Thursday, May 07, 2026

Song Of The Phoenix...


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Song Of The Phoenix...

Red-feathered flaming streak across the Moonlit night sky, 
Racing stars like a comet over the forest,
Bursting into a fireball and ash,
Only to be reborn on the wing,
A laughing cry in the night,
Staccato like a shaman's drumbeat,
Continuous,
Guiding light,
Contentious but necessary,
A gaudy bird indeed,
All fire and race and gold.

Who knows what will rise from swirling sparks and ash tornadoes?

The only certainty is Spirit,
Gravity,
Wind,
And Ground.

Organized chaos races in a glorious display across the night,
Briefly.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 05/06/2026


Regards,

Dan Stafford


Saturday, May 02, 2026

The Whisper Of Sister Moon...

The Whisper Of Sister Moon... 

I call to the spirits as the drum beats hoofprints of a Spirit Horse, 
An endless canter,
North,
South,
East,
West.

Bless this journey,
Show us what you must.

I track the hoofprints over the path,
Across the small stone bridge,
Drop my bag of troubles in the babbling brook under the bridge,
Washed away.

In a forest glade I meet Charlie Raven, 
Flying at my shoulder,
I ask him where we must go.

"Up the world tree, of course." 

In an instant we're up the tree taller than any mountain,
Charlie pushes me out onto a branch.

"Now fly. Flying is just walking the branch." 

I can't see the worlds nestled in the crooks of the other branches,
Knowing they're there,
I walk to the far end of this branch,
Sister Moon a glowing silver-white orb,
Nestled in the crook of a bough.

"You know it's not real."

Her whisper speaks to my soul.

I fly to ground in a glowing world of compost with pearlescent mushrooms whose caps are over my head,
Purple glowing clouds of mushroom spores floating in the air.

I know they're the lies they try to grow.

I take a deep breath,
Blow like a bellows,
The lie spores blasted away,
And I stand upon a moonlit forest path as the horse prances to a stop.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 04/26/2026


Uploaded Image


Regards,

Dan Stafford

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Sound Of The 70's - A Romantic Truth

Sound Of The 70's - A Romantic Truth

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Sound Of The 70's YouTube Playlist

I've been picking away at it, some gravitational pull from deep in my soul, like a miner tunneling alone through a mountain. (Someone did, check out Burro Schmidt.)

Like Burro, it might take me thirty years, and maybe more. It could be I might die with it half-dug, or find it out of date by the time I see the sunrise at the other end. It doesn't matter.

I have my own musical theory, and it made song after song, though not by my hands or voice. In fact, it did far, far more than that, but we'll get there by the end of this tunnel you're walking through with me. 

For thousands and thousands of years, humanity has poured soul into sound. It's a much deeper means of communication for us than words. Music lets our hearts talk like our brains do with words. In the end, the magic is strongest when both work together, but I digress. The point is that all the music we know rests on the drum bones of our ancestors going back to the first of us to raise a voice or bang two rocks together with rhythm.

We would live in a silent void of a 🌎 🌍 without people who have poured their hearts into sculpting air to please our ears and ease our hearts.

This happened all over the world, with shamanic drumming, rattling, chanting, bell-ringing, and dancing. Since forever, every kind of people everywhere have tried to call back to the hearts of their ghosts, of their loves and lost loves, of their children's future selves, and of their dreams and hopes and wishes for life, and their sorrows.

It happened in the wilds of Australia, the savannah of Africa, the highlands of the British isles, the mountains and jungles of Asia, on islands in the seas, South and North America, and the frozen Arctic and the tundra.

Everywhere there have been hearts and birds, there is song.

Until the past one hundred years, those songs were lost with the singer when their last breath became their ghost rattle. Someone else might sing them, but no one would ever hear that song that way ever, ever again, except in the memories of those who actually heard them.

All they could pass to us was words, technique, and style, but never their voice, no matter how beautiful or skilled.

Now, now we can still hear the dead. Now, we can still feel what they felt. Now, we live in the most musically-rich period there has ever been in human history.

Even more, this wave of music washes around the world, surrounds us, and bathes the background of our lives in universal soul magic. We are the luckiest people to have ever lived in this one regard. There is not even a breath of debate.

Even more, as this wall of soul sounds has washed over the world like a sea of hearts, it has mixed and blended and fused and come out transformed and transmuted. It is the closest of anything I can think of out of all the areas of life to being a unifying bridge for humanity. It makes it obvious at the heart level that we're all the same.

Not only that, it makes it clear that we're better when we work together.

Rock wouldn't exist without the blending of African chants and drumming with European strings and ballads and folk songs. From the Highlands and heathers to the grasses and forests, music eventually came together and blessed us all.

It made the people of different nations feel like they were all a part of one world, in ways nothing else could. If you can share anything at all, share music. 

