Showing posts with label Ambika Talwar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ambika Talwar. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Crystal Fire Lights Up Village Poets on Sunday, March 24



 

Village Poets presents the anthology, Crystal Fire, Poems of Joy and Wisdom, (Moonrise Press), as our March 24th feature at 4:30 pm and we welcome eight of the contributing poets to Bolton Hall. 

Two segments of open mic will be available and refreshments will be served. Suggested donation $5 per person for the cost of refreshments and to donate to the Little Landers Society that manages the Bolton Hall Museum, 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91040. Bolton Hall is a Los Angeles Historical Landmark built in 1913.

 Maja Trochimczyk’s remarkable new anthology, “Crystal Fire”, pulls together many poetic gems from several writers. The focus of the book is laser-tight on joy and wisdom, but the kaleidoscope of poetic imagery and insight ranges from the natural world to divine shadows to human relations. Beautiful artwork by Ambika Talwar further enhances and unifies this work, with such paintings as” Meridians” and “Serenity at Dusk” brightening its pages. Poems such as ”Snow Flower” by Jane Stuart and “What is Important?” by Alice Pero further expand the cosmic scope of these works. Do yourself a kindness in these challenging times and refresh your soul with this lovely volume.         ~~Kathi Stafford, author of Blank Check (Finishing Line Press, 2016)

Edited by Maja Trochimczyk, and illustrated with paintings by Ambika Talwar,  the Crystal Fire anthology gathers poems of joy and wisdom by twelve poets, eight women and four men:Elżbieta Czajkowska, Joe DeCenzo, Mary Elliott, Jeff Graham, Marlene Hitt, FrederickLivingston, Alice Pero, Allegra Silberstein, Jane Stuart, Ambika Talwar, Bory Thach, and Maja Trochimczyk. The poets span all ages and diverse life experiences. They includeémigrés from Poland, Cambodia, and India, and those born in the U.S. College professors join community poets. Native speakers appear alongside those for whom English is the second, or even the third language. The ”joy and wisdom” they write about are also different, as each poet follows their own path and gathers unique reflections to share with their readers.

 Selections from Crystal Fire:

 The Bantam Hours 74

 To see the same tree a thousand times

is to see a thousand trees

and see a thousand trees at once,

is to see the same tree a thousand times

      at the same time,

or say, is to ask the world who am I?

For the world to respond:

       you are here; it is now.

 

~Jeff Graham

 

Begin Again, Summer Solstice

After a long run down the strand

her limbs untangled

Thoughts flew off

no time to reassemble

Beach trash cleared itself

Wind blew away bottles and cans

Seagulls swooped, seemed to understand

no need to explain where she was going

Heart beating faster

soul slowing

to a universe she saw, old and unmoving

Dare she think of dying

when life unfolded in colored splendor?

Tiny grains of sand fell from her

Begin again, she said

and fell down laughing

~Alice Pero

Alchemy in the Hills

Rarefied air opens up to reveal

rocks in the mountain stream,

scattered sparks of reflected sunrays,

shimmering golden waves of water

spreading in circles from where

I stand on thick grains of sand. I watch

a wild sunflower unfurl its petals.

I smile at the aerial acrobatics of sparrows

orioles and the small yellow-gray

birds of unknown names. The scents

of white sage and sumac fill the valley,

ringing with the buzz of a myriad of

bees hovering about cotton-ball arrays

of wild buckwheat. It is not much,

but it is enough: rock, sand, and leaf enough.

 

Children’s laughter flows towards me

from another wading pool, upstream.

They splash and laugh, laugh and splash,

amused by every droplet. I rest in

the center of my universe, at a still point

of my turning world, where all elements--

air, rock, sand, water, sunfire—

merge into one blessing of being here,

sharing this space, this time with

children’s laughter, with lily-white

yucca blossoms stretching to the sky,

and a single blade of grass guarding

its spot between stones on the creek shore.

~Maja Trochimczyk

Fig

         Mora, Costa Rica

 like you

     I am no

true fruit

     succulent

at inflection

     of senescence

 

but an inflorescence

       of sweet

swelling dreams

        encircling a buzzing

stinging

        winged being

 

except you

         know precisely

when to bloom

          for all those

who need

          and are needed

by you

 ~Frederick Livingston

In the Deepest Parts….

In the deepest parts

is fire

miles of flame

carefully surrounded

by molten stone.

Hot breath

singes tree tops.

Islands are built

in a cold sea.

All this is necessary

~Marlene Hitt

Reflecting

They dance on moon spots

on a slippery floor

as a hard breeze blows the willow.

That once, when the sun itself

was in shadow,

there were crescent suns

on the wooden floor.

