mission * capistrano

I was blessed to spend the day at the Mission San Juan Capistrano where I spent time reflecting on what it means to create a space for peace & embrace the peace that transcends understanding.

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The mission is known for its annual migration of swallows.  The mission bell rings in honor of their return –  the same date every year – March 19. 

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I didn’t see any swallows or jug-shaped mud-nests, but it’s August, after all.

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I enjoyed walking on the curving sand-paths.  A dry, hot noon sun rose overhead.  The heat reminded of baking bread – indeed, I passed an outdoor stone hearth with a rusted iron kettle on it, large enough for me to stand in, then I passed a round oven, like an igloo, with broken coal inside. 

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I followed the mica-flecked path around one stone-and-stucco fountain with lilies and koi, then another with lilies equally beautiful, and came to rest at the foot of two large stones.  I touched each stone with my hands: If the stones could speak

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Two scaly sand lizards sun-bathed on the edge of the path, looking quiet & content, blinking & breathing.

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Here’s what a sign said by the two large stones:  Olive Mill

Built around the 1880s and reconstructed in the 1930s, this unconventional, two-wheel olive mill was used to crush olives for juice extraction.  Evidence indicates that the pulp produced was pressed in a room within the west wing industrial complex.  Processed olive juice was used to produce olive oil for cooking, lamps, medicines, and protective balm.

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Olive oil… holy oil, the blessed oil, the oil for anointing the sick, the healing oil, the olive trees Jesus loved centuries ago, how old they must be today, if still alive: about two thousand years.

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I thought of holy tongues of fire coming to rest over the believers’ heads in Acts 2:3-4.

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Prayer:   To embrace blessings that come from the Holy Spirit to bless our own lives & loved ones, too.  To embrace blessings that come to bless others.  To be a vessel of grace with a diversity of tongues.


 

sarah * gambito

Omoiyari Interview with Professor Sarah Gambito
Director of Creative Writing at Fordham University

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Poet’s Biography

Sarah Gambito is the author of the poetry collections Delivered (Persea Books) and Matadora (Alice James Books).  Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The Iowa Review, The Antioch Review, Denver Quarterly, The New Republic, Field, Quarterly West, Fence and other journals.  She holds degrees from the University of Virginia and the Creative Writing Program at Brown University.  Her honors include the Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers Award from Poets and Writers and grants and fellowships from The New York Foundation for the Arts, Urban Artists Initiative and the MacDowell Colony.  She is Assistant Professor of English and Director of Creative Writing at Fordham University.  Together with Joseph O. Legaspi, she co-founded Kundiman, a non-profit organization serving Asian American poets.

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KL: Congratulations on the success of Kundiman, the annual retreat for Asian American poets!  Kundiman also sponsors the Kundiman Poetry Prize with publication of the winning manuscript by Alice James Books.  

What are some of the highlights of your transformative journey in creating Kundiman?  How would you describe the lasting influence of mentorship and community which Kundiman provides?
    
Sarah Gambito: What has been so rewarding is to see how the energy of the retreat extends past the physical days of the retreat.  Fellows really keep in touch over email, Facebook, Ichat, good food in Queens, salons in Los Angeles and Brooklyn and continue to mentor each other.  It has been wonderful to see how they become each other’s best readers and sanctuary. 

One of my favorite moments was when Yael Villafranca—one of our youngest fellows—who had never read in public before read at the Retreat reading with Bei Dao. It was so symbolic of what Kundiman has come to mean to me—various generations of Asian American poets buoying each other through words.

KL:  Currently, you’re director of the Creative Writing Program at Fordham University.  What are your dreams & visions for this program? 

Sarah Gambito: The English department at Fordham has long fostered a symbiotic relationship between scholarship and the creative arts.  I’d love to help build upon this.  One of my projects in Fall 2010 is Turning Tides: A Symposium on Diasporic Literatures to be held at the Fordham Lincoln Center campus.  More information on this is here:  http://turningtides.squarespace.com/  Kundiman is fortunate, also, in the fact that we have entered into a institutional partnership with Fordham.  We held our first retreat at the Fordham Bronx, Rose Hill campus this past Summer 2010.  Fellows wrote poems on the beautiful grounds.  Stayed up late into the night discussing literature.  Visited the Botanical Gardens and Poet’s House in Manhattan.

