Thursday, October 14, 2010

Revisiting McCambridge Park



This photo is from my dad and Uncle Sam's 10th birthday. That's my Uncle Dick kneeling, and my effortlessly beautiful Grandma keeping everyone steady. When we asked Dad (the lanky kid on the left) what he wanted to do for his big six-zero, he sent out this email.

Hi Everyone,
Here is the picture that will be 50 years old next Friday afternoon. It was taken in McCambridge Park in Burbank and when we developed it, Grandma really liked it, and Uncle Sam said "Me too!", and Uncle Dick said "It's groovy". I said "You know, we should take another one on our 60th birthday so it will be all of us in two photographs that are exactly 50 years old". Papa Joe said "Good idea," and I was put in charge of remembering to do it. So that is the true story.
Love, Dad

So that's what we did. I got to do the reshoot. A far cry from the perfection of Papa Joe's eye that I will endlessly be chasing, but I'm proud to be the next Bellomo to snap this shot.



Pretty close, eh? My favorite part was right after...


Happy Birthday, Pop!


Monday, September 6, 2010

RIP Barnaby




I really don't know how to do this, yet. I don't know how to write about it. These pictures are the best I can do right now, but he deserves so much more. Rest in peace, my little one.
Oh how I miss you so much more than I know how to say, except for that I love you the same way. So much more than I know how to say.

Doing What I Do Not Do

I am not a wedding photographer.

Nothing about the way I shoot lends itself to being a wedding photographer (film, labs, old heavy cameras, waiting). I do not have business cards, especially ones with the words, "Weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, and Special Events" written beneath my name . I am incapable of charging a fee, for fear that the photos will not turn out and I will be thought of with regret forever after. I detest giving people direction; the phrase, "Move a little to your left," makes me ill. I avoid weddings like one avoids an ex-boyfriend after gaining 15 lbs; you do it if you have to, but you better be wearing a badass dress and have a "plus one."

I am not a wedding photographer. But my life as of late would suggest otherwise.

A year ago, Gabe, a friend from college, asked if I ever shot weddings. I said I had once, but, well, see above. He urged me to think about it, that his fiance loved my photos, and they, above all else, would love to have me there. So I thought about it. I thought about where I would be in August of 2010, I thought of how my photo skills would have surely progressed, I thought of how nice it would be to visit the state my grandparents came from.

But there was another thought happening somewhere in my subconscious as the word, "Sure," so effortlessly tumbled out of my big mouth.... There's something about events that are a year away. I always think they'll never really happen.

As the rental car swerved deep into the Poconos Mountains, further and further away from civilization, I thought,

"This is, in fact, happening."


While Paul and Jill (guests of the wedding and my ride) helped me to recount the times we must have met during our four years at the same college I began to get genuinely excited about the people I would be seeing. The people I vaguely remembered, but knew I thought I really liked I'm pretty sure I hoped.

We arrived at the house where most everyone would be staying and the festivities were well under way. The wedding was scheduled for the next day and friends and family from all over the country were congregating at this impossibly beautiful farm house to "pre-party" as we used to call it at Colorado State.

I found Gabe right away and gave him a big hug. The truth is, I was flattered. Gabe had always kept in touch. His perseverance was unmatched. He sent postcards on a regular basis, followed my blog and berated me to post more, checked in on my website, and just plain cared about what was going on in my life, even when I was silent for months at a time. I was happy to be there with him and for him. Kind of like a way to make up for my lackluster 3 to his sparkling 50 postcards sent. To set the good friend score even and show him that I do value our friendship, regardless of the fact that I had not seen him in more years than I had known him. Oh, and the bride, Lea, was one of the most lovely ladies I had met so far this century.

But that is not the point of this story. The point of this story is that I am not a wedding photographer.

Gabe showed me to my room and I began to unpack. My dress went on a hanger, my book on the bedside table, my toothbrush by the sink, and my charger in the phone. Then onto my film and the systematic divvying up of how many rolls would be allotted for what. Finally I grabbed 1 of the 3 rolls set aside for that night and the precious time to hide behind my camera had arrived. I went to my bag to get it.

My parents once left my little brother behind at a rest stop during a cross country road trip. They realized it a few miles down the road, sped back, and swooped him up, barely causing a wrinkle in our family vacation.

