Tuesday, April 7, 2026

A big day in Lilith stories

1. 
 
"We were all waiting for you to get back," said S at the cemetery shack. I wondered why. "Because of all the destruction," he said. Yes, I'd seen evidence of downed trees, ex-bushes, new vistas no one wants. Fresh absences after two weeks away. "Those two trees by the turn toward the Temple . . . people get attached to the trees near their loved one's grave," he said. That would be the man with lots of tatts and a locals teeshirt; I've seen him often beside the one tree with flowers and family members. Kind of ironic, I tell S, that I was away reading from my book about befriending a tree when all these get chopped down. "They broke in the storm," another worker told me. And the bushes?
 
Lilith and I walked to the top, saw our two buddies there, and headed back down. S sat in a green maintenance vehicle, wrapped flowers in the back, Padres cap on, talking to the guy who sits in his silver truck early mornings. S said he's not allowed onto the Temple grounds any more. "Oh, I snuck in the other day, cuz he [the man in the truck] wasn't here. He chases me away." "Not any more," said S, the man in the truck nodding along. That was then. Now it's fine if you go in. He doesn't care any more.
 
Before moving on, I said we'll see if Iran survives the night. "Oh, that war is FAKE," opined S. "Iran can't control the Strait of Hormuz; they have no navy or air force. And the moonshot is even worse! You can see the CGI all over it." For an instant, I found his words a balm. If the war is fake, who needs to worry? If the war is fake, why feel despair at 3 a.m.? I looked up in time to see another green vehicle coming at Lilith and me. The two workers in the truck were staring up the hill. "Stop!" I implored. "Are there pigs up there?" No, mangoes. A mango tree full of fruit. That's what held their attention. S said he'd get a big stick and come back.
 
2.
 
On the other side of the chain link that separates Ahuimanu Park from Kahekili Hwy and the asphalt path Lilith and I walked on, we saw the park custodian whacking at high grass and weeds. Getting ready for the next storm. "You investigated all that water?" she asked. "It's moving!" There has, in fact, been a stream running down the bike path, even in the absence of rain. "It's coming out of the hill there, where the ground fell down," she said. 
 
She'd put a county lock on the gate to keep out the homeless guy that comes around; the lock's now gone. "He's the guy who steals flowers from the graves--the urns, too--and takes them to 7-Eleven down by the Hygienic Store to sell. You should write about this." I expressed surprise that I hadn't seen him. "Oh, he does it late at night." She offers a litany of stories about homeless (and homed) folks who do strange things. One guy took her to court for sexually harassing him, because he said she said he had small balls! (I already knew the punch line to this one.) "And the judge was laughing, just like you are now, and saying that's not sexual harassment. And I told him, besides, I have a wife, I'm not interested in his sort." Ka ching, there it was. The punch line.
 
I mention Iran, because that is what I do. "The bridges and power plants! Oh my god, what's gotten into him? Is he bipolar or what? Schizophrenic?" I suggested we didn't know, but he was not of sound mind. She returned to the subject of people in her park. "They complain there's no toilet paper, and I tell them the homeless people burn the rolls, so we stopped providing paper. And they come out of there disgusted, wondering what to wipe their asses with. It's coming out of your ass, so don't feel so disgusted," she said, before Lilith and I continued toward home, the bike path stream gurgling beside us.
 

This morning in Tehran

Deep in her dementia, but still at home, my mother knocked on a neighbor's door at 2 a.m. "The sun didn't come up today," she told them, thinking it was 10 a.m.
 
This morning, our demented president threatens to make that statement true for Iran.


