Watching birds in formation
I ignore their enemy species
Now flying free they needn't
Seem like the pigeons I so
Dislike. Early in their day, I
See the flapping choreography
Of birds in sync with one another.
Their wings so rapid as they
Swoop above and make yet one
More beautiful circle overhead.
Author Archives: therealtamara
Scenes

The L.A. Planetarium plays a prominent part in Rebel Without A Cause.
The teens from Rebel, watching the dire predictions of collisions and booms, are more engrossed in their own life angst. The adults in their lives can’t seem to provide them the guidance they need.
Officially named the Griffiths Observatory, it makes an interesting cameo in La La Land. It has appeared on TV episodes as well and some dozens of other films.
The Griffiths Observatory’s presence in Rebel was dour. In La La aery.
On a tangent that leads away from L.A. but still features a planetarium, I recall how much I loved stargazing. At least from the comfort of plush seats.
New York City has a well rated world-class planetarium of its own adjacent to our often-in-films dinosaur museum. The American Museum of Natural History is the setting for A Night In The Miseum, a series that is neither dour nor aery.
The observatory here in New York City is called The Hayden Planetarium.
And we’re once again back full circle to films. If not quite back to L.A.
Fall colors













Shorter this way

Why is it a shortcut if I cover the same distance? It definitely feels shorter when I turn on Cherokee to get 1 block down.
I still have to get from Cherokee Place to York. Why does it feel so much less arduous?

There’s a jazz club just off 86th and Second. That’s exciting.


There was scaffolding shrouding this corner for ever so long. It’s a pleasant surprise having this building come out into the daylight.


The Fall
It’s the best season.

Not just for the color on the trees or the crispness in the air but for its promise. The spring will overwhelm with expectation but the Fall has wisdom. It’s a temperate time of year, sometimes breezy, others balmy.



This bronze stag has taken its stand in our neighborhood for some time now.


This dental practice seems to be on a mission we as New Yorkers should appreciate. The goal, I gather, is to put a smile on our faces.

Foliage







A personal history
While he might not recall or
Expands and stretches his
Own, he is aware that others
Have a personal history they
Share, sometimes sparingly,
And revere. He knows his is
Worth a great deal to those
He has loved, who love him.
These memories are precious.
On the subject of: names

Names like Silverman have a history that connects the named with an occupation. Surnames were a later development in the human community.
It used to be that you would be directed to find Max. He’s the blacksmith. Max the blacksmith might become Max Smith in a shortening of his trade.
The mob, if gangster films teach us anything, will use a trait to identify a comrade in arms. Joey Triggers or Tony Safes might be a moniker in use. Since Joey and Tony come from a long line of Capistranos and Conamores they already have a last name. If they’d lived in the middle ages, the nickname would stick for the next generations.
Names connect us to our past.
What’s in a name?

Aaron Judge may be in the wrong field yet as an outfielder he broke Roger Maris’ home run record this year. Judge him not or judge him great.
Mike Hammer should’ve been a carpenter but The Carpenters were definitely, based on their name not their talent, in the wrong line of work. Perhaps they should have been called The Singing Carpenters.
(Yes I do know that Mike Hammer was a fictional sleuth.) MC Hammer, like The Carpenters, also finds himself in the singing game with Grammys to prove it’s for real.
I am certain you know a Singer who can’t or a Taylor who doesn’t? It’s such wonderful symmetry when the name and the doing align.
The Emmy-winning writer from Schitt’s Creek, David West Read has a great name for what he does.
Recovery

Sleep and convalescence are today’s topics. If you feel the exploration of this lulling you into the first aforementioned, perhaps it’s my expository skill at ye olde bedtime story. This staple of the nursery is now recommended for adults!
Speaking of adults, my friend Bill W. (No not 12 step b.w.) shared a Karl Jung YouTube. Pertinent quote for us today: “life truly does begin at 40; everything up until then is research.” On the very plus side, this also makes us all much younger. At 41 you have only been an adult for one year as I see it.
Don’t cry yet but I am also going to have to introduce the onion in this health alert. It appears that it is full of natural antibiotics. Who (besides Nat Geo from whence I was schooled on all 3 subjects) knew?
If the health benefits of that extremely healthful vegetable have not had the full benefit, you may be obliged to recuperate. In the not so distant past, you might have benefited from a long slow recovery period known to all as convalescence. It is coming back in vogue among the medical professionals.
Don’t expect a longer welcome while in hospital. Beds and staff are still in short supply. But do lounge about at home, having spouse and friends do for you while you take the time to get better.
Oh, and have someone prepare a nice salad with clementines, kiwi, avocado and onions- lots of them. Bermuda is a favorite, but I hear tell that the Sunion is designed to not bring you to tears.