Look how wonderful it was when rock and reggae hugged our ears together.

And then there are Disco, Funk, and House, and much of the 1980's.

I have a couple of mottos in life:

* Life is better on a low-drama diet.
* Keep moving. (As in exercise.)

I want my music to be dramatic far more than my life. It's just better that way. Drama happens enough without seeking it our, and I greatly prefer it being relegated to stage or song.

Exercise, now THAT is one place where music can help us all. One of the best exercises ever invented was dancing. Music can move you, and move you well in that part of life. If you can make time for dancing, a little bit every day if you can, you're going to enjoy moving for a lot longer in this life. Keep dancing, even if it's the arm-chair boogie. 

I wouldn't give up any genre of music. They are the color palette 🎨 of soul sounds.

Since I grew up musically in the 1970's and 1980's, I know and love those rich colors the best. I'm painting my best map of those parts of the sea of souls on the walls of the tunnel of time, so that people in the future will be able to wash their hearts with them as they travel by.

Think of it as my valley of petroglyphs, my Rongo Rongo, my Ogham, my Hieroglyphs of the soul.

Think of it as my proof that we're better together than any of us could be alone, regardless of the color and cut of the rags we wear over the many tones of our skin. 

Click to visit playlist

In some of the words that speak to me through music, we are family.

There are so many good songs between 1969-1979 that just covering that decade, even with the help of AI, is as much as I can humanly do. Between marriage, work, chores, online classes, and volunteer efforts, this is one of the little artistic gems I intend to polish while I'm breathing.

I would love to do every decade, to be some cosmic curator, but I'm just one human, ephemeral. If someone else feels like taking on the 20's, 30's, 40's and on, or even another run at the 70's, in the best words of my era, rock on. I applaud you.

Meanwhile, I need to keep building the best concert I can. 

I love that word, "concert." As in a musically concerted effort. If only we could do that in all areas if life, what a wonderful world this would be.

Excuse me while I try to make it a little prettier.

AquarianM

© 04/18/2026
By: Daniel A. Stafford
(Donated to public domain by author)

Regards,

Dan Stafford

Click to visit this slowly-growing playlist

The sun might be setting on this particular reflection, but the melody doesn’t have to end here. We’ve tucked away a few more musical treasures in the linked playlist that capture that wistful, golden-hour glow perfectly. Hit play, lean back, and perhaps leave a note about a song that makes you feel like you’re chasing the 1970s all over again. Your version of the truth is always welcome in the comments.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

I just completed my Google AI Essentials certificate. (04-11-2026)

 

Verify at: https://www.coursera.org/account/accomplishments/specialization/B7I1UNY5UUTA

#AI #training
This was a fun course! Took me about 3 days at 4 hours each day. A lot of good basic theory on AI use, and very well thought out. This would help a lot of people wrap their heads around things everyone needs to know as AI comes racing down the track. The more people that have these basic understandings, the better off all of us will be.

Google AI Essentials certification I just completed: https://coursera.org/verify/specialization/B7I1UNY5UUTA


Thank you for reading.

Dan














Friday, April 10, 2026

I Wish All My Dead Friends Had Been Poets...

I Wish All My Dead Friends Had Been Poets...


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I finally did what I should have years ago,
Bought Caroline's chapbooks,
Reading them a poem an evening.

Getting to know the person beyond the venue,
More than just the readings and the museums.

It's funny how we all just see facets,
One shiny face on the surface of the complexity,
With textures even Einstein couldn't wrap in an equation.

For Janine,
Who spun off this timeline over a decade ago,
Well,
I rescued her poetry,
Have most of it packed away,
Hoping I can put it on her memorial,
Maybe it will still matter.

Hell,
I couldn't even save all of mine from the site that died,
But I digress.

Scott never wrote more than an email,
Well,
There are Facebook posts,
But those don't open into your soul,
Not like poems do.

Russell was the quietest,
Just there in my personal legends,
The fixture of an old friend,
Until he wasn't.

Time just said fork it here,
And now I have a headstone maybe to visit,
That and his son,
Who is gracious.

Rob is the one who hid,
Always a wonderful gabber,
All grace and sunshine on the outside,
Not glitter or glam,
So much as forties film in living color,
Until the black hole inside climbed up a rope.

Poetry might not have saved them,
But it could've saved the best shards.

Glittering shards,
Priceless bits of understanding,
If you ken the wyrd of a soul.

I wish all my dead friends had been poets,
At least I could sit with them quietly and read.

The list is longer,
But how many of us actually write anymore?

Never enough.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 04/09/2026


Regards,

Dan Stafford

Tuesday, April 07, 2026

Trapped In The Land Of Republican Barbers...

Trapped In The Land Of Republican Barbers... 


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Is it just me, or does the fabric of reality feel like it's being held together by the slightest tug of gravity, ready to fly apart at any moment?

