Tuesday, August 5, 2014

How Do Your Favorite Books from Childhood Reveal You Today?

     After spending four intense days at a conference (Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators Annual Summer Conference--#LA14SCBWI on Twitter) with writers, agents, and editors to learn and share about our glorious industry of creating children's literature, I realized something about myself in personal, not just professional terms. This epiphany might apply to you as well:


Just as we learn about ourselves and who we aim to be by analyzing our parents and our childhoods, we also learn by analyzing our reading choices and our writing styles.



     This epiphany came to me after an excellent workshop with Andrea Welch of Beach Lane Books, in which Andrea facilitated the participant-writers' discoveries of the magical elements that comprise great picture books. She read many great picture books to us, classics and contemporary titles, and I felt like my kindergarten self again, as if I were sitting on the floor, cross-legged and slack-jawed, listening as the warmth of lovingly crafted words washed over me. I liken this experience to listening to old vinyl albums from childhood days, allowing the music to press mental Play buttons and start playing video montages of the memories evoked by particular songs.

     Children's books, like music, directly connect us to the feelings we had when we first experienced those stories. Memories of tales read aloud to us, or read by us as our first "independent reading" books, have shaped our adult-reader (and writer) selves. I recalled and lovingly jotted down the titles of books I recall that made me Me. They are my childhood "passion books," the ones I can still feel emotional about, and even see in my mind today--and not necessarily because I later read them to my own kids. My personality-shaping first books are memorable enough to have stayed in my brain's hard drive, despite many reboots over these past few decades, and here are the titles I recall, and how they shaped me and reflect who I am:

Harold and the Purple Crayon, by Crockett Johnson (THE FIRST BOOK I BOUGHT WITH MY "OWN MONEY" AT A BOOK FAIR) Harold uses his art to defy boredom and ugliness by creating his own magic and beauty, thus getting himself both into and out of trouble. That's what I do.

Amelia Bedelia, by Peggy Parrish and Fritz Siebel, catalyzed my utter joy in the playfulness of language and my need to strive for clear communication. It also helped make me the punster I am today.

Charlotte's Web, by E.B. White. Heck, I am Fern: outspoken, sometimes impulsive seeker of justice and compassion. And I am Charlotte: thoughtful, innovative word-crafter with hopes of improving the lives of others with the words I weave. Fortunately, I am not Templeton and love to get rid of junk, not collect it!

The Secret Garden, by Frances Hodgson Burnett. The title still makes me sigh wistfully, for some reason. I dared to explore my scary basement (if Mary Lennox could be brave enough to wander down dark corridors, I could certainly conquer my fear of walking down the basement stairs!); and I adored planting with my dad, probably due to the magic of nature that this book elicited within me. I also had boys as best friends, like Mary, and didn't think they had cooties.

Harriet Tubman: Conductor on the Underground Railroad, by Mary Petry. I am as awed today by the powerful story of the female Moses--my biblical hero--who lived her life fueled by goodness and courage in the face of the worst hardships, and saved so many people by outwitting the bad guys. Go, Harriet, my hero! (I recall this particular biography being full of imagery and not boring, as I thought all biographies were until finding this one!)

Harriet the Spy, by Louise Fitzhugh. Okay, so maybe I have some connection to the name Harriet…hmm. Past life? Anyway, this Harriet epitomized the curious writer who collects people like postage stamps and sticks their descriptions into her journal. Need I say more about how that illustrates me?

Are You There God, It's Me, Margaret, by Judy Blume. After Lori B, in 5th grade, taunted me, "When you get older, blood's going to come out between your legs! You didn't know that?" I called her a liar, and ran home, red-faced. Judy Blume's Margaret helped me sort out the truth and mitigated my horror with humor. I'll always appreciate that book more than the pamphlet my mom gave me from a Kotex box.

All of a Kind Family, by Sydney Taylor. A book about sisters who had fun adventures in their urban world, appreciated small blessings, and were Jewish. I have a sister. We're Jewish and I loved reading this book during my Hebrew school years, since it validated that our rituals and beliefs were cool enough to be in a book for anyone to read. Also, I have always been the girl who finds joy in the smallest things--especially in experiences involving family.