My camera, unlike, my little brother, was not a few miles down the road. No, no, it was, say, 2700 miles down the road, AKA, on the other side of the country. It is difficult to relay the pure horror-agony-panic trifecta that set in the moment I realized that my entire purpose of being at that moment was not with me.

My first instinct was to run, naturally. Because, ya, that made sense. Just run away and never come back and they'll think you died and they'll never ever know that you destroyed the single most important day of their young lives. This truly seemed like a more than viable, and flat out reasonable solution. But there were too many of them! They were everywhere. In the halls, behind every corner, outside, inside, even a few passed out in the field leading to the road, no doubt.

Running was out. Being a grown-up was in.

A short prayer: "Dear God, please let there be cell reception up here in your gorgeous mountains." as I dialed my home number.

"Jon. I left my camera at home."

The next hour was a blur of Jon scouring Craigslist for old Nikons, me sobbing through phone calls to strangers in Scranton asking if they'd take $175 (all the dough I had on me) instead of $250 for their camera, and occasional silent mental breakdowns every 10 minutes or so. Finally we found Russian Steve in Allentown selling an old Nikon for the right price and promising in the most unsettling tone,

"You can drust me, eet workz. Eet workz pearfectly."

Up at 6am to start my 2 1/2 hour drive to Allentown to test his camera, drive back, and make it to the Poconos by 11:30am to start shooting the girls getting pretty and the boys hitting the back 9. Fat chance. Or more specifically, morbidly-obese-needs-stomach-stapling chance.

For the first time in my life, I did not get lost driving to a new place from a new place. That was the only thing that went right that morning. Russian Steve did have an old Nikon, but "eet" did not work. At all.

Mid-meltdown on his couch under a painting of Jesus at Gethsemane, he revealed to me that he did have this other Nikon. This other Nikon caused a series of begging and pleading with Russian Steve to please accept a personal check on top of my $175 so that I could purchase it and not have to kill myself because I single handedly ruined an old friend's wedding day. He finally conceded and handed over a beautiful old Nikon F4. A dream camera of mine, to be honest, but the glory of my possession of it fell flat in this veritable nightmare.

I believe I kept my fingers crossed the entire drive back to the Poconos, hoping against hope that this F4 would not only work, but take beautiful photos and save the God-damned, God-forsaken day.

I arrived at the bridal suite at 12pm and the ladies had just begun getting their hairs done.

Here's what happened next...




I think if I were a wedding photographer, this experience may have kicked me right out of the business. Luckily, I am not a wedding photographer, and this experience was one of the most special and fun I have had in quite some time. And though I didn't have my "plus one," I sure as shit had one badass dress.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Jenny O + Scout: Una Storia d'Amore

Trovare.

Amare.


Lasciare.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Nikkormat, Jr.

Sophia using my old Nikkormat. She shot an entire roll that day. Only needed help winding it; understandable considering its weight/size in proportion to her.
It felt so strange having to explain that she'd have to wait a week before she saw the photos that she took.
And the photos that she took... Amazing. Mostly dogs and people with no heads. And a lot of photos of her brother, Joe. Head included.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Sandypede


Dodgeball
Originally uploaded by World Dodgeball Society
The Power of Sandy Compels You.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Getty

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Baby Biggs and Ry-Ry Christ

Rebecca and Ryan got married this summer in St Lucia. I was lucky enough to be there. Aw, Baby Biggs!



Wednesday, May 12, 2010

I Got My Philosophy



It was probably Spring break. I was home and mid-thaw from spending the winter knee-deep in snow at Colorado State. I was at the point in my “don’t-live-at-home-anymore” stage where I thought I had learned enough to have a valid opinion. And the first opinion I decided I had was that Ben Folds played some bad ass piano.


Now, me liking a musician that hadn’t been hand fed to me by one of my siblings was unheard of. My childhood is not recalled by how old I was or what year it happened to be, but rather, which band or album I (and my siblings) was obsessed with at any given time. Each of them had been responsible for one super great obsession.