~Marlene Hitt

A Kyrielle

Green holly shines in winter snow

that glistens on its prickly leaves.

The holly leaves jab at the wind,

its berries feed the hungry birds.

 

At night, the holly tree is dark,

By day, it shines in winter’s sun

that sparkles on the holly leaves

and warms the coldest winter birds.

 

Rain greens the holly even more—

the berries grow and turn bright red.

The owls cry in winter’s wind,

the holly greens and glows.

 ~Jane Stuart

 

MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK: moonrisepress.blogspot.com/2022/09/moonrise-press-publishes-crystal-fire.html

Saturday, July 2, 2022

Happy Independence Day 2022! Village Poets are Baaaack in the Parade!

 

Happy Independence Day 2022! 

from Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga and Friends at the California State Poetry Society and Helena Modjeska Art and Culture Club - Joe DeCenzo, Elsa Frausto, Marlene Hitt, Alice Pero, Pamela Shea, Dorothy Skiles, Maja Trochimczyk, Susan Rogers, Bory Thach, Ambika Talwar, and Beata & Ella Czajkowska


It's that time of the year! The Independence Day Parade in Sunland Tujunga starts at 10 am on Monday, 4 July 2022 from the crossing of Mt. Gleason and Foothill. The parade goes down Foothill Blvd, and ends by Sunland Park.  It takes about an hour to walk.  Above is one of the previously decorated Poets' Convertibles (lent to the poets by Joe DeCenzo). Below a photo from the parade that featured Pamela Shea, then Poet Laureate as the Statue of Liberty, with her crown and torch Those were the days.... and now we are coming back to this patriotic fun! 


Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga will be represented by the Poet Laureate Alice Pero riding in the Poets' Convertible driven by Joe DeCenzo (ST Poet Laureate No. 4), with guests Beata Czajkowska, Secretary of Helena Modjeska Art and Culture Club, poet Susan Rogers, and Village Poets volunteer, Josephine.  Walking along the decorated car, poets will distribute postcards with "America the Beautiful" and poems they selected for this occasion. 



 The "walking" poets will include Dr. Maja Trochimczyk, ST Poet Laureate No. 6 (2010-2012) and President of the California State Poetry Society, Ambika Talwar, secretary of the California State Poetry Society, Bory Thach, one of the Editors of the California Quarterly and member of the Board of CSPS, and Elzbieta Czajkowska, representing Helena Modjeska Art and Culture Club as its volunteer web designer. 


Maja Trochimczyk, Bory Thach and Ambika Talwar (2021).

Alice Pero started her term in 2020, however all public events were cancelled and her first public appearance in a large Village Poets event was at the Passing of the Laurels Ceremony held this spring. You can read her bio and a list of achievements on our site, and about the Passing of the Laurels on this blog.

Alice Pero

Some of the poems to be given out will be on the theme of the celebration, for instance Marlene Hitt wrote about the fireworks:


These are not bombs
up there in the sky
only fireworks
It's the Fourth of July!

Bursting to celebrate
freedom for all,
sparkling promises
begin to fall

         (c) Marlene Hitt

Maja Trochimczyk's "Independence Day" poem that was given out as a postcard previously, received a new design:



Independence Day

Red - are the rocks of the Grand Canyon
White - are the mountains, covered with snow
Blue - are the waves of Pacific Ocean

Red, White and Blue - colors of all.

Red - is the Earth from which we come
White - is the Air that fills our lungs
Blue - is the Water inside us, with Stardust

Red, White and Blue - connected in all.

Red - is pure Love, deep in our hearts
White - is the Brightness of our minds
Blue - is the Peace of well-lived lives

Red, White and Blue - freedom for all.

(C) 2018 by Maja Trochimczyk


Maja Trochimczyk decided to also distribute one poem from her new book, Bright Skies - a version of a poem written for one person, now transformed from singular into plural - so it is a poem about all of US and our strengths, together. We are all perfect! 

Today – For Us

 

We are a miracle of life

We do what we want

We want what we do

We are perfect

We are cosmic trees

We grow by the calm lake of light

Its smooth opal surface

Reflects the sun’s smiling face

Our roots drink liquid light

Our crown sparkles with stars

Our leaves are green with peace

Our flowers are gold with joy

Our fruit is ripe with wisdom

We are a living miracle

We are perfect

From noon to midnight

From midnight to noon

We love what we do

We do what we love

We are—we  shine

We are one with the One

We are perfect

                     (c) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, from "Bright Skies"


Ambika Talwar follows the theme of "Today"  with an excerpt from a longer poem: 


…Today

  laugh silently and aloud

for the winds are your messengers

  spread your love

wherever these miniscule spores wander

 

