"We're ugly, but we have the music!" -Leonard Cohen, "Chelsea Hotel"

"Truly, the greatest miracle that can happen is not the parting of a sea, but a changed heart." -Brian Ricks, Florianopolis Mission, Brazil

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Create-Your-Own South Park Avatars

My family, and a vague approximation of my dog


My cousins, aunt, and uncle

Kenny and his family and a vague approximation of his and his mom's dog combined

Napoleon Dynamite, Pedro, and Deb


Guess who. I couldn't resist. The Palin updo was perfect.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Mahavatar Babaji

This is a drawing I made of Mahavatar Babaji, a great Himalayan yogi and Indian saint. 

Monday, December 6, 2010

Winter Morn - a poem of the beauty of the winter sun

Winter Morn

By Adrienne Clark
12/7/2006

Pale light from the south,
White sun in the sky,
bleak light.
All shapes blue and black
with white outline light.
Too bright
so white.

Deceiving heat through glass,
so chill outside, so cold
metallic, cold sun.

The light lies.

Solstice a fortnight off.
Day so short,
so blinding bright
so cold...
Like cold, hard silver glinting,
reflecting only
a warm scene
Whose metal image chills the bones,

On an early-December winter mid-morning—
Beautiful, bleak, and cold.


This poem was illustrated by my sister Ingrid.


































Winter Noon
A sequel to Winter Morn

By Adrienne Clark
12/23/2006


south white sun
blond cloudlight sky
spotlight on the world of black silhouettes,
whose flaxen backdrop blinds
     to teary blue phantoms
in open eyes.

watery winter sun
white star beaming washed radiance,
pulsing with blue mirages,
so bright it throws the blended clouds
    into grey relief,
the only other color,
moving to cover,
to filter to a visible, vanilla, grey-veiled disk.
a momentarily softened sun’s gaze,
like a creamy woolen blanket,
descends,
then back to blind in ivory.

the warm golden caress
alternating, morphing
with the brilliant white sheen
is in truth a bit false;
the thin liquid light is insubstantial,
and for all the world though it seems,
it carries no warmth
save through glass,
the heat drawn out by the medium as clear and shining
as the light itself.

leftover rain,
suspended glassy diamonds in the dazzle
twinkle brightly, coolly.
o, remind us the resplendence of the winter star
lives for eyes alone, not for the freezing body!
for overdosed of its fickle, fluent glory,
they turn away…
tearing, blinded, bluing,
frigid-cold and smarting,
and awed.



My sister Ingrid illustrated this poem, Winter Noon, a sequel to Winter Morn.
They were both Christmas presents from us to our parents.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

"Like Nothing Else" - a poem of unique magic and wonder

Like Nothing Else

By Adrienne Clark
Nov. 22, 2010
1st real snow of the year.


All-permeating light,
That peachy glow
All night.
Ground to cloud and down again,
A soft, pink sandwich.

The taste of freshest, best restaurant’s water,
With a pinch of nature
No human artisan can create,
Melts in your mouth.


That smell—
Faint smoke plus cold plus
Something impossible to name,
Yet your nose knows it
Hours away.

The sound—
“creak, crunch, creak,”
Light flakes compact beneath your feet
Make your marks on this newborn world,
However transitory they may be.

The lack of sound—
The only noise the closest voices
And a car one block down.
Nothing beyond,
Save a down comforter muffler
Around your personal world.

Crystals sting your eyes,
Fluffy angels align with your tongue,
You spin around,
Face lifted and arms open to the pouring sky.

This magical miracle unique in all the world,
Enfolding our world,
Clothing our world

With the pure gauze of Heaven.

Seattle U behind Pigott








My deck








My backyard

Sunday, November 14, 2010

"A Wondrous Place" - my first real, good poem

This is the first really good poem I ever wrote (in 3rd grade), preceded only by one decent poem for a 2nd grader. But this one won a bunch of contests and stuff. It was really the experience of writing this poem that got me into poetry.

A Wondrous Place

By Adrienne Clark
November 1999

A wave of excitement floods o’er me,
For I know the place that I’m bound,
‘Cause humans dream forth of it everywhere,
In nations on Earth all around.

This place I am going is wondrous,
It meddles with hardworking minds,
Unharmful it is to all people,
It plays with the words it entwines.

But not every heart longs to be here,
Yet to everyone it has been told.
This place I shall go is a poem,
In my very own heart and soul.

"Unheard Sound" - an answer to a philosophical question my dad often asked me

My dad often asked me this question: "If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, is there any sound?" Finally, I came up with a reply. Here is my answer:

Unheard Sound 

By Adrienne Fiona Clark
March 2003


Silence in the wood.
Alone.
No sound of footsteps
No cracking twig
No living life to befoul
The beauty of the loneness.

