Poetry – Jean Wong

 

Waiting for the Phone to Ring

by Jean Wong

 

 

Waiting for the phone to ring

Such a small little thing

For my 33 year old self to not 

Be in the moment about.

 

Would his fingers touch the phone

His voice caress my ear

Ask me to go for a walk

Have a coffee, see a movie

Have dinner, marry me,

Give me children

 

Connect his heart to love me

Or not love me or be indifferent

Or disagree, fight,

make me leave him, or have him

leave me.

 

Whatever,

I don’t care what happens…

Just pick up the

goddamn phone

And

call.

Doesn’t Want my Friendly Heart

by Jean Wong

 

 

Poised on grid

Moved midst

 metal hulks,

scanning ceaselessly

Mutual  anonymity

Wrapped in steel

Protected by horn and laws

 

Red to Green

A lengthy pause

Creates my blunder

Am invaded by curses

Unforgiving hatred

 glaring

 through sunlit glass.

 

He can’t hear my apologies

Nor reasons for my

day dreaming

slow reflexes

poor  judgment

 

Doesn’t want any of my

goodwill

peace making

friendly heart

 

His hard carapace

becomes my own

My mind leaks out loud

“Screw that wing nut.”

 

Metal hulks

carry away

strangers passing

wrapped in steel

protected by horn and  laws

 

Jean Wong may be reached at marcjeanhw@comcast.net – she lives in the San Francisco Bay Area and enjoys writing poetry as well as autobiographical short stories.

 

 

Samples from Alisha Fisher

 

I am an artist who combines all the art forms in my work:costumes being my main discipline. I turn people into nature nymphs, fairy spirits, etc and I take all my own photographs.

SHAMANISTIC PHOTOGRAPHY
Alisha Naomi Fisher’s artist statement:
I combine costume with jewelry, body-painting, hair design and background art in my work. I also take pictures.
I make myself and my models blend in with their surroundings whether I am doing scenes in nature or in the city.
I have studied Fine Arts in college and at university, Textile Arts and Painting. I also minored in college and university in women’s studies. I have attended crafts workshops over the years.
For the past couple of years I have been working with plants. I am fascinated with the different textures and colors in the plant kingdom.
I love nature so much that one day I exclaimed, “Why not dress people up in nature!” I first began my plant costumes in August 1999 on a trip to the Madeleine islands of the Quebec Maritimes , Canada . I am fascinated by the fact that many of my costumes look like fabric. In fact I have always been interested in fashion. All the materials I work with are free!
My work can go in many directions; fashion, performance art, photo art, movies, theaters can interpret any theme and transform it into an experience.
You are free to interpret my work as you wish but for me I feel that my work represents that we are part of nature. When we die we will go back to the earth just as the plants do. All that will remain is our bones like stones.
Our blood contains chlorophyll, and so do plants! Minerals in the earth – we possess as well. By killing the earth we are thus killing ourselves. When we stop our busy lives by taking a slow walk in the forest and listen and touch then we are closer to god.
For me when I dress up in the plant clothes I become closer to the goddess/ god presence. The scratching of the branches against my skin wakes me up, brings me closer to god. I become the Shawomin; transforming myself into the nature spirit/nymph.
I believe that a fairy world exists in each species of plants, trees, and flowers.
My work can also be interpreted as ritual. A sacred act, performance.
I was born and raised in Montreal , Quebec to an artistic family. My father would give me fabrics and old hats as a child I would dress up in them. He was a photographer and would take pictures of me.
My work is owned by a number of celebrities and private collectors. I have appeared on TV in Canada and the United States. I have also had articles written about me. I have had solo shows and have been a performance artist in a couple of festivals.
I am available to hold/give workshops here and in other states or countries.
 

Alisha Fisher may be reached at goddessphotography@yahoo.ca and would love to hear of professional opportunities using her skills and talents.