Today

 proclaim freedom for all those

 who choose to give nourishment to

  their inner hearts’ miraculous ways

 

Today

is the day we each promised eons ago

 we would shift the ley lines

  of our thoughts and ways of being

 

Today

 my blessed beloveds, we are on the path

  of discovery and new creation

 

Today … be free

     And freely choose life liberty wisdom…
        and happiness …

                                   ~ Ambika Talwar


Joe DeCenzo will bring his poem inspired by America the Beautiful, "From Sea to Shining Sea," that we previously published on this site: http://villagepoets.blogspot.com/2018/07/village-poets-bring-poetry-to.html

Here are links to photos and stories from our previous parades. The last one of these was in July 2019:



Joe, Marlene, Maja and Josephine at the Parade in 2018.


PHOTOS FROM 2022 INDEPENDENCE DAY PARADE

Happy Independence Day! We had the largest crew ever in the Village Poets entry in the Sunland-Tujunga Parade - two people to carry the banner (poet Joe DeCenzo and Josephine), three in the poets' convertible (ST Poet Laureate Alice Pero, poets Dorothy Skiles and Bory Thach who served as a driver), and three "walkers" to give out poems - myself, Ella and Beata Czajkowska! Then, a party at home and great conversations with another guest, India-born poet Ambika Talwar. So much fun! 

In one group we had immigrants from Poland, Mexico, Germany, Cambodia and India, plus those born in the USA. A true celebration of freedom, diversity and friendship!  I wore the gold scarf made by my Mom who died on the 4th of July 2013, and I always remember her joyous generosity and love on this lovely, happy day!  Ella, a poet and "walker" giving away poems, said that  people were moved to tears to get cards, especially the Hymn of Light I wrote new words for... America the Beautiful was the biggest hit on my side. I had people coming up to ask for extra cards... We'll have to print 800 for next year!

First, we gathered at my house on Sunday evening to decorate the Poets' Convertible - the car is lent for this occasion by Joe DeCenzo who, after the parade is over, has to remove the "goo" of glue from tape that melts into the varnish. Thanks a lot Joe! In some years, we totally overdecorated the car - see the photo on the top of this post. This year, I think we managed to stay classy! 

July 3, 2022 Decorating Poets' Convertible with Alice trying out her seat


Almost ready - Poets' Convertible covered in silk flowers, bunting and flags!

Josephine and the stars

Bory Thach and the front grille, tricky job!

Alice and Josephine put the final touches on the front

Maja, Joe, Josephine and Alice so happy together!

Joe and Josephine attach the bunting to the front

We have some words on magnets, and the Poet Laureate picks up mini-poems 

Two of Alice's choices are here. 

I asked poets for some comments about the Parade and received the following from Alice Pero, our current Poet Laureate. 
 

Alice with her special umbrella from Joe and scarf from Maja.

 
"Here is the story about me and the little girl today.

When I was waiting in the car to start off in the parade,
a man and little girl came and seemed very interested in
our car and the man asked what we were doing and I
said, "This is the Poet Laureate Car."  I directly addressed
the little girl who was standing wide-eyed at me. I asked her,
"Do you know what a poet is?"  She didn't answer, so I said,
"A poet is someone who makes poems. Here is a poem:
'The bright yellow sun is up high in the sky
will you be my friend today on the 4th of July?"

She smiled broadly at that point and then we got into
a conversation about how she could make up a poem herself,
maybe about the unicorn on her tee shirt.

These are the things that make being a Poet Laureate so much fun.
Thank you for including the Poet Laureate in the Sunland/Tujunga
4th of July Parade!

Alice Pero"

 

 

The crew ready to roll!  Alice in her chair on top of the convertible, 
Josephine, Joe, Ella, Bory, Dorothy, Beata and Maja stand in costumes. 

Ella and Beata Czajkowska with poems to give away

Bory as the driver, Joe and Josephine to carry the banner.

Maja with the flag

Beata with postcards of poems and America the Beautiful

Joe made the banner, and this year carried it with Josephine. Fantastic outfits! 

The crew with Alice, Dorothy and Bory in the car, Joe and Josephine in the back

The second smallest car, a truck with its driver and Joe.

The crew at the end of the route.

After the parade with the car

Joe and Josephine

Maja, Joe, Josephine in front of her house.

Maja Josephine, Beata and Ella 

Josephine designed her dress and had it made to order specially for this parade! 

Maja and Ambika in patriotic hats

The next step for the poets will be....CSPS Board representatives
Maja Trochimczyk President, Bory Thach, CQ Editor, and Ambika Talwar, Board Secretary.