Sunday, August 25, 2013

More Artwork and Poetry

View more of my Dad's artwork set to my poetry.

THE AUTIST AS A YOUNG CHILD
My mother had this painting of me in her office
at SJSU.

the child's a fool, the child's a sage
born too soon; he may not die
too old- too young to act his age

calm blue marbles in a flesh-bone cage
squirt laser truth on each white lie
the child's no fool, the child's a sage

he stands aloof in a field of rage
in a vale of tears his mind stays dry
too old- too young to act his age

when boredom looms he flips the page
and shuts the book when others pry
the child's a fool, the child's no sage

luminous eyes take center stage
his face as wide as a northern sky
too old- too young to act his age

teach him now of what and why
all the wisdom life can buy
the child's a fool, the child's a sage
too old- too young to act his age

HEAT TREATED
Here comes the heat
To soften and temper me
To burn holes through 
my hard-headed skin
And when I become a malleable mass
The Master sets me by.

Here comes the hammer
To bang and ping me
To force me into shapes
useful for horses and hinges
And when I become a specific shape
The Master lets me lie.

PORTRAIT OF A DORY IN GRAY
My father painted this sad and sober little dory
Listing listlessly leeward in its lonesome lagoon
As if set spinning its long and lingering story
Weaving in the colors of death's endless tune

She'd maybe been built, I'm thinking, for the sake
Of being rowed along river, estuary, and inlet
To take on netloads of tuna, salmon, and hake
Serving her master years without ruin or regret

But the old salt died and with him, her purpose
He left her tied up in the port of his last breath
Rust and dryrot marring her once-spotless surface
Lonely years of neglect would hasten her death

Cabin and decks were once bright blue and white
Her once-sturdy hull sported bold coats of carmine
But surely as youth's sunshine shades to cold night
Our dory's graying colors spell the end of the line

Monday, June 17, 2013

Artwork And Poetry

To honor my first Father's Day without my father I am going to share some of his artwork along with poems I've written to go with them. Enjoy!


SUNDOWN SAILBOAT
Anchored
in some hypothetical harbor
in a dead-centered calm.
Someone’s craft;
whose, we've no idea.
Could it be she’s below-decks
making love with the boatswain?
Yet this sailboat is far too small
for a crew of more than just one.

Evening;
sky scribbled red,
water scribbled red, yellow, and green.
Red in the sky because
the sun is happy
to bed down after a hard day’s trek
across a thankless earth;
Red, yellow, and green on the water because
a calm harbor delights
in reflecting back more than it captures.



THE MINSTREL
He surely does look happy
strumming away on that guitar...
or is it a lute?
(I'm not sure what they played
back in the sixteen hundreds.)

He surely does look the part 
of a well-fed cat in a birdcage!
But who knows whether
he retired to his private chamber 
weeping tears of torture after his performance 
for some fart-cheeked Bavarian princeling
who told him his act stank?


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Larry Wahl's Memorial Service

A service for Dad was held in Menlo Park CA at the gracious and lovely home of Peter and Theresa McNamee on St Patrick's Day. Dad had always said he wanted an Irish wake despite being Polish ;)





28 people were RSVPed but more than 40 showed up to honor the memory of this most amazing human being.  Toward the end of his life, Dad discovered the healing balm of Father God through an amazing book on the Kabbala which mirrored his own geometric vision of the Universe; a vision none who knew him were able to understand.


Here in this red velvet box lie the peaceful remains of a man my sister and I learned to love and honor late in my life.  My mother knew how special he was from the minute she first saw him.  Many others learned, like us, to appreciate his bold and uncompromising uniqueness.  Larry Wahl! Man, we hardly knew ye!



Meet the surviving family of the survivor Larry Eugene Wahl:
From left to right: 
his son; Eric ( a survivor in his own right!),
his daughter; Jill S. Grove,
his loyal friend, soulmate and wife; Dr. Sharon Wahl
his son-in-law; Tim Grove

REST IN PEACE DAD.
WE'LL SEE YOU SOON.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

MEMORIAL TO MY FATHER

LARRY EUGENE WAHL
OCT 5 1927 ----- FEB 27 2013

There are old warriors and there are bold warriors,
but there are no old, bold warriors.


A massive man,full of mind and heart
Hating knaves who'd twist and torture truth
He made mincemeat alike of liars and lies
Born in a place between two major wars
Confusion abounding he found little peace
In times to come he would lose track of time

He nearly drowned but in the nick of time
Kindly souls took him into their sacred heart
In a world of toys and books he found peace
He received the Church's love if not its truth
Yet he could not quench his lonely inner war
With warm food and bed were served holy lies

The growing boy learned to sift facts from lies
But not to separate heartbreak from happier times
The ocean called his name at the end of a war
Cold green seas mirrored his storm-tossed heart
Black-hearted T-Men became his servers of ugly truth
In the mazes of engineering he found his little peace

A next-born daughter and her blue eyes of peace
Helped rescue him from the empty void of lies
Helped anchor in him the precious gem of loving truth
She passed into death after two years hard time
The loss tore another hole in the hull of his heart
In between wives and up to his eyes in war

They trained him in the unfair unconscious ways of war
Neither friends nor loving foes brought him any peace
Until the night his true soulmate captured his stony heart
He became blabber-mouth, she half-teller of silent lies
These two bonded together through hard and easy times
Mutual laughter and tears now sing a perpetual truth

This man was my father and as I tell my form of truth
Seasons of joy and warmth mixed with seasons of war
Yet now with the end of his days and the collapsing of time
I testify that all in him has melted into accepting peace
In the still coolness of a restful unknown he happily lies
A living rich memorial in his friends' and family's heart

My father gained a heart  filled with hard-won truth
He conquered many lies and fought his final war
Gaining a true peace that will outlast all time