The Daily Tweets, 2010-06-24: UAA Justice Center website redesign

  • Congratulating my coworker Melissa Huenefeld for great work on UAA Justice Center’s “For Students” pages http://bit.ly/uaajc-students #fb #
  • She did great work putting “For Students” stuff into UAA’s CMS. Went live today. http://bit.ly/uaajc_students #fb #
  • As for me, I’ve been skinning the research/pubs parts of UAA JC site to look like UAA’s CMS using CSS for layout. http://bit.ly/uaajc #fb #
  • & now, tonight, more geeking out: getting set to make WordPress templates to skin our blog (currently in Blogger) to match UAA CMS too. #fb #
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“Anchorage Oil Town Villanelle” published in Cirque

Cirque,  Summer Solstice 2010

Cirque, Summer Solstice 2010. Cover art by Janet Levin

On April 29 this year I headed downstairs to the Starbucks in the UAA Social Sciences Building to grab myself a cup of coffee, & there ran into my friend Marilyn Borell, with whom I went through UAA’s Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program in the late ’90s. Marilyn told me about something that had somehow had escaped my attention until then: Cirque, a literary journal created and edited by our friend Anchorage poet Mike Burwell, which had already published its first issue on Winter Solstice 2009. Further, Marilyn told me, Cirque was taking submissions for its second issue — with a submission deadline of the very next day. And so I submitted.

The Summer Solstice 2010 issue was published — you guessed it — yesterday, Summer Solstice (June 21).

You can find my poem “Anchorage Oil Town Villanelle” on page 37. I wrote this poem in 1997, eight years after the Exxon Valdez oil spill, & submitted it to Cirque a few days after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion. But no one knew on April 30 how vast the resulting oil spill would be — less of a spill, really, than a hemorrhage. But it’s not just oil spills that are the problem — it’s the whole schlemiel surrounding oil & the corrupting influence of oil money.  Which Anchorage, & Alaska, is square in the middle of.  Just take a look at Wikipedia’s article on the Alaska political corruption probe — which broke into the news a good nine years after my poem was written.

I’m delighted to be accompanied by works by other poets & writers I know like Marilyn Borell, Anne Coray, Marybeth Holleman, Mark Muro, Jeff Oliver, and Tom Sexton — who taught the first poetry workshop I took at UAA in Spring 1994. I know my friend David Cheezem — another friend from UAA MFA program — primarily as a poet and coowner of Fireside Books in Palmer, but he’s also a fine photographer: see his contribution on page 42.

And then there’s all the great reading, illustrations, and photography from people all over the Pacific Rim who I don’t know.

To turn the pages, click on the arrow bars on either side. To zoom to fullscreen, just click on the page.

Cirque is a regional literary journal of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, artwork, and photography for emerging and established writers living in the North Pacific Rim — Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Hawaii, Yukon Territory, Alberta, British Columbia, and Chukotka.  As such, it is in some ways a successor to Ice-Floe, an international journal of poetry of the circumpolar north co-edited (with Sarah Kirk) by another of my fellow UAA MFA graduates Shannon Gramse. (My poem “Field of Words” was published in Ice-Floe’s Winter Solstice 2002 issue.)  Except, of course, that Cirque includes other genres beside poetry.

It’s a beautiful publication too. It’s available for viewing & reading online, as above, or you can purchase copies through Magcloud.

Stories mentioned in my Cirque bio

My bio in Cirque mentions two stories I wrote.  Here’s where you can read them:

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The Daily Tweets, 2010-06-18: Divebombed

  • Was just divebombed by 2 screaming grumpy gulls in Consortium Library parking lot. Lucky for me they didn’t drop any actual bombs. #fb #
  • But I am reminded of the poesy of the immortal Henry Gibson: Birdie birdie in the sky / why’d you do that in my eye / (contd….) #fb #
  • (Henry Gibson contd.): I’m a big boy, i won’t cry / but I’m sure glad that cows don’t fly. #fb #
  • Charles Wohlforth (Alaskan, The Fate of Nature author) on Talk of the Nation Science Friday now talking about Exxon Valdez & oil spills. #fb #
  • Talk of the Nation Science Friday w/ Charles Wohlforth ‘The Fate of Nature’ in NPR archives. http://bit.ly/cXhokD #fb #
  • @tonei I hear rumor that Google Gears will go away in favor of some better offline option. They’ve already disabled Google Docs offline. in reply to tonei #
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The Daily Tweets, 2010-06-17: IE bugs

