Changing Colors

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Chapter 3 – Peeking through Kashmir’s Keyhole

Friday, June 19th, 2009
Keyhole

Chapter 3 - Peeking through Kashmir’s Keyhole

So why else would this 45 year old lunatic named Ron (rhymes with cracked pecan) be clutching a bottle of rose wine in my mitt, the other fingering my last Camel, hoping Mr. Bik has one last light in his reservoir, the arrowhead in my pocket gouging my thigh as I sit down on Kashmir’s steps, proud of the double-breasted suit coat I’m wearing from 20 years ago (don’t fashions tend to cycle?), unless I’d been truly smitten?  Since childhood.

I who am a failure at most endeavors have been buzzing my blind date’s doorbell.  I who have nothing have been tapping at her door.  I who have received the slap-on label narcissistic prick from my soon to be EXwife am mucking in rivers over my head.  I who am a kayaker and an archer feel I must have already shot my boat full of arrows.  Aren’t women famous for changing their switchback minds?

Is my lady thinking I’m just another Otis, who screwed his plantation negro,–promised her marriage and vacations in Israel, but then realized, yes!, his dragon from inside her Skokie mansion would strip him of his last pair of silk drawers?

Or has Kashmir’s son Roger, whom she said is now a flame-carrying black Muslim, returned from college, and wailed, “Ma, don’t tell me you’re about to date another white devil!”

Maybe I’m feeling low as a night crawler trying to tie the strings in his hiking boot because of my Big Affliction.  Should I have kept that doctor’s appointment Dragon made for me, before she kicked me off HER patio?

Sitting on that stoop, fat ass feeling the cool of the concrete, hands cradling my lead head, I’m wondering if I haven’t gone as Lonny Tunes as my Aunt Myrtle, who drove her nifty coop 2-seater all the way to the golden shores of California, seeking her lost Jim. I imagine her spiraling up the Rockies, singing, “Love is the most important thing there is.”

But look what happened to Myrtle #1.  Last time I visited #2 in Minneapolis, she didn’t recognize her favorite nephew.  Should I have rung her doorbell with the abalone shell pressed to my ear? Click to continue »

An Intro to Chapter 3 – Peeking through Kashmir’s Keyhole

Friday, June 19th, 2009
Letting Go

Let it ghose..

The Difficulty of Letting Go

It was difficult to let go of Chapter 3.  Is my opening sentence so clumsy, only Einstein could untangle it?  Will the fact Ron yammers on about his mom’s forbidden subjects—politics, religion, and (oh Lordy, Lordy) sex– offend my readers?  Is the chapter so hopelessly tangled in flashbacks, I’m turning you into a confused time traveler?  What will my Olive-College family think, when the take a gander at the real Ron back in October, 1989?

Yet I remind myself that I’ll never write the perfect chapter.  And the purpose of this blog is to get this love story out there, so I can receive comments to consider for future revisions.

So where has midlife mess Ron miffed you off?  Are there places you’re tickled by his “loose libido?”

Memoir Writing = A Meld of Memory & Imagination

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

photos-2-273

Lakewood Loop River Misty

That’s not my idea.  But what a relief when I read it in Christine Rainer’s How to Tell your Life Story.  Having rough drafted Book1 of Changing Colors, I was concerned I’d made too much use of imagination, which, like some evil snake, couldn’t resist hissing from inside my wicker basket.  My inner critic, Detective Joe Friday on that old timey TV series Dragnet, kept insisting, “Just the facts, maam.  Just the facts.”

But take a gander at some of wise Christine’s quotes.

“The truth one seeks in autobiographical writing is not literal truth as emotional truth.”  And next paragraph, “Mixing imagination with memory is a powerful technique, perhaps the most important secret of autobiographic writing I will teach you (page 109).

My hope is that you will write your own life story.  Why should the great stuff you’ve got housed inside your heart and soul drift off like the mists on my 80 Lakewood Loop river?

Lakewood Loop River

Lakewood Loop River

How heroic of you to leave your shifting states of consciousness for future generations to ponder and enjoy.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, I’m wondering: Did you find the Ronnie in Chapter 2 a likable and believable character?  Are you craving to feel what he felt, when his Princess Vicksburg and shadow brother Bega got snatched away?  What vows do you intuit he made?

As always, I thank you in advance for your comments.

Intro to Old Black Women

Friday, May 29th, 2009

An Invitation to Celebrate

Two Crows in a Nest
Two Crows in a Nest

So my son Steffen Corby Naas and I (2 crows) are sitting up in my nest tree at Penthous #25, and he’s reviewing my poems.  Not an enjoyer of such yuck mucks by any means, he’s saying, “Dad, you love people so much, you ought to write stories about them.”  Spurt goes the spark that lights my bush -to what was to become 12 years later Changing Colors, a 2 book memoir about this white boy’s romancing a splendid woman of color, who goes by the name of Ms. Mahogany Kashmir Dubonet Moses.

But there’s not room enough in this true romance to include my shorter celebrations of people-the Clarks and the Ledlows, in shotgun shakes long side the easeful Mississippi river-the family I left home to discover.  So what I’m saying is, give this poet a chance for cripes sakes.  Every one says my prose poems, essays, whatever you choose to call them, are not dense, their doors swinging wide open, celebrating the divine blaze in each of us. Click to continue »

Old Black Women and Other Wonders

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Lula Davis Ledlow

Lula Davis Ledlow

Old Black Women and Other Wonders is a collection I’ve already written, except for the blog introductions and selection of photos. These portraits of the people I love feed into Changing Colors, but I don’t have room to include them in my memoir.

Over the past decade, I’ve read many of these prose poems to congregations inside black Baptist churches, to clapping hands and amens.

I would be honored if you’d take a peek at my 2 samples.  And/or hear them being read by this author-my son Steffen providing a Jazz-blossoming video.

Thanks again, Ronald Lee Naas

Old Black Women

Honoring Lula Davis Ledlow, Annie Blair, Essie Clark

And the Mt. Carmel Choir

Old black ladies display a beauty more varied than the congregation’s babies.  They range in color from full moon to the interior of midnight.  Their shapes and sizes are as different as the stones among the shadows of swaying palms.  Some have hips that protrude like the benches we press our weight upon.  Although one wears a hat that Saturn and a comet revolve around, they are all rooted in the earth, their flower watered by the spirit. Click to continue »