Showing posts with label Amy Hale Auker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amy Hale Auker. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

LIKE NATURE, AMY'S BACK ~ AT THE BIJOU

Stunning photo ala MrWSierra

A M Y ' S    B A C K !

It's a natural thing.
You'll see.
No, you'll feel it.

Recharge within.
AUTHOR AMY HALE AUKER
is splashing under more than just warm spotlights.

It's the voice within that does it.

~ Absolutely*Kate,
resonating
*AT THE BIJOU*


A Double*Feature of Amy Hale Auker,
comin' right up folks ~
 

BIGGER ~ By Amy Hale Auker ... AT THE BIJOU

CREATION PRESENTATION  (of Creation) . . . BY AMY HALE AUKER

BIGGER
By Amy Hale Auker

bigger than you, bigger than me,
bigger than a bank account, bigger than a vote.
bigger than committees allocating funds for artistic projects yet undone.
bigger than the fight you had with your lover last week.

see how his eye is bigger than his wing,
as if at first he'll need to see more than he'll need to fly?

and his wing is just an L of bone,
dwarfed by the beginnings of feathers,
as if nothing special, but you can't soar.

he fits on my thumbnail, fits inside my head until I can't sleep.
the embryo of the universe cradling the yoke of the world
fit inside that fragile shell until it fell.

the stock market rocks back and forth.
the clouds build to the north.
there are questions calendars schedules songs tasks
and did someone call while I was away?

if  you don't want to see, don't look.

(c) 2010 ~ Poetess Amy Hale Auker 




AMY HALE AUKER is back AT THE BIJOU. It's a natural thing . . . 

The illustrious Amy Hale Auker writes and rides on a ranch in Arizona where she is surrounded by spiders, bats, lizards, weather, rock, hummingbirds and as much love as one person can breathe in at a time.  Her first book, Rightful Place, will be in the Texas Tech University Press Spring 2011 catalog and she has other works ready for publication when the rightful time arrives.  She just finished writing her first novel, and as a break for fingers and psyche, she is letting her imagination play with poetry... poetic prose?  prose poems?  Words.  Language.  Images. To view more of her work, visit DRY CRIK REVIEW


And check out a foxy fave here AT THE BIJOU "I GO FOR THE GOING"

Her poetic prose flows in the following poem as well . . . 


REAL LIFE DANCE ~ By Amy Hale Auker

REAL LIFE DANCE
~ By Amy Hale Auker

We sat on red rock at mesa's edge
as clouds came on, as storm rose up,
saying prayers for rain,
dancing in the dirt.
We felt it today on cooler concrete,
toned-down asphalt with no glare on our skin
under wet clouds.
We looked on the website
satellite
Doppler radar
Channel ten?
We smelled it out an open window.

