Friday, October 28, 2022

Readers' Favorite gives "Seeing Red" a Five-star review!!!!

In a Readers' Favorite review released October 28, 2022, the reviewer, Asher Syed, writes:

"Claudia Ricci is an exceptionally talented author who has the ability to elicit a long groan and a surprised laugh from a reader in the same breath. Ronda is fully fleshed and authentic, she is a likable character and through her, we see the pure gold of Ricci's prose in Seeing Red. It's probably the dialogue that was most amusing but the acerbic voice of the narrative that can turn painful moments into cleverly worded quips is a bonus. I'm certain there was a 'Meet Virginia' pun but I was devouring the story so fast I may have just hoped for it. As for ancillary characters, nobody is given mercy in Ricci's witty portrayal but it's interesting that we don't begrudge the character for their failings. Ronda is perfectly imperfect. Ronda's way of dealing with problems is to run, often into the arms of the unworthy, but don't mistake this for a romance novel. Seeing Red is a coming of age for those of us who are coming of age in a different way, and it's beautiful to witness the drive of a person who persists even when she's told, “Lo siento pero no es possible.” Very highly recommended."

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

They Flew Down From Heaven!

Sometime early this morning, my poet friend Nancy Dunlop texted me the dream she had last night. It is rich in imagery and it fits some of what is going on in my life right now! Yesterday a gigantic backhoe arrived to dig a pool in our yard. And as for wanting more life in my house, that's certainly true, as my middle daughter Lindsay is about to deliver her first baby. Excitement, yes, but nerves too! Oddly enough, I just last night started to read a novel in which a baby is born in the first chapter, and flocks and flocks of purple and white hoopoes (a Eurasian bird with a long, down-curved bill) descend on the city and the house where the baby was born. Nancy and I must have a little telepathy going on!

Here's her dream:


Claudia!

Had a very big dream

about you and birds

and a big city last night.

We were walking through small grottos

of overhanging trees

followed by wide swaths of skyscrapers.

Both landscapes living side by side.

Nature and concrete.

You were crying.

You wanted more pets,

more animals,

in your house.

More life.

But then we came upon

the little house in the thicket

in the thick of things.

In the thick of

many many small birds.

They rose from the ground,

shaking the fallen leaves.

They flew down from heaven.


They lit upon tangled branches,

making them shake

and shiver

in the little front yard.

We spotted the woman

who lived there,

washing her windows.

It was a wonderful house.

A house of many birds.

Your tears stopped,

making room for joy.

Nancy Dunlop, Ph.D., is the author of the widely praised new chapbook, Hospital Poems, which can be purchased on Amazon at this link.

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

We Are Approaching the Month of Thankfulness -- It's Time to Start a Daily Gratitude Practice

Thanksgiving is a time when our thoughts turn to gratitude. But there is a huge body of research that now shows that having a daily gratitude practice has a slew of benefits. Here is an excerpt from an article on gratitude, by Dr. Lisa Firestone, taken from Psychology Today
"I probably tend to sound like a broken record when I talk about the benefits of gratitude. Yet, I can’t overstate the rewards of connecting to gratitude on a consistent basis to both our physical and mental health. Research is continually showing that taking the time to focus on what we’re grateful for is a powerful way to feel happier and more fulfilled. And I’ve seen this data proven firsthand in friends and family, as well as patients, who’ve tried a daily gratitude practice or simply made adjustments to their mindset to think about what they’re thankful for rather than what they resent in a given situation.

"So, what are some ways we can make being grateful a tangible daily action item on an already long to-do list? My suggestion is to find a method that works for you. That may be five minutes to merely meditate on the things that we appreciate or taking time to make a list in a journal. It may mean actually thanking someone for something, as the act of acknowledgment itself can make us feel more grounded and connected.

"Reflecting on what we’re thankful for has an amazing way of shifting our outlook from pessimistic to positive. It doesn’t make all the things that we’re upset about go away, but it may transform the way we look at them by softening us, making us feel more ourselves, and even more resilient. With plenty of things that could inspire cynicism being thrown our way on a daily basis, gratitude is a secret tool for any aspiring optimist (or anyone who wants to keep a good balance of lightness in their attitude and strength in their stamina for facing life’s inevitable challenges).

"If you’re still not sold on putting gratitude into practice, here are some of the findings on its benefits:

• Greater happiness

• More optimism and positive emotions

• New and lasting relationships

• Lower levels of the stress hormone, cortisol, in the body

• Better health -- fewer visits to physicians!