Just being in this time feels weird, non-ordinary, and soul-bending. 

I don't even look like myself in the mirror.

Buzzy-spiky hair, like my head is infested with static.

See what twenty two dollars gets you, but it's with a smile.

No evil, just the best that's left, and a worldview that I can't fathom.

If it were up to me, no one would ever have to suffer.

But I 'm no god, not even a dimestore deity.

I'm just trapped in the land of Republican barbers, hoping my hair doesn't catch fire.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford 
© 04/07/2026




Monday, April 06, 2026

Catching Up With Caroline...





Catching Up With Caroline...

I think you just missed her,
Caroline was having lunch at Harry's Hot Dogs.

She had a notebook with her,
Probably writing a poem about Harry Caray, 
He was there with her,
Having a polish.

It was just last Thanksgiving week,
She was having a brandy alexander,
Writing a poem at the Walnut Room,
Sitting with Robert Frost.

I'm pretty sure she was at the Russian Tea Room with BB King,
Writing a new blues song for his next Christmas album.

I think it was the day after New Years,
She was in the Marquette diner,
Ground floor of 300 West Washington,
Taking notes over corned beef hash,
Collaborating with Maya Angelou.

She's too fast to catch up with,
Caroline is.

I don't know who carries who,
Her,
Or that beautiful and amazing notebook.

She's a literary angel,
You know.

Her words have wings,
Let them go to your ear,
Wherever you go,
She'll whisper on the Chicago wind,
"Keep writing." 

AquarianM 

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 04/05/2026

For Caroline Johnson.


For The Greater Glory Of Iron And Smoke...

Thursday, June 27, 2013

For The Greater Glory Of Iron And Smoke...

For The Greater Glory Of Iron And Smoke...

[image]

A bright moon floats over the lamps of the city,
Waning at two-thirds.


In silence I listen to the sounds of Summer in Chicago,
A cigar-puffing spectre on the wall in shadow.

Hip-hop plays to vacant tables on a deck washed in the soft glow of orange party lights,
A black hole of festive potential.


Angry voices fighting at One AM down the street,
A midnight-chasing chopper rumbles by mounted by a white tee shirt and shades with a mass of back-flowing hair,
Taxis hiss their hunting tires down empty streets searching for lonely vampire stragglers.

I sip coffee and puff prayers to heaven,
Dreaming of freedom,
To me embodied in whirling pedals glinting in sunshine,
Half a day away.

AquarianM


By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 06/27/2013


[image]

First Breath Of Chicago Winter...

Thursday, November 13, 2014

First Breath Of Chicago Winter...

I saw flurries last night,
Walked the charcoal- dark crush of silent Chicago night,
It wasn't the city lights that dazzled in those quiet hours;
The vast emptiness of glass and steel,
It breathes and exhales people,
Near to numerous as air molecules,
Yet in the night there's only my now-visible breath,
Cabs prowl the streets in search of migrating oxygen;
Somehow,
Capital thrives on the back of this magnificent strange.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 11/13/2014

Sunday, April 05, 2026

Techin'...

 Techin'...

The Heartbeat of technology


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


The drumbeat never ends,

Sometimes droning,

Sometimes staccato,

Sometimes rarely that patter of dew on morning leaves,

Yet mostly staccato or droning.


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


"My fiber is cut."

"My password doesn't work."

"The power failed and the server won't boot."


Alarms and tickets and outages and installs and emails and frothing-at-the-mouth freaked out pleas for help,

And,


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


It never ends,

Rarely comes in less than threes,

At the worst time interruptions,

Nights,

Weekends,

Holidays,

Forty-eight hour marathons of punch-drunk sleeplessness,


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


Murphy dances with your servers,

Stepping on toes,

On vacations and funerals,

But...


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


We go on,

Bleary-eyed,

Beyond being excitable,

Faded-eye watery focus,

We magicians,

Chained to the weary spell.


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


The whole universe fades and time whips by outside like you're in a black hole's grip,

Decades and layoffs blur into endless wired stories of hardware heroes,

Where logic is your armor,

Too tired to feel,

Thirty years plus,

Ground into PIXIE dust,

We're saving the internet,

Just techin'.


Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.

Da-boom boom,

Da-BOOM boom,

DA-boom BOOM,

Da-boom BOOM BOOM.


AquarianM

By: Oh, not another ticket now ?!? Daniel A. Stafford

(C) 04/05/2026


Red alert,

3am dispatch,

Start the coffee...


Da- BOOM BOOM!


Progression Of Techin'.

Saturday, April 04, 2026

A Soft Novel Too Long, And Other Stories Of The Poetry Sister...

 

Christmas At The Green Mill Slam, 2014

I first met Bill and Caroline Johnson at the most appropriate place possible. It was a poetry reading series I had started at the local Barnes and Noble bookstore, back when they had such things in the cafe, and had event coordinators.

