Heard this song recently after not having heard it for a while--same effect on me. I love these kinds of songs--moody, reflective--both the music and lyrics. I love songs that make you feel and think about what you are feeling.
And here are the lyrics:
Porcelain
by Richard Melville Hall
In my dreams I'm dying all the time,
Then I wake it's kaleidoscopic mind
I never meant to hurt you,
I never meant to lie
So this is goodbye,
This is goodbye
Tell the truth, You've never wanted me
Tell me
In my dreams I'm jealous all the time,
When I wake I'm going out of my mind
Going out of my mind
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Why I loved La La Land
If you haven’t seen La
La Land, the movie musical that won and lost the Oscar for best picture in
the space of a few minutes (it was mistakenly announced as Best Picture at the
Oscar awards), see it. It was nominated in fourteen Oscar categories, and won ten
of them (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3783958/awards).
The Oscar fiasco is quickly forgotten when you slip into the world that
La La Land creates. I am not a real
movie musical fan—it’s not my favorite genre—but if more of these kinds of
musicals are made in the coming years, I may become one. The songs in this film
are lovely, catchy, bittersweet and memorable. There is an air of respect in
the movie that is rare these days. It was a refreshing change to experience
that level of respect for nearly everything in a film--respect for the genre, for
the actors, for the plot, for jazz music, for acting, for individual dreams, for
good manners, for courtship and good old-fashioned romance (more important than
one often likes to admit), for serious conversations, and overall for the art
of movie-making. That art is on display in full force in this movie—stylish lovely sets,
historical references to the Hollywood of a bygone era and to a Los Angeles of
a bygone era as well. It’s a dreamy, dreamlike film in some respects that has
its feet firmly planted on the ground in most respects. Boy meets girl, they
don’t get together right away, and then they do. Both are talented individuals
who have big dreams, and whose pursuits of those dreams unite them in a common
cause. They love each other and they want the other to succeed. And when the
other doubts himself or herself, they are there to remind them of the bigger
picture, the goal, the big dream. They are there to remind them to never give
up. Neither of them do. I loved pretty much everything about this movie. It
evoked just the right amount of nostalgia for a (presumably) more innocent
time, the longing for a time in one’s life when everything was still new and
untested, when love was new, when conversations between people mattered as a
way of getting to know them. It illustrated the importance of striving tirelessly
to achieve your dreams regardless of the outcome (not always a happy ending),
of not compromising or settling for the
job that gives you the most money, of believing in yourself even when everything
seems to be falling apart around you or when the voice of reason is telling you
to give in and settle for less. Along the way, we are treated to acting that
tugs at your heartstrings (Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone were wonderful together
and singly) and a story that reminds you of that time in your life when dreams and love
were new and your future, largely unknown and somewhat daunting, was ahead of
you. There were some really good dance numbers and some memorable songs. I found myself
humming one of the songs (the one that Ryan Gosling whistles when he is walking
out on the pier) on the way out of the movie theater. The director, Damien
Chazelle, makes it clear that the typical Hollywood happy ending as depicted in the
fantasy sequence at the end of the film is not always the ending in real life for those who achieve their dreams. Boy and girl don’t always ride off
into the sunset together. We need that reminder, even though we are rooting for
the couple to be together against all odds. Sometimes we experience a love when
we are young that transcends us and our real lives, and we are not ready for
it. Or it may simply serve another purpose—to bring out the best in ourselves and to help us achieve our dreams—and that
kind of love is to be cherished for a lifetime.
Sunday, March 12, 2017
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Out of the blue
And so, out of the blue, one day before the sixteenth anniversary of my mother’s death, I received a message request on Facebook from a person I did not know. That person turned out to be my first cousin Robert, the son of my mother’s sister, Mildred, both of whom I had never met as a child. In the space of a few days, I have discovered my mother’s side of the family (a side that we had little to no contact with growing up), thanks to Robert, who has done extensive searching to create a family tree. His tremendous work organizing it has paid off. It is extremely interesting to see how large my mother’s family actually was. Her mother had five children by her first husband (who died), and then five by her second husband. Robert led me to Victoria, another first cousin, who is the daughter of my mother’s brother Joseph. The family spread beyond Brooklyn where they grew up, to New Jersey, Indiana and Maryland. Among the things I have discovered is that heart disease does not just run in my father’s family, but also in my mother’s, as many of her brothers and sisters (and father and mother) passed away due to heart conditions, strokes or kidney disease. It explains why my mother was so focused on eating healthily (little fat, few sugary desserts) and on remaining thin her entire life. It has not escaped me that I got to know that Robert existed one day before the anniversary of my mother’s death. I’d like to think that this was her way of communicating with me, perhaps to let me know that all of the secrecy and untold tales of her family are secret no longer. They are the stories of another era, when society’s constraints and rules were harsh and when there was little tolerance for lives lived outside of those constraints and rules. I understand my mother so much better now for having met Robert, and I am grateful that this opportunity was given to us.