Ancient newborn
Old, but young in the eyes of Creation
Tallest in the forest
A tree stood.
It knew its time had come.
(It had cracks in its bark to prove its point)
And it chose that moment to fall
Defying the very defiance of gravity
It yearned to touch the ground.

Writhing stretching twisting
Tearing out the very roots of the earth
It tottered
tipped
trembled,
Tremors shook its every fiber,
A leaf twitched...

And then slowly
Oh so slowly
It tiptoed through the air
To kiss the ground.

And it made no noise.

It created pulsing waves of air
Radiating into the universe
Moved by all its sheer force
And marvelous gentleness...
And there was no one there to hear it.

But somewhere in the cosmos,
Countless light years away,
A star shook and trembled
Because a tree fell in a forest
And there was no one to take in the sound.

I don’t know this though.

Another ancient newborn
Told me the story as I walked by,
With no cracking twigs
And silence in the wood.
Then I was not alone,
For I myself was there as well.


But there is no sound
When a tree falls in the forest
And no one is there to hear it.

"Tears of Heaven" - Washington love poetry

Tears of Heaven

By Adrienne Clark
4/30/2007


Peace is the smell of moist dust sifting up,
filtering from warm, new rain-fallen, dry ground.

Peace is the grey woolen blanket
cradling the earth, enveloping and tenderly enfolding,
In comfortable closeness to the expansive mother’s breast.

Peace is the quiet of retreating residents and emerging birds,
only you and the soft pattering and the natives
alone, at home, together.

Peace is the gentle touch of heaven’s lozenges,
Tears of relieving, calming release, falling just for you,
Clear kisses descending to minutely peck your cheek,
caress your face,
and with its cool grey sheet, cleanse your opened heart.

Peace is the penetrating breath of moist and cool crispness,
Just sharp enough to tingle your outer wrappings
And remind you so powerfully that you are alive.

Two poems of the mountains - my favorite place on earth

(These were both written on top of Mt. Winchester above Twin Lakes, near the Goat Mountains and Mt. Baker.) 

The old fire lookout on top of Mt. Winchester.













Twin Lakes, viewed from the summit.





















Alpen

By Adrienne Clark
8/3/06

The vast, broad, expansive valleys…
Rolling continuity from peak to river bed
The sweeping soaring of a whole.

















A tiny bubble of perfection, isolated miniature worlds,
of the smallest, natural, delicate beauty…
A minutely perfect flower, lichened stone, spray of vibrant heather, sprig of wily grass,
are everywhere close, with naught but a guided glance. 

The wild scree, the alpine scrubby meadows,
   rounds of  boulders, cracked and caked with growth,
   cascades of stone,
   patched moss, heather,
   strewn curling ferns, small hardy trees,
   bursts of flower…
The wild, determined, untamed slopes.































Rambling, winding up to meet,
The steep, unbroken slide slopes
rise to bare raw rock, so rugged
scarce even a patch of heather to be seen…
Powering forceful upward;
ragged ridge of unfinished thoughts,
sharpened pyramid, no mistaking to where it points,
or rounded statement—stolid—of ultimate power, stability, strength.































Pristine pools, contrast of calm, tiny glitterings,
trickle over clean rocks, spongy moss and bent grass.
Made of melting snow
water clean as air.
Artful scattered bottom
waiting bubbles
tiny, feathered, spreading moss…
Mirror to grass and sky.






















Watch the ruffle of wind
On a mountain’s blue mirror—
a lake cradled by, nestled in, its valley—
Slowly grow ‘cross the water…
sheen turned to matte.
Perpetual song of air’s rush through valleys,
snow-freshened, brisk, cleanly clear
fragrance, hint of flora—
Cool, crisp, caressing, refreshing mountain breath
turns to fill your lungs.






















To sit for hours with no passing time of mind,
Watch the clouds—fogging mountains, steaming rock, stroking and enveloping
   big-bellied
   misted
   wisped
   growing
   morphing—
Lazily drift across the aqua ceiling.
To follow a shadow across ridges,
down a green slope, up the next scree
reach your perch, blot the sun’s beating heat, and chill…
But it will pass
and move on to dapple the spreading valley once again.


















Deep

By Adrienne Clark
8/3/06

reaching pinnacle
sweeping buttress
plunging face,
swooping down to a grand valley
of furry tree carpet through blue haze...

impossibly broad, deeping.
soaring contours...
one jump flies downward, onward, forever
wing ‘round shoulders, river bends, rises
between misted sunbeams.

enormity, space, those ridges embracing... what?
what fills the volume of that great valley?
or the next valley, or the next?
ridge after ridge,
blue mountains stretching through mist and cloud into oblivion.
unnamed, unknown local wonders,
many miracles dwarfed by those more known
each with its own valley of gaping grandeur...
but what can fill such endless air?

