Mythos & Marginalia

2015 – 2025: a decade of days


  • Impractical Imagination

    Left brain. Right brain. A delicate balance.
    A left-handed Gemini; no stranger to controversy, but
    I can’t take sides. I dart back and forth regularly between
    a practical reality, where I must live,
    and the fractured imagination where
    I want to be. And I, a dreamer, know this. We all dream,
    of course we do; there you find other people, and you.
    Déjà vu.
    We’ve been here before.
    Pyjamas in bed, most of the time. Insomnia.
    You question the whys.
    Never settling for the answers, there is always another way.
    Another sleep (when else would we dream), another day.
    Imagination can soothe.
    Practicality will confuse.
    My imagination is as practical as my every day is creative.
    This is my choice, my voice, and where I choose to live.
    I’ve been here before.
    I will come back often.

    “An idea is salvation by imagination.”
    -Frank Lloyd Wright

    © 2018 j.g. lewis

  • full or not

    Will half of a full moon count for much
    if we look longer?

    Luna waxes and wanes, sharing its silence,
    or its spirit, in each phase.

    Do you ignore all that is not complete?

    Will you allow yourself to be sated by
    what is not there?

    We only see what we believe.

    It might only be darkness, though it
    may well be more; full or not.

    © 2022 j.g. lewis

  • Like This Day

    Sixteen times per minute,
    twenty-two thousand breaths
    in a day. No time
    like the present.
    There are no other excuses, but
    there are always other ways.
    Breathe. Choose today
    to speak up when you can,
    push out the latent sorrow,
    guilt, and anguish
    only you can understand.
    Inhale. There is no life, no
    oxygen, like this day. Despite
    our selected perceptions,
    there is not a
    single breath to waste.

    ©2018 j.g. lewis

  • My Annual Letter

    Every year, as we near the end of the calendar or come close to our winter’s solstice, I make a list. I write two lists actually, on one slip of paper with a bold line drawn right down the middle: the dividing line.
      On the left side I begin to list all the negative crap I have dealt with over the past year, the frustrations and things that got me down, or couldn’t be resolved. To the right (because it’s all right), I freely list all the good things that have taken place, the positive news, and stuff I simply feel good about.
      It’s my way off summing up the year. Hopefully the good side is longer than the bad. Usually, it is.
      I then take the paper and tear it down the middle, right along the line, separating the positive from the negative.
      The left side I’ll tear it into tiny pieces and toss it in the recycling bin, or flush it down the toilet. Gone. Good riddance to bad rubbish. The right side I neatly fold, slip it into an envelope, and mail myself a letter.
      Cathartic, yes, it’s my way of leaving things behind and stepping forward with a new positive attitude. The year-end review is invaluable, providing me a better idea of what I have done. It also rids the mind of what is no longer important.
      I don’t open the envelope when it arrives in my mailbox, but only slip it into my most recent journal. I keep it there for future reference; perhaps there is a day I’m feeling down and need pep talk, and I’ll open it then. Or, maybe the next year will be kinder to me and I won’t need reminding.
      Presumably, it may forever sit, unopened, in my journal, and that’s not a bad thing (I left all those behind). Writing the lists keeps me looking ahead, and that’s much easier once you’ve got the negative stuff out of the way.
      Others have told me they appreciate this exercise, and have adopted my practice. It might just be a symbolic gesture, but deep thought and action often provides us with those little moments of resolution.
      This year, I’m taking a more concise approach and listing one positive thing I’ve felt over the past year, and one negative aspects of my life (or the year of my life). It’s been another rough year; I don’t want to dwell on it. This is the good thing I want to remember today, next year, and in the decade to come. This is the list I’m going to mail to myself. I may never open it, but I know what is there. You want to remember things like that.
      I’m then going to take the other side of the paper, the negative element that has been bothering me, and I’m going to set a match to it. I’ll let it burn to ash, disappear right before my eyes, as if it is a ceremony or exorcism.
      It’s not that I won’t think about it again — this kind of stuff always haunts you — but I will know, in my mind, I have dealt with it, that I’ve made the effort to remove some of the negativity from my life
        It might only be symbolic, but don’t we all need more symbols, or gestures and actions to mark even the smallest steps we take forward?

  • Variations On A Street

    Each street has a function, a name, and familiarity
    to someone. Not merely a destination, but a place on which lives
    are lived. More than lines on a map indicating territory, a street
    defines a place. Vehicles drive and humans wander, tripping through
    what others leave behind. Cigarette butts, empty bottles, and dog shit
    reminders that we are not alone on this path. The human race,
    not without a whisper or trace of humanity.

    Traffic patterns become the regularity marking our time,
    coming and going on the same street, the same route, the pedestrian
    nature of what we do, and how we live. We travel with frequency
    along indistinguishable streets to get done what we need to, and enjoy it
    as we can. Little happens at night, silence stretching to fill the space as
    taxicabs and cowards leave little light behind. You can’t imagine streets
    not being there, yet man and beast travelled before they existed.

    Fate or destiny, missed turns along the way. Calm or cold,
    you decide if it is late, or early, when you arrive. Even rush hour moves
    forward. Lanes merge and we struggle with speed and direction.
    Congestion on major arteries, blood pressure measured with the click of
    the turn signal. We come to dislike traffic and our place in it. There is
    no point between A and B, frustrations articulated by the contrast. We each
    have an address and every street takes somebody home.

    © 2016 j.g. lewis