Sunday, December 5, 2010

The First Fall Rain


Nobel Prize, 1951: Glenn T. Seaborg
Glenn T. Seaborg, with Edwin M. McMillan for "their discoveries in the chemistry of the transuranic elements."


"A question that sometimes drives me hazy: am I or are the others crazy?" - Albert Einstein

"Keep your feet on the ground and your thoughts at lofty heights." - Peace Pilgrim

"I have my values, and if you don't like them, well I've got some others." - Mark Twain

"If you don't like something change it; if you can't change it, change the way you think about it." - Mary Engelbreit

Just to keep people informed, recently I was blessed by the gods of facebook when on a whim I searched for a "best friend" that I lost touch with over fifty years ago. We were blessed with the fact that his name is even more rare than mine. There were not many possibilities and so I chose the most likely one and got it right the first time. This is the picture I guessed was my friend. It looked like it was taken a few years back to me. Can you see the ten year old boy in this man? I thought I could.

Fifty years plus of absence and now we are present to one another once more. And more. We are still compatible. I believe he feels the same. We were children in a modest Berkeley, California neighborhood where many of the residents were college employees and students, where Glenn Seaborg, a nuclear physicist lived just around the corner before he became nationally known, where he lived when he got his Nobel Prize. I played with Glenn's son, Peter, but we were not close. My mother was a student and then a teacher at Cal in those days. My step dad played on the championship Golden Bears football team. They won the Rose Bowl. That I believe was 1948, when I was three.

I was in second and third grade. My friend Conal Boyce was in third and fourth. He told me just the other day about a father figure in his life, and I guess a little in mine. Conal had a cloud chamber in his house for a time, built by his mentor, a device where you can see the tracks left by cosmic rays as they pass through. I remember it, or I think I do. I know I remember some cloud chamber somewhere. You see, Conal and I both knew about nuclear stuff in 1952 and 1953, before either of us we were ten. Conal became a Harvard graduate, a PhD specializing in things Chinese, a Sinologist, and later in life, he has also become a theoretical chemist and philosopher of science. Me, I became a counter culture guy and then an Engineering Designer with a degree in Philosophy and Psychology.

Yesterday was a beautiful day and today as well, except for the biting winter's wind that is informing the departure of fall. So today I shall recall September, but not this September. I wrote this poem about September a year ago. As I have been at pains to mention from time to time, the date and time beneath the poem is when it was written and occasionally a date is added as to when I edited it in some (usually minor) way.

The First Fall Rain

Look how our summer
days have washed away with rain
sent insistently
by the weather god
who has forced the sun lower
in my heart.

I find
you rejoicing. He
has called you out while I sit
in my study writing
how lovely your scent
is to me in the moist bright
air of this first rain.

September 13, 2009 11:32 AM

4 comments:

  1. The ten year old boy...
    I am here for a bit, looking.

    I feel wonderful for your sharing somehow. As though I have just had a bath. Isn't that strange?

    Your poem is lovely. Scent always wins me over.

    Yesterday there was a strong northerly biting wind. It was good to meet it.

    xo
    erin

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  2. Your comment is very kind. That I might be able from time to time help you feel that way is important to me.

    Yes, scent does it for me too.

    I am still chewing on what it can mean that I lost him for so long, and that I found him again. Is this just the way it goes? But he said for reasons of simplicity in his professional life he went by the name "Dan", one reason I never found him before. He said recently he decided it no longer mattered that much so he switched back to Conal. He has written books under the name Conal, recently published. He said as well, he was only findable on facebook because he wanted to be in contact with one of his daughters who was travelling in Europe. It hasn't been a long time that I could have found him.

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  3. And so, it seems, that synchronicity has a meaning, a purpose. It seems this way. Seems is enough for me. And even if there was no purpose seen beforehand, there is great purpose now. These things lay inside of us, their relevance making itself known in time. (Or perhaps not:)

    xo
    erin

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  4. That is my faith too, that synchronicity abounds. I think it is rare for things to lack intrinsic meaning, except when it is important that we thrust meaning on events ourselves. It is probably a common teaching of the work to us that we must invest events with meaning ourselves and less common that events come to us with inherent meaning, but they do come that way often enough. It is more common to feel the pregnancy of meaning and less common to actually know the meaning. I don't think synchronistic meaning fits words very well. It never has in my life.

    Thank goodness then that I can trust my body to respond well, words or no words.

    ReplyDelete

The chicken crossed the road. That's poultry in motion.


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