A Trip to the Dentist.. of Long Ago Humour

Tim Conway and Harvey Korman in "The Dentist," a
Skit on the Carol Burnett Show from when I was young.
I can remember how much joy and a sense of peace
Would wash over me when I would watch these two together.

It never bothered me that Mr. Korman would break character
And laugh with such abandon at so many of Mr. Conway's
Perfectly serious incarnations. I think that by knowing people
Could enjoy their own laughter, even if it wasn't strictly in
Keeping with the script was freeing to me then, as I built up
My code of understanding about things, Phase: Early.

Not everyone has the talent and rapport with the audience
Necessary to pull something off like that without losing
The folks watching, in disbelief unsuspended.

Ones' own gifts that can be shared with the world
In the end are meant just as much for ourselves to appreciate,
If possible... as self-regard and compassion are needed
For peace between ourselves and others.

We can always recognize the act of laughter out there,
Yet it is also a healing balm within us, the resounding echo
Of our own in harmony, as well.

 
 

"The Once and Future King" ~ One of Postscript Girl's Favorite Books


Above image from kathrynbentley.net


One of those books I couldn't put down, T.H. White's
Envisioning of one of the most enduring western tales,
Though it depended on its survival until the written word
On the grand glorious old oral tradition,
Has amazements and wonder on every page. Humour too.

At this moment in time, however, I just wanted to address
The methods that Merlin the mentor used to teach
The young Arthur and ready him to be King of England,
To bring the country together, united, and live in peace for a time.

Merlin especially wanted Arthur to understand that the rule of
"Might makes Right" was a barbaric and less than optimally
Civilized example of human potential and unity.
To that end, Merlin changed Arthur into various animals,
Among them the following three kinds...
To show the manners in which it is possible to coexist
With similar and different variations within and without the species.


(Merlin and Vivien (the Lady of the Lake) in a painting by Gustave Dore

So he changed Arthur, first into an Ant.
There he learned, among other things, what it meant to
Work together in a group with one's fellows and to
Care with great devotion for the queen.

He changed him into a fish, so he could learn about
Stealth and sly actions. How to out-think a larger opponent,
And by so doing, to live another day intact, body and mind.
Larger opponents there were sure to be in his time as in the past.

And finally he turned him into a goose
So he could learn fealty and devotion to another,
Share in the leading by utilizing all the skill and strengths
Of his compatriots, while staying mated for life.

These were some of the qualities that the
Great and powerful  Merlin felt it crucial for a king of men
And women to have in his heart of understanding, and not
Just in a verbal exercise.

***

Though the first video is clearly from another fantasy,
The Mike Oldfield rare B-side, "Legend,"
And then the next Oldfield song, "Pipe Tune,"
Together:
Struck a chord with me as does this king's story
From the mists of time in what we now think of as
Esteemed England's 'green and pleasant land
(as sung in Church of  England's 'Jerusalem.').

The power of story is the power to
Outlive its inspirers, tellers, listeners, writers
All.


The Elephant, the Shrew and the Elephant Shrew Too


Image above from: www.mountcarmelschool.net/.../index.html

From the article below: 'Spare parts...' that's one perspective, surely.
But since we are not only made of stars, as Moby said, but also
More recently descended from shrew-like creatures,
That supposedly teamed up with fungi for survival's sake
In the wake of the meteor or whatever it'll turn out to have
Killed off the long-standing and  vast Age of the Dinosaur...

To one of the most incredible examples of animal majesty
Alive today, both in stature and girth AND in memory and intelligence.
I am touched by elephants to a great extent; their poignancy.
Human beings are often defined by their original rituals
Surrounding the burial of the dead.

That care and attention, which we share with the Elephant
And geese for that matter, and who knows how many others
Makes me wonder whether they are sentient beings only or
Have an existential knowledge which puts them much closer
In manmade reckoning to what makes our species supposedly unique
Just saying.

What follows can be found at the crowning link and is not my writing.
Save for these musings in a few paragraphs.

Though sometimes mad with rage and destruction,
Elephants are most often helpful, strong, family-oriented, and they
Move me to laughter or tears in many stories about their deeds.
What they do, how they know , why they help,

And offer another example of how to live.

Above from:

http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/inside-an-elephants-womb/2006/11/24/11...

