Friday, April 10, 2026

Well whoopsin-a whoopsin


Welcome home, Artemis II!

So They Give It a Word

Chord:

A man steps out of sunlight,
sunlight that streams like grace,

still gaping at blue sky
staked across the emptiness of space,

into a history where shadows
assume a human face.

A man slips into silence
that began as a cry,

still trailing music
although reduced to the sigh

of an accordion
as it folds into its case.

Stuart Dybek.

Welcome Home, Artemis II!

Ngl, I was a bit anxious.  PTSD, you know.

It was so beautiful.  All of it:

Mission commander Reid Wiseman just told mission control: “Great view of the moon out window 2. Looks a little smaller than yesterday.”

Mission control replied cheekily: “Guess we’ll have to go back.”

I reckon we will, Jacki.


PS:

Thursday, April 9, 2026

You just got Litt up!


I was pleased to learn that I am not the only one who thinks Mike Cosgrove looks like Rick Hoffman.

Out of Mind

Oblivion:

I poured a whiskey and soda
watching the tree outside dissolve:
light going backward   pushed to corners
to the white sliver of wood
around the door.

Where was that river seething with light?
I recall the banks menaced by wasps
swollen on summer sap, a cement hollow
stuck with their strange cradles
a woozy stench of damp clay
the blunt poison of water snakes.

I do remember someone
close warm flesh pushed to the sand
the ocean a dark noise
echoing gulls and a wail of forlorn love
moonlight like yellowed keys
on his antique piano
music across the water    our song
tides pulled awful and endless
as the spine of memory.

The light is lost
my glass is hollow:
the door is luminous
like a firefly at midnight.

Rachel Sherwood.

#throwbackthursday

Can you guess what this is?  (2020)

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Hang on to your hopes, my friend


That's an easy thing to say.

The missile to launch a missile was almost a secret.

Venus and the Ark:

Old and withered, two Ph.D.’s
from Earth hobbled slowly back
to their empty balloon, crying alone
for sense, for the troubling lack
of something they ought to do,
while countless fish slapped
and the waters grew, green came
taller and the happy rats sped
through integrated forests,
barking like dogs at the top
of the sky. But the two men,
that last morning of death, before
the first of light, watched the land
of Venus, its sweetless shore,
and thought, “This is the end.
This is the last of a man like me.”
Until they saw, over the mists
of Venus, two fish creatures stop
on spangled legs and crawl
from the belly of the sea.
And from the planet park
they heard the new fruit drop.

Anne Sexton.

All Rise

I love this crew's fun spirit.

Speaking of which, that shot reminded me of the Spirit of 76 mission during Gemini, so called because Gemini 6 and Gemini 7 conducted the first rendezvous in space.  During those days, interservice rivalry was a pretty big part of astronauts' jokes and gibes (still is?), and the crews on this mission were mixed: Schirra, Stafford, and Lovell were Naval Academy grads, whilst Borman was a West Pointer...

...so naturally Wally and Tom had to prank Frank with a BEAT ARMY sign in their window (a couple weeks earlier, the Army-Navy game ended in a 7-7 tie).

Now Artemis II also got some rendezvous practice with the ICPS (interim cryogenic propulsion stage), but the rocket stage did not express as much 'tude...

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

شیراز


Been listening to a lot of Ali's stuff of late.  This one is I think my absolute favorite: the visual and auditory beauty is so great that I can't even get mad that it's shot in portrait.


Iranian musician Ali Ghamsari has been performing outside the Damavand power station— which supplies a significant share of Tehran’s electricity — in a symbolic protest against US threats to civilian and energy infrastructure.
After the Iranian authorities banned musician Ali Ghamsari from performing “until further notice” for refusing to remove a female singer from his most recent concert in Tehran, he announced on his Instagram page that he “wasn’t sorry at all.”
I fervently hope he and his people can continue making music.

ξένος

The Stranger:

Moonlight cold

and untouchable

like mercury


cascades through

an open window 

to the mirror.


Who is staring at me

in the glass

with my own eyes?


How many years

I evaded

their gaze


favoring the darkest,

obscurest waters,

rain-muddled rivers,


the cracking

windowpanes

of fractured sleep.


I heard my footsteps 

as though they were 

another’s


haunting me no end

in dreams

where I’m lost


in a labyrinth,

chased through sleep

in frenzied circles.


Now the moon wells up—

silvery rivulets

in the mirror.


The stranger emerges

over and over

out of the glass.

Melissánthi.

Overview Effect

Earthset captured through the Orion spacecraft window at 6:41 p.m. EDT, April 6, 2026, during the Artemis II crew’s flyby of the Moon. Image Credit: NASA


We sure can do great, illuminating things when we put our minds to it.  Costs for the SLS and Orion, et al, are higher than I would like, but much better spent this way than on blowing up people and things in Iran (and Venezuela, and...).

Godspeed, crew of Artemis II.

Selah.

Monday, April 6, 2026

I'm not a human, I am a dove


I'm your conscience, I am love.

Ἄρτεμι, καὶ χαρίεν φῶς ἑὸν ἀνδρὶ δίδου

Prayer to Artemis:

Goddess of culverts and lighthouses, goddess
                     of burrows and coves and safety in narrow escapes,
stand where you stand and shine
                     like kindness on our children.
From you they learn right and wrong, and how to wear capes
                     for hunting or self-concealment, how to find
a turtle’s egg-cache, or a rabbit warren,
                     how to distinguish a dangerous
impulse from a lovely whim,
                     when to keep a flower or a friend,
and where it’s safe to swim.
                     It’s hard work, I know, to shine all the time,
but it’s never pointless.
                     Sometimes it’s divine.

Diotimus.