  • IE bugs hack hack hack. It’s time someone took Internet Explorer out into the back 40 & shot it. #
  • @gayanch I’m interested in learning MODx too but admin interface looks intimidating to non-geeks here who will also need to use it. #
  • @gayanch Which is one reason I picked Joomla. Plus large user base & longer history. But: read Joomla’s info abt keeping it secure! #
  • @redrummy In this case IE7 & 8, which while much less buggy than IE5-6 still renders many CSS floats improperly. I use Firefox myself. #
  • Celebrating the (IE) buggy: Created a bookmark folder for website work dedicated to Internet Explorer bugs & hacks. They are so many. #fb #
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The Daily Tweets, 2010-06-15: CSS

  • Whatever else one might feel about Google, they know how to put together a first-class (& free!) webinar. Thanks, Google! #
  • Kudos to UAA Chancellor Fran Ulmer, appointed by Pres. Obama to National Oil Spill Commission. http://bit.ly/bKvIMh #fb #
  • My work: UAA Justice Center site redesigned to match UAA CMS. Not an HTML layout table to be found! (It’s CSS.) http://bit.ly/uaajc #fb #
  • RT: @gayanch: @yksin very nice indeed! // Thanks! Really glad to be learning CSS the way I should be learning it, finally! #
  • @gayanch The knowledge will come in handy for my own website, too. Also gonna be learning PHP & content mgt systems using Joomla. #
  • I love my new light hiking boots from Keen that I bought at REI yesterday. Gonna do some backpacking next weekend. #fb #
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Get thee behind me, pumpkin scone!

Pumpkin scones

I’m a sucker for Starbucks’ pumpkin scones.  And so every workday of last winter through early spring, when I’d go down to the Starbucks in the Social Sciences Building for my coffee, if pumpkin scones were available, I’d get one.  Mmmmmm.

But then sense took hold again.  Two summers ago I took off 40 pounds.  Some of that was water weight (I was doing a lot of low-carbing), but at least 35 of that was honest to goodness fat loss.  In any case, of that 40 lost, by last April 16 — the date on which I took the photo above — I’d regained about 20 of it.  (Again, some of it water weight — but some of it not.)

I took the photo on the occasion of my first day of looking but not touching (much less eating).

Here’s the trick I use, in five easy steps:

1. Look at the pretty and tasty pumpkin scones.

2. Salivate.

3. Envision the words, in blinking 24-point bold red font-of-your-choice:

480 calories!!!

(sorry, I’d style it that way here, but WordPress ain’t cooperating)

4. Buy a cup of coffee with no cream or sweetener, and envision:

0 calories!!!

5. Congratulate yourself & go back to work.

That’s what I did the day I took the above photo.  And I was prepared to do it thereafter in an admirable daily display of self-control in the face of prodigous temptation. But alas! I was given no opportunity, because the pumpkin scones disappeared from the SSB Starbucks daily offering.  And nothing else there even tempted me.

Yesterday they reappeared.

I’m happy to say my technique still works.  And also that I’m 6 pounds down from where I was on April 16, though of course pumpkin scone abstention isn’t the only step I’m taking.

I expect my progress to continue. Meantime, I continue to marvel at how we marvel at high levels of obesity, when tasty but high calorie items like these are so widely on offer.  The 480 calories in a Starbucks pumpkin scone is a third to a quarter (depending on your size & level of exercise) of an average person’s daily calorie need.  And not much nutritional value at all.  It’s high-end junk food, but junk food nonetheless.  So… an occasional treat.  Nowadays, very occasional indeed.

Coffee’s good though.

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The Daily Tweets, 2010-06-08: A Green evening

Charles  Wohlforth and The Fate of Nature

Charles Wohlforth giving a talk on his book The Fate of Nature at the Wilda Marston Theatre, Loussac Library

I hadn’t even known Charles Wohlforth was talking about his book tonight until a friend mentioned it at the Green Tea Party — & though we got there late, I’m really glad I went.  The book is The Fate of Nature: Rediscovering Our Ability to Rescue the Earth. It needs to be read & talked about. I’ve got my copy.

  • Back to blogging, back to tweeting — but for now, back to learning me some CSS. Geekout. #fb #
  • I belong to no political party, but I _am_ Mel Green, hence must go to the Tea Party being held in my honor. http://bit.ly/dnCd1s #
  • Besides, green tea, & hence Green Tea Party, is good for one’s health, both locally & globally. http://bit.ly/dnCd1s #
  • A Green evening: Green Tea Party, & then to Loussac to hear part of Charles Wolforth presentation, & bought his book The Fate of Nature. #fb #

Here’s Charles Wohlforth talking with folks as he signs his book after the presentation.

Charles Wohlforth signing his book The Fate of Nature

And after that, capped off the night by watching “The Fall” with Ptery. What a great movie!

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Recalibration

Recalibration

It’s been awhile since I’ve posted anything than a few stray tweets — & not too many of them.