Sarah aka The Morning Drive Phase: Blizzard of Oz and Houses of The Holy

Mary aka The I Love Calvin Broadus Phase: The Chronic

Angelo aka The Rap is Crap Phase: Metallica, namely, Master of Puppets

Tim aka The Kinder Phase: Little Bunny FooFoo


I never had the need to develop my own musical tastes, as my sisters and brothers were clearly holding it down for me. But being under 20, and over 800 miles away will cause you to establish your own idea of what is awesome. Ben Folds was making me play air-piano way hard and I couldn’t wait to get back to Cali and show the sibs my new moves.


The day I got home, I was sent to the valley to pick up the baby brother from school. Lil Tim was a mess of burgundy with gold trimmings and smelling like a pep rally as he hopped in the passenger’s seat of the Chevy Blazer. We did the customary exchange of yelling nicknames at each other (“Tim-Tam!” “Smellanie!”), and headed back toward the 405.


He asked me how college was going and I asked him how Molly* was. I answered that college was still cold and he answered that he wanted me to stop asking him how Molly was every time we spoke. Once the formalities were out of the way, I decided to lay it on him. We had just entered the turn into Simi Valley and the Ronald Reagan Freeway was uncommonly traffic-free.


“Tim, check this out.”


I pressed play and turned the dial clockwise.


“Song for the Dumped” comes out of the gates like a 2-ton Brahma bull with mad cow disease. It begins with the kind of musical gusto and hysteria that most songs take 2 or 3 verses to build up to. A veritable free-for-all of violent strikes to the piano that cause your neck to joyously whiplash in lunatic rhythm for almost 4 minutes.

I looked over at Tim who seemed more horrified at my frenzied antics than impressed by my new favorite song. Fudge. I blew it. I mean, I don’t know what I had expected.


Or wait... Yes I do... I expected Tim to be completely taken with the music, magically know the words, and wildly sing-a-long with me while we sped down the 118 to our First St exit. I immediately let go of the dream, and turned on KNX 1070 News Radio for the rest of the drive.


I didn’t call home very often when I was in Colorado. When you’re away from home, you assume everyone’s in a holding pattern until you get back (FYI to any teenage readers: NOT THE CASE).


I was back home the day after classes ended for the Summer. I went to visit Tim at work and bring him a sandwich from The Hat. I walked into his mini-office and heard “Philosophy” blasting through the speakers of a boom box sitting on top of the file cabinet. Sitting at the desk was Tim, mouthing the words and feeling it. Like, for real.


This was 10 years ago.


Tonight, Tim-Tam and I are going to see Ben Folds beat the shit out of his piano live for our first time. No doubt, we will be completely taken with music, magically know all the words, and wildly sing-a-long.


PS Thanks, Eric.


*Molly is the girl Tim had a crush on for about 1 week in the third grade.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Oh, BTW...


dodgeball
Originally uploaded by LA Dodgeball
Dodgeball is back.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Everyday Miracles


Eric and Doug living life to the fullest.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Thursday, March 4, 2010

"Why I Love Richard Christy" by Melanie



Richard Christy* falls asleep listening to this; his favorite scary soundtrack.

Ever. Single. Night.

His fiance listens along with him.

Super strange, I know. But here's what really got me.... there's a part in the tape where a woman starts screaming and it wakes up Richard's fiance and scares the shit outta her.

So...

Richard made a special version of the tape where the screaming has been mixed down. And that is why I love Richard Christy.

Well that and because he has drummed in metal bands named "DEATH" and "Charred Walls of the Damned."

Oh Richard. Just look at you.



*Richard Christy

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Saul Leiter aka Love of My Life

I love Saul Leiter. I do, so deeply, and usually spend my last waking moments with him in my bed each night. He gives me sweet dreams. Early Color is my single most favorite photography book ever in the whole entire world. Look...

I try to spend time with my other loves: Parr, Eggleston, Winograd, and Lyon.....
But Saul has my heart.
Here. One more, then goodnight...
OK. Goodnight.
M

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Expert Dance Moves

I logged in to my YouTube account after many months and found that my brother, Angelo, has been using it to upload little movies he makes at work. I CANNOT stop watching this one. It is bringing me so much joy, especially the boy on the far right during the first 4 seconds of the video.

Know Your P's and K's



Dear Angelo,
I'm cataloging (see below), lest we forget.
From, Melanie

  • Stop ik, that hurks.
  • One Hundrek.
  • Angee, do you wanna get some copfkee?
  • I got pulled over by the copks last night.
  • I have the hipkups.
  • I drokked the baby on accident.
  • Has anyone seen my keyps?
  • I'm on Team Edwark.
  • You're stupik.
  • That's a Corgi on my tea cupk.
  • Publiksher's Clearing Houkse.
  • I cannok believe you just said that.

