“Pelagic Sadness” by Hana

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Brooklyn, Pelagic, Places

The sea is like a never-ending love,
that seems to go on forever.
But the sea does eventually stop,
Just like the life a person that has no more use for a person.

I fall into a sad and dark sleep where no one may enter,
And the things you are convinced are wrong,
Suddenly appear to be the only right in this world,
a world that is filled with anger and jealousy.

As I step into the whirlpool of an unending sadness,
A pelagic sadness that grows at it yearns for a life.
The sea and I have two things in common,
We are full of surprises, even if it may not seem like it and,
We both are pelagic in one way or another.

The story behind both of us still hasn’t ended,
and the story will never end.

Georgic: The Park Slope Food Coop

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Brooklyn, Georgic, Places, Words

Park Slope Food Coop

The food co-op ! what wonderful place
The food co-op! It ain’t no passing craze
IT MEANS FREASH FOOD FOR THE REST OF YOUR DAYS
ITS OUR PROBLEM FREE
SUPERMARKET
The food co-op

FOOD CO-OP! FOOD CO-OP!
FOOD CO-OP! FOOD CO-OP!
FOOD CO-OP! FOOD CO-OP!
FOOD CO-OP! FOOD-

IT MEAN ORGANIC FROM THE LOCAL FARMS
Its our chemical free
Established in 1973….

The food co-op
I say “food”
I say “co-op”

FOOD COOP FOOD COOP FOOD COOP… APPLES, YOGURT, WHOLE GRAINS, CATFISH, COTTAGE CHEESE, ASPARAGUS, FIGS, LEGUMES, AND BRUSSEL SPROUTS….

THE FOOD CO-OP!

food co-op

Georgic: Sakura

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Brooklyn, Georgic, Places, Words

I never really liked flowers that much
The daisies always seeming too happy
The fragile roses poisoning my touch
All much too big or yet too small to see
But in Park Slope there seems another lot
All pink and white and growing in their crowds
And even dying I see that they’ve got
A sort of charm as petals fall in clouds
Colours against the sky are shocking still
In contrast yet in perfect harmony
Growing when it’s warm yet there’s still a chill
Their beauty comes from their simplicity
Dying and floating down to where we stand
Make a wish on the petal in your hand

From Diglot to Omni-view

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Diglot, Open City

Hi WebWordVisionaries. Think I may be stating the obvious with these comments, because I don’t feel I have any real web experience/understanding. But, in fact, that’s what fascinated me: I couldn’t get over the construction of the site, especially after seeing and hearing the presentations at the library. So, I was really wowed by your mastery of the technical aspects of the medium/media you were using, wowed by that before I even got to the content. The conception of the project, by itself, was amazing to me.

Which brings me to the content and then to the uses to be made of what you’re doing. I really see the use of the overall project as a teaching tool.

Seems to me that it could consume an entire semester of middle school, much in the same way one might take a course at college on, let’s say, European Studies, which would encompass, lit., philos., math, science, and so forth. One might start with the content parts, i.e, geography, history, spelling, and the like and then progress to the means by which the entire site came together technically and how it all interacts. Or make that two courses. Putting together the lesson plan(s) would be so stimulating for the teachers of those grades.

Given that children seem to be taught and to learn differently in this era, here’s why I think the project should be used at the middle school level: children of that age should have learned basic skills and would be ready to be stimulated by the complexity of the Net and its links. And for the thousands who can’t read and do basic math, given the many social and economic problems that so many NY school children are faced with, this project would provide some real stimuli for curiosity to grow. How exciting to be able to spell and know what a diglot is–I had lunch with a Korean friend of mine and informed her that she was a diglot, so I put my learning to immediate use! And what about those really hard, arcane words. What bragging rights a 13 yr. old could get. Or what a contribution could be made by a child with no skills, who could yet see his/her input right up there on a computer screen. Just give him/her a camera for a class “walk around the neighborhood” project. Or give them a local map and let them lead their classmates to the candy store and interview the owner. And on and on…..

As for the other age groups, one could parse out the manner in which the project provides the best access to their interests. What about the senior citizen centers or whatever is used in NY to spread knowledge. Those seniors are all over town, soaking up learning and being in a position to pass it along to others. And many of them are a little light on computer use, even though that has rapidly changed in the last few years. I’m always astounded when I meet someone around my age who functions technologically like a neanderthal, but they are numerous yet.

And then, of course, there’s the project as art form and community. Don’t think I need to comment on that, as you probably started with that thought.

The project was particularly interesting because it seems to make unusually productive use of new technologies to incorporate literary ideas. Could become the Zagats learning tool for all our cities, thereby making them all Open Cities for expanded thought and civic behavior.

Diglot: On how I see the subway…

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Brooklyn, Diglot, Manhattan

As a diglot, the subway seems to me like the place to eavesdrop, full of conversations I can secretly understand and full of secret conversations I wish I could. I had worked on a short sound piece on this subject during my first semester of film school, and oddly enough I find myself reviving it on my last semester. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhiIPe11p5Q

1964-65 New York World’s Fair Flashcards

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Places, Queens, Vaticinate

1964-65 New York World's Fair Flashcards

The 1964/1965 New York World’s Fair was the third major World’s Fair to be held in New York City and the second World’s Fair to be held at Flushing Meadows Park in the Borough of Queens, New York in the 20th century. It opened on April 21, 1964 for two six-month seasons concluding on October 21, 1965.

View image gallery of 1964-65 New York World’s Fair Flashcards >>

For more information on the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair visit:

Splendor of NY

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Culminant, Foudroyant, Manhattan, Welkin

Top of the rock

After spending past five years of my life in Los Angeles, seeing magnificent towers and sea of people on the streets of New York really dazzled my imagination. For the whole time I was in New York, I couldn’t rest; I couldn’t take my minds off from the world around me.

In Los Angeles, big real estate developers are trying to build what they call “Times Square West” in Downtown LA. But, I doubt that it will ever match the fierce splendor of Manhattan .

Georgic: Watering can

BY | Posted on | FILED UNDER Categories Bronx, Brooklyn, Georgic

In early spring-tide, when the icy drip
Melts from the mountains hoar, and Zephyr’s breath
Unbinds the crumbling clod, even then ’tis time…

Along Ashokan Reservoir, March 29, 2008

Along Ashokan Reservoir, March 29, 2008

Spring is back. Upstate is melting.

During spring break I went on a delightful hike with my family and friends, along the Ashokan Reservoir. The reservoir, like others in the area, was created in the early 1900s, I learned. It flooded the town of Ashokan and surrounding farms, to quench the thirst of the big city, downstate.

Home from the hike, looking at the photos taken that walk among as of yet leafless trees, frost and thaw, I feel the need to learn more about this watering can of the five boroughs.

My Brooklyn window looks out on a budding magnolia, and I know the garden hoses around town are starting to be unfurled by the thousands, as I write this.