Month: June 2024

  • Lake 11

    The Other Shore ~ PART TWO

    CHAPTER ELEVEN

    “Love is a Beautiful Reflection”

    T.S. Brock

    What we think we see may be an illusion. Everything may or may not look better from another point of view. As the sisters fished in the deep morning hours, they may have seen something unusual. But there had been a party after the rally. The dead man floating in the water appeared to them as random debris tossed out after all the ruckus around the lake. Dismissed. They might have picked it up under ordinary circumstances, but this time they chose to keep on fishing. And the fishing was good.

    The twins were always together. Here, Gilda smiling as the rays of sun landed softly on her rosy cheeks. There, Rose cursing the ground as she walked on invisible burning coals. Gilda, light and chatting endlessly and Rose, dark and dreaming, but dreaming may be the wrong word. Only she would know. I’d hesitate to say they were a circus act, but it resembled one. In fact they were two of a perfect pair. But more later.

    They have always lived on the lake. They inherited the property from their father who had recently passed. The sceenerio of his “exodus” is a whirlwind of events and can only be told with all the spices from from your racks and then you may be lacking. His new romantic inclenation appeared as a dark haired woman with blue eyes, small breats and, frankly, a near zero personality… Maybe no skills (except the ones given by nature) and droopy loving eyes. Maybe she was 30… or 40… 50?… She was a timeless woman… And she had very little to say… which was much appreciciated by one and all. It was a desperate move by the old man.

    He had an incurable disease (prostate) but told no one… Yet his new wife knew of his condition and they married and he allowed her a reasonable sum in the pre-nuptial agreement… The twins had no idea… That seemed best to the old man… They were taken care of as well in the will… He knew his days were numbered.

    He and his mysterious bride packed up a 1950 Ford Custom Delux Woodie Station Wagon with a minimal amount of belongings. Father hugged his daughters, then drove off with a smile and a wave.

    The twins were shocked but relieved. What is that when we know relationships are no longer working and we consciously choose to end them with no remorse? I call that common sense. And after all, the twins were 25 and single with a beautiful house on a spring-fed lake.

    How bad could that be?

    The three of them had been a family of laughter and whimsy… As mentioned, the twins were devastated on one side, relieved on the other. They had wanted their father to find someone from the time their mom disappeared. I mean they were nearly teens at the time. They had boyfriends. They were in confusion and lost in pot but not drink. Their father became a workaholic and was rarely home. He didn’t drink. He had a real estate business that thrived… Many of his clients were just simply sympathetic… After all, his wife had disappeared… No foul play suspected sice she was known to have the soul of a cuckoo bird… having no nest of her own. These women are very attractive but unreliable… so it was in this case. And life at the lake went on.

    CHAPTER TWELVE

    The father wasn’t without a conscience. The bulk of his trust went to the twins. He kept more than enough for the two years that were left to him and his bride, but I doubt his “companion” had any clue. He always kept his “cards” close. When he died, the black hairered, blue eyed bride had only a trailer home in Tampa, Florida..

    He sent one postcard a week… and then there were none.

    The house, the home has always been immaculate just the way their mother liked it. The twins were well off. This history comes from their mother’s diary, and well, their mother disappeared. In fact she was the “beautiful one” recognized by her graduation. Not the cutest, not the prettiest, no. She was the most beautiful.

    Truth remains in limbo. Gilda and Rose relentlessly venture to uncover the truth. There is a library of paperwork in a bookcase in their living room

    Imagine a camera (or an eagle) far above their home. We see Gilda. She is a tall fit young woman with a cheerful personality. No one can tell her what to do. She is pretty but not beautiful. She might walk a mile for a jar of jam. She will just play “dumb” when dumb people say dumb things, but she is kind to a fault. She spent hours teaching children how to swim at the south shore beach perhaps because no one had taught her and perhaps because no one else had ever thought to do it.