Have you ever
sat still
on red rock,
on a mesa,
watching,
watching,
praying,
dancing?
Have you ever danced
for rain?
In the rain?

~~~~~~~~~

 We were here.
We knew granite, pipestone,
water coming up in the fall,
water going down into sand.
We had seasons,
totems,
animal guides,
mouths to feed,
sunrises,
old men smoking at sunset,
dances;
We knew
which leaf
to slap from our babies' mouths –
Yeh!
We built walls,
knapped flint,
hunted for food and hope,
ground grass seeds into flour,
dammed and dug the spring,
skirted the tracks in the dirt,
ground that doesn’t lie.

We are here.
We know Dillard’s, Arby’s,
what shoes to buy for fall,
driving directions to the stadium game
over at the buzzer,
no one wins.
We have schedules, plastics,
calendars, power,
strangers with fake smiles,
old men rolling in chairs,
movies.
We feed
our babies formulated wonders –
Yeh!
We build cities,
send text,
hunt for stuff,
call mom on her birthday,
sort packaging into bins,
look at bank statements,
numbers that never lie.

Come see the wind,
hold the sun,
hear the rock,
taste the flight of the swallowtail from bush to bush,
smell the clover dampness.
Come to the creek,
the million song mountain,
the real world,
where we left footprints,
yesterday.
(c) 2010 ~ Author Amy Hale Auker
Visualizations ala Laura Travels and James Neeley  

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * 

Amy (or Cita as some of us around writers'worlds have known her) is in a rarified state of prolifics and prose. It's as if you're barefoot and wading your way along a creek and then, way up ahead you see a lithe spirit. Son-of-a-gun, it's lovely Amy and you know you just want to sit and talk, ponder and laugh on that rock there. You'll move on feeling deeper and more splendid with another angle of peering at your world.

I think *ease* happens when you accomplish, are attuned to your 'nature' and are confident at a plateau where waiting for what's next to simply (thus strongly) come around the bend is its own sense of reality. I sensed that about the now of Amy, but wanted to know a little more for sure.


ABSOLUTELY*KATE:  So Amy, if you had your druthers, what would your superb and natural vision see happening for you in your writing and life'ways?
 

 
AUTHOR AMY HALE AUKER: We live, right now, in a world where Wall Street bankers are rewarded even though they have created nothing of value in a nation where everyone knows what a McDonald's french fry tastes like. I want to write about the real world where things grow up out of the ground, where the miracle of life happens over and over again, where people can and do survive without malls and movie theatres.  I want to produce something of value from a place where the bats fly, the lizards do pushups on the rocks, the bears leave barefoot prints in the dirt, the hummingbirds do a rain dance in August, spiders weave for their food, and poetry is in the chrysalis and the cocoon.  I believe that what you put out there is what you get back, and that if we do the good work, stay true to the creative process, we will be rewarded.   
 
See? I told you.
Amy's creating splendour
from the natural grace within.
 
Soar Amy Soar!
Thanks so much for natural flair
you brought 'round again,
*AT THE BIJOU*
 
~ Absolutely*Kate
and our fine staff of renown
 

Thursday, January 14, 2010

HOW DO YOU SAY "HOME"? ~ Double*Feature Thursday & Tuesday will Tale you, AT THE BIJOU



Feeling foxy at the Roxy?
Knowing where the grass is greener?

HOME is where it feels right,
how it feels right.
Nothing could be more serener,
( could it? could it? )
 Two femme fatales
 Tale their tells,
for the very first time!  

Luscious Ladies and Gutsy Gents 
**AT THE BIJOU**
oh so proudly presents
 the opportunity for me to say,

"Nothing could be Sweetah
than Cita and Laurita!!"
 ********************
AMY HALE AUKER

A N D 

LAURITA MILLER

********************  
BRING IT OH SO HOME!

Do Enjoy! 
~ Absolutely*Kate

I GO FOR THE GOING ~ By Amy Hale Auker


I Go For The Going
~ By Amy Hale Auker


 The dogs found a dead fox in the pool below the culvert on the trail leading into the forest.  All I could think about was how beautiful she was, even as she lay, half in and half out of the ice, frozen into the pool.  When I pried her out, I was shocked at how heavy she felt, and I almost expected her to still be warm, almost expected her to reach around and bite my arm when I freed her muzzle from beneath the surface, this dainly blue-coated creature.  Then I looked down and saw a huge piece of ice still clinging to her front legs.  The ice made her heavy when she should have been running away from me, like a shadow.

Her fur was hard to feel with my insensitive hands, the hands that carry wood, wash dishes, shovel dirt.  Surely there is another part of my body more suitable for feeling this fox's fine fur--and I think of rubbing her on my belly or along my inner thighs where the skin is protected and more able to feel.  Her face was patrician, sharp, pointed outwards at the world and I wondered how panicked her eyes, milky with death how, must have looked as she scrabbled on the slick traitorous ice before she died.  Because I have decided how she died--the deep pool cracked and broke under her weight at midnight just as the year flipped over the edge.  While all but a few hearty patches of snow beneath the perpetual shade of boulders have melted, the clear nights are cold in our mountains.  The little fox drowned quickly, her pads and claws slipping off the cruel edges over and over again while the water quietly regained the shape and state it had been in before its thinness betrayed her.  I wasn't there, but I know that the cold put the little fox to sleep and her dainty muzzle dropped into black water that clung and stiffened and held.

