What’s the Mother of Peroration?

Hot weather is the mother of procrastination —
my energy is at ebb tide —
I’m getting caloricly stupid —
Tried to read . . . mind stumbled
on a ponderous perioration (sic) (I think)
and fell in between two paragraphs
and lay unconscious for ten minutes . . .
Diary of Thomas Edison, July 20, 1885

Thomas Edison kept a diary for all of 10 days in his 84 years, but clearly someone else kept it on his behalf and on ours. I thought it was cute, so I posted it.

I had to look up perioration.
A correspondent of mine, July 03, 2026

I might have looked it up too, but I had decided to ignore my faint misgivings about the spelling and go with my vague sense of its meaning from context — A long-winded thought or argument, yeah? — because there was a delightful image beckoning to me from the far side of this peculiar word.

(My) mind . . .
Fell in between two paragraphs
and lay unconscious for ten minutes.

I’ve had reading experiences just like that.

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Posted in Language and Communication, Thinking Broadly | Tagged , | 14 Comments

Car Reflections

One advantage of going to familiar places is that I know what to look out for: in this case, the in-full-leaf trees reflected in the sunroof, windshield, and hood of our SUV parked in its usual spot, as viewed from my usual spot on the second-storey deck.

New vistas can be exciting; familiar ones can be exquisite, joining hands across time to draw from and add to each other’s beauty.

Posted in Appreciating Deeply, Photos of Built Stuff, Photos of Flora | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Naming the Clouds

Heigh ho, heigh ho,
It’s off to work we go.
Song from Snow White

How did the Seven Dwarfs get into things this week? Well, I was reading The Invention of Clouds, a book whose existence I stumbled across when trying to find out whether clouds had seasonally distinctive appearances, in order to justify my belief that a given cloudscape was a harbinger of spring which, in turn, would justify the associated photographically induced departure delay. I was not entirely successful in this quest, which is often the case when searching for self-justification, but I got a new book out of it, so there’s that.

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Posted in Appreciating Deeply, Laughing Frequently, New Perspectives, Through History | Tagged , , , | 8 Comments

Now You See It; Now I Don’t

It’s your turn.

Silence.

It’s your turn.
People online have to introduce themselves, too.

I sigh inwardly and speak my name, rather than the thought in my head.

Oh. You’re talking to me?

Or, perhaps . . .

What exactly do you think I can see?
Because I can’t see you lookin’ at me.

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Posted in Language and Communication, Laughing Frequently, Thinking Broadly | Tagged , | 8 Comments

As I was saying . . .

You’re a good woman.
(slight emphasis on the good)

If you’re not a woman you won’t have heard this addressed to you, but you might have said it or heard it used — it, or this punchier variant.

Good woman.
(slight and entirely optional emphasis
on the 1st syllable of woman)

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Posted in Feeling Clearly, Language and Communication, Laughing Frequently | Tagged , | 14 Comments

Light Show

As we took our seats, I looked out through 40-foot tall windows lit up beautifully by the setting sun.

Not.

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Posted in Appreciating Deeply, Photos of Built Stuff | Tagged | 10 Comments

Quick! Name that thing!

Whoa.

You know those tall balloon figures that sway as if in the wind but it’s not really wind, it’s variable bursts of air from a compressor or something? The ones that look as if they’re about to fall over backward and then jerk upright? The ones used to attract attention to used-car lots and similar establishments? Sure you do, although my description might not convince you of that. This would be simpler if they had a name.

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Posted in Laughing Frequently, Photos of Built Stuff | Tagged | 8 Comments

A Fistful of Floors

Not a fan of balconies: the higher, the worser. Sometimes, though, getting an uncomfortable distance off the ground provides a different perspective. Here’s just such a perspective from Winnipeg last weekend, just before sunset.

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Posted in Appreciating Deeply, Photos of Built Stuff, Thinking Broadly | Tagged , | 8 Comments

A Fistful of Faces

As seen on a recent trip to Winnipeg, one art card offered at least four faces/characters. Can four faces appear by accident in one piece of graphic art, just as a function of the underlying design or style choices? Whether by chance or intention, here they are, top to bottom . . .

Grinch

And his face is even green!

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Posted in Photos of Faces | Tagged | 6 Comments