    The same bird focuses on Rose. She is non-identical, not as tall, but with the same coal-black hair… well, she can be cranky with a sassy demeanor, something like Bette Davis. After all, this was the beginning of the 1950’s in the USA. Pop culture was everywhere. It would be wrong to suggest that Rose didn’t succomb to Hollywood icons after she saw “All About Eve” at the movies. Rose went nuts over the character “Margo” even quoting some of her lines:

    “Fasten your seatbelts, it’s going to be a bumpy night!” at the
    beginning of parties and

    “A lost lamb loose in our stone jungle,” when she spied a man she
    liked.

    The twins had no television, but then most people couldn’t afford one at the time. They did have a Panasonic radio from Japan. Something to dance to. They were and they were not connected to the world at large. In this way, television had little or no effect on their lives. But radio was in the background most of the time.

    Let’s just say the sisters were iconic in their own ways. Together they were seen in the community as an anomaly, not strange, just in a world of their own. They were nearly six feet tall. Men would retreat due to their physique, but then the men would melt like butter as they walked closer. They were mesmerizing. Their bodies were perfection. Like a full moon.

    “You would think they could fill these damn potholes once in a blue moon,” Rose spoke in a grave tone.

    “Don’t you know birds drink from these potholes,” Gilda said cheerfully.

    They had a cottage left to them by their grandfather. It was medium-sized but clean and comfortable. There were only four or five homes allowed on the shore.

    Friends from high school, but sometimes campers or tourists, and sometimes a neighbor or two. The place was pretty secluded. They had a pavilion and dock only shouting distance from the other homes. The music was acoustic or from their radio. The barbeque pit spat sparks disappearing skyward as the meat and fish dripped into the glowing coals. Beer was on ice or in their frigidere.

    Their parties were famous. Always lakeside. They had a long property. You could park up and down the road. But the night crew rangers might take a pass… young park rangers. They came and went with Rose on their mind.

    Another diversion. It was obvious to most people that the “Communist Scare” was a third-rate B-movie starring wannabe politicians. Not only that, they seemed to have criminal backgrounds. Over time, they gained momentum. Then campaigned to win on division and fear. I’m afraid this is the old song and dance of desperatos and people who will never be content. I’m afraid for the future, Even the next century.

    In fact, the party had moved to the pavilion and the adjacent dock.The twins owned two boats, one with a motor and one with oars.

    “Hey Jon, ” Rose challenged. “I bet you can’t catch a fish.” Jon was a former basketball celebrity in their younger days.

    “Bring it on,” Jon mumbled in his semi-drunken state.

    “Get in the boat,” Rose commanded softly.

    “Which boat?” Jon looked excited and confused.

    “The one you are going to row,” Rose laughed deeply.

    “Where are the poles?” Jon stumbled toward the skiff.

    “They are oars, and we don’t them,” Rose got in and Jon began to row.

    This act of seduction was something Rose was accustomed to. Gilda always turned a blind eye, preferring her company on land. On this particular night, Gilda walked alone on the wooden steps to the cottage and went to sleep. Needless to say the twins did not go fishing together.

    It was a humid day with cigar-shaped clouds occasioning the sky just above the western bluff. UFOs had been reported in the early morning hours. The Rosenstein twins had seen some lights above the lake on many occasions but gave them no mind. A shark would have given them notice more than anything in the night sky.

    If the man with the orange-colored hair had floated across the lake, they would have delivered him to shore and prayed for him.

    Yet, they were the only boat on the lake just before dawn on that day and did not recall the heavy set man with orange hair washed up under neighbor’s veranda. Further, the twins emphasized that they had never happened upon any celestial nor terrestrial events.

    After the “incident” they made a statement: “We saw lights, but we were so tired, we hitched our catch, sprayed off, then we fell asleep…. Maybe 3 or 4 am…” Gilda spoke with balooned eyes.

    “We cleaned our catch and hit the sack. We woke up and people were up and about. It was Sunday for Christ’s sake. What do you want!” Rose unleashed her temper.