Below from: www.word info.info/words/index/ info/view_unit/3738

With a trunk similar to a pachyderm and an anteater's tongue, the elephant-shrew looks like a modified squirrel designed by someone with a creative imagination

They appear to be put together from spare parts of other animals. Their enclosure at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. calls them elephant-shrews, suggesting a cross between the largest land mammal on earth and the smallest. Just like elephants, they have delicate, quivering trunklike snouts, for rooting through leaf litter. Just like shrews, they eat insects, flicking elongated tongues from underneath the trunk to snap up their sought-after food. Their bodies are furry and rodentlike, with glossy black eyes and long, leathery tails.

Another special characteristic is their spindly antelope-like legs. Elephant-shrews, unlike many other small mammals, don't scuttle down burrows to escape hungry predators. Instead, they run away with great speed. They are said to be fast enough to be overly confident about their fast get-a-ways. When they spot an approaching predator, they may simply sit still and slap that elongated tail against the leaf litter. It is considered more accurate to think of elephant-shrews as dwarf anteater-antelopes. Their Bantu name is sengi.

Elephant shrew

Elephant-shrews are native only to Africa, where 15 species live in deserts, savannas, and forests. Since scientists discovered them in the mid-1800s, they have variously described these animals as insectivores (for example, shrews and moles), ungulates (antelopes and the like), even lagomorphs (primarily rabbits).

Apparently DNA analyses has placed them in their own separate order, Macroscelidea. It also seems that they are part of the newly proposed superorder Afrotheria, whose members emerged from a common ancestor some 100 million years ago. Though a small group, Afrotheria are decidedly diverse, ranging from tenrecs, hedge-hog-like creatures, some weighing less than a quarter-ounce, to elephants weighing 11,000 pounds, and also including aardvarks, manatees, hyraxes, and golden moles.

Unlike many other small mammals, which tend to be nocturnal, elephant-shrews are active by day.

 

—Excerpts from "Shrewd Configuration" by Richard Conniff
as seen in the Smithsonian, June, 2005.

More information about "elephant-shrews"

Naturalists who have never seen elephant-shrews in the wild, often refer to them as jumping shrews because they thought that their long rear legs were used for hopping. They have been called elephant-shrews because they have long snouts like elephants and eat insects (invertebrates) just like shrews do. Although elephant-shrews do have long noses to forage for insects, their similarity to true shrews has no further similarities.

With large eyes and long legs resembling those of small antelopes, a trunk-like nose, high-crowned cheek teeth similar to those of a herbivore, and a long rat-like tail; they have been shuffled by scientists from one taxonomic group to another.

 

 

Elephant shrew

Rufous elephant-shrew (Elephantulus rufescens).
-Aldous Huxley

Elephant shrew

Chequered elephant-shrew (Rhynchocyon cirnei)
-Aldous Huxley

 

Elephant shrew

Short-eared elephant shrew (Macroscelides proboscideus)
-Aldous Huxley

 

Elephant shrew

North African elephant-shrew (Elephantulus rozeti)
-Aldous Huxley

 

Elephant shrew

Four-toed elephant shrew (Petrodamus tetradactylus)
-Aldous Huxley

 

Elephant shrew

Black and rufous elephant-shrew (Rhynchocyon petersi)
-Aldous Huxley

 

Elephant shrew

Golden-rumped elephant-shrew (Rhynchocyon chrysopygus)
-Aldous Huxley

 

—Information for this report came from the following sources:

Macmillan Illustrated Animal Encyclopedia, edited by Dr. Philip Whitfield;
Macmillan Publishing Co., New York, 1984.

Grzimek's Encyclopedia of Mammals, Vol I; Dr. Bernhard Grzimek, et al.;
McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, New York, 1990.

The Encyclopedia of Mammals, Edited by Dr. David MacDonald,
Facts on File Publications, New York, 1984.

More links to animal knowledge.

 

Other related "shrew" units:

Shrews: A Variety of Shrew Species.

shrew word units.>

Everything or Nothing

Each day - Earth day, unless that day...:
I didn't have the ground underfoot to support me,
The mix of air right for my human breathing,
Concocted by light, tree, plant, atmosphere;
Not much to say; everything to do.

***********************************

Start the music if you want, and watch the globe
Spin albeit with a bitty hiccup.


Happy Earth Day!