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Sunday's photographic treasures
the beautiful Akerselva (Aker river) |
Akerselva |
Akerselva |
Akerselva |
unsigned street art, or is BT the artist? |
unsigned street art |
Gamle Aker church |
Kjærlighetsstien |
Friday, February 24, 2017
Two songs by Gilberto Gil
Two just-about-perfect songs by Gilberto Gil--one of my favorite musicians.......I finally got to see him in concert some years ago here in Oslo, and it was such a great concert!
Toda menina Bahiana
Touche pas à mon pote
Toda menina Bahiana
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
A new poem--Photo of you in a Manhattan café
This is a new poem that I wrote on the second anniversary of my brother's death. It is part of a new volume of poems that I am working on, in addition to my book about Tarrytown that I hope to be finished with this year.
-----------------------------------------------
Photo of you in a Manhattan café
And on this day, the second anniversary
Of your untimely death
A long-buried photo of you surfaced
Causing me to catch my breath
We had met for lunch in some downtown Manhattan café
That you frequented—eager to share with me your find
Proud that you were working there in that melee
Of New Yorkers milling about with their own kind
The contours of your face, your photogenic smile
Your youth that emanates from a decade ago
Your furtive smile, the one that could beguile
And persuade the most stubborn of us so
Your hidden secrets that remained unearthed
You did not give them willingly away
And those of us who tried to probe and came away
Unenlightened frustrated rather gone astray
If walls could talk, and photos likewise
Perhaps you would still walk upon this earth
And smile your stealthy smile for all to know
That happiness was yours, there was no dearth
copyright 2017 All rights reserved
Paula M. De Angelis
Monday, February 20, 2017
Sunday, February 19, 2017
An icy river--Akerselva in winter
From last Sunday's walking tour along the beautiful Akerselva (Aker River)--some photos of the ice in the river, nearby where we live.......
Friday, February 17, 2017
Egeberglokka Parsellhage
Those of you who have followed this blog know that we became members of a nearby community garden (an allotment garden) in March of last year. The name of the garden is Egeberglokka Parsellhage and it has a website and a Facebook page. The website has recently been updated with new photos from garden members. The website has many lovely photos of this beautiful garden (some of mine are posted there as well: a butterfly and bee photo, pumpkins photo, hollyhocks photo, and a daisies photo).
Here is the website: https://www.egeberglokka.no/
And here is the Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Egebergl%C3%B8kka-parsellhage-632798036735972/
I'm looking forward to a new gardening season--the days are getting longer and the sun is getting stronger (and warmer) for each day that passes........
Here is the website: https://www.egeberglokka.no/
And here is the Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Egebergl%C3%B8kka-parsellhage-632798036735972/
I'm looking forward to a new gardening season--the days are getting longer and the sun is getting stronger (and warmer) for each day that passes........