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet, by Eleanor Cameron. Two boys answer a mysterious ad to build a spaceship--an ad written specifically for kids. This book empowered me, showing that kids can do anything they set their minds to do. Plus, it made me very curious about science, especially the uses of sulphur and mushrooms. Maybe the meaning of this interest will become clearer as I age, but for now, I just chalk this passion book up to my sheer exhilaration even today about traveling to far-off places, about exercising my independence, and about maintaining long-distance friendships, even across space and time.

A Girl Called Al, by Constance C. Greene. This book taught me the word "nonconformist," and to be a nonconformist. It reminded me, in echoes throughout the years, not to be self-conscious, but rather, to be direct, be myself, and be kind as often as possible. Oh, and that there's a lot to be learned from elderly friends and living in New York City (which I did end up doing, for one year).

A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeline L'Engle. This book stayed with me and surely inspired me to take physics in high school (I can't imagine what else did). Meg Murry's bravery, and her unrecognized brilliance made me feel that someday I'd be noticed for doing something very intelligent and admirable. I also loved the writing, I recall--all that rich imagery! I often teach with this book today.


Island of the Blue Dolphins, by Scott O'Dell. The idea of surviving on my own, with my own ingenuity as my tool, appealed greatly to me, and still inspires me to be a kind of innovator in my approach to solving problems. I've been known to create strangely functional inventions to fix malfunctioning things in my house, wowing my handyman at times. Also, every time I buy seaweed snacks at Trader Joe's (if you haven't tried them you should!), I think of the young girl eating seaweed in this book. Seriously, I think this with every bite of dried seaweed and when eating sushi rolls! And more seriously, living off the land intrigues me to this day, and I have a secret fantasy of retiring to an organic farm and writing books all day.

My Side of the Mountain, by Jean Craighead George. Running away occupied my mind a lot as a kid. This boy's adventure and glorious return to civilization, having earned respect from adults, fueled my imagination in much the same way as O'Dell's book above. Persistence and being taken seriously are still big issues for me as a writer, even today.

The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norton Juster and Jules Feiffer. I have always liked escaping to places where puns abound, people make you think as you're communicating with them, and everyone has cool names. Sophisticated, yet still silly humor tickles me today, and even characterizes the middle-grade novel series I am writing.

 The Diary of Anne Frank, and numerous Holocaust-themed books captivated me when I was 11 through 13, especially. I have always thought that, in a past life,  I died in the Holocaust. (My father-in-law was a survivor of the Nazi concentration camps, and I'm the one who convinced him to share his previously secret and repressed survival story with his kids for the first time--which liberated him yet again from the horrors that bound him, I am proud to say.) Anne Frank especially influenced my life because her words made her mark upon the world--an indelible, necessary mark. She inspired me to keep writing words that matter.

That Was Then, This Is Now, by S.E. Hinton, was my favorite teen angst book, though most kids favored Hinton's The Outsiders. I'm sure it resonated me because it was about best friends growing apart due to different values, and I read it and adored it in sixth grade, just after I moved to a new city and found myself growing apart from my old friends. It helped me understand that people move on from each other, and it's part of life.

The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger. A sensitive, misunderstood soul yearning for affection, depth in his relationships, and a preservation of the innocence he treasures. A person who despises phoniness and hypocrisy. A person who observes the world in a paradoxically broad, yet microscopic way that many people do not see. A human who sometimes feels out of place in the world. I was, and often still am,  Holden Caulfield. This makes me sigh. It also made me give my son the middle name of "Holden." Yes, I did. And he's grown up to be a lot like me and Holden (and Salinger's book is one of his all-time favorites, too).


     My list could go on, and I'd certainly add the picture book The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein, which I discovered for the first time as a teenager working in a bookstore. Silverstein's book definitely played a part in making me the tree lover who wrote my first book, Knock on Wood, and its ebook version, The Secret in the WoodBut I do believe that I've sufficiently conveyed the core of the list that best illustrates who I was, who I wanted to be when I first read those books, and who I've become as a result of having adored them. I have reread portions of a couple of these books (for teaching purposes), but now that I've compiled this list, I am itching to reread all of them and feel that familiar joy, excitement, pain, fear, and inspiration that I felt as a kid. It's comforting to know that a revival of those feelings does not require finding an old turntable that actually works. Thank God and authors for books.








Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Memorable Words from Murder Victims' Families

After the recent murders of three Israeli teens, allegedly by Hamas terrorists, followed by the revenge murder of an Arab teen, allegedly by right-wing radical Israelis, I read articles that quoted two family members from each side of the conflict. I was struck by their commonalities, which cried out for juxtaposition, to make a point.

The Israeli uncle of Naftali Fraenkel, and the Arab father of Muhammad Abu Khdeir BOTH shared similarly admirable, passionately pacifist words, despite the unimaginable tragedies they are both enduring since the murders of their boys:

Naftali Fraenkel’s uncle stated in response to Muhammad's killing, “Murder is murder. Whatever the nationality or age are, there is no justification, no forgiveness or penance for any murder.”

Muhammad Abu Khdeir's father stated, “I am against kidnapping and killing. Whether Jew or Arab, who can accept the kidnapping and killing of his son or daughter? I call on both sides to stop the bloodshed.”

If these two men, in the midst of such suffering, can maintain their ethics and not seek revenge, but peace, then what right do the ignorant haters on both sides of this ongoing conflict have to ignite further violence?! PEACE REQUIRES PLACING THE VALUE OF LIFE ABOVE ALL.


Shalom-Salaam-Peace!

Monday, June 16, 2014

Prompted by Photos of Abandoned Things...

On Facebook, I discovered a page called "Abandoned," featuring mysterious and/or thought-provoking photographs of abandoned things and places: a cornucopia of writing prompts for me! I just wrote this poem about this photo, and want to share it with you now:



Retired Phone Booths
by S. L. Lipson

The out-crowd rusts together,
around the corner from smirking cell phone towers,
who've made the booths superfluous,
unnecessary for anyone
but the nostalgic,
or the technophobic,
or the Superman wannabes.
Metal huts replaced by
metal rectangles the size of candy bars,
with powers that the booths
never contained.
Like the callers who used to feed them quarters,
the booths, too, have been pushed aside
to make room for Today.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Manners Make Us Memorable

          Manners make us memorable, either as courteous, compassionate folks, or as people who practice acceptable social customs out of obligation and respect for traditions, or even as hypocrites who use politeness to disguise disdain. Here, in poetry, are some thoughts about manners:

Definitely!
by Susan L. Lipson

They agreed that it was fabulous to reconnect after so long,
that they needed to get together--DEFINITELY!
And that old sentiments renewed should be called "resentiment."
They laughed together, then exchanged phone numbers, emails, smiles, and hugs.
She texted her long-lost friend the next day, to say how thrilled she felt to be back in touch.
The text evoked a "ditto" and a smiley face in reply. 
And that reply evoked an invitation to get together,
which remained unanswered for two days, 
before being re-sent, along with the words, "You probably didn't get my text, so…".
A day later she re-sent the text again, and then re-sent a new one,
and finally, "resentiment" became RESENTMENT.
And "definitely" became a lie.



You’re Welcome 
by Susan L. Lipson

You’re welcome—to take your place
below her,
once you’ve finished gushing,
“Thank you so much for your help--thank you!”
and she replies nonchalantly,
“You’re welcome,”
but never, “Thank YOU—
Thanks for asking me.”
No, that would mean
you’re welcome
to bother her again,
and clearly you’re not.
To thank someone for effusive thanks
creates balance,
equates giving and receiving,
and negates power of one over another.
“You’re welcome,” blithely uttered,
implies a privilege granted,
a favor tallied,
and only rarely a follow-up offer
to “feel free to ask again, anytime.”

Sympathy Cards 

She called to ask whether we received her sympathy card,
and whether we knew that she had made a donation in memory
of our dearly departed.
She didn’t ask how we are coping with the loss.
She didn’t even mention my mom-in-law's name,
or any memory of times spent with her.
She was just wondering—“no pressure, of course!”—
since she’d never received a thank-you card.
“But that really doesn’t matter, of course,” she assured me,
“since I’m sure you’ve been so busy since….”
And then she assured me yet again: “You know, dear, that you have
my sincere sympathy, in any case—
card or no card.”

Whose card did she mean?

And why must I thank her for mere sympathy,
which is like a carefully wrapped package of nothing,
without the true gift of Empathy rattling within.

