Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Winning entry from Peter Berryman
Behold the bespectacled Buddha of Burma
The granddad of geezerly gazing about
A keen 20/20 his eyes looking inward
But 20/200 his eyes looking out
Peter Berryman
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Winning entry from LaDonna Robinson
I work in a call center. That’s the gentle way of telling my family that I am now a tele-marketer. It’s not a glamorous gig, but most days it’s moderately entertaining and it allows me to write and continue eating, something of which I’ve become rather fond. I work for a really good, progressive company (obviously, they were intelligent enough to recruit and hire me) that provides above industry wages and a full benefits package plus free parking, which in Duluth is a pretty significant perk. We have exceptional training in providing exceptional customer service to our exceptional customers and clients. I would like very much to pass along some of that exceptional training to some of the exceptionally rude people that I am blessed to encounter on a semi-daily basis. Yes, I do speak fluent Sarcasm, but I really mean it when I say that I am blessed to speak with some of these less-than-pleasant humanoids. Among other things, they remind me that my husband, his boss and my mother really are nice people. They remind me that there are apparently many occupations in the world that I am glad I don’t have. And they most frequently remind me that a good sense of humor is an invaluable tool when dealing with anyone. My current work project has me calling business energy accounts to see if they might be interested in receiving a non-binding price quote from another company to supply their power needs. I’m not trying to get them to buy anything, just offering to have someone who is an energy expert contact them to see if there might be a way to sweeten their bottom lines by helping them reduce costs. I should at this point mention that while I am a non-Christian, I am not an anti-Christian. There is a difference, and I just want to make sure, gentle reader, that you know I am coming from a position of love and acceptance of all belief systems. Today my phone list blessed me with many calls to religion based organizations. I also had a rather large number of public and private schools in the mix. For the most part I found the people who answer telephones at schools to be cheerful, pleasant and helpful. If the contact name I had was incorrect many of them went out of their way to help me find the person with whom I needed to speak. Sadly that was not the case when I found myself on the phone with people from some of the religious institutions on my list. At one church the automated answering system utilized Lurch from The Addam’s Family’s voice. “You have reached MOST (pause for effect) Sacred Heart Church. The office IS closed from noon until 1:00 pm and NO calls are answered. IF this is a TRUE emergency, you may dial 555-555-1212.” That was it … no “thanks for calling, have a good day.” No offerings of blessing for anyone of any religious flavor. LaDonna Robinson |
Labels:
call center,
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LaDonna Robinson,
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tele-marketer
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Winning entry from Pedro Albequerque
Como sol que teima em
queimar
Dentro da minha
escuridão,
Que ilumina o meu
coração,
Em cinzas a me
transformar.
E náufrago em mar
revolto,
Que enfrenta batalha
insana.
Tenta manter-se à tona!
Busca respirar afoito…
Pois amar sem ser amado
É Ícaro o sol a tocar,
Que desce mortalmente ao
mar-
Cego, pois apaixonado.
É amor que, quando é
findo,
Em buraco negro implode
Com força que tudo pode-
Em novo amor ressurgindo.
Pedro Albequerque
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Winning entry from Ed Newman
IT ALL BEGINS WITH A SENTENCE
It all begins with a sentence. With so many possible directions to go it’s hard to decide what will follow.
What is it that makes a good story? Well, part of it is engagement. In a world with so much background noise, with so many distractions, how do we engage the reader, to make him or her stop and take notice?
Oscar Wilde did it by being outrageous. And so it is that rock stars and artists to this day have followed this self-same path. Not all have done so with Wilde’s sense of panache.
Outrageousness is not an essential quality of great art, but at times it is useful for gaining attention. It’s a typical rock star ploy. Artist Francis Bacon took advantage of it. Marcel Duchamp did it especially well with his “found objects” making a mockery of critics and the art scene, without winking or letting on what he was about. The king had no clothes on.
Thus did Dylan sing, “even the president of the United States must sometimes stand naked.”
But how far can one go and still get away with it? What if the outrageous and audacious is so far afield that one loses his or her audience altogether? Where are we then? Perhaps in a meadow, more often than not in a quagmire. Muck and mosquitoes and bad lighting, with indigestion, and usually without a compass.
So it is apparent that invention has its limits. That is, if we are to influence we can’t be arbitrary or so absurd as to be nonsense. Finnegan’s Wake is all we need look at to understand this. Fourteen years to create a meandering epic, strings of loose ends and word games, a postmodern debacle. Yes, this is what happens when literature turns abstract. There is little left to engage. Or an insurmountable mountain of indecipherable rubble to sift through for clues… to what end? We search for meaning at our own peril here…. But then, perhaps that is what Joyce was clowning about. Finnegan’s Wake is a mirror of his world view… Or is it?
No, nonsense is not our lot. Only when we abandon sense do we lose ourselves in it. But who wants to live there. I much prefer, as do most people, a hierarchy of values, giving a measure of importance to friendship, family, heritage and the hope of a better tomorrow.
In the end, it all begins with a sentence. And where we go from here is up to us.
Ed Newman
Friday, January 8, 2010
Winning entry from Liz Minette
A Poem for A Possible Buddha
Calling
Sometimes I am
the dog walker
of the brindle boxer
named Nikolai,
whose heart shines
through his eyes.
So, I am mindful
of this animal,
as we cross
the busy street
into the park.
I gently rein
in the rope,
curl its slack
like one step,
one thought and
ask Nik to heel
which he does
with a sigh.
We look both ways
then enter the
winding footpath.
As I unravel the lead,
Nik leaps ahead and then
side to side - he wants
a million smells at once.
We are just two more,
dog and I, on this trail
shared with bicyclist,
jogger, other people
out with their pets -
what about the couple,
pierced noses and lips,
with the albino ferret
on a leash?
There will be others
to follow, all of us,
that are right now
headed for home,
or on our way
to someplace else.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Winning entry from Diana Pothast

The Search
The man walked to the water's edge
as the ground crunched and creaked.
The bitter cold took nips and bites
of cheeks and finger tips.
Rocks glistened with a band of ice...
edges lacey and fine....
The water gushed by, and around
the frozen winter ground.
He knew the spot where he would find
the treasure hidden deep,
a spring fed pond
meandering from a creek.
The sound of water pushing past
all obstacles in its way...
was more than enough to qualify
as the treasure of the day.
Diana Pothast
Winning entry from Anna Cook

Seek purity in unity
With freedom of thought
For drifters and dreamers
Will wander about,
All concepts have value
And no lesson is free
Several options surround us,
Selection is key!
Anna G. Cook
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