Category Archives: Reflections

Thank you, dear merlinspielen my Liebster Blog source!

Yes, I am now one of the recipients of the Liebster Blog Award thanks to merlinspielen my Liebster Blog source! I have nothing intelligent to say about this experience, only a word if appreciation to my source of designation: I appreciate your kind gesture in entrusting me with this award just when I needed a supportive reader. I had appreciated your “likes” and comments before but this initiative is something I will cherish during my blogging years -which I intend to keep aplenty. In your own words: thank you, thank you, thank you!

Through the words of merlinspielen my Liebster Blog source:

The Liebster Blog Award is given to people with fewer than 200 followers, by their blogger peers.  [It is about running] a peer award system that is really a blog chain mail pyramid scheme to drive traffic to each other’s sites and feel good that their daily hits are climbing! [T]he Liebster Rules for all Liebsterites to follow:

  1. Thank your Liebster Blog Award presenter on your blog.
  2. Link back to the blogger who presented you with the award.
  3. Copy and paste the award onto your blog.
  4. Present the Liebster Blog Award to 5 bloggers with less than 200 followers.
  5. Let them know they have been chosen by leaving them a comment.

My selection of bloggers to award with the Liebster is as follows ([i]n no particular order):

1. joyandruin.wordpress.com

2. veronicasgarden.wordpress.com

3. thedawnerupts.wordpress.com

4. bobmillspoetry.wordpress.com

5. grandfathersky.wordpress.com

Happy blogging!

Related articles (copied and pasted from merlinspielen)

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Blogging is an Awarding Experience!

Thank you dear blogger friend, merlinspielen, for listing my blog as one of your Liebster Blogging Award/Honoree … Blogging is an Awarding Experience!.

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Bryce Courtenay (b. 1933)

“I had become an expert at camouflage. My precocity allowed me,

chameleonlike, to be to each what they required me to be.”

The Power of One,

Bryce Courtenay

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Morrie Schwartz with Ted Koppel

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May 8, 2012 · 4:26 am

The Crying Pomegranate: Translation excerpts from a Dervish novel in German

Author’s biographical statement

Links to the author

From: Der weinende Granatapfel. A Dervish novel by Alev Tekinay. Phantastische Bibliothek: Band 249 (also: Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag, 1990).

The Crying Pomegranate

1

Violent jolts shook Ferdinand in his sleep; he rolled around in a swift move.  His body cringed; his cramped fingers grasping the creases of the bedspread; big drops of hot sweat on his forehead.  He sighed and groaned in his sleep, his lips half open, his throat completely dry.  He reached out his hand into the air, as if to catch something.  His breath was cut short, his heart in trembles with unease and a peculiar fear.

Ferdinand wanted to have a tight hold of the images – not to forget or lose them again.  His hand fell back onto the bed like a dead bird, the impact of it waking him up. In heavy exhaustion, he opened his eyes.  Exhausted, as if he had just had a fight against the powerful images that once again left him in defeat.

Without turning on the nightlight, he sat up in his bed, his fingers searching for the cigarette package.  He loved the gentle darkness; he found solace in it.  Like a mother, or a lover.  Yet, Ferdinand Tauber had neither a mother nor a lover.

He wiped off the sweat drops from his forehead with his pajama sleeve, lit a cigarette and smiled in muse at the fact how rapid the dream world was disentangling.

He never had such encumbering dreams as those of tonight, although he was to be considered a master of dreams.  In fact, he lived more in the dream world than in the real one.  Reality was to him only a surface, only a transparent skin over the unreal, higher world.

Ferdinand Tauber became even angrier in his realization how unable he was to remember the particular dream he had been having every night for some time now.  For how long, he couldn’t recall.

Only a few fragments were hanging on to his memory, as he tried in exhaustion to put them together like mosaic pieces.

When he woke up, his teeth were in a tight clench and his body felt like a gigantic log.  But now his body was loosening little by little and an indescribable feeling ran through his heart.  He felt how an unknown something moved in his innermost being, triggering that familiar sweet ache, the one that Ferdinand Tauber could not describe.

When he finally managed to gather some of the mosaic pieces, the images began to gain a stunning clarity, one that surpassed each reality of his student life thus far.  It seemed to be a hasty racing sequence without a central point.  But, no!  There was one.  It’s only that…as soon as the image stream began to flow toward this focal point, everything became non-transparent like a piece of muddy glass, and finally, real dark, pitch-dark.  In fact, now, only the last images remained bright and alive, those that Ferdinand wanted to touch before he woke up bathed in sweat:

With milky white sails, he was soaring on a sea that looked like a violet mirror lit up by a full moon.  Though the waves were gentle in their thrust against the ship, she tilted in a sudden move and began to sink.  Deeper and deeper, Ferdinand fell into the Abyss until all his senses vanished, until everything dissolved and was wiped out.

