LMaddale@pacificgrove.lib.ca.us for reservations.

The Pacific Grove Library is located at 550 Central Ave, Pacific Grove
Start Time: 09:00
Date: 2011-03-19
End Time: 12:00