• More progress toward personal goals

• Fewer aches and pains

• More alertness and determination

• Increased generosity and empathy

• Better sleep

• Improved self-esteem

"Ultimately, our emotional reactions are a part of us, and our goal isn’t to bury or fight every mood that we experience. A change in our mood can give us valuable information about something we need to reflect on, address, or alter in our lives. However, changing our approach to how we handle these shifts in our mood can be an empowering process.

In the next blogpost, I will describe a daily gratitude practice that I have developed over the last six months. It's working like a charm, and I'm excited to share it with others! STAY TUNED!!

Saturday, October 08, 2022

Time is Sliding This Way and That

Oh bisnonno, my dear great grandfather Pasquale, please come sit down. I've placed a white rocking chair beside the orange zinnias,

the last of the season. Sit here, next to me, because I am sitting in my own white rocking chair, staring out at the glowing meadow. I have fixed you un tazza di caffe!
And over here on my right is my granddaughter, Dani, your great great great granddaughter (in Italian "grande pronipote.") Dani is only three, but she is a "firecracker" -- un petardro-- as her mother Jocelyn (your great great granddaughter, or "tua pronipote") calls her. What's weird is that in 70 years Dani will be 73, older than I am now. And already she is familiar with her grandmother coming unhinged from time.

A few days after she was born in August of 2019, I did a little time travel with her and my father, Richard Ricci, who was your grandson. Did you feel about my dad the way I feel about Dani? That her face and her smile just melt my heart? That everything she does and everything she says are awesome and adorable beyond words? You were 56 years old when my dad was born. I was 66 when Dani was born. So talk to us bisnonno.
Quindi parla con noi, bisnonno.
You see, I am turning 70 in exactly two months, November 29, 2022, and somehow time has become unhinged again. Suddenly I'm flying back and forth in time and I can't hold on. It really started when I was talking to my writing buddy Peg about you, about the fact that it was a miracle that you survived as an infant. I told her that time suddenly seemed to be bending back on itself. She told me, "Claud I think you should make a timeline." So I did, I took a piece of brown wrapping paper and I made a long time line starting with your birthday, November 3, 1870. I drew the line all the way up to the anticipated birthday of my third grandchild, your great great great grandson, due in early December of this year, 2022.

Somehow I'm finding that time line unnerving. I look at 1870, and I look at 1940, when you died at the age of 70. I am at the age you were when you passed. Another thing I see: you were born in 1870 in a backward little town in southern Italy. It was a miracle that you even survived, because your mother, Filomena Scrivano, wasn't married. But one hundred years later, in 1970, I entered Brown University as a freshman. How does a family move from the depths of poverty in southern Italy to the Ivy League in 100 years? In the little town of Paola where you were born, the priests and municipal officials officially gave you the name Orzo -- a type of macaroni -- to mark you forever as a bastard boy. How difficult your life must have been growing up. Like I said, my head is sliding back and forth in time. I'm 70, and I have children 38, 36 and 33 years old. I have grandchildren who are eight and three. Seventy years from now, even my children will not be alive! Seventy years ago, my dear Grandma Albina -- your daughter -- was 49 years old. She was still young! What I'm realizing is that life is short. Time goes so so fast. And sometimes the past and the future collapse on each other. It seems as a child that life will last forever. Your parents will last forever. Not so! Growing up, I thought 1940 was ancient history. After all, it was further back even than the second World War.

But now, I see that 1940 was only 12 years before my birth year, 1952. Growing up in the 1960s, I was part of a generation that thought we would never get old! We turned society upside down, and things have never been quite the same.

But I digress. And I guess that's part of getting old or older.  You have so many stories to tell that you can get carried away!

Recently I heard someone say that turning 70 doesn't make you old, but it puts you in the "foothills of old age." As two of my children -- your great great grandchildren Noah Kirsch and Lindsay Kirsch Kaatz -- live in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, I can relate to the idea of foothills.

It's been two or three years since I started writing about my Italian ancestors.

At first I wrote about my mom and my dad. I wrote about my grandparents on both sides.

But it's only in the last few months that I have turned to you, Pasquale Orzo!  All of that writing I did in recent years has drawn me here, to your life, especially, to your early years. 

I want to know how it felt to be you growing up. So I have started writing in your voice. I call you the Macaroni Boy, because I suspect that people made fun of you, being illegitimate. Is that true? And what was life like for your mother, Filomena Scrivano, my "grande grande nonna?" Did she visit you when you were a child? Were those visits painful for you? Speak to me bisnonno and grande grande nonna. Help me see through your eyes. Aiutami Pasquale e Filomena, a vedere attraverso i tuoi occhi. Damini visioni e parlami, per favore. Give me visions and speak to me... please!

Thursday, October 06, 2022

OH MAMAMMAMMAMAMA COME TO ME!!!!

