Life and death in a pot
May 2018
text version below
Sunlight – too little you die; too much
you die. Today I sit outside. The sky is
blue and clouds are nowhere in sight.
My skin curls as the rays lands upon my
fair complexion. There are children about,
behind the panel fencings, and birds; less
contained, happy I guess; they always
sound the same regardless. Some clouds
would have been nice, for shade; and looks
no doubt. Fluff in the sky. Missing this day.
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There is obsession
Lurking
Never far from
Resurfacing
Kept at bay by
Pharmaceuticals
I desire satisfaction
I crave satisfaction
I only get my satisfaction
From a brain
in overdrive
Behind me the bridges are
Burning
Angry faces fading in and out of
Shadows
my doing
Without
Doubt
There is obsession
Lurking
In the
Dark
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John Muir (L) (April 21, 1838 – December 24, 1914) was the The famed Scotsman who persuaded the US president to save and protect America’s wildest open spaces.
Few Scots have made such a long-lasting impression on America as John Muir. Even now, 180 years after his birth, he is remembered as the ‘Father of the National Parks’.
Young John Muir arrived from East Lothian with his family in 1849. He soon dedicated his life in the US to sharing his passion for nature.
Muir became an evangelist for the great outdoors, preaching his message of conservation through his evocative writing; warning against encroaching development and the impact of farming on wild spaces.
All the while he encouraged people to get outside and lose themselves in the wonder and beauty of the natural world.
Muir’s campaigning played a key role in establishing Yosemite in California, as a National Park and he lobbied successfully for the creation of further protected parks.
Among those who listened to the Scot was President Roosevelt.
In 1903 Muir escorted him on a three day trip into the wilds of his beloved Yosemite, using the time to convince the politician of the need to preserve the country’s spectacular wide open spaces.
Photo: President Roosevelt with John Muir in Yosemite, 1903.
Source: BBC Scotland.