What was there before, though?  What was there before the mysterious sailing trip?

With strained brows Ferdinand forced his memory to play back the film.  Before, there was – before – a reddish glow and a – his memory flickered like a shooting star and – then it extinguished again.  How nearby, still, Ferdinand felt the central point; half a heart beat long, for a flash!

Suddenly, he remembered a recent conversation with Klaus in the university cafeteria.  Klaus, a TU student, to whom Ferdinand actually would not have credited this much imagination, spoke of a video camera that presumably filmed people’s dreams.  The next day then, one would be able to play the tape while forwarding or rewinding it as often as one desired.

Of course, Klaus did not know anything about Ferdinand’s nightly torments.  Not even Rudi, Ferdinand’s best friend and roommate, knew anything about them.  Rudi only knew Ferdinand was a dreamer from birth.  Ferdinand kept his nightly dreams of his lack of recollection a secret from his friend Rudi.  He was protecting this secret; he wanted to keep it to himself alone.

But in case one such video camera should ever be invented one day…With seriousness and a total concentration, Ferdinand stared at the ceiling, as if that were a television screen.  Then, he pressed on an imaginary button, forward and backward, further forward, until the reddish glow appeared.

Several figures were moving around in the hazy redness, obscured, in slow motion.  People?  Trees?  Buildings?

But then the figures became more and more blurry until they were lost in full disappearance and everything remained dead silent inside Ferdinand.  He got up, exhausted and shaking, went to the window, opened it and inhaled, in long breaths, the freshness of the night.  Actually, it wasn’t night anymore.  Pale streaks of light were crossing the horizon.  The day was already dawning over the mountains that the clear weather made visible from the windows of the big old building on Clemens Street.

The mountains in the blue distance always awakened in Ferdinand wanderlust and a sense of freedom, of unbounded freedom at the same time.

Not too long ago, when Ferdinand was still preparing for the exams, his longing for this freedom had become almost unbearable.  But now that the exams were over, that everything was over, his studies, the graduation…yes, Doctor Tauber…Ferdinand felt paralyzed.  He didn’t know what he was supposed to do with his new self, the graduated Orientalist, the doctor of philosophy.

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My Nittany Valley Writers Network October 2011 Talk

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May 1, 2012 · 10:12 am

Sinop (Sinope)

Sinop has always transformed my psyche, taking my innermost self to a place of peace.  Its thought alone from a several-days distance where I live now quiets any turmoil I may feel trapped in at any given time.  Regardless of the “hell on earth” I lived there a short few years ago.  My memory – in harmony with my power of imagination, takes me back to the eight-story apartment building where my flat was.  I haven’t been back since the sale of my home in that land of the sea and the sun.  Yet, I often transit myself out of my bedroom onto the long hallway with a direct passage into my living room overlooking the sea, the Turkish Black Sea, to be exact.  I take in the spectacular view, breathe in freedom and begin my imaginary dance that the sound of the waves accompany.  My kitchen adjacent to my living room waits for me to wake up the various aromatic nuances a region-specific breakfast will lend it soon. Then again, hunger doesn’t visit me that early in the morning.  All of this happens in the memory, after all.  Before the locals get on to their daily routines, I sneak in a walk alongside the sea, all the way to the heart of the picturesque town.  I can almost see my shadow.  I had wished desperately to stay there for years to come.  So I believe to have left my shadow there instead.  I can almost spot my spirit still walking on high heels on the bumpy and hole-rich sidewalks up to and in the “Town Square.”  Selecting fresh fruit and vegetables from each stop, I am gliding in and out of stores and cafes, taking in -with an utterly overwhelmed psyche- everything that my senses can conceive of.  Feeling elated all the time.  Bursting with a yet unmet happiness.  My entire being shouting: freedom!

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From: Morrie Schwartz (1916-1995)

“Death ends a life, not a relationship.” – Morrie Schwartz (1916-1995)

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From: Frances Mayes (b. 1940 in Fitzgerald, Georgia)

Choice is restorative

when it reaches toward

an instinctive recognition

of the earliest self.

                        Frances Mayes, Under the Tuscan Sun

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From: Sue Monk Kidd (b. 1948 in Sylvester, Georgia)

“A worker bee weighs less than a flower petal, but she can fly with a load heavier than her. But she only lives four or five weeks. Sometimes not feeling is the only way you can survive.” – Sue Monk Kidd, The Secret Life of Bees

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