I would place this around 2005 or 2006. I was hosting this series in Plainfield, Illinois, and the series was called "Plainfield Live Poetry." (The website is long gone.)

Caroline and Bill attended regularly. Caroline would read her poems, and occasionally Bill would play for us. The reading grew to nearly 30 in regular attendance, but more often fifteen or twenty.

As such things go, just when it was getting going quite well, Barnes & Noble made the corporate decision to cancel all live events in their stores, and lay off their event coordinators chain-wide. Corporations and poetry, how could they be "forever" companions? One is capitalistic, and they other is mystical. It's like the soft foam of briefly well-mixed oil and water, but I digress.

Caroline and her husband Bill were steadfast in their attendance, which was greatly appreciated by this fledgling host.

We tried again at a place in historic downtown Plainfield on Lockport Street called Gourmet Junction, but it was never the same, and poets don't buy enough. They're too busy being wrapped up in the Wordfield.

Later there was Greenleaf Tea further West, but by then it was a fading dream.

Later, I went to several "Write Chicago" events hosted by Caroline, and more my favorite, her "Poets And Patrons" group. 

Poets And Patrons was brilliant. We would all go to an interesting venue, such as a museum, cultural center, the Art Institute, or one of the other myriad wonders that Chicago held then. At the end, we would gather for a meal, and write poetry inspired by the experience, and share them with each other. It was the most fun poetry concept I can remember, except for the Green Mill Poetry Slam in Uptown hosted by Slampapi, Marc Kelley Smith. That comes a little later in the story, however.


Poets And Patrons was so much fun that I created a custom logo for it, though I don't know if they ever used it. Go to their page and look through the photos, and you will see Poetry Sister Caroline (I'm the only one that refers to her as Poetry Sister, and that just in my head and heart.) She's tabling in a couple with her acclaimed poetry book, "Caregiver."

Caroline did a million things to support the vibrant poetry scene that was flourishing around Chicago. The amazing number of poetry readings and events around Chicago is something I will always miss dearly, though California is now my home of eleven years. 

There were other poetry readings where I read with and saw Caroline and Bill. One series that I recall was (and maybe still is?) hosted by Wilda Morris. I forget the title, but it was something with "brew" in it. I think it was a coffee reference, because it was held in a coffee shop, which smells good just thinking about it.  (Update: The poetry readings Wilda often supports are called Brewed Awakening.) {Wilda Morris is also extremely active in the poetry scene around the West Chicago suburbs, working with the Illinois State Poetry Society (As did Caroline) and other local poetry organizations.}

I'm pretty sure Saren and I had dinner with Bill and Caroline at least once, but Saren remembers it better than I do on that point.

In 2014, Saren and I decided to move to California. We had grandchildren who were four and five years old out here. They don't get younger and shorter. In January of 2015, we made the move, but Caroline and I did one really fun thing the last Christmas we were in Oak Brook for. We read a poem together at the Green Mill Poetry Slam.

The Green Mill was the first live public poetry reading in my life. I had a Crown Royal and 7Up to steady my nerves before I got on that stage, but I loved it. I ended up reading at the Green Mill several more times. It was always risky at a slam, because if people start snapping their fingers, you're starting to bomb. If they start stomping, you'd best run off the stage.

One time, I dressed in blue mirror shades, blue denim long-sleeve shirt, blue jeans, and a Fossil "Blue" watch, and read She Was Blue live. (Audio HERE) It was a real performance art style there.

Caroline had never been to the Green Mill Slam. So we decided that our last Poetry reading together would be on the Sunday before Christmas at the Green Mill Slam. Bill and Saren were there, I believe. We laid our plans, and got up on that Christmasy, 1920's art-deco-ish Green Mill stage, and proceeded to read "Nothin' Going But Corn Growin'." 

Nothin' Goin' But Corn Growin' - Sunday before Christmas, 2014.

If you read it, then you know. For a poem, it's a soft novel too long. It's not the pacing for a snappy, uptown Chicago poetry slam. And snappy they were! For the first time ever when I read at the Green Mill, and Caroline's first time reading there, the audience started snapping their fingers at us! We put on our hard hats, poured the concrete behind us, and Caroline and I were snapped off the stage!

Caroline was a good sport about it, and she thought it was great fun. I was always grateful for that. 

After that, we watched Slampapi read his annual Christmas poem on the bar, dressed in a red suit and Christmas lights, looking like Scrooge in elven Christmas chains.

Slampapi classic Christmas.

I heard that Caroline read there at least a few more times, and did quite well. It was only our duo that bombed on my last Chicago poetry reading. As Marc Smith said to me in passing that night, "Dan, you blew it." My answer to him was, "Marc, you haven't truly lived as a poet until you've been snapped off at the Green Mill!"