Light.

like shining, golden beads of honey,
it gushes up from the valley floor
rolls down the mountainsides
rains from above:
all of nature, plants, stones, sky, beings
pouring forth this sustaining, healing light
from their core which in each is their Creator.

filling up each valley, running over, running deep
rushing up the cliffs to surround me where I sit,
washing me, caressing me, soothing hurts and worries
bringing my straying heart back Home,
this light that cannot be seen with the eyes
but sensed from within...

pouring forth from the pristine mountains
and others... the sea, the Sound, hills, waters, forests...
together they will bathe the sterile, bustling cities
and heal deep the hurts of those there who know Its presence.

but here on my peak, with the light from my valley...
here, it will bless my heart.
 
Illustration by my sister, Christmas present for our parents. You can't really see the mountains
in the background, but I swear they're there. Stupid light gray didn't come out well....

my valley.  <3

Two poems of air, birds, and flight - not bad for a 4th grader

A Bird’s Song Cloud

By Adrienne Clark
January 2000

Whoosh!
Warm white,
Silky feathers,
 A wish,
A prayer,
A dream,
Then up!
My world, a song cloud.
I land singing
A soft, sweet tune.
Quiet.
Leaping birds,
Then down to Earth.



I Fly

By Adrienne Clark
January 2000

I fly,
Soar,
Through the sky,
Wind in my hair.

I see,
Hear,
Forests lush below,
Birds singing softly.

I go,
Come,
To peacefulness,
From a hatred strong.

I wish,
Know,
Freedom’s sweet song,
An endless flight.

I fly.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Two poems of change - moving on can be hard

Moments

By Adrienne Clark
6/25/2009
Written after returning to my high school after many friends the year below me graduated.

(To understand one stanza you need to know that I was the head librarian in Band Council.)

I walk amongst the ghosts of my past
I see myself,
The ghost of myself,
Still standing where I left myself
When I created a still frame of the
moment
In my mind.

The memories are so tangible
That I can almost see myself,
My instruments,
My band,
My boyfriends;
The places I walked,
Where I grew,
Three of my most formative years,
All here…
This was my life.

Now I am an outsider,
I feel it distinctly.
I am now a criminal to come on campus
During the hours I once lived here.
“Out the door,
You are no longer wanted.”

The foreignness swirls around me
And waters my eyes,
Whirls in my stomach,
Shudders in my lungs,
Pulls on my throat
And winds around my heart,
Constricting it ‘til I ache in the core of my chest.

The band room is the worst:
It swarms with phantoms,
So thick I can scarcely breathe.
Everything that was mine:
Cubbies, seats, instruments, friends, cuddles, dances, piggyback wrestling, glowsticks, posters, antics;
Moments.
The smell of music,
My folders,
My system,
My room,
My pride,
MY music…
My one legacy, the only ghost anyone can see,
save me.

I see the spots we stood;
Every hug,
Every kiss,
Frozen in time in that very spot.
I can see two highschoolers as I walk by,
Blind to all else,
Caught in an embrace,
a stolen moment
That is no longer mine,
To which I can never return.

I see myself,
The ghosts of myself,
The ghosts of my past,
frozen moments,
Ice statues in the wind,
That wind of change that swirls around me
And squeezes out my grief,
And spirits me away
To places greater and beyond.

But my traces remain,
Visible to few, perhaps only me,
But I am there.
Shimmering in the air,
my moments,
My art,
My passion,
My family,
My love,
My life.

Once you give a piece of your heart to someone,
You can never quite get it all back.
Once you give a piece of yourself to a place,
You can never quite take it all away.
Do I even want to?
Or should I leave them there,
My
moments.

Where I went nearly every day during morning break.

























Mellophone cubby.






















































My favorite choreographed drum call, Speed2



Tenor sax choreography to Iron Man FTWWWW!!!!



Waves of Time

By Adrienne Clark
June 2002
Written just after I graduated from 6th grade (elementary school in my district).

O childhood!
How the time rushes by!
Like the ocean waves;

They fling themselves at children’s feet
Who dance and splash in the foamy surf,
Squealing in delight
as they chase each other ‘round and ‘round
in the fleeting, engrossing rush.

Then just as suddenly as it came,
It is gone,
Washing over their feet
And trickling between their toes.
And before they can chase after it,
A bigger wave crashes against their feet.

O childhood!
How the time rushes by.


My friends at Lockwood amused ourselves endlessly with building "The Pond" in various locations around the school. As for the cartoons....don't even bother trying to understand them, it only makes sense if you were there.  :P
Almost my entire Lockwood class at our reunion after we graduated.
I spent my last year of elementary school (6th grade) here at Shelton View.












Shelton View playground.