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Remembering and becoming
When I started out in the work world over thirty-five years ago, I was fortunate enough to meet some very special people who became life-long friends. One of them was Edith, who was already in her mid-50s when I met her. She was the head secretary for the department I worked in at the Public Health Research Institute of the City of New York, and we became friends immediately. She was a friendly and outgoing woman who made everyone she met feel welcome and at home. I would say she was one of the most hospitable people I have ever known. She was a born and bred New Yorker who lived in Manhattan most of her life. She married and raised two children in a spacious apartment in the Stuyvesant Town–Peter Cooper Village, a large, post-World War II development of residential apartments on the east side of Manhattan. That apartment is where I visited her many times on my annual trips to New York, and it is where she suffered the stroke that eventually took her life at the age of 91. She had many opportunities to leave Manhattan, to move to the suburbs to be with her daughter and her daughter’s husband, but she chose not to. She remained independent until the day she died. I remember my last visit with her a few months before she passed away; she was waiting for me at the door of her apartment as I got off the elevator, and although she was very unsteady on her feet, she insisted on serving coffee and some pastries. And when I left her apartment a few hours later, she held onto my arm as we walked toward the door. Sometimes, before it got too difficult for her to walk, we would leave her apartment and walk to the nearby diner to have lunch--one of her favorite places because it made veggie burgers that were out of this world. And then we would walk slowly home again. It was always a bittersweet moment to say goodbye, much like when I said goodbye to my mother after one of my annual visits, not knowing if I would see them again, but hoping against hope that I would. Edith was a truly generous soul, who helped a lot of newcomers at work, who helped her children and grandchildren, and who took care of her husband who was afflicted with Alzheimer’s until she could no longer manage his care by herself. My memories of her are very pleasant; she and Virginia, another secretary at the institute and one of Edith’s close friends, both taught me how to make an apple-cranberry pie for the first Thanksgiving I ever prepared food for. It was the first such pie I had ever made; we made it at work during our lunch hour one dreary day in November, and I carried it home with me on the subway that evening. Unfortunately, I dropped the pie onto the subway platform and the glass pie plate shattered, and I ended up having to make the pie again when I got home. But at least I had learned how to do it. In return, I taught her how to use the newest word-processing program on her work computer. She was open to most new developments, was interested in the world around her, and very well-read. She loved to go to Shakespeare in the Park and to the opera and ballet. She and Virginia came to the church when I married for the first time (very young); when I later got divorced, she told me that it was no surprise to her, as she had not had a good feeling about my marriage from day one. She was honest that way, and it was good to hear it. If you asked for advice, you got it. I asked for advice when I needed it, because I knew it would be reasonable and smart.
I thought about Edith recently because I realized in one of those moments when certain insights make themselves known, that I have overtaken her role for some of the younger people I know, some of whom are at least twenty-five years younger than I am. The age difference between me and Edith was much larger, over thirty-five years, but it never bothered me. I hardly thought about it. That was the way I was raised. I had older parents and my relationship with the both of them was very good. They were my parents first, and then my friends. I assume that the younger people I know feel the same about me as I did about Edith; the age difference does not matter. Why should it? We are able to discuss books, music, movies and so many other things that interest us. I like a lot of the current music and literature; they like a lot of the music I grew up with, as well they should since it is really amazing music and an amazing era in which to grow up. We need role models to show us how to grow older. I had them, and I hope that I can be one for the younger people with whom I have become friends.
I thought about Edith recently because I realized in one of those moments when certain insights make themselves known, that I have overtaken her role for some of the younger people I know, some of whom are at least twenty-five years younger than I am. The age difference between me and Edith was much larger, over thirty-five years, but it never bothered me. I hardly thought about it. That was the way I was raised. I had older parents and my relationship with the both of them was very good. They were my parents first, and then my friends. I assume that the younger people I know feel the same about me as I did about Edith; the age difference does not matter. Why should it? We are able to discuss books, music, movies and so many other things that interest us. I like a lot of the current music and literature; they like a lot of the music I grew up with, as well they should since it is really amazing music and an amazing era in which to grow up. We need role models to show us how to grow older. I had them, and I hope that I can be one for the younger people with whom I have become friends.
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
A New Yorker in Oslo was quoted on a Tarrytown NY website
So happy to see that something I wrote about the Tarrytown Lakes on A New Yorker in Oslo was actually used on the My Tarrytown Bike It! website, which by the way is a very interesting website. You can bet that I want to do some of the bike trips listed here! Check it out......
http://www.mytarrytown.com/t-town-lakes-extension/
http://www.mytarrytown.com/t-town-lakes-extension/
Monday, February 6, 2017
Cookie man
I made hermit cookies last night (raisin spice cookies) and discovered one cookie on the cooling rack that definitely didn't look like the rest of them! Definitely not planned......but cute.
Wednesday, February 1, 2017
A favorite photo of my brother
Today is the second anniversary of my brother Ray's death. I was looking through old photos during this past weekend and came across a few of him from November 2005 (he had just turned 45 in August of that year). I had met Ray for lunch in Manhattan; that was something we often did when I came to NY to visit. I would meet him for lunch for a couple of hours as his 'business client', and then we would join the whole family in the evening of the same day or on a separate day. It was always nice to have some alone time with him; we always had some interesting conversations about how he enjoyed being a father to two children, our family, the work world, politics and history. He was an avid history buff and a real font of knowledge when it came to American history. He would have made a good history teacher. This photo is one of my favorites; he was happy and smiling (my mother would have said--look at his dimples) and relaxed. It wasn't often that he had the chance to relax.