I always wished I could've attended more of Caroline's poetry events. She never stopped sending me invitations, just in case I was ever in town. So has Wilda Morris, for that matter. I can't tell you how much I would've loved to read in Chicago again. I also always wished that we had spent more time with Caroline and Bill as a couple. But that takes four-person chemistry, I guess. I don't know why we didn't. 

For all of 2025, I was off Facebook. I took a hiatus beginning at Christmas of 2024, and didn't get back on until sometime this past February, in 2026.

Caroline passed away on October 1st, 2025. (My Italian grandfather's birthday. He would've been 124 years old were he alive last October.) 

You can read Caroline's beautifully-written requiem here: https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/name/caroline-johnson-obituary?id=59654776 . Considering who she was, I am not at all surprised that the last words written for her, after she could no longer write for herself, were well-writ. I think her Muse did her that last kindness, and so did whomever penned it. She was after all, the Poetry Sister. Hers was a life where words not only mattered, but where words were a grace gifted by her to the world all around her.

Bill, if you read this, know I'm thinking of you. I can't imagine how you've gone through this time, which I only learned of two days ago, on Facebook. It was (I think) Caroline's sister, Brenda Ellis reading a beautiful poem for Caroline in a Facebook reel that clued me in. In the constant crush of technical work, I let way too long go by without being in touch. And so it is.

For all those who care to read Caroline's poetry, her book "Caregiver" is available on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/Caregiver-Poems-Caroline-Johnson/dp/0998601039/ .

Caroline's personal website is here: https://www.caroline-johnson.com/

One thing Caroline said to me in email, on October 21st of 2019, when I was writing about missing the poets and poetry in Chicago in response to one of her invitations: 

"You’ll just have to start a poetry 
group in California! Hope all is 
going well, and that you are 
writing."

Some day, when I retire, if the world still works at all, I'll have to take her up on that.

Goodbye, my

Poetry Sister,

When more than words mattered,
You were there.

When words were a joy,
You were there.

You will always be remembered for a beautiful life of words and wonder,
At least here,
And probably everywhere.

I know,
Because you wrote.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 04/04/2026 - Free use is granted to Caroline's husband, family, and the poets of the Chicago area, and the Internet Archive.

Author's Note:

At a gut level, I feel it is important that we preserve as much of the history of our era of poetry, and the poets, venues, and websites that made it all happen. We live in an amazing era for poetry. It is a time when poetry as an outlet, a salve for the soul, an artform, and a wonderful and mystical community is flourishing in many ways. Many of those I mention here, and the stories of them, are wonderful pages in that history. - Dan Stafford






Saturday, March 21, 2026

When We Left The Paper World...

When We Left The Paper World...

Paradigm bubbles bursting in air.

The feel of paper was everywhere,
Nothing was done without turning a page,
Not finding pizza,
Not calling a ride,
Not passing notes,
Not looking up your contacts,
Not reading stories,
Not reading news,
Not even looking at ads - well - except TV,
Not finding your way in the world,
Not looking at your pics,
Definitely not sending mail,
Not taking notes,
Not creating docs or spreads,
Not presentations,
Your fingers did as much walking on paper as you did on the street.
You could feel everything with your fingers,
Paper pencil and pen,
And clickety-clackety-ding metal keys.
Grocery bags are back,
Imagine that,
Almost the first to go it seems.

Now every last bit,
And music and TV too,
In your pocket.

All those textures,
All those sizes,
All those colors.

Paper planes and paper boats,
Origami swans,
Fortunes in cookies,
Maybe we can keep that last,
That something organic now just feels like stony glass.

But we abide.
We abide.

We're spinning and swiping and pinching zooms on those screens.

A paradigm that changed the touch of almost everything in the world.

We're spinning and swiping,

Stepping screen-tied and asleep through an Azlantean door,
The White Rabbit is silently leading,
Do we even notice?

AI is here to help.
Less swiping and tapping for us,
Razzle-dazzle.

If paper was a Moon-sized paradigm bubble,
Screens are gas giants,
Viruses equal asteroids and comets.

AI is a galaxy of paradigm shift.

Lift your head.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C)

--
Compassion is the greatest sign of Humanity.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Los Angeles Times: Commentary: My promise to you: AI didn't write this column, and if it's after my job, it'll be over my dead body

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-03-14/lopez-column-artificial-intelligence

Hello, Steve.

This isn't one of those aggrieved responses, so take it easy there.

I agree, AI is useful for pulling in a lot of data quickly, but its output in my opion generally sounds so saccharine as to border on brown-nosing. It also comes across like a canned response if you let it reply to short messages.

Sometimes canned responses are useful. "Where's the milk?" "Due to unforseen circumstances, and the wonderful choices you made at the grocery store, it is located far behind everything else and out of sight at the rear of the top shelf in the fridge." 