I’m looking forward, also, to learning about how I can be effective in creating community between the creative writers at Fordham.  This year, we are piloting a series of student-centered readings that will entail the participation of all the creative writing classes across both campuses.


KL: What are some of your favorite writing exercises and texts to teach?

Sarah Gambito:
Empathy, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge.  I love Adrienne Kennedy.  I love translation exercises.  Even better if you don’t know the language you are translating from.  Through the years, I’ve been working on a directed writing exercise involving breath and the seven chakras.  I’m so much in my head as a writer.  It has been fulfilling to think about the physical body and how this can help drive creative impulse.

KL: Your acclaimed second collection, Delivered (Persea Books) was published in 2009.  Are you working on any current projects?   

Sarah Gambito: Right now I’m interested in new media and poetry.  How can the text of a poem expand to fit the liquid contours of the Internet….

KL:  With all your administrative responsibilities, how do you set aside time to write poetry?

Sarah Gambito: I’m still learning this discipline.  What I try and do is read as much as I can.  And write as it comes.  And to try not to question too much.         

healing * cancer

This morning, I was pleased to attend the inaugural kick-off breakfast, “Making Strides against Breast Cancer,” sponsored by the Orange County chapter of the American Cancer Society. I created a team for my university so we can participate in the 5k walk-a-thon to support finding a cure!   I enjoyed listening to survivors whose personal testimonies encompassed suffering yet embraced life.  The beauty of women was highlighted with dignity, emphasizing their inner strength & survivorship.

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I also very much enjoyed the pink-frosted cupcakes at my table!  Cupcakes for breakfast are a special treat…. plus spinach quiche, croissants, pineapples, cantaloupe, and watermelon.  I drank tarragon mint tea.

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Last night, I counted on both hands – more than both hands – the number of people I know who’ve survived cancer or passed away from cancer.  There are many, and early detection in all cases was the key to survival, as well as a positive outlook, faith, & an active prayer life.

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On the various journeys each person experienced, I think (1) anger, (2) stress, and (3) bitterness were deterrents to healing…. especially if a person felt isolated or couldn’t forgive someone.  It’s healthy to embrace the good sparks in life – even if they’re sparse for a season – and find ways to work through painful & uncertain realities.  It’s also good to be blessed by loving friends; it’s hard to endure this sort of journey alone.

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Women over the age of 40:  Get your annual mammograms!  At the presentation, the Director of Radiology from Hoag Hospital showed pictures of a new kind of technology called “digital tomosynthesis,” which yields higher resolution than regular mammograms. Digital tomosynthesis is especially useful for precise image-slicing of dense tissues, and it’s been used for research, but hasn’t been available for patient care.  Even better news for patients:  none of that icky “squooshing” with regular mammos (which, by the way, are low-dose x-rays).  Even teeny-tiny calcified specks are visible on the digital imaging.  Needless to say, I could’ve listened to this presentation for hours.

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I remember taking a radiology course as a pre-med student.  The professor showed us pictures of advanced breast cancer and radical mastectomies:  Basically, if the lump is already palpable, it’s in the later stages and could be metastatic.  (I am a poet, not a doctor, and not a doctor-poet like William Carlos Williams, so please take all this with a big grain of salt!)  When I was a student, I had no idea then that this sort of technology would evolve to benefit cancer patients today.  How exciting, and how wonderful for patients who can afford excellent health care.

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“Cancer doesn’t wear a watch,” said Lori Smith, Chair of the Board-elect of the California Division, the American Cancer Society.

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I love listening to stories of hope… again and again.

 

salt * genius

From Melissa Breyer’s 46 Smart Uses for Salt…  salt to dry clothes in winter, salt to treat bee-stings:

“How many ways can you use salt? According to the Salt Institute, about 14,000!  … I can’t think of another more versatile mineral.  Salt is the most common and readily available nonmetallic mineral in the world. In fact, the supply of salt is inexhaustible… There are a number of forms of salt produced for consumption (and by default, housekeeping!): unrefined salt (such as sea salt), refined salt (table salt), and iodized salt. Kosher salt is sodium chloride processed to have flat crystals. And in case you’re wondering, Epsom salt is an entirely different stuff: magnesium sulfate to be exact (which is a salt that I consider to be, essentially, miraculous).”

 

poeta * diwata

Latest poetry collection, Diwata, by Barbara Jane Reyes!  Congratulations!