Blame it on skankthrax. I’m not, in fact, a skank; but skankthrax is what a online friend of mine dubbed the nasty cold-that-wouldn’t-go-away that I was afflicted with in early 2007.  Well, of course, it did go away, eventually.  But the word stuck, & comes in handy for the similar kind of nastiness that took hold of me early last month.  (I had a similar cold in 2008, too, whence cometh the photo below — used to illustrate this part of this post since I didn’t take any self-portraits during this latest bout.)

Skankthrax, stage 4: Sneezing & streaming eyes (075/365)

(I’m proud to proclaim my minor claim to fame: the photo was selected by New Hampshire Public Radio to illustrate an October 2008 story about the common cold. Huzzah!)

I intended at the time I caught the cold to write one of my geekily long, super-referenced political posts in followup to the April 28 gun carry protest on the UAA campus, about which I tweeted the day thereof.  Here’s one of several pics passed onto me by a friend that were intended to illustrate that post (see others in my Flickr photostream) –

Campus carry protest on UAA campus

– but skankthrax sucked all the energy out of me, & I never got around to it.  If I had, it would mainly have been to reiterate in longer form what I’d already said in comments on other people’s blogs on the actual day, & if anyone’s really interested they can follow the links to those posts from my tweets.

But thank goodness for skankthrax. If a nasty cold-from-hell is a crisis of sorts, then it’s also an opportunity; & here along with four days out sick from work was not only an enforced opportunity to rest, but also a voluntary opportunity to pull back & rethink a few things about what I’m doing in my life.  And on this blog, which is a reflection of my life, & on the work I still want to do in it.  (Not, I’m thankful, a period of reflection that required as much time & silence as the cave I dwelt in for a period of 2008-2009.)

Here’s some of what I’ve determined:

Last year, in the midst of the (lost) battle for an equal rights ordinance in Anchorage, & other political goings-on of 2009, I declared myself an occasional political blogger.  But virtually every time I dip into the “occasional”, it distracts & detracts one helluva lot from what I really want to be doing — again again again I must say it, if only to remind myself: writing.  Writing about a local or even state, national, or international political issue is writing, of course — but it’s not the stuff I really want to write.  Important as it is, what feeds my spirit is writing my stuff, which I know darn well what that is.  At the same time, a lot of my stuff is inherently political — just not at that level of “at this very moment in this very place” immediacy such as one can find on, for example, The Mudflats, Alaska Commons, Progressive Alaska, or any of the other progressive (or otherwise) political blogs that I’ve been semi-numbered among for the past year. I count on those bloggers to keep me in the loop on what’s important to me politically — they excel at it, & furthermore they seem to thrive at it.  Unlike me.  So I’ll count on them to do what they do, & count on me to do what I do.

That’s not to say that this blog will become apolitical.  As I’ve already said, a lot of my stuff is inherently political.  Hence, politics will be here; but the emphasis of it will be that which is integral to my work.

My silence over the past month has been in part to give me a break, a distancing from immediate politics, in order to better effect that shift back to my writing & my own direction in life.

Write hard, die free

Other stuff I’m doing too, that will be reflected over the next few weeks & months on this blog.  For my job, I’ve found myself needing to fill in a lot of gaps in my catch-as-catch-can education on website design. The know-how I’m gaining as a result will have a lot of benefits for my website too, which I’ve long intended to play a central role in my writing/self-publishing life.  That’s another part of my silence lately: I’m busy learning (or preparing to learn) in-depth a lot of cool stuff about CSS, PHP, MySQL, & other such stuff.  As a poet, I can’t quite sign onto the meme that “code is poetry” — but I appreciate the beauty of elegant code that makes websites look good & load fast, & it’s pretty darn cool to learn better how to do it myself.  Especially because it’ll help me get some of my stuff out there for people to read.  (I hope.)

I’ve also got a visitor in town right now, my more-than-a-friend-but-not-quite-my-partner-anymore love Ptery (formerly Rozz), who’s up here for another few weeks.  Ptery is going to be doing some guest blogging soon, perhaps then breaking out into his own blog.  I’m looking forward to the conversations we’ll have here — me, him, & anyone else who wants to join in.  I’ll have a more extensive introduction when Ptery posts his first guest post.  But here we are below, on the day he arrived in town.

Mel & Ptery

And now I’m back to blogging. It’s a good thing.

Posted in Journal, Ptery | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

The Daily Tweets, 2010-05-28: Ptery arrives

  • Just picked up my ex Ptery-formerly-Rozz at airport, had bfast @ Beartooth, now – both of us having not slept last night – about to nap. #fb #
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The Daily Tweets, 2010-05-27: Shill baby shill

  • Obama just said “That’s why you’ve never heard me say ‘Drill baby drill’.” I predict an insulting stupid Palin Facebook update soon. #fb #
  • My last tweet struck a nerve w/ some poor hapless Palin supporter, who told me to STFU. Shill baby shill. #fb #
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