What a beautiful day it is here today.
If one were to look on the surface, it might look like all is well.
But it isn't.
The vast majority of people on this planet do not have clean water.
Resources are being stripped from the earth without a backward glance
At whole ecosystems which are integral to our longtime survival.

Our atmostphere is decaying, and the planetary system is showing signs 
Of... disappointment?? if I may anthropomorphise for a moment.

There are so many things an individual can do
To reduce their carbon footprint, plant a tree, reduce, reuse, and recycle,

Live consciously.
These things can be done, but we also must support research into new
Sustainable energy and ways to undo what we've done...

...At an accelerated pace.

I hope we're  up to the challenge.
A whole lot seems to hang in the balance.
Earth will ultimately be okay and live out her life span,
But the delicate species which rely on their mother's continued support
May or may not be.
We have lost so many already and have hard decisions ahead.
I understand that this is the reason why people look away,
But it is not possible to remove an obstacle by ignoring it.
Not at all.

Best wishes for what you CAN do x5 billion -
Those numbers just might make an impact
Those are the resources we must mine.
Be well, be happy, our mother, our sustenance, our Earth.

'Big Question Theater' Night


Just like the many personality tests that
In all silly seriousness stamp you with a label based on the answers
To 1-10 questions, I will pose a simple one
Which I am genuinely curious about,
But which also shows how late o'clock it truly is.

Do you sense that the

a) Ends justify the means?

Or that the

b) Means justify the ends?

Just curious to know what you think... and if you could also
Support your 'a' or 'b' answer in some pithy manner or other,
I would be most appreciative.

Novels in which this issue is presented and/or wrestled.

The Lord of the Rings
Riki Tiki Tavi  :)
George Orwell oeuvre
Into the Forest
Engulfed in Flame
Flaubert's oeuvre
Winston Churchill's biographies
Harry Truman's biographies
The Poisonwood Bible
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Most other books, movies, Stories
Many of your dreams?
Choices made on a daily basis.

Fin?

Postscript Girl Asks Why Not & Are You Kidding Me?

In reference to the last post about the concert for Bangladesh and the song,
"It Don't Come Easy," what Postscript Girl wants to know is this:
1)What prevents it from 'coming easy?'
2)What is 'ease' all about?
3)What is 'IT?'

You'll know it when you see it, they say.
And I guess i feel like I did, and do.
It is my experience that often immediately after that, 'It' does get easier.
The noticing can often be All.

*******************
Didya bring your flashlight, Scully?

Stow the gun, won'tcha?
Geez, it has no place in this post!

It Don't Come Easy...

No, it don't.
But then again, it's life's work.
And it's the means of accomplishing.
River of consciousness
Meaning added, no extra cost
Hard-wired for joy
And melancholy sometimes
It don't come easy
Until it does. 

I don't know whether it can truly be appreciated easily now, nearly 30 years gone by and having lived with these 'types' of things for a long while now... what a huge media and humanitarian thing this was; one of the first times in my life when I remember those two things coming together quite so significantly and on that scale. I remember saving up my money for the album a long time in advance I was aware that it was coming out on such and such a date, and I got it the first day it came out, with a little help from parental transport. (No Amazon Preordering then (oooh was that product placement? I'll set an alert here. :). The awareness of the world, the interest in helping out with the skills they had that might raise up the most resources of helpfulness. And this song was just one of the many sterling interpretations that defining day.

By the song's poet writer, a demo for the piece:

And then: At the Concert for Bangladesh,

R. sings the song that G. wrote and gave to him

Orthodox Celts

Thanks to mamasaid:

mamasaid September 16, 2006
 Belgrade's most popular Irish & Celtic music band!
They are very popular in Serbia and neighbouring states,
 mainly for their vibrant live shows.
 A music video from 1997, directed by Darko Debelic
http://www.darkodebelic.com

http://orthodoxcelts.com/

When I see the love of Celtic music
And Ireland's influence spread so far and wide,
Turning up in far corners unexpected...

I remember this book by Thomas Cahill:

http://www.amazon.com/How-Irish-Saved-Civilization-Irelands/dp/0385418485/ref=tmm_hrd_title_0

Thanks be to Ireland's stout of heart!
And Serbia's as well...
And with them I stand wherever on this globe
I may find myself.
The spirit is all, and manifests in
Its myriad manner the multitude my mind perceives.