Friday, February 5, 2010

www.BHSAH.com

Tim's been helping me put together a new website for the animal hospital. Go take a little look. You will see things like this there...

Friday, January 1, 2010

Happy New Year

Get the kids together and bang your pots and pans. I'm happy that last year is last year. I sure do like all of you a lot. So let's be nice.
-M

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Angeles National Magical Forest

It's about that time of year again, for this...

and this...



but mostly this...

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Ryan and Anna


My lovely friends Ryan Bingham and Anna Axter got married this summer. Here are a few shots from the day.
PS It was on the mountainside of a huge Malibu estate overlooking the Pacific Ocean, so.... ya.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Growing and Pains



"The biggest growth comes out of pain,"
so says my older/wiser sister, Sarah.

I hate this statement right now. It is a jerk.

And it is true.

Like when you're 8, lying in bed, writhing in pain because the sticks that you call legs are growing, one Charley Horse* at a time. And you think you'd rather be dead. Or short. Because if being big hurts this much, well then, thanks for asking, but I'm good down here in the kiddie pool with my floaties. Plus my floaties have hippos on them, and hippos, frankly, are awesome.

But then. Your sister (who has heard your pathetic whimpers) comes in the room, brings you a glass of water, and rubs your little stems until you fall back to sleep.
When you wake up in the morning, you're an inch taller.

Fucking yes.

And you go the the St Rose Carnival and get in line for the "Hammerhead," because now you're big enough.

Now you get to go on the ride.


*Where did Charley Horse come from? Anyone?

Friday, September 25, 2009

Boys



Joe is constantly reminding me of why I like having my camera with me, always.

I keep thinking of this Diane Arbus image...
Mind you, I am not comparing myself to her. At all. Like, at all.
But I think this kid and Joe would have caused some trouble together.

5.5 Hours

And I could be here.

Monday, September 21, 2009

To, Everyone


I hope you know.

1. I'm sorry.

2. I love you.

3. I'm trying.

From, Melanie

PS Maybe read this again tomorrow.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Momma



I just wanted to tell you...
I was thinking of the time we went for a road trip in the Pace Arrow motor home. To Zion National Park, I think.

We were driving through the desert,
in Arizona,
in traffic,
in a heatwave.

The motor home was overheating, so Dad was forced to turn off the air conditioning. One by one, we all began to come to the conclusion, that we were going to die. And as temperature continued to rise, we all began to come to the conclusion, that we would welcome death.

In my daze (created by a combination of heat-exhaustion and gingersnap consumption), I turned towards you for assistance. But you just were standing at the sink, and on the counter top you had all of our beach towels stacked, one on top of the other. You proceeded to soak them under the faucet.

I thought you had lost it; that you had mistaken the towels for pasta and were preparing for dinner. Then you took the stack of soaked towels, placed them in the freezer, walked back to the front of the motor home, and re-stationed yourself in the passenger's seat.

At that point, I believe I lost consciousness for about an hour. I awoke to the sensation of snowflakes engulfing my tiny head, and opened my eyes to darkness. I thought,

"So this is what death is like. How unexpected."

As my delusion began to wear off, I realized that I wasn't dead, but rather, being covered by a towel. A big frozen beach towel. It was the greatest feeling of relief that I have ever felt; and still is to this day. I peeked through from under my ice-shield of comfort, and saw the other four kids blanketed by frozen towels. And at the driver's and passenger's seats sat you and Dad, and your frozen towels/turbans.

NICE MOVE, MOM!

I still use that move. You will even see my dogs walking around with capes made of frozen towels on those hot LA days that we have been frequenting.

Ok, I just wanted to tell you I was thinking about you and all the awesome things you invent.
I love you.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Early Morning War


Yosemite
7 AM
Joe and Sofia
We play War and Uno.
I lose hard/win big.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Soon As I Let It


I'm going to be nice
To myself this time.
I'm alright, I think.
Yes, I think
I might just be.

Lots of days spent
Planning on getting back
To who I was before
The moments pushed me
Pretty far from home.