From the BOA Editions page: “In her book Diwata, Reyes uses such Filipino oral tradition devices as meter, repetition and refrain, call and response, incantatory verses which verge on song, and the pantoum (which has Southeast Asian origins). She frames her poems between the Book of Genesis creation story, and the Tagalog creation myth, placing her work somewhere culturally in between both traditions. Also setting the tone for her stories is the death and large shadow cast by her grandfather, a World War II veteran and Bataan Death March survivor, who has passed onto her the responsibility of remembering. Reyes’ voice is grounded in her community’s traditions and histories, despite war and geographical dislocation.”

 

anna * leahy

Omoiyari Interview with Dr. Anna Leahy:
Director of the Tabula Poetica Series
at Chapman University 

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Poet’s Biography

Anna Leahy is the author of Constituents of Matter, which won the Wick Poetry Prize and is published by Kent State University Press. Her poems appear widely in literary journals, most recently Barn Owl Review, The Laurel Review, and Margie. She edited Power and Identity in the Creative Writing Classroom, which launched the New Writing Series at Multilingual Matters. Her essays about teaching and writing appear widely, including in the latest issue of Mid-American Review (co-authored with Larissa Szporluk) and in the newly published Does the Writing Workshop Still Work? She co-writes Lofty Ambitions blog (http://loftyambitions.wordpress.com).

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KL: Congratulations on the success of Tabula Poetica, the poetry reading series at Chapman University! Would you share a little about your upcoming guest poets and M.F.A. events?

Anna Leahy: We piloted the Tabula Poetica series in Spring 2009 with three wonderful poets: Jen Bervin (also a visual artist), Richard Deming (also a literary scholar), and Nancy Kuhl (also a library curator). That experiment went so well that we established the Poetry Reading Series as an annual fall event in 2009, with you among the fantastic poets in that line-up. In Fall 2010, Pulitzer Prize winner Rae Armantrout will kick off the series on September 14. I contacted her before she won the Pulitzer and the National Book Critics Circle Award, but those prizes help the visibility of our project. Two other California poets follow: Patty Seyburn (she was awarded a Pushcart Prize) on September 28 and Lynne Thompson (Director of Employee and Labor Relations at UCLA) on October 12. Our final visiting poet is Allison Joseph on November 9; she’s an Illinoisian, an editor of Crab Orchard Review, and great with students. Our series concludes on November 30 with a reading by Chapman University MFA students. All the Poetry Talks and Readings are free and open to the public. The Poetry Talks are at 2:30pm in Argyros Forum 201, and the Readings (with refreshments) are at 5:00pm in Leatherby Libraries. For more info, visit Tabula Poetica at http://www.chapman.edu/poetry.

KL: In the classroom, what are your favorite writing exercises and texts to teach?

Anna Leahy: I use Robert Pinsky’s The Sounds of Poetry quite a bit, because I want to forefront to students that writing poetry is about formal choices—even when it’s free verse—even more than it is about those spontaneously overflowing emotions. The poet’s self will always be part of the poem, so I like to distract students from themselves with a focus on form. For advanced students, James Logenbach’s The Art of the Poetic Line is a good follow-on to complicate the issues. I read widely myself, and I urge my students to do that too. I often bring in poems for imitation exercises. Larrisa Szporluk and I wrote a conversation essay called “Good Counsel” in which we discuss imitation as a first step in the creative process, a step toward deep imagination. Dorianne Laux’s “The Idea of Housework” is a fun poem to use; students can start with the opening lines “What good does it do anyone / to…” and go from there, riffing on things they feel obligated to do or to have. Nancy Kuhl’s The Wife of the Left Hand has several poems with repeated phrases that structure the given poem as a prayer, wish, or lament; students can use that repeated structure with different subject matter. What’s great about such exercises is sharing the imitations afterward to demonstrate that, even when everyone starts with the same line or prompt, each poem is different. If there are phrases common across versions, most students recognize on their own that they may have reached for the easy cliché. In the long run, this sort of exercise teaches students to read closely and selfishly.

KL: Your first full-length collection, Constituents of Matter, received the Wick Poetry Prize. Are you working on any current projects?