On Monday of this week, a woman from our old neighborhood in Tarrytown (Tappan Landing Road), Bridget, passed away from cancer. She was the sweet daughter of the older woman, Philomena, who used to care for my mother in her later years. Just like my brother, Bridget was 54 when she passed away. They died two days and two years apart, but at the same age. I'd like to think that they're both in heaven now, happy and at peace.
On Monday of this week, a woman from our old neighborhood in Tarrytown (Tappan Landing Road), Bridget, passed away from cancer. She was the sweet daughter of the older woman, Philomena, who used to care for my mother in her later years. Just like my brother, Bridget was 54 when she passed away. They died two days and two years apart, but at the same age. I'd like to think that they're both in heaven now, happy and at peace.
Tuesday, January 31, 2017
What May Sarton said
So many of her reflections resonate with me..............
---------------------------------------------
“Without darkness, nothing comes to birth, As without light, nothing flowers.”
"Whatever peace I know rests in the natural world, in feeling myself a part of it, even in a small way.....To go with, not against the elements, an inexhaustible vitality summoned back each day to do the same tasks, to feed the animals, clean out barns and pens, keep that complex world alive."
“The more articulate one is, the more dangerous words become.”
“I can tell you that solitude
Is not all exaltation, inner space
Where the soul breathes and work can be done.
Solitude exposes the nerve,
Raises up ghosts.
The past, never at rest, flows through it.”
“There is no doubt that solitude is a challenge and to maintain balance within it a precarious business. But I must not forget that, for me, being with people or even with one beloved person for any length of time without solitude is even worse. I lose my center. I feel dispersed, scattered, in pieces. I must have time alone in which to mull over my encounter, and to extract its juice, its essence, to understand what has really happened to me as a consequence of it.”
“Loneliness is the poverty of self; solitude is richness of self.”
“We have to dare to be ourselves, however frightening or strange that self may prove to be.”
“A house that does not have one worn, comfy chair in it is soulless.”
“The moral dilemma is to make peace with the unacceptable.”
“It is harder for women, perhaps to be 'one-pointed,' much harder for them to clear space around whatever it is they want to do beyond household chores and family life. Their lives are fragmented... the cry not so much for a 'a room of one's own' as time of one's own. Conflict become acute, whatever it may be about, when there is no margin left on any day in which to try at least to resolve it.”
“I always forget how important the empty days are, how important it may be sometimes not to expect to produce anything, even a few lines in a journal. A day when one has not pushed oneself to the limit seems a damaged, damaging day, a sinful day. Not so! The most valuable thing one can do for the psyche, occasionally, is to let it rest, wander, live in the changing light of a room.”
“Most people have to talk so they won't hear.”
---------------------------------------------
“Without darkness, nothing comes to birth, As without light, nothing flowers.”
"Whatever peace I know rests in the natural world, in feeling myself a part of it, even in a small way.....To go with, not against the elements, an inexhaustible vitality summoned back each day to do the same tasks, to feed the animals, clean out barns and pens, keep that complex world alive."
“The more articulate one is, the more dangerous words become.”
“I can tell you that solitude
Is not all exaltation, inner space
Where the soul breathes and work can be done.
Solitude exposes the nerve,
Raises up ghosts.
The past, never at rest, flows through it.”
“There is no doubt that solitude is a challenge and to maintain balance within it a precarious business. But I must not forget that, for me, being with people or even with one beloved person for any length of time without solitude is even worse. I lose my center. I feel dispersed, scattered, in pieces. I must have time alone in which to mull over my encounter, and to extract its juice, its essence, to understand what has really happened to me as a consequence of it.”
“Loneliness is the poverty of self; solitude is richness of self.”
“We have to dare to be ourselves, however frightening or strange that self may prove to be.”
“A house that does not have one worn, comfy chair in it is soulless.”
“The moral dilemma is to make peace with the unacceptable.”
“It is harder for women, perhaps to be 'one-pointed,' much harder for them to clear space around whatever it is they want to do beyond household chores and family life. Their lives are fragmented... the cry not so much for a 'a room of one's own' as time of one's own. Conflict become acute, whatever it may be about, when there is no margin left on any day in which to try at least to resolve it.”
“I always forget how important the empty days are, how important it may be sometimes not to expect to produce anything, even a few lines in a journal. A day when one has not pushed oneself to the limit seems a damaged, damaging day, a sinful day. Not so! The most valuable thing one can do for the psyche, occasionally, is to let it rest, wander, live in the changing light of a room.”
“Most people have to talk so they won't hear.”
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The Spinners--It's a Shame
I saw the movie The Holiday again recently, and one of the main characters had this song as his cell phone ringtone. I grew up with this mu...