    The next day… and days on end… The sisters pulled their aluminum skiff up to shore and the beautiful morning sun shone all about them except on the rainy days when they skinny dipped just before dawn. They caught pike, bluegills, and sunfish, bass, and on an occasional day, a giant carp. A fish that size is not good eating. They threw all carp back. The bluegills were best fried up with batter and butter but no bones.

    Usually, there was more than enough bounty to keep the local reataurant chefs and their customers satisfied. Fresh fish. No one complained. And, of course, money in the pockets of the twins. It was a living.

    More Chapters to follow

    Thank you for your support!

    This work is partially funded by “Nobody”

    and the “Nobody” foundation for “Nobody”

    spencer

    June 12, 2024

    Novel

  • Misdemeanors in Language ~

    Quotations Out of Context

    Ray Bradbury and Gene Roddenberry ~ Two Fantastic Writers

    Quote One ~ Ray Bradbury ~ Review in print November 1979

    It looks like a dream book. Then you suddenly remember it’s all real. Then the long march from the rim of the cave to the edge of the cliff where we flung ourselves off and built our wings on the way down quickens to focus. It’s all here, in a building, in a book.

    Quote Two ~ Ray Bradbury ~ October 1986 UC Irvine Lecture

    “Jump off the cliff and learn how to make wings on the way down.”

    Quote Three ~ Spencer ~ Here

    “Jump off the cliff and learn how to make wings on the way down.”

    Quote Four ~ Gene Roddenberry ~ Off the cuff

    “We must question the story logic of having an all-knowing all-powerful God, who creates faulty Humans, and then blames them for his own mistakes.”

    “Star Trek was an attempt to say that humanity will reach maturity and wisdom on the day that it begins not just to tolerate, but take a special delight in differences in ideas and differences in life forms. […] If we cannot learn to actually enjoy those small differences, to take a positive delight in those small differences between our own kind, here on this planet, then we do not deserve to go out into space and meet the diversity that is almost certainly out there.”

    “The Strength of a civilization is not measured by its ability to fight wars, but rather by its ability to prevent them.”

    BY RAY BRADBURYOCT. 26, 1991 12 AM PT

    Gene Roddenberry asked me to be part of the “Star Trek” family as a writer 25 years ago. He showed me the pilot, and I looked at it and liked it but said at that time that I’ve never been able to adapt other people’s characters–no matter how much I admire them. So, one of the sad things of my life is I was never able to participate in the love and joy that made “Star Trek” so special.

    Gene Roddenberry

    “For most people, religion is nothing more than a substitute for a malfunctioning brain. If people need religion, ignore them and maybe they will ignore you, and you can go on with your life. It wasn’t until I was beginning to do Star Trek that the subject of religion arose. What brought it up was that people were saying that I would have a chaplain on board the Enterprise. I replied, “No, we don’t.”

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  • List of Posts

    You can access all posts in the categories on the left. The first example will appear on screen and the links to the same topic will appear at the bottom of the scroll:

    Knitting (or Fishing) Catastrophes

    Both are tangled and shoud be discarded

    “Try Again”

    Yes… Always

  • Poetry One ~ Japan

    Poetry One

    T S Brock

    We had been living in Tokyo, but we ventured to other countries 2 or 3 times a year… Money was good… In Japan, near Tokyo, every chance that chance gave us… Well… We often wandered around the country sides of Japan, places not far from our home, but far enough to experience the deeper culture. So I asked my wife to take this photo of an abandoned Toyota… There were fireflies at night and elusive mosquitoes… But the wonder, the natural wonder was the symphony of cicadas making magical sounds all around us, hypnotizing our minds into sleep…

    Note: Links to other poetry pages below…

    Poetry Two ~ Dark Poets

    Poetry Three ~ Reconciliation

    Poetry Four ~ Our Universe

    Poetry Five ~ Longing

    Poetry Six ~ Love

    Poem 1 Cicadas

    Sounds of summer

    no one complains

    don’t ask why

    their rhythms

    bother only

    the most sensitive minds

    They relieve our heat

    and related pains

    while their quiet

    roaring bells

    set us to relax

    as decibels

    slip deeply

    like tranquil streams

    into our ancient minds

    1000 species across the world

    living in the earth

    as I’m told

    emerging in luster

    teen-aged and flustered

    What brilliant energy

    do they possess?

