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My hearings ended a day early, but the airline choices on Thursday afternoon failed to include a convenient flight to get us home. In the post-9-11 era, late flights from the western cities back to Texas seem to have become far fewer and further between. My co-counsel and I elected to take our scheduled 3 p.m. flight Friday, so that I could get some work done early on Friday morning. We had a celebratory drink (my elixir: Diet Coke) with our clients, and then we sought out some good Mexican food. We went to a restaurant called Los Dos Molinas way down by South Mountain Park, where I had a really good and really "authentic" plate of carnitas. The menu said words to the effect "don't ask for mild, we don't know how to cook that way". It was not really the road burn which is real Tex/Mex, nor the chiles of New Mex/Mex nor the subtlety which is Arizona Mex, but instead a fun cross between the hottest Tex/Mex and Sonoran food. The signs said that the collection of old homes in which the restaurant was located was the old Tom Mix house, but I wouldn't recognize Mr. Mix's house unless it had movie cowboy pictures everywhere, and this place had a kind of kitsch decor.

I worked the telephone and the computer from dawn to the morning, and got several things done. Then I called [profile] poetbear, with whom we'd planned to link up before we went to our flight. We met him at Papago Park, where he showed us the easiest access to it's nice scenic vista, the Hole in the Rock. Then we headed over to the Desert Botanical Garden. I love botanical gardens, and I hadn't been to Phoenix's since I spoke at an insurance insolvency seminar in the early 1990s. It was only 102 or so, and the park was nearly empty in late August. The cactus and succulents were truly stunning--some in bloom, some towering over us, some small and just so gorgeous. The information exhibits wanted us to understand the way to tell the difference between cactus and euphorbia, which makes sense to me. I have some lovely small cacti now, one of which recently bloomed. But I want more, now that I have seen that garden again. Sadly, my eBay pencil cactus (actually, a euphorbia) never took root, so my massive four dollar investment is lost.

We sat on a park bench in the shade and watched a cactus wren emit its harsh cry as it scampered on a palo verde tree hunting insects. We visited the park library, a collection of old succulent books donated by a wealthy patron. I stood and glanced through books and day-dreamed of collecting enough used books on cactus to donate them to a garden. As I sit here, though, I realize that I should instead collect them on prairie, since that is much more where I live. Someday I am afraid my book collection would just be "tract homes sprawling across the fruited plain". I really enjoyed meeting [profile] poetbear, who has realized, after a long career being other things, that his job title is now "writer". That's cool. I have LJ friends who are long-time real life friends, one LJ friend who is an in-law, LJ friends who I first met through nanowrimo or other internet things, and LJ friends whom I met only through LJ. It's fun to meet in person LJ friends whom I've never otherwise met. Of course, I was thinking that some of my long-time real life friends who are on LJ I rarely get to see, and mentally calendared "need to visit Tulsa some weekend to see many relatives and [profile] gregwest98

I got an e mail rejection slip from a poetry magazine to which I'd submitted some poems a while back. This form e mail showed me that the form rejection slip genre is still alive and well, even after its transition to the internet. The first paragraph advised me that they could not use my poems. The second paragraph said that they don't publish rhyme, cliche, things that are general, or a variety of other things. The closing lines suggested that if ever I write a poem which is not one of those things, I am welcome to submit again. I don't really mind the rejection, other than the usual adrenaline rush of disappointment, as I feel that a little reminder that I do not move mountains in verse is perhaps good for me.

Today I work on an appeal brief, and tomorrow on other "catch up matters" that any out of town trip "creates". I'm exhausted, because my plane did not arrive until quite late (due to something called "microbursts" at the stop in Denver), but I want to be productive today.

I have now spent many weeks in Arizona over the past six months. I keep formulating "Arizona is...." type of statements, because I keep thinking that the state ought to lend itself to some summing up. But today I think I'll just let my impressions of Arizona hang in the ether, more valuable to me undefined than tied neatly into a bow. When I went to London years and years ago for one of those college summers, a friend said to me "don't draw conclusions. Don't make it what you imagine it to be. The old cliche is that England is whatever you imagine it to be. So don't come to one
conclusion about what you see. Just take it in". Sage advice--at least as informative as a form poetry rejection letter.

Date: 2003-08-23 06:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] coollibrarian.livejournal.com
another wonderful entry.

Date: 2003-08-23 06:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asphalteden.livejournal.com
We have a Los Dos Molinos here in NYC--I ate there once and it was great! But maybe a little too hot for these lips. I actually saw Luis from Sesame Street eating there that night--if that's not a recommendation, I don't know what is.

Sometimes those rejection slips are so general. I know ours are. Our poetry one is just horrible. Better not to hear anything at all, than get one of those.

mexican

Date: 2003-08-23 06:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] seraphimsigrist.livejournal.com
The Mexican food up here is not as good
as in the southwest, so...well someone might
say "deal with it." dealing with it by and
large...
as to rejection slips when I was a boy I wrote
a good many science fiction stories and since
my parents were writers knew how to send them
out fairly professionally and keep them going
from magazine to magazine etc and collected a
great many rejection slips and made an album of
them with particular pride of course in the
hand written ones. also some were nice to
look at as for example fantasy and science
fiction used backs of unused covers for them
so I would tape those in book so you could see
both sides. eventually burned all stories,
wisely I should say. now have an agent to
take care of that but she does not seem to
focus her full attention on it... I mean not
that is burning my stuff but circulating it.

not drawing conclusions is a good approach
or perhaps tentative ones...I would say that would
be mine with Medjugorje having been there now...

these to your good post,
+Seraphim.

EUPHORIA ~ EUPHORBIA

Date: 2003-08-23 10:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] msajiva.livejournal.com
In November 1996 I had a plane change in Phoenix. I wound up being stranded for 6 hours before I was able to get a flight to San Jose. When I was a child my parent's camped in Arizona on our way to vacation in Seguin, TX.

As I deplaned I was impressed by the mountains surrounding Phoenix that I could see from the airport. I think every part of the United States has it's share of beauty.

Being a Scrabble player I make up Scrabble puzzles and lists to aide my memory. One list I've made up is to Insert a letter and form a new word. That works with EUPHORIA and your EUPHORBIA. The word STREAMED can be STREAMBED by adding the "B". The list also involves Delete a letter. COWRITES becomes COWRIES by deleting the "T".

When I was in junior high we lived in San Jose, CA. My mother was Texas born and she had a cactus garden. I remember it having a cow's skull too.

Image

Date: 2003-08-23 10:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] voodoukween.livejournal.com
openmindedness is the key to so many things

you're a great model

and any form rejection letter is in poor taste regardless of the size of the publication...still, they get away with it

and what exactly is a *microburst*?

Date: 2003-08-23 11:13 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] poetbear.livejournal.com
a "microburst" is a tiny thunderstorm. they appear and disappear
quickly, but can have dangerous winds and lightning. they are
common in the Southwest.~paul

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