La Parola da Casa: podcast on Io ed Eucalipto (I and Eucalyptus), Lavender Ink/Dialogos

 You can watch the podcast here. I'm at home, desperately missing the sound of Italian. Thank you to everyone who made the Italy trip possible, including Federico Preziosi, Pina Piccolo, and Lou Vezzali.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qdwpk18QxYs&t=175s 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Jesus' side arm

On our way out of the cemetery, I wished Uncle a happy easter and Buddha's birthday (in three days). "This is the day Jesus whups the Devil's ass," he said brightly, adding "peow, peow" sounds to his trigger finger and thumb sign. "I thought Jesus liked peace," said I. "Oh, he does . . . "

Thursday, April 2, 2026

The last flight home from Rome


The young blonde woman in a Texas sweat shirt and Seattle Mariners cap (it was her boyfriend's, but I told her about Brendon Donovan anyway) had grown up in Indonesia, but lived in suburban Minneapolis. She was moving to Hawai`i with several other Marines. The weather would remind her of her first home. And Iran? "I have no business there." I told her about a Chinese dissident I met once who learned how to fail a physical exam. She's going to look into her bad joints. She wondered where on Oahu to live, after she and her boyfriend get married. Between them, their housing allowance is 6K a month . . . you can live on that, my husband said. (Local people don't benefit from the military's socialized housing support.) Toward the end of the flight, she scrolled and scrolled through photographs of her and her boyfriend (I infer). I passed her my phone number, in case.

 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Italy trip for I and Eucalyptus / Io ed Eucalipto

Le traduttrici Pina Piccolo e Maria Luisa Vezzali ne parlano con l'autrice.
Io ed Eucalipto (Lavander Ink | Diálogos, 2025)
Ispirato alle meditazioni filosofiche contenute nel libro Io e Tu di Martin Buber, Io ed Eucalipto di Susan M Schultz abbina prosa poetica e fotografia per condurre chi legge lungo un percorso di interrogativi sul rapporto dell'essere umano con la 'natura', la società, le diverse forme artistiche con i loro limiti e potenzialità. Ciascuno dei 21 capitoli è corredato da una specifica foto artistica a cura dell'autrice, una specie di palinsesto che consente di sondare le sfumature di colori, le fenditure naturali, le figure formate dalle gocce di resina in uno sforzo di interpretazione e di entrata in comunicazione con la diversità di quello specifico essere vivente, alla ricerca di sapienze ed alleanze che possano essere di reciproco aiuto in questo periodo cupo della storia. Angolando il suo discorso da quei margini che sono l'arcipelago delle Hawai'i e un albero come l'eucalipto considerato di scarso valore nella scala commerciale umana, l'autrice comunica lo sgomento provocato dagli squilibri del mondo ponendoci davanti a tutta una serie di elementi scomodi da affrontare nel nostro resistere e nella ricerca di soluzioni.
Susan M. Schultz è poeta, critica, editrice americana e professoressa di inglese all'Università delle Hawaii a Manoa. E specializzata in poesia moderna e contemporanea, letteratura americana e scrittura creativa.
 

https://www.cheventi.it/eventi/2026-io-ed-eucalipto-un-libro-di-susan-m-schultz/ 

Friday, March 6, 2026

How stories fall apart

 

There is also sweetness. If Lilith and I get to the top of the cemetery, where the mountains are, and we often do, we find Ola and Hoku. Ola's got a salt and pepper beard and pony tail; Hoku is younger, wears an aloha shirt on Fridays as he weed wacks. They come toward us; in the sun their shadows precede them on the green grass. "Hey, Aunty!" they call out, leaning over to pet Lilith as her fur flies off. "Hey, you get grindz the other day?" I called out today, walking with Rachelle, remembering that the boss had said he'd tell them when the movie crew was having lunch so they could join them. "Nutting." No lunch. No hello to Jason Mamoa, though Hoku got one video. Rachelle said some of the film guys come to Waikane Store to eat chicken and sushi. Adam Sandler invited them all to eat with his crew next door. Rachelle's a massage therapist. Tells Ola to get his wife to walk on his back. "Doesn't last long," says Ola, who wishes his wife would get massages at the new Planet Fitness, like Rachelle.
 
As we walked down the hill, I told Rachelle that my Lilith stories took a hit when we started talking to Ola and Hoku. No conflict, just family, just their love for my dog, my fondness for them. I gave Ola a baby gift, and am looking for an aloha shirt for Hoku. We're always happy to see each other.
 
Write about them, said Rachelle. And I did.