Lots of days wasted
Watching the words
While they came out,
So for to catch them
Before they get to the rest of you.

I never wanted you upset. With me.
But you get upset anyhow,
Despite my best efforts.
Despite my worst lies.
So I'll stop watching and

Listen for a while,
To what I meant to say.
Mostly because I forget
Who it was
I meant to be.

I have a vague idea, and I think it will all come rushing back in.
Soon as I let it. Be.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Mia and Salvatore


My cousins, Joe and Wendy, are producing some unbelievable progeny.
Seriously. Get. Out. Of. Here.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Two



Happy Birthday Sophia. Love Love Love.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Wiiiiiilly!



I walked into Carol's house to do the bi-monthly trimmimg of kitty cat nails....

and found this.

Her new kitten/ewok/mogwai/pirate, Willy.

I had no other choice but shoot myself in the head.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Happy Birthday?



When I wrote all my siblings and asked them to call me with their fave Dad stories, I had no idea it would basically turn into a collection of short stories entitled "How Not to Raise Your Children." Thankfully, no one can take a little heat better than Dad, so when I read my editor's version of these stories aloud on his birthday, no one laughed harder than him.


Sarah
Dad and I were driving home and I really had to pee. Bad. But I was too afraid to tell him, or them rather; Uncle Sam was with us too. So I just decided to pee. In the backseat. Of the company car. Hoping against hope that it would go unnoticed. Well, we parked in front of the house and dad took off his seatbelt, then he started to do that smelling thing that he always does, you know, "sniff, sniff." And I remember looking at the backs of his and Uncle Sam's heads and they just looked like these two mobsters and I was thinking, "Oh God, no."
So Dad immediately realized what the smell was and where it was coming from. He says,
"Honey. Oh Sarah. Look, if you had to go to the bathrrom you just gotta tell me. "
I was in awe. Like, I could tell my dad I had to pee and he not only wouldn't be mad but he would accomodate me? I was reminded of this concept a few years later when he caught me picking my nose.
"Sarah, it's ok to pick your nose, just go into the bathroom to do it."
It was great. All these things I thought were so shameful... needing to pee, picking my nose, they were ok. It was like he was telling me for the first time "It's ok to be you. It's ok to be human."
Granted this was coming from the same man who told me he was actually 100,00 years old and an alien.

Mary Lee
It's 1994 or so, and we're in Yosemite, camping. It's nighttime, we've had dinner, its been a long day, and it's time to go to sleep. I've brought my friend Andrea, aka "Dre" with me, and Ang has brought Eddie and Phil, I think. Anyways, they're still talking and trying to figure out something about a trail or who-knows-what, so I yell out the answer. Before I can even finish my sentence, Dad yells at me to go to sleep and stop talking. I try to explain that I was just answering Ang's question. But he doesn't care what I have to say.
"Mary just stop talking."
So now I'm pissed because it's such crap and I'm sitting in my tent with Dre, complaining about how stupid Dad is, etc etc. But i guess the volume of my voice raises again and suddenly...
"Mary? Mary? Is that you? I can't believe that's you!"
"But Dad, I didn't even..."
"I CAN'T believe that's you!"
I continue to get in little defenses here and there, but it's useless.
"I CAN'T believe you're still talking! SHUUUUT UP! SHUUUUUT UP! SHUUUUT UP!"
It was so embarrassing, but at the same time, I kinda understood why he got so out of control angry. I mean, I brought Dre with me who hates camping and, seriously, we stayed in the tent the entire time, listening to "The Chronic" album over and over. We didn't help with anything. All we did was sweep off our own sleeping mat and worry about breaking our ridiculously long acrylic nails; like so long that they curved. So, you know, I get it. Poor Dad.

Angelo
Dad went through this super long, weird phase where he would talk about baboons escaping from the zoo. Sometimes he would just say, "Oh man, baboon escaped," and not do anything about it. But once in a while he would really go the extra mile and pull out his baboon mask and scare the shit out of us.
My best friend Phil was over and he had never been through this whole baboon thing. Phil and I were hanging out in the dining room and it had these big long windows on the wall that looked out on to our dark backyard. Dad was watching TV with Mom in the other room, and he yells over to us,
"Oh hey, yeah, news just said that a baboon escaped from the LA Zoo. Last spotted it heading west, so they think its coming through this way."
God, he made it sound so convincing, and for Phil who had never heard it before, you know, why wouldn't he believe an adult? So I'm standing over by the couch and Phil's kinda just staring out one of the big windows. All of the sudden I hear this horrified scream and I look over and Phil is on his back and his hands are over his face and he's half-crying/half-laughing, and he's just repeating the same thing over and over again.
"Your dad's crazy. Your dad's crazy."
I look out the window, and there's Dad, hysterical. And in his hand, the gorilla mask.