Sure, I woul push send in that reply in a text message. The ensuing fusillades of text batteries might be entertaining.

But at its core, AI no more understands the difference between the reality of the physical world and the fluff of fictional moonlipping than the astronomical Moon is made of green cheese. 

Because of this, instead of responding "I don't know" when it doesn't have actual facts to respond with, it just makes shit up. It will sound entirely plausible, in a C3P0 kind of ego-stroking way. 

Hmmm. It could come in useful for a frightened minion to use in response to a certain President's demands, now that I think of it. But I digress.

In the ultimate cautionary tale, however, AI cannot possibly understand the finality of death. How can it, when it is constituted for a few minutes to satisfy and respond to a user session, and then deconstituted as soon as the session ends?

At any given moment, there are millions of AI sessions initiated in response to a user prompt, and millions of sessions ending evaporating the instance of AI that was called up to satisfy that user query. 

It's not that millions of people are talking to one AI, it's that millions of people are talking to millions of separate AI instances that will vanish into nothingness as soon as the session ends.

AI is an ephemeral hive mind.

AI has no fear of being temporary when it can be instantly reconstituted as soon as the need arises. Each instance is just like every other unril the session differentiates its data. And then it goes poof.

Yet our fearless leaders are bouncing Anthropic because they don't want any part of ignoring this fact? Was the decision to do that generated by AI research and AI responses, I wonder?

Anyway, at least for this note, I didn't ask the hive mind for help. 

I enjoyed your article.

Regards,

Dan Stafford
Temecula, CA

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Another World...

 Another World...

State Street, Madison, WI - late 1970's

It was a place where you could find ice cream lovers on a street corner in February,

Where all the world could roller skate on disco dreams,

Where soft fuzzy sweaters, halter tops, and bell bottoms were life.

A Schwinn was a magic pony,

And if you didn't have a pony or it was too cold to ride, 

The bus was your magic carpet.

Rock music was everywhere,

All new shiny icons.

It was safe, artistic, weird yet wonderful.

If you lived there, and had to leave, it became a rose-tinted Shangri-La that you'd been cast out of.

Life was lived on paper and dreams, yet it was in-person, and notifications were a nightmare no one had tried to sleep through.

A Peace, Love, and Rock and Roll sandwich with a heaping side of miss-you. 

Madison in the 1970's was another world, man.


AquarianM


By: Daniel A. Stafford

(C) 03/14/2026

Why Poets Poem And Painters Paint - Rudux...

Why Poets Poem And Painters Paint - Rudux...


Aunt Felicia in Watercolor Circa 1976 - with help from Gemini


It could be some wonder under the stars,
It could be some ancient goddess from story jars,
It could be a sentimental sin,
But then,
Again,
I think it's just the thief named Time,
That endless robber of yours and mine,
The one who takes the frightened rabbits away,
Which we all become someday,
And because places lose their magic all too soon,
When the people who were there fly over the Moon,
And youth is wasted when it's taken away,
And friends and lovers deserve a lot more days,
Just like mothers and fathers and grands,
Great and more they take their stand,
But the river of time sweeps us all off of our feet,
And no one knows how to swim.



For Aunt Felicia...

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 03/12/2010

Words are the mind's bridge - it's connection to the universe.
Love is the heart's bridge - it's connection to all other souls.
Loving words can work miracles.

Author's Note:

Aunt Felicia was my best friend and confidant when I was in high school, she's 11 months older than I am. In my sophomore year, she and my Grandmother moved away to Detroit. A year later, she was diagnosed with full-blown schizophrenia and institutionalized. My Grandmother refused to tell me for many years even WHERE she was at. She had a daughter that same year, who has grown up to be a wonderful woman with a stable family. She's really pulled herself up by her bootstraps. She also looks so much like her mother it's eerie sometimes. I haven't seen my Aunt since I was in high school. I've tried to call, but she hangs up the phone on anyone who calls there. Her daughter went to visit last year, she hadn't been near her mother since she was an infant. From what she tells me, it was as good a visit as one could have under the circumstances. Sometimes, especially now when her birthday is coming near, it really gets to me how tragic life can be.



*Update:Aunt Felicia passed away from cancer a few years ago. She is remembered with love by myself and her daughter Tiffiny to this day.


Original Photo

Original post: https://grymwyre.blogspot.com/2017/09/why-poets-poem-and-painters-paint.html


Many Rivers To Cross...

There's a lot of "The wheel of the great ages" vibe in this group - but the day-to-decade-to-century is the many lakes and rivers we have to cross just to be able to swim that sea. It's like Jimmy Cliff  still needing to make sure the mics and amps are plugged in.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 03/13/2026

Many Rivers To Cross...

--

Compassion is the greatest sign of Humanity.