 Editor's note: My great grandfather, Pasquale Orzo, was born in November, 1870, in Paola, Italy. He was born out of wedlock. In those days, most babies born out of wedlock died in horrible foundling homes. Miraculously, Pasquale survived. However, his mother, my great great grandmother Filomena Scrivano, was not allowed to raise her son. Because of strict laws reinforced by the Catholic Church, all "illegitimate" infants were taken from their mothers. Pasquale was given the name "Orzo" -- like the pasta -- and he was raised by a foster mother, Annunziatta Sessa, another villager in the small town of Paola, in the southern region of Calabria. My great grandfather did know his mother, however, as she periodically paid him visits. In this chapter, Pasquale is about six or seven years old and he has just had a visit from his mother.

DOWN BELOW THE WINDOW I SEE YOU GO,

sotto la finestra ti vedo andare urlo per te

 I SCREAM FOR YOU

Urlo per te 

MAMAMAMAMAMAMAMA

You stop, you pull the black shawl tight around your head and shoulders.

You turn, you raise your hand to wave. 

Your sad eyes stare up at me.

You kiss your fingers and you linger there

MAMA, you stand against the wall of the narrow cobblestone street

STONE THE COLOR OF EGG YOLK

pietra il colore del tuorlo d'uovo

The soft egg you fixed me.

Why can't I go home with you Mama?

Alessandra tells me,

young man, I can't explain this until you are older

Giovanotto, non posso spiergarlo finshe on sarai piu grande

Why does she say this to me?

All she will say is that some day I will understand.

Someday, she says, I will see why many children cannot be with their mamas.

I cannot see you out the window anymore.

I slide to the floor. The tears come easily. I put my face into my hands.

MAMAMAMAMAMA I can smell the lavender

Alessandra tells me to wipe my eyes.

Pulisciti gli occhi! 

She tells me to go with my stepbrother, Salvatore,

Go for a walk by the ocean, but come back for soup,

so we do,

                                    My great grandfather, Pasquale Orzo, as a grown man. 

the two of us must hold hands she says,

him so tall, and me so small,

and we do hold hands until we are out from under her view.

Then Sal leads me through the narrow grey streets

he knows so well. We come to the center of Paola,

the church bells are chiming noontime.

The fountain in front of the church is dry. I stop.

I'm always looking for coins but there are never any to be found.

"Come on Pasquale," Sal calls and I run after him.

Soon we are on the sand and we take off our leather shoes

I am watching huge green waves rise and

crash on the beach. I want to run into the water, I want to splash the way

we do in the summer. I race as fast as I can to the water's edge

and Salvatore is screaming behind me

"Do you want to die you crazy little maccaroni boy?"

Vuoi morire ragazzo pazzo dei maccheroni?

I stop. I kick the sand. The sand gets in between my toes.

The wave crashes and crashes and the clear water snakes up to my feet. Cold!

I have never thought of dying before. I think of Mama, when she is squeezing me,

she is whispering

you are my life little man you are my life!

Sei la mia vita piccolo uomo sei la mia!

I can smell the lavender in her black hair


                                        My great great grandmother, Philomena Scrivano.

caught in a bun at the back of her head.

Suddenly I shout as loud as I can, MAMA MAMA MAMA MAMA

I am dead without you!

Sono morto senza di te!

Salvatore is behind me. "What did you say?" he asks.

I turn toward him and he throws sand at me, and some of it lands in my eyes.

I scream, I use the word he always uses for me

BASTARDA BASTARDA!

He laughs. He points at me. He shakes his head and squeezes his nose as if I have a foul smell.

"No no no macaroni boy. Not me. You. You. You will alway be

Il bastardo Orzo!"

I don't know what he means 

but I know how I feel when he says it.

My chest is empty. I scream inside

OH MAMAMAMAMAMA COME TO ME! 






Monday, October 03, 2022

Mariner's Boathouse Is No More!

By Sharon Flitterman-King, Ph.D.

Mariners' boathouse
Is no more --
friends, fun and
family,
memories of shorebirds
and seagrass, palm trees,
seashells,
and walks on
the beach.
Gone. gone.

A lone magpie surveys
the scene --
ocean everywhere, sand,
debris,
no homes.
We grieve, we mourn.
But in our hearts
the boathouse
lives --
Fort Myers Beach. Estero Island.
they flourish still
as we remember.

Sharon Flitterman-King is a writer and painter who lives in Hillsdale, New York. For many years, she and her husband David King spent time in Florida at Mariner's Boathouse, now wiped out by Hurricane Ian. The watercolor painting in this post is by Dr. Flitterman-King.