Upcoming SF Bay Area local writers’ groups – in partnership with an Ethiopian library construction project

 

Would like to let you know that Synchronized Chaos Magazine is starting two new local spinoff writers’ critique groups, one in Castro Valley/East Bay and another in San Francisco, along with the group we already host in San Jose. Anyone and everyone is invited to the drop-in group sessions, and anyone from anywhere around the world may submit writing via email and we will discuss it live and send you feedback.

Also, our groups will partner with Jenny Ruedi, organizer of a yoga fundraiser in Castro Valley, to raise cash for Haiti relief and a library construction project in Ethiopia. Ruedi has spent time in the village where the library will be located, and is familiar with the community and knows they’ll be excited about the books! All the writers’ groups are, and will always be, free – but if people wish to donate to Ruedi’s international projects, they may bring cash and do so privately.

Info on the writers’ groups here:

Castro Valley:

Peet’s Coffee on 20439 Redwood Road, near the Safeway.
Second and fourth Monday nights, 7-9 pm drop-in.
Starts February 22nd, open to all genres and styles.
Walking distance from CV BART.
Facebook group here: http://www.facebook.com/cedeptula?ref=mf#!/group.php?gid=281753154565&ref=mf

San Francisco:

La Boheme Coffee Shop, 3318 24th Street.
In the Mission, directly across from 24th St. BART
Second and fourth Fridays, 5-8 pm drop-in.
Starts Friday the 26th, open to all genres and styles.
Facebook group here: http://www.facebook.com/cedeptula?ref=mf#!/group.php?gid=282370192669&ref=mf

San Jose:

Caffe Trieste, 315 South 1st Street, downtown.
Walking distance from the 180 bus line, accessible from Fremont BART. Second and Santa Clara stop.
Second and fourth Wednesdays, 5-9 pm drop-in.
Next meeting February 24th, open to all genres and styles.
Facebook group here: http://www.facebook.com/cedeptula?ref=mf#!/group.php?gid=110924937469&ref=ts

Another mentorship opportunity – via the postal mail

 

Everyone, if you’re interested in a writing mentorship opportunity which takes place at your own schedule through the postal mail and costs nothing other than the price of a few stamps, please comment or email me, Cristina Deptula (editorin-chief) at cedeptula@sbcglobal.net

Over the past several years I’ve become pen pals with several women incarcerated in California’s prisons who are survivors of domestic violence and determined to educate themselves and rebuild their lives. These women are part of the organization Free Battered Women, (www.freebatteredwomen.org) which works with and looks into the stories of women incarcerated for crimes they committed to some extent as a result of the abuse they endured at home. Many of them would receive lighter sentences nowadays for the same actions, now that there is more awareness of the problem of domestic abuse, and also nowadays more shelters and resources exist to protect people in these situations – resources the women might not have had at the time of their crimes.

I acknowledge that anyone of any gender identity can experience domestic violence and support all survivors’ ability to live in safety and to receive education and help rebuilding their lives – this organization, which I’m already familiar with, happens to serve female survivors.

Quite a few of the Free Battered Women ladies take part in volunteer groups and pursue art, therapy, work and job-skills training, etc…one lady I remember was a gardener and raised a collection of plants from her cell as part of a vocational program, another created elegant stationery and holiday charity stockings for others while earning a college degree, another served as a volunteer with the Forest Service’s firefighting program, another works towards a career in journalism to help tell others’ compelling stories.

Many of them write and would love to learn from and be in contact with other writers…some want to create and sell memoirs and give profits to charity, others would like to put together poetry or stories or magazine articles, or are interested in a head start on their education while they wait for room and textbooks to become available in the overcrowded prison education system in California. There are correspondence school programs available to them, however, they cost money – and prisoners here work full time, but only make cents per hour to use for hygiene supplies, stationery, stamps, and maybe education if they can afford it. They often end up receiving parole at some point, and it serves them and society better if they go back into the world with some more education…also many of them have gifts to develop and nurture and writing is a way for them to give back to society.

