6.5.12

Interactive Winnie the Pooh

 What we wish our Kindle could do . . .
Here's what I call an interactive book

18.4.12

Photos: Ponyo


"Ponyo", Jacob Riis Park, Far Rockaway Queens, New York City

"Bench", Jacob Riis Park, Far Rockaway Queens, New York City
   
                                                            "Rear Window," Far Rockaway Shuttle

16.4.12

Photo: Buggy

I pose with a buggie next to the A train elevated line in Far Rockaway, Queens.
We call 'em buggies

14.4.12

Photograph: "Lifesaver"

An unwrapped red lifesaver candy lies on a sidewalk somewhere in New York City.
"Lifesaver" © 2012 Greig Roselli
The life you save may be your own. I understand this quote now than I ever did before in my short life. I take a rather peculiar take on life. I feel like no matter what happens to me two things eventually occur. First, I cannot control a lot of stuff that happens to me. I can't pay my rent. My boyfriend dumps me. I lose my job. My doctor says I have high blood pressure. And so on. But then there is the response to whatever batsh*&t crazy stuff happens to me. I can respond to it. I go to my room and shut the door and don't come out for forty-eight hours. Or. I go to a museum (I live in New York so museums are like drugstores). I take a walk. I flirt. I talk to strangers. I do. I be. I am. Do be do be do. Therein lies the small modicum of freedom between what is unassailable and what I can do about it.

13.4.12

Photograph: "Birds"


Birds
I used this photograph of birds flying away in a baseball field near Fort Tilden as the cover of my book of essays entitled Things I Shouldn't Have Said (And Other Faux Pas).

16.3.12

Quotation on How the Wise Understand

a word to the wise is sufficient
dictum sapienti sat est


Attributed to Plautus, Roman dramatist and Terence, Roman poet

PDF Copy for Printing

14.3.12

Theater Review: Performance of "The Skin of Evil"

My friend and colleague Steve Ewaschyn directed and adapted the play the Skin of Evil with a group of wonderful young people at the Radha Govinda Hare Krishna Temple in downtown Brooklyn on Friday, March 9th. The play recounts the wrath of a malevolent demon who is destroyed by the help of Krishna and the deep faith of several village folk. Here are some pictures.
Anupa presented the divine role of Krishna with grace and majesty.
Music and dance preceded the performance to pay homage to the deities manifested on the altar.
Malika and AJ evoke the god.
This boy was rushing through the crowd of dancing women.
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