Anna Leahy: I have a second manuscript, Among Virgins and Harlots, that I’ve sent out, and it’s been a finalist in a handful of contests. I’ve started writing poems beyond it, though, so I’ve not sent it out much in recent months. I’d hoped to revise it this summer, but planning the reading series has taken more time than I’d expected and, to my surprise, I’ve been writing memoir essays. The move from Illinois to California two years ago felt like a big shift that’s led me to this new form. One of the essays was recently a finalist in the Arts & Letters competition, which was just enough of an external nod to make me think I might be on to something. That said, I’m still a poet, and Chapman University has generously awarded me a one-course reallocation in the spring so that I can give my poetry manuscript the attention I think it needs and deserves. I’d like to experiment with persona poems to an even greater extent when I return to that project.

KL: What’s your advice to people who wish to launch a new reading series on their campus?

Anna Leahy: Absolutely the first thing you must do is be friendly with every Administrative Assistant you meet—in your department, in the dean’s office, in the public relations and development offices. And take time to meet every Administrative Assistant you can. Unless your PhD is in event planning, these are the people you need to help you make the reading series a success. Coordinating a reading series is more work than it probably should be, so it’s easier and more successful when you have a team behind you (and often ahead of you). I have a few other recommendations, based on hindsight. Make up a name early; it took us weeks to settle on Tabula Poetica after we (somewhat accidentally) piloted a series, but having a name makes people think you have a project. Establish a Facebook group; maybe 232 members isn’t huge (yet!), but it helps get the word out, and students especially use Facebook to track events. Collaborate; Tabula Poetica worked with the Rodgers Center for Holocaust Education to do a reading from Night just before Elie Wiesel visited campus, and we hosted a bilingual reading by MFA students in English and undergraduates in German as part of the Freedom Without Walls program. Look into hiring a student worker (graduate assistant, work-study undergrad, whatever); Natalie d’Auvergne is this year’s Graduate Assistant, and even over the summer, she’s been working to generate a list of area high schools and libraries and write reviews of books by this fall’s visiting poets. These are things I’d advise because I happened upon them, but wish someone had told me sooner. Mostly, I’d say just do something to promote poetry. These are difficult times for the arts, so those of us who can do something should. Poets are generous people, by and large, and you never know who’s out there waiting for a poetry event, either because they secretly write poems or they have fond memories of a grandmother reading poetry to them. Poetry, because we are language users and metaphorical thinkers, is one of the most human of endeavors.

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dove * lion

Barbara Jane Reyes and Oscar Bermeo, two extraordinary poets, launch Doveglion Press, an independent publisher of political literature and orature: “We are committed to publishing aesthetically diverse and challenging works of strong artistic merit.  Doveglion, the pen name which Jose Garcia Villa crafted from the dove, eagle, and lion, is a fantastic and hybrid creature, signifying the writer’s ability to embody multitudes, and from splintered selves, to reinvent, and to reconstruct him/herself anew.”

diversity * beauty

From the New Pages blog: “Embracing Our Differences invites professional, amateur and student writers to participate in its 8th annual exhibit celebrating diversity. National and international submissions are encouraged. Entries should be no more than 30 words and express what the theme ’embracing our differences’ mean to you.

“The exhibit, displayed during April and May 2011 in Sarasota, Florida, has been viewed by more than 850,000 visitors. Cash award of $1,000.00. Deadline for submission is December 20, 2010. There is no submission fee or limit on the number of entries. Submission forms and more information concerning past winning submissions are available at www.EmbracingOurDifferences.org or by emailing info@EmbracingOurDifferences.org. Submissions may also be made online.”

lan * samantha

A PBS interview with Lan Samantha Chang, award-winning author of Hunger and Inheritance plus a forthcoming novel about poetry in a fictional world.  In real life, she holds the amazing position as director of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. 

Tavis: What are the characteristics of a good writer, or is that an impossible question to answer?

Chang: Oh, that’s such an interesting question. I mean, we could sit and talk about that for a long time. What I look for, when I’m looking at different student manuscripts, is a sense of passion and tension in the prose, a sense that the writer cares about words and that the prose is alive. It could be any style. It could be highly experimental or street-psychological realism. It could be international fiction. It could be a family saga. But whatever it is, I have to have that sense that the narrator of the story cares, that there’s something at stake; that the prose is charged with passion on some level.

  book cover of   Hunger   by  Lan Samantha Chang     book cover of   Inheritance   by  Lan Samantha Chang