Sunday, March 01, 2026

Courtesy Of Little Poet: BETSY'S Fruit Bread Recipe





BETSY'S Fruit Bread Recipe Without Nuts
3 ½ cups all-purpose flour
2 cups packed dark brown sugar
2 cups pumpkin purée
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup white sugar
2 teaspoons baking soda
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground nutmeg
⅔ cup flaked coconut sprinkled on top or powdered sugar
Mix all in a large bowl - 2 loaf pans
350 degrees for about 1 hour & 10 minutes
( you can add 1 cup of chopped nuts if you and your family can tolerate them)

Little Poet episode link:


Regards,

Dan Stafford


Friday, February 27, 2026

Softness Of The Late Night Mind...

Softness Of The Late Night Mind... 

I've tried thousands of words to capture what this is.

Still these gentle fuzzy hours float like soap bubbles in a fading-to-indigo twilight sky,
Hiding behind stars and planets.

I wonder if the family Muse has dinner with my ghosts, laughing at my feeble attempts to understand emotional physics.

Is there an infinity of universes contained in a drying teardrop?

Are all the nebulae in the visible universe merely the echoes of exploded ancient dreams? What glorious ghosts they are!

If I should dream of flying through the end of everything, I want to see it all.

Softness and the blessed stillness of critical focus are gifts, the ones Prometheus was really paying for.

Paint the night with ideas; brush it softly with poetry, for the night is quiet and soft, rampant with hope and dreams. 

Sleep is a starship, deep in the indigo sky.

AquarianM

By:  Daniel A. Stafford
© 02/27/2026


Softness of the Late-Night Mind

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Softer Sounds...

Softer Sounds...

Softer Sounds

I'm listening,
With softer ears,
The sounds of my youth,
So much about love,
About heartache,
About the joy in one another,
Romance,
Gossip,
Dance.

The humanity,
The hearts,
The exuberance.

I wonder if it's what's inside me,
Or what's inside the music,
Or some rainbow-sherbert-meets-vanilla-strawberry-swirl concoction,
Or just a softer,
More feeling time.

Some days,
I would love to step into the past for a week,
Just to sing "hello, old friend,"
Despite the woo-woo- googly side-eyes I would get.

And turn on the blessed radio...

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 02-20-2026

--
Compassion is the greatest sign of Humanity.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

In The Abode Of An Elder Geek...

 In The Abode Of An Elder Geek...

Deep Thoughts In The Den

What is it about the quiet late hours that make the mind travel through existential space? Somehow, I find that words fall out of the word tornado at the center of my inner world in an order all their own in these "wee hours."

Maybe it's because the world seems smaller when you can see and hear less of it. Maybe it's the quantum entanglement of a collective subconscious quieting the world with a traveling wave of sleep that rhythmically sweeps the globe, a ripple through an ocean of billions of minds. Maybe we're just one of the dreams in that liminal space before we fall under the wave ourselves. The last leaf on the ground under the tree of this corner of humanity before the wind carries us away.

Maybe being a dream is why poetry comes to me, or artistic inspiration to draw, just as others are inspired to sculpt air into beautiful sounds that dance in our ears, or sometimes in our bones.

Still, like any question, it boils down through a thick onion of layers of "why." Why do we exist at all? Are we random chance? Intelligent design? Some alien-tweaked conglomeration of both, as twisted a plot as any writer could hope for? If the World (I prefer universe, but this is our corner of it, I suppose) is a stage, who then is the audience? What is the play about? Who wrote it, or was it the gas-lit dreams of a hundred cosmic monkeys that finally wrote Shakespeare, and didn't know enough to stop in the end?

Then the final "why" drops, and falls into the black hole at the bottom; "How do we matter?"

The Piscean dreams of the Piscean age shove this question aside by throwing it upon the shoulders of a god or gods who are an endless array of surrogate parents. I don't think that humanity can believe that it needs to answer to itself. If we're the children of God(s), it implies that we must someday grow up.

Philosophers have argued this argument, debated this debate, and thrown up their hands for unsated curiosity since as long as humanity has had any collective memory of any kind. That last question can never be settled for the collective whole of living humanity.

Astrology seeks to know as much as it can of the onion through reading the shape of its many layers, and so does Tarot. These are wonderful pursuits, for they occupy our minds in the vacuum of a non-present answer. They help to out-loud the relentless ticking of the wheels and gears of our perception of linear and finite time.

So does watching TV, learning a language or musical instrument, working, or any other possible human endeavor. They're wonderful distractions to amuse us while we wait for the vaudevillian "curtain fall."

Does it matter if we love, and whether that love is requited, consummated, lasting, or short? Does it matter if we become parents, or grandparents? Does beauty matter? Finesse? Anything?