Its warmer today and I fled my office and its keyboard that links me to a million people and ten times that many words, that snares me in the clutches of "just one more email," one more glimpse at facebook, one more pass on chapter four, but oh what about searching ebay for a wool sweater, women's size small?  Dreams of a new year, promises made to self of a new way of being, breaking out of the ice of inertia at the end of the old year, drive me with a kind of restless desperation out into the wind and sun--out into a forest of surprises I'd rather have than any gift I unwrapped last week.

But I go without expectation--no agenda--the antithesis of hunting.  I go for the going.  I never know if the surprises or treasures will come from the forest or from within my own wilderness.  Both require vigilance--old fashioned paying attention.  And then, of course, sometimes the going, the walking, is its own reward.

Today the surprise required paying attention because the pool of water is off the trail, beneath the lip of the culvert, a long way down the steep slope.  But, as I said before, the dogs found her first.  I could explain away my actions with words like "natural exhuberance," but the fact is that I have a very low ick-factor and while I always feel a twinge of sadness when I see a dead animal, I am not scared of death, not put off by it, don't feel squeamish about how the wheel of life circles 'round and 'round again from flourish to entropy.  I have a dead hummingbird, several beetles, and a snake skeleton on my nature shelf in the living room.  I don't like to kill, but would if I had to, and didn't see the dead fox as anything but a treasure, even as I envisioned her slight figure as it really should have been, her cold nose buried in her warm tail deep in her burrow.  This is the closest I am ever going to get to a fox, really, other than catching a glimpse of startled eyes and a flash of a fluffed-out tail disappearing into the oak brush, so I carry her by her thin tail bone, the rich fur clinging to my hand, back over the trail, all the way home, her head swinging above the dirt, to lay her out in state and call my boyfriend out of his office, feeling a little bit self-conscious only then.  She's just a small wild creature, allowing us through her own tragedy to see, to know, to hold, to feel, to appreciate, to love something more of the mystery.  But she's still a dead animal and no, I didn't consider rabies or disease, or how silly it looked for me to carry home a dead animal.  I carried her back, put her back where I found her, and I went on with my walk.

We played cribbage in the late afternoon and outside the window a hummingbird buzzed by the seed feeders, on January 1, 2010, and the surprise was just a little more warmth on a day in which the ice had already been broken.

(c) 2010, Author Amy Hale Auker

So many of us know Amy as Cita but mostly, as Herself . . . above all things! What a tender tough femme. She writes while breathing with the seasons.  Twenty years on commercial cattle operations in Texas barely prepared her for living and loving and laughing on a forest service allotment in Arizona where the gaps are filled and freedom abounds, but Amy? Freedom? Yes, she found her new happy trails.

Currently, Amy has a book of essays, Rightful Place, in the pipes for publication at Texas Tech University Press.  Her first foray into fiction, The Story is the Thing, is complete and she's beginning the beguine of the good work of editing, polishing, and asking everyone to please pass the compliments. (Like you didn't see that coming - our Amy is no shy filly ~ rather one who will take her readers on a ride with such touching attention to nature's genuine fulfilling life, you just want to move in and call that wild  place home.)

Seems everyone is duct-taping notes in the upper balcony - we found this tattered piece of barn-parchment in Amy's characteristic scrawl~

"Really, fiction was an uncomfortable and scary new world, so now I am ready to get horseback and work cattle through the spring and forget about writing. My family of heart are all of those in the cowboy poetry and music world who were part of blowing the doors off of my cute little ranch wife existence and showing me that thinking people abound in the ranching industry.  I plan on earning enough with my writing to feed myself, though its hard not to dream of that big advance check someday.  My boyfriend is so happy that I wrote him a boat, I mean, a book."

THANKS Amy for your honesty, your scrawl, and best of all ~ the wonders of your piece of peace, seen for the first time here ~ AT THE BIJOU.

~ Absolutely*Kate and the fine staff of renown, 
AT THE BIJOU, where a little hummingbird just blew in (Honest!)