Cheers,
Elizabeth
Sad to say, but it looks like Ms. M's 2nd grade class is not going to get to see their first live theater performance. With 13 days to go, they've raised $110 - far short of their goal of $666 (an unfortunate number if you ask me, but there you are) to take everyone in class to see Harry the Dirty Dog.
Seems the San Francisco Chronicle is so understaffed these days that it can't send its one and only critic, the excellent Robert Hurwitt, to TJT's revival of The Last Yiddish Poet - which opens their 30th anniversary season. Hurwitt tried to get his editor to reverse the decision, but no dice.
Get to work. Your work is to keep cranking the flywheel that turns the gears that spin the belt in the engine of belief that keeps you and your desk in midair.
Things are said that might seem to be nothing at all very much, but that we know without analyzing are the light or serious outpouring from intense or profound or daily and humble sources - a preference for a flower, say, is not just that but also a comment on some quality in life, some soft sweetness or cold or graceful formality, or some old romantic memory or happy or sad association. It might be some shading in the voice, some color of the tone, or the very order itself of the words or phrases, or even what is left out, not spoken at all, that expresses the thing really being said. - Stark Young
Verbo by Pablo Neruda