I, or the organization’s leaders, would love to put you in touch with a person or two who would love to receive encouragement and advice/critical feedback on her writing, and/or suggestions for publication. Please let us know if you would be interested!

California’s inmates don’t have Internet access and are not always able to make phone calls regularly, so the regular mail is the best way to stay in contact. Again, please comment or email me if you are interested, and I will ask one of my pen pals for permission to give you her address!

By the way – as a former Slam poet, I’m very excited and honored to see slam poetry incorporated into Vancouver’s Olympic opening ceremony!

Asking a favor – for eight year old Natalie

Announcement from the family of someone I dated in college and still care about very much…his niece has cancer and needs help. Please spread the word via Facebook, Twitter, LiveJournal, etc.

Natalie is 8 years old. She has a little brother, Sean, and lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

After five difficult rounds of chemotherapy last year, Natalie’s leukemia was in remission. Now it’s back and we have just weeks to find the bone marrow donor match that Natalie needs to save her life.

Natalie’s greatest chance for a match is from those of ASIAN descent. Please help us spread the word through the Asian community.

http://www.hopefornatalie.com

To register as a potential bone marrow donor…I just did this – (free and easy, cheek swab test, kit mailed to your home and you send the swabs back in a prepaid envelope, only 1 in 200 donors will ever go through the simple outpatient procedure to give marrow to save a life) go here: http://www.dkmsamericas.org

San Francisco Art Institute winter classes

 

Highly recommended – Stephen Wagner’s an excellent speaker and very knowledgeable, and each of these classes represents a networking opportunity in itself. Great for photographers, painters, graphic designers – any type of art…or for art writers and publicists.

If you’re not in the SF Bay Area (sorry for all the local announcements recently) perhaps email the event organizers and have them send information and notes your way for a PayPal contribution.

SAN FRANCISCO ARTIST NETWORK Programs for Winter 2O1O:

 Wednesday, February 10th, 7-9PM

“FOUNDATION:  Setting Your Intention & Strategy” 
- Making a commitment to your artwork, understanding your motivation, obtaining focus, making a game plan, with Stephen C. Wagner

 Wednesday, February 24th, 7-9PM

“SOCIAL BUTTERFLY:  Social Networking for Artists”

– Learn to successfully market yourself and your artwork on-line, with strategies, tips & suggestions from those who have mastered the art of social networking & on-line marketing, using e-mail, e-newsletters, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr and other on-line sites & tools – with GUEST SPEAKERS:  Tim Aldridge, Megan Wolfe, Mike Yochum

 Wednesday, March 10th, 7-9PM

“ORGANIZATION:  Developing Your Body of Work

Developing themes, creating series, titles, pricing, framing, managing your inventory, with Stephen C. Wagner 

Wednesday, March 24th, 7-9PM

THE JURY IS IN:  Entering Juried Art Shows”

 – Learn about juried shows, how to decide which ones to enter, tips to give you an advantage, how to manage your entries – with GUEST SPEAKER:  Priscilla Otani

Wednesday, April 14th, 7-9PM

“PRESENTATION: Preparing Your Artist Packet” 
- Written materials including artist statement & bio, documentation of your artwork, formats for your packet or portfolio, with Stephen C. Wagner

 Wednesday, April 28th, 7-9PM       

“RISE ABOVE THE CROWD: Presenting Yourself as a Professional Artist”

– Insight from local art gallery professionals on what galleries are looking for and how to approach them – with GUEST SPEAKERS from local art galleries

 ADMISSION:  $20 each lecture

ENROLLMENT:  admission at the door

 

at ARC STUDIOS & GALLERY

1246 Folsom Street, San Francisco


www.SFArtistNetwork.org


follow SFANART at:  http://twitter.com  and  www.facebook.com/SFANART

Volunteer opportunities for contributors and readers

 

These are some volunteer opportunities for contributors and everyone else which involve writing, reading, and music and other arts – great for resume-building and references, and also a chance to use artistic and writing skills for others’ benefit. Synchronized Chaos is all about networking and mentorship, so here are some mentorship opportunities! And, come on, singing with preschoolers is just plain fun!

