Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rain. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 February 2017

The Seasons & The Weather

       Commenting About The Weather

“Damn!” he said, “It sure is hot!”,
then looked at me as if expecting
some appreciative corroboration
of his insightful observation.
All I could think of to say was,
“What the fuck do you expect of South Texas in August?”


Thought for a Sub-Zero Morning

One of the many things
that I disliked
about living on
a tropical island
was the absence
of autumn,
winter, and spring,
and the temperature range
being the same
every day,
rainy season and dry,
except during
typhoons.


                    … What A Man’s Gotta Do

I don’t know why I was so spaced out that morning,
but I left for the dog exercise park
on a day characterised
by a disturbed westerly flow
having forgotten to take my umbrella with me.

Although the sky was blue-dome when we left the car,
I knew that our chances of a dry, full-length ramble were slim,
and sure enough, a half an hour later,
as we were crossing the lawn toward the stick tree
I felt a gust of wind at my back,
turned, and saw a mass of black clouds
approaching rapidly
from the southwest.

Without hesitation I started striding briskly directly back toward the car,
the fox terrier following.
It started spitting as I descended the ramp past the boathouse,
then began raining for real after I’d strode
maybe twenty metres along the riverside footpath.

I ran,
with a thudding, lumbering gait,
the last eighty metres of so
to the Swarbrick Landing car park
and the shelter of my funky old Ford.

It was the first time I’d run in years.


                     Layers

One morning at the park in early April
I had to adjust the layering
of my outer garments
eight times in fifty minutes
as the sun seemed to be playing peek-a-boo with the clouds
and the breeze rose and fell.
For me that’s one of the more lovely things
about living where I live.
I like weather that does something
and doesn’t just sit there.


        Precipitative Indifference

I do love rain,
as did my flowers, herbs, tomatoes, and jalapeƱos,
back when I cultivated them,
and rain on the roof is one of my favourite sounds,
but when it really pisses down
it did put a crimp on my ability
and inclination
to exercise my dog
when she was alive,
and also to exercise myself
with long, solitary walks
since her demise.

The rain, of course,
doesn’t give a shit
one way or the other
about my attitude toward it.



          Aguas de Amazonia

One chilly, rainy morning,
with my wipers on and off
as I’d driven to the dog park,
I’d been listening
to a Brazilian ensemble called Uakti
playing minimalist compositions by Philip Glass
called Aguas de Amazonia
on mostly home-made percussion instruments and flutes
made from whatever they’d had lying around.

The river was up, but the rain had lightened,
so we were able to make
a complete circuit of the park –
albeit shorter than our usual one
and no game of stick.
As I strode, with the aid of a brolly,
along the surging, rising river,
the somewhat complex last four bars
that had been playing
before I’d switched off the ignition
engulfed my consciousness continuously
and guided my feet
in a magical combination
of mantra and marching music.
Music about the Amazon by the rainy, rushing Waikato:
it worked.



           Here it Comes
That just-before-it-rains
grey-sky thing
with the high overcast,
decreasing atmospheric pressure,
a breeze picking up from the northwest,
and the air dancing
with negative ions –
that’s when the weather
feels best to me.



     Remnants of a Depression

I love rain,
but when the wispy remnants
of an early-summer
subtropical depression caught me out
on the way home from the 4-Square,
the droplets blowing onto my sleeves
despite my umbrella
and the air’s oppressive stickiness
had a telling effect
on my ageing body
and I spent the rest of the day feeling unwell.

My plants loved it, though,
as did, apparently,
the neighbourhood birds,
who tucked into the birdseed in the feeder
on the wall of my front patio.

How the neighbourhood cats,
who keep hoping to get lucky with the birds,
reacted to that wet warm front
I couldn’t say.


                      A Cloudy Sunrise

The sunrise refracting through clouds
during my morning walk
temporarily distracted me
from my sorrow, desperation, and despair.
Clouds make everything so much better.
When I returned home, however,
everything was the same.
Cloudy sunrises don’t last.


       Vernal Indication

I’m not usually out after dark,
but when I did come home
after an evening performance
in late September
I crunched two snails underfoot
in the three steps
between my gate and my door,
without even looking down,
thereby convincing myself
that Spring had indeed arrived.


   Unseasonal Visits

I wonder if
the rare fly
that comes in my open doorway
when it’s well into autumn
does so
because it’s lonely,
or don’t flies get lonely?
Hell if I know.


     Limits To Comprehension

Wind, rain, lightning, hail –
these I can understand.
Money, religion, egotistical power lust –
these make about as much sense to me
as wearing a double-breasted suit.


Saturday, 3 September 2016

High-Brow Music Stuff

        Music
The rain returned,
so I turned off
my CD player
to listen to it.
I think Telemann
would’ve understood.
  

           Negative Aesthetic Preferences
I’d really rather enjoy music than have it irritate me –
indeed, I prefer enjoyment to irritation in all things –
but music goes deeply into my who-I-am,
and I can’t bring myself to enjoy musical syrup,
I can’t bring myself to enjoy bombast,
I can’t bring myself to enjoy superficial catchiness,
I can’t bring myself to enjoy smug self-importance,
and I can’t bring myself to enjoy
the florid glorification of the essentially trivial,
generally misleading, and frequently destructive
biochemical phenomena that are emotions.
  

              Too Bad For Some Of Us
Monk once said,
“All musicians are subconsciously mathematicians.”
The key word there is ‘subconsciously’,
because they may have never studied any maths in their lives,
but they were born with mathematics
imprinted in their brains,
and their minds work mathematically
whether they want them to or not.
Mine doesn’t.


Composer and Listener
One of the reasons
that I’m fond of the music
of Johann Sebastian Bach
is that it is,
as Martin complained to me,
overwhelmingly mathematical.
What makes this good for me
is that my mind
is not mathematical at all,
so I’m not suckered into
trying to understand it,
and can just experience it
as it washes over me.
  

    The Best of Bach
I saw an ad for a CD
called The Best of Bach.

Johann Sebastian Bach
composed more than eleven hundred
pieces of music,
all of them brilliant.

I think I’d probably
dislike personally
whoever it was
with the hugeness
of self-confidence
and teflon ego
needed to judge and assert
which two dozen or so
of these qualify
as Bach’s best.


           Minimal
During an afternoon walk
I was for some reason
blessedly able
to maintain in my head
the repetition of
a minimalist bar
of wordless notes
to distract me.
I say blessedly
because every undistracted moment
had come to be thoroughly filled
with sorrow, despair, and hurt,
and seemed overwhelmingly
likely to continue
to be so.


          Perceptions Of The Art Of Music
He told me he was a musician,
so I played him Frank Zappa’s ‘Gumbo Variations’,
one of his most musically challenging and rewarding
instrumental recordings at that time,
thinking that any real musician
would appreciate it.
Then he told me that what he’d meant
was that he’d played guitar
for youth-group singalongs at his church
(Catholic – but he had a Jewish-sounding surname)
and that what I’d just played for him
was about the most obnoxious thing
he’d ever heard.