The Forty-Five
Sunday, February 22, 2026
A Year Of Kindness (VIII): Do Unto Others
Saturday, February 21, 2026
On Memories And The Real World
That post - those words - resonate with me on a couple of levels.
Friday, February 20, 2026
A Brief History of Haiku (V)
One of the ideas that I had about traditional haiku was that it was always supposed to be a serious, meaningful reflection - or "snapshot", as we discussed last week - of nature or life. Turns out that is completely untrue. Many of the old masters wrote humorous haiku reflecting their situations as well, and late 19th-early 20th century haiku writers invoked more of modern life into their writings.
says the idler,
walking along, slapping them.
I don't know;
Thursday, February 19, 2026
A Year Of Haiku (VII): Edo Moon
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
2026 Japan: Dinners (II)
The second "kind" of dinners we had were specific restaurants.
One night we had dinner at a Tempura restaurant:
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
2026 Japan: Dinners (I)
Dinners in Japan fell into three kinds of categories. The first - the ones we will review today - were mostly one offs.
Soba (buckwheat noodles) and donburi (rice with various items - chicken and egg in this case) on our first night in Japan. This was a shop where one purchased a ticket from a machine, turned it in, and got one's order:
Monday, February 16, 2026
Something Lent
The season of Lent is almost upon us (see what I did there?).
Lent has always occupied an odd corner of my existence. As a family growing up Episcopalian and then Lutheran, Lent was not something we ever talked a great deal about or did anything for. It was mostly a church related activity: the hangings changed, the altar cloths changed, the service excluded certain portions. I knew of Shrove Tuesday (because we always went to the pancake breakfast) and Ash Wednesday (which we occasionally went to). It was only later in high school and after college that more of Lent came into view, fueled partially by my friendship with Uisdean Ruadh (a very strong Catholic) and partially by reading more about the history of Lent.
There have been years when I "gave up" certain things for Lent (sugar is the one that regularly made its appearance, although other things have appeared from time to time, like social media or some activity). There have also been times when I tried to "add" something as a practice - here prayer or reading a particular work.
Interestingly, I do not know that either version particularly changed or improved my Lenten experience.
One of the better ones I remember is reading John Chapters 13-19 weekly. There are seven chapters (which, conveniently, fit into a week's worth of reading) and it covers from the Last Supper to the Crucifixion of Christ. It certainly fit well into the somber tone of Lent, reading of Christ's last hours.
I have not fully decided what I am doing this year for Lent - likely a combination of giving some things up and doing some other things. What is not certain in either category, other than it has to be something that is a noticeable change to my life.
A general question: How do you observe Lent?