Yes, I know this list is a bit Bay Area-centric…but many of these organizations have chapters in other states and countries, and schools in many countries would love volunteers and reading/writing and art mentors. This is just encouragement from the editors of Synchronized Chaos to find a program where you are to share your skills with children, students, or up and coming people in your field of any age.

Please feel free to comment if you are, or plan to start, mentoring – either informally or through a program such as these, and we’ll give you publicity and a shout-out in our magazine! Also, there are plenty of writers, artists, etc right here in our Synchronized Chaos community who’d love mentors – if you’d like to work with someone over email as time allows, please let me know and I’ll drop some folks’ names and contact info your way. Maybe you have some work up in a gallery or some stories published in an anthology and you’d like to give some feedback on a beginning artist’s work…please let us know, we will give you extra publicity in our pages for your service to the community and to the artistic fields.

East Bay Agency for Children – Sequoia Healthy Start. Help with after-school program and enrichment activities, 1 hour a week. Contact Reka Lal, reka@ebac.org

East Bay Agency for Children – Hawthorne Family Resource Center. Seeking Spanish speakers, a few hours a month to work with students and prepare for special events. Reach Allison Delgado, allison@ebac.org

Experience Corps Oakland, 55+ years old folks sought to mentor kids one on one or in small groups with reading and homework. 2hrs a week. Reach David Moren, dmoren@aspiranet.org

Lafayette School Mentoring Project – Get trained in language arts or math tutoring, then help in classrooms. 1.5 hours a week, includes evening sessions. Reach Jessica Bilksy, lsmptutor@yahoo.com

Oakland Parents Literacy Project – Help promote parental involvement and literacy, through Family Reading Nights. 2-3 hours, Wed/evening events. Denise Geer, dlgeer@comcast.net

Oakland Public Library’s Books for Wider Horizons. Receive training, and then read and sing with preschoolers through Head Start or Child Development programs. 1-2 hours a week. Reach Chris Waller, kwaller@oaklandlibrary.org

Reading Partners. Receive training, and tutor a student struggling with reading. 1 hour a week, with semester commitment. Reach Salleha Chaudhry, volunteer@readingpartners.org

Super Stars Literacy – Help disadvantaged K-2 students with their reading. Also accompany them on weekend field trips, 3 days a week for three weeks, and/or 4-5 hours Saturday. Reach Erin Drake or Jessica Berry, erin@superstarsliteracy.org, jessica@superstarsliteracy.org

Brothers on the Rise – Help set up and develop this organization. Looking for men to speak for the Speakers Series, for Fruitvale boys from 8-14 years old. Contact John Gilgoff, info@brothersontherise.org

Faith Network of the East Bay – Training provided, serve as a reading tutor or library assistant, or math tutor, or classroom assistant. Reach Randy Roth at randy@faith-network.com, or Rebecca Buckley at rebecca@faith-network.com

Oakland Unified School District Library – work in the school library, a few hours a week. Ann Gallagher, ann.gallagher@ousd.k12.ca.us

AVID – Help middle and high schoolers to prepare for college, using this socratic curriculum. 1-2 hours a week. Reach Robert Wack, elrwack@aol.com

BUILD – Work together with another person to lead a small group of high schoolers in developing and starting their own business. 1-5 hours a week. Reach Hillary Fernandes at hillary@build.org

Be a Mentor – Training provided, mentor kids socially and academically. 1 hour a week. Reach Ryan Gray, rgray@beamentor.org

WriterCoach Connection – Community Alliance for Learning. Training provided, work one on one with teens on their writing assignments. 1-2 hours a week, 2-4 weeks a month. Reach Lynn Mueller, writercoachconnect@yahoo.com

Oakland Schools Volunteer Office – Ask about a program not listed, such as art or music or science, or a specific school. Reach Risha Riley – rishariley@ousd.k12.ca.us or call 510-434-7765.