9/25/2001: Robin, Sean, Jessie, Cam

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Birthday poem, 15 Oct 2008




Winnowing
For Allison, my heart

Maybe it's all so simple after all. A heart hungering,
a giving up, our yearnings enfolded in a world of mercies unseen.
Rainswept we once dashed beneath the maple canopy, lips kissed--
your breath later pulsing against my neck in the dark.
One flesh, so long ago
alone, then together, twinned but one--one heart always, now rich with years.

Loving you is so joyous, deep, a true thrill at heart--a mystery no
language can ever ever capture--always faltering with each scrawled runic framing:
I only live to love you true by giving up, repeating the pledge
so long ago banding us:
I will love you with an everlasting love.
(Once my darling it circumscribed our joyous nuptial whirl amid jeweler jaunts.
Now uncomplicated as
emptying, it encircles the one brimming passion of our hearts.)

Friday, August 22, 2008

Sean and Duyen's Wedding



Hooray!--Sean & Duyen were married, 23 August 2008. We'll post photos soon.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Spring trip to Ohio Wesleyan

We had fun motoring from Rockport to Ohio Wesleyan--here are some snapshots of the trip...














Monday, March 10, 2008

..."The thing we freely forfeit"...

Apologies to Gerard Manley Hopkins: some snapshots from eons ago...



Sean, July 1991: South Pasadena JHS



John: scouts, May 1965



John: Rose Bowl parade, 1967



John: with best friend Kim, c. 1968: South Pasadena



Sean and Grandpa, July 1991: Glendale

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Robin's "A Place of Importance"

Robin wrote the few paragraphs below as a 7th-grade writing assignment. His teacher enjoyed it so much, calling it the best middle-school writing she'd seen in her years of teaching. She then listed the names of a half-dozen famous authors on the chalkboard, read Robbie's paragraphs without attribution, and asked the class to guess the author!

A Place of Importance, by Robert Micah Lovell

The path, viewed from above, looked not much different than a burnt sienna-snake trail among a yard crowded full with dark green grass, ever-twisting in a long, narrow route. It began where the rocky lane in front of our house faded into the vast ocean of tall, tired oaks that inhabited that old forest. It diverged at many places, and every different pathway that split away from the original trail would always take you to somewhere different.

My two brothers and I used to prowl among the great trails on long hikes every summer, marching proudly alongside acres of aged pine trees. Because we traveled in order of age, oldest in front, I always trailed along in the back as a follower. We explored every nook and cranny of the whole wood, and knew it almost better than we knew our very own selves. Sometimes to get away from the house every once in awhile, I would sneak out into the woods, secretly, covering my furtive footprints with every step I took. I would not do this often, for I was generally a happy boy, but the calming whistle of wind swimming across the sky was a soothing song when I was feeling melancholy.

What a view it was on the path at dawn, a slithering zephyr, that passed through the tall yellow grasses like an invisible wave in front of the setting vermilion sun. In the dirt, imprints of strangers' shoes rose into the sky with the breeze, and washed its slate clean until the new sunrise.

Even now, I visit the old trails and I listen to the wailing wind’s song, and I take the path that leads down to the river. I find a good sized walking- stick and march lively along the rugged dirt trail, but this time, only one thing is different. No, not the new tree-fort beside the river, or the fact that I hold a different stick. This difference changes the whole feeling of the march. The smell of independence now dwells in the atmosphere, because for now, I march in front.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Carleton Stevens Coon, by W.W. Howells

Allison and I treasure our memories of Carl Coon--Pappy's verve, vitality, enthusiasm for life remain inspiring to us.

Here's a link to Bill Howell's 1989 remembrance.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Days of heaven

Some snapshots of Sean and Duyen's formal betrothal festivities in VN, where 700 people came to celebrate. And until Allison returns from VN next week with commentary for these (and many other) photos, we thought it would be delightful to share these with kinfolk far and wide.