YOU, READING THIS, BE READY (William Stafford): THE NEWS OF GRAVITATIONAL WAVES AND WHAT IT HAS TO DO WITH POETRY, AND THE BRAIN ON LOVE: OUR VALENTINES SHOW FOR BRAINIACS

To the music of “Gravity” by The Perfect Sphere, “Defying Gravity,” Wicked, “Fly Me to the Moon,” Frank Sinatra, “You Make Me Feel Brand New,” Stylistics, “Love (Is All There Is), Beatles, and “Skiddamarink,” we start with William Stafford’s poem “You, Reading This, Be Ready,” and the so-called “news” from the world of physics that Einstein’s theory of relativity predicted gravitational waves. (I know you know what I’m going to say, that poets predicted this, talked all about it, and that is true, of course, beginning with our claiming Einstein as ours, a poet, his e=mc2 being all about the equals sign, the genius in seeing one thing connected to another: metaphor! I’m just sayin.)

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WHAT’S THE STORY, MORNING GLORY? Oh, Just, Saving the Earth, Or, The Poets Had It All Along: Trees (et al) R Us!

A tree-mendous show that takes off from

Shakespeare’s tongues in trees, books in the running brooks,/

Sermons in stones, and good in everything to reflect on the headline “news” this week about trees from The Hidden Life of Trees: What They Feel, How They Communicate—Discoveries From a Secret World” by Peter Wohlleben, and what poetry has to do with it, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and John Muir, of course, and our ability and need for story to survive, when “survival is insufficient” (Star Trek), reflecting on Daniel Quinn’s Ishmael, Douglas Adams’Goodbye and Thanks for All the Fish, Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, Thoreau’s Walden, and Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven and NPR Radio Lab reports of research thereon.

With notes of Scott Russell Sanders’ Divine Animal, Thomas Berry’s Dream of the Earth, Bruno Bettelheim’s The Uses of Enchantment, and Robert M. Sapolsky’s A Primate’s Memoir (A Neuroscientist’s Unconventional Life Among the Baboons). On the PoetrySlowDown,radiomonterey.com, produced by Zappa Johns, podcast BarbaraMossberg.com, the news we need, the news we heed, the news “without which men die miserably every day” (William Carlos Williams). We’re talking about what’s at stake in the way we tell, and listen to, and hear, the story of our earth.

We’re here (hear hear!) slowing down (screech! You know you move too fast) for our Poetry Slow Down, and my dear and beloved listening community, gathered around our campfire here of radio waves, it’s so delicious, what science has been bringing out recently, about rocks and trees and animals, we’re all on the same team earth, realities that poets have been talking about in ways that save, and can save, our earth. By poets, I mean people who use language imaginatively, if not also agonizingly, to do justice to the gift of consciousness, to rise to the occasion of revelations about our earth, and our role, perhaps, to see it, express it, and ultimately, hopefully, to save it in the process. . . .

We hear about the role of poetry for Lincoln in The Yosemite Grant of 1864, John Muir’s inner poet as he walks into the new preserved area in 1868, and writes to defend it to become a national park, and how his writings about the environment to transform our thinking about it, our “story,” are recreated in Daniel Quinn’s creation of Ishmael, a gorilla who is a teacher teaching us a new story about earth that can save us all . . . we hear Emerson’s inspiring role inspiring Thoreau and Muir about this, who are all inspired by Shakespeare, and we hear about stories, imagined and recounted from life, about the way we can learn from earth’s creations, if . . . we slow down, to listen, and make the morning last, and earth last . . . .(at least another 5 billion years). We pause to ponder the role of children’s stories that give voices and wisdom to the natural world, including E.B. White’s poet spider Charlotte, who saves Wilbur’s life, and the saying, What’s the story, morning glory, connecting it to our show’s theme song by Simon and Garfunkle, a poet out for a morning walk asking of what he sees, “whatcha knowin?”—like Mary Oliver, slowing down to pay attention, a way to spend our “one wild and precious life.” And more . . . thank you for listening! Write me at bmossber@uoregon.edu, or twitter at @barbaramossberg

THE POETRY SLOW DOWN
With Professor Barbara Mossberg
Produced by Zappa Johns
Radiomonterey.com
© Barbara Mossberg 2016

DREAM POWER: PRELUDE TO A NATIONAL HOLIDAY OCCASIONED BY POETRY: WHAT IS NEEDED FOR LEADERSHIP OF A GREATER SOCIETY AND RESILIENT WORLD?

Doubt not, O poet, but persist. Say, ‘It is in me, and shall out.’ Stand there, baulked and dumb,stuttering and stammering, hissed and hooted, stand and strive, until, at last, rage draw out ofthee that dream-power which every night shows thee is thine own. (Emerson, 1844)

DREAM POWER: PRELUDE TO A NATIONAL HOLIDAY OCCASIONED BY POETRY: WHAT IS NEEDED FOR LEADERSHIP OF A GREATER SOCIETY AND RESILIENT WORLD? Today we’ll hear the likes of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Abraham Lincoln, and the poets that made his day and nights, Edgar Allen Poe, Bobby Burns, and those Thoreau inspired, Gandhi, Tolstoy, Havel, and King’s Lincolnesque Biblical cadences of “I have a dream.”

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YOUR FEETS TOO BIG: WAKE FOR JOHN EATON AND LIVE BROADCAST FROM ABROAD WRITERS, DUBLIN

YOUR FEETS TOO BIG: WAKE FOR JOHN EATON AND LIVE BROADCAST FROM ABROAD WRITERS, DUBLIN
Welcome to our Poetry Slow Down, I’m your professor Dr. B, Barbara Mossberg, with Producer Zappa John, our Mr. Z, for radiomonterey.com, podcast at BarbaraMossberg.com, broadcast live today from Duuublin, a city where I got on the bus to find a pub on my night of arrival, and the bus driver says what brings you to Ireland and I say, a conference celebrating poetry, and he launches into a poem by Yeats, as we drive through the dark and rain, rain so fierce the streets are rivers, 
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GROWING BOLD WITH POETS ON OUR JOURNEY!

I shall grow old but never lose life’s zest, Because the road’s last turn will be the best.—Henry Van Dyke

“The difference made me bold”—celebrating Emily Dickinson’s life of service, in honor of her 185th birthday; the meaning sharing one’s life can make to the spirit with which we each go forth boldly where no one has been before, with May Sarton, Ruth Stone, Tillie Olsen, Wendy Barker, Sandra Gilbert, Linda Gregg, Lucille Clifton, Deb Casey, and moi, and not only feisty ladies including Sphinx but the guys, Dante, Eliot, Gerard Stern, Stanley Kunitz, Donald Hall, W.S. Merwin, Charles Gibilterra, and Charles Tripi, with special tributes to Jack Gilbert and Lawrence Ferlinghetti.

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