    Their mystique has been

    worshipped, feared

    cooked and eaten

    studied and collected

    filed and defeated

    On my balcony

    my ears are captured

    exquisite sounds

    and rhythms

    never before heard

    These are the sounds

    of the cicada in mass

    presenting their

    symphonies

    in harmonious unison

    How many million changes

    Does it take to make

    such a miraculous evolution

    And now, my wife calls me

    And now, I will fall asleep

    to the sounds of the Cicada

    And I will dream

    Poem 2 Communication

    (walking from above)

    I watched a stream

    and became aware

    of how music began

    water flows across stones

    beyond streams

    waves meet sand

    rain sounds on every object

    rain meets our bodies

    passes through our minds

    and makes a home in our hearts

    beating and pulse

    the rhythm of life

    birds and other animals

    making orchestral sounds

    across the expanse of planet

    creating melodies

    calling to each other

    for one reason or another

    preserving their space

    In their competitive place

    beasts across forests

    jungle and plain

    signaled intention

    from pleasure and pain

    sounds that remain

    in our history

    no mystery

    the musical tones of life

    human community

    watching carefully

    spirited language

    borrowing thoughtlessly

    In clumsy gestures and expressions

    from those animals

    both friend and foe

    countless ages

    of development

    evolved our tongues and ears

    for speech

    when we were finally able

    to take care of each other

    and accomplish

    the miracle of

    Communication

    Poem 3 Winter Skating

    Preface ~

    “All the mischief of young people
    trying to be in love
    While parents hollered
    for their children to come home
    them slogging with skates
    frozen to their love-lorn feet 

    miracles of endurance”

    Story ~

    They made their way

    slow and desperate

    to the ramshackle cabin

    at the corner of the ice field

    to retrieve their worn-down and

    half-frozen shoes

    laughing in pain

    amid the smoke of

    a warm smoldering fire

    burning in an antique barrel

    stove squat center in the

    shack among walls laden

    with poetry, graffiti

    proposals of love and hate

    phone numbers and obscenities

    when the old stove finally

    lost its heat

    the pond became

    an oasis of moonlit

    silence

    dreams descended

    then we embraced

    and the universe folded

    into our heaven-like bodies

    https://www.lang-works.com/0-Pompei-07/index.html

    Poem 4 Angels

    Even Einstein
    would agree
    semantics aside
    spirits could glide
    from sea to sea

    Of course
    winged benefactors
    aren’t probable
    which is a difference
    of mystery

    Seems there’s
    something looking down
    giving us a frown
    then waving a wand

    trying to cast
    a magic dream
    like an office
    of the lost and found
    that has always
    been empty

    It could be
    a four-leaf
    clover
    that no one’s
    looking over

    the Universe
    is too wide
    for me to decide

    religions to me
    evolved in the sea
    and are corrupted
    As they emerge

    On the shores
    of restless minds
    and the lesser
    of humankind
    despite that…
    the angel in my mind
    comes and goes
    endlessly upon

    ideas and empathy

    Poem 5 Voices

    Voices falling from stars
    and Venus and Mars
    floating like snowflakes
    and landing on warm lakes

    The gentle fall breeze
    brings the tones
    to grace

    solitude
    or shared
    the tones move
    in our minds
    and make our daily work
    the music of heaven

    End of Poetry Group One

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    Poetry Two ~ Dark Poets

    Poetry Three ~ Reconcile with the Morning

    Poetry Four ~ Our Universe

    Poetry Five ~ Longing

    Poetry Six ~ Love