Tim
Dad and I were folding laundry together and we had gotten to the part where it was time to fold the underwear. Now, this was during the time where Angelo and I had an overlap in our underwear size. So, there was size 30 worn by me, size 34 worn by Ang, and size 32, which we both wore. Problem was that tightee whitees have these tags where once they're washed so many times, you can't read the tag. It just becomes a memory of where the tag was.
So, Dad picks up some underwear, folds them then turns to me and asks,
"Tim whose are these?"
I look at the underwear, see the ghost tag, look at Dad and answer,
"I don't know Dad. There's no size on the tag."
Immediately, Dad just snaps.
"Don't get smart with me."
"Huh? No Dad, look there's no size... The tag,"
THWACK!!
He slapped me. In the face. He slapped me in my face and I couldn't believe it. I was just trying to answer the question the best I knew how. Then I thought, "This is CRAP!" ...so I slapped him. In the face. I slapped Dad in the face and I'm pretty sure I had to jump to do it. He was shocked. We both were. And we stood there staring at each other for what seemed like an eternity, but it was probably a half a second... and then Dad went nuts. He lifted me up by my waist, carried me to his room, and walloped me. Ugh, it was such BS.
Anyways, a few hours later i think he was feeling that feeling you get when you get too out of control with your kids and he comes up to me and says,
"Hey, uh, Tim you wanna get some pizza. Yeah, let's order some Little Ceasar's. How bout that, Tim?"

Me
I just remember Dad losing his mind in Mexico. The Belt Period. It was like, for everything and anything, you could possibly get the belt. If you answered him "what?" instead of "yes?" -the belt. If you ate candy in front of the poor kids -the belt. If you didn't finish your soup -the belt. If you were a totally out of control, disrespectful 13 year old brat (Sarah) -the belt. It was almost a nightly ritual.
But towards the end of our 90 day trip, Dad called us all in to the main living room and told us the most incredible and unbelievable news I had ever heard: we were going to get our chance to belt him. Each one of us. Line up and have at it. I think we each got 3 swings. The older kids kinda got the humor of the event. But man, I was excited! And I went for it! I remember standing behind him and really letting him have it. I know I was small at the time, but the centripetal* force alone! It had to hurt! But he was laughing, and I really think it's because as fun as it was for us, it was a relief for him. He was keeping it fair. When we got out of line, we got the belt. And now he had gotten out of line, and he was getting the belt. And this has been such a lesson that I have learned from my dad. As nutso as he could be, he was always fair! At least eventually. And that was not lost on any of us. Not a one.

*Is it centripetal or centrifugal? Whomever can answer this gets a prize. No, really.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Moonlight


Clair de Lune by Claude Debussy, especially as played by Van Cliburn.
The life in this song is so present that sometimes I can't listen to it.
Not tonight.
Over and over, it's playing. I have no intention to stop it.

And it makes me think of Papa.

He loved to record the most oddly random movies off of the television and onto VHS tapes.
He never wrote the actual names of the movies on the tapes. No. It was always some descriptive noun or adjective, followed by "movie," and written in all capital letters.

The titles were pretty straightforward, like


"PAVAROTTI MOVIE"

or

"CAR MOVIE"

There was this one we used to watch all the time about a few hapless bums and their racetrack dog. Papa entitled this one,

"GOOD MOVIE"

...and that's what we all called it. And it was.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

A View With Some Room



The calm kept me cool
While time curled into a string
Bound tight and secure
Waiting to unwind and reveal everything

I liked being small
Invisible to the knowing
That chokes me now
And tells me I'm not possible today

Maybe I will step away
To watch people being just so
And laugh, then cry
Because I remember it all.

Now I keep time
with the rising and falling
of every single breath
And my eyes close to sleep.