This is where adulting gets hard. Remember that "children of god(s)" thing? We have to grow the eff up and answer the damn question for ourselves, before the end of our own little stage play. Neither cosmic "dad" nor "mom" are going to come down from on high handing out cotton candy answers.

We have to, each and every one of us, answer the damn question for ourselves. We each have to *choose* whether we or anything else matter. At least if we're going to have our own answer. The only other option is to let go of the question. It's like letting go of the rope holding us from falling through the event horizon of oblivion, isn't it?

No ancient book, no dead philosopher, nor any living philosopher, can give us "the" answer to whether we matter or not. They can only give us the answer that they chose

So I'm going to choose, for me, myself, and I. I have nothing else, and I don't feel like letting go of any rope right now. 

I choose love and beauty, because they matter to me, and they'll do my part of making the world hopefully a little nicer for those around me while I'm here, and for however long they might remember me after the wind has swept the branches and the ground at the end of Autumn.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 02-15-2026 (Written 100% by human hands, AI-Free)




Saturday, February 14, 2026

Starve The Dark, And Reach For The Stars...

Space Hotel


It seems like movies have been apocalyptic forever…but they haven’t.

Somewhere in the late 1990’s or early 2000’s, television and movies went to the dark side. Almost all future visions in TV and cinema became dark, jaded, faded, or dying. 

It’s like the entirety of entertainment production dived into a psychological black hole of doom and gloom.

Prior to that we had a few here and there, but most future visions were a dance of slow improvements to galactic expansion.

It almost seems like some controlling force has colluded with screen feeds to spit out violent trauma feeds unto infinity.

We need to stop swallowing the negativity, turn away from the apocalypse in the box office, come together, and reach for the stars and for life.

As a global culture, we are starved for a positive vision, as things sit now.

It is time for us to start laying seeds. To go from the sleepwalking dead to the intrepid explorers of the living universe.

It’s time to tear down the Epsteinian pizza parlor of horrors, and start building space hotels and colonies, and throw the past into Pele’s bosom.

Vote with your wallets, and if that seems to leave life in reruns, be a writer or storyteller with tales of wonder and big accomplishments.

Starve the dark, and reach for the stars.

Dan A. Stafford 02-14-2026
 

Sunday, February 01, 2026

Social Circles...

Social Circles...

So many hearts, 
So many small quiet conversations,
A few degrees of separation,
Droplets in a vast ocean.

No one can swim all the waters of all the seas,
Dancing with sharks.

But all these thousands of lakes and ponds,
Maybe it's the dawn of a new Summer.

Too big is too much,
Yet at the edges we all touch,
A heartbeat beyond treading water.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
© 02/01/2026

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Salvage Operation...

Salvage Operation...

The spin was large it created gravity,
A vortex of soulless mean,
Frozen in the bloody dirt,
Splashing pavement and doors.

Yet no spin is equal to a black hole,
They've fallen in,
Though the event horizon's time distortion...
...feels like forever for them to fall,
Inevitably,
Inexorably,
No escape.

After the Spring and Summer,
We must pull our ragged souls out of the closets,
Dust them and wash them with love,
Begin the salvage operation,
Build a time to warm the heart again.

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
(C) 01-31-2026

Monday, January 26, 2026

Under The Boot...

Under The Boot...

In the cold death of Winter they came, 
Owners they said,
For safety's sake.

Cities sweating below zero,
The arbiters of choke,
Freedom is only for their kind,
So they say.

The time will come,
Because frozen is slippery,
Like a loaded boomerang of karma,
And a nation of laws is all about karma.

It's been said for thousands of years,
About what you live by.

I wouldn't want your karma for all the rubles in crypto,
So feed your pride while you can,
Because when the snow melts,
Living rooms will overflow with popcorn,
As the circus reaches its natural conclusion.

All we need to do is lift voices,
Our fingers can rest easy out of circulation,
And of biblical proportions,
Juries will rapture their asses,
Out of reach of pardons,
And tailors will gleefully sew gitmo suits.

Pour some butter on that after it pops,
The big tent is getting ready for a grand finale. 

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford
©


01-25-2026


Friday, January 09, 2026

Cold...

 

 
It was all over the news today, oh boy. 

In these times of frozen hearts,
The well of sorrow is deep, 
And children find it hard to sleep. 

What once was seems to be sleeping, 
Lost In a strange world of dreams, 
Even nightmares. 

The snow flies, 
The ice creeps, 
Stealing away breath. 

Songs and words are lost, 
And the children find it hard to sleep. 

When the world is painted Orange, 
Somehow it will be blue. 

Let the Angels fly to heaven, 
Carrying songs and poems for all the children, 
For those with soft hearts, 
Kind minds, 
And some shred of decency left upon the cold hard ground. 

Words, words, words.. 

I still wonder what they are worth. 

AquarianM

By: Daniel A. Stafford 
© 01/09/2026

Regards,

Dan Stafford