Sympathy is what you SHOW to others; Empathy is what you FEEL for them.
Sympathy is external; Empathy is internal.
Sympathy is a polite action; Empathy is a compassionate one.
Sympathy is expected in polite society; but Empathy is a welcome, cherished surprise.
Sympathy can be expressed by greeting cards; Empathy is only expressed in sincere words and/or hugs.
Sympathy is announced; empathy is understood.
Sympathy shows caring; Empathy creates sharing.
Sympathy is to shine another’s beaten-up shoes; Empathy is to wear those shoes.

Loss is cluttered by the sympathetic shoe-shiners,
But simplified by those who share our burdens,
Leaving us a smaller fraction of grief to bear alone.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Spring Has Sprung!

Gardening
by Susan L. Lipson

To help them flower and spread,
I add to the seeds of my ideas
inspirational flow,
figurative fertilizer for nurturing full color,      
and empowering light after germination.

And then I weed,
ripping out random growths
that strangle their laconic beauty,
detract from their tones,
cover their distinctive petals and leaves,
and clutter their well-aligned lines
with verbose foliage.

I try to resist clipping a bloom
or forming a bouquet to share
until each flower's growth has peaked,
to avoid publishing prematurely harvested blooms,
which will wilt in the shadows of disappointment.

In verbal vases
I present the bounty,
hoping that you see Beauty and Truth.

Monday, May 5, 2014

Memorable Miscommunication!


          I shared my daughter's latest YouTube music video (she's a singer known on YouTube, as well as an actress on TV and in films) with my 86-year-old father via email, and when I called him to hear what he thought of it, his questions about the song and her collaborator hilariously exemplify the generation gap in the music world. First, watch, and then I'll tell you his response….

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioN8ClDI1KE&list=UUcyjBPgV4o-xkrozdwRLZYQ




          "So, Dad, what did you think of Lainey's newest music video?" I asked.

          "I don't know…. I didn't like that guy in the video. I don't why she needed him standing there. He was distracting, and he wasn't even singing along with her--I watched his lips!  He didn't even know the words! And he wasn't even playing the background music with her, so what was his purpose?"

           Trying not to laugh, I replied, "Dad, he was beat-boxing, not singing."

           Before I could explain what beat-boxing is, he asked, "What do you mean he wasn't singing? I saw him moving his lips, but he didn't get the words right."

          "No, Dad, he was making the beat sounds in the background with his mouth. All those drum sounds you heard were coming from him. That's what made the song so cool."

           "What do you mean?"

           "Are you listening? There wasn't any instrumental music in the video, only percussion sounds that he was making with his mouth while Lainey was singing a cappella."

          "Well, I don't know that song, I only know that I didn't like this one because of that guy making weird expressions and keeping me from hearing the music."

          Sighing, I conclude, "Okay, Dad, maybe you'll like her next one better."

          Thinking about that conversation now reminds me of a "text fail"--the kind I'd save on my phone just to laugh over it later. That's why I wrote this post, to save this "phone fail."

Friday, May 2, 2014

#NationalPoetryWritingMonth2014: My Newest Collection of Almost-Daily Poems


For #NationalPoetryWritingMonth2014 (a.k.a. #NaPoWriMo14), I tried to compose a new poem, or revise an old poem, to post on Facebook every day. I confess I missed three days. Here’s my almost-a-month’s-worth of poems (one is a revised poem that is too long to post among these short ones). Please let me know which are your favorites! If you have trouble leaving comments here on my blog, leave them on Google+, please. I’d love to hear from you.


Stretch

If I weren't stretching on the floor right now,
I wouldn't see the sunlit leaves through the half-raised blinds;
Sometimes when you're down,
you see more than when you're up:
The beauty of a grounded point-of-view.


Leader Dog


My blind dog
Looks as if he sees,
While sitting and staring at me,
Silently conversing as I rub his neck.
My blind dog
Seems guided by radar
Until he walks into a piece of furniture, out of place,
Then pivots and reroutes
Like a robotic, self-propelled vacuum cleaner,
Without even so much as a whimper.
My blind dog
Helps me see
How adaptation and positivity
Enable rerouting to roads less traveled.
He is my leader dog.


Morning Metaphors

Before turning on the shower,
I hear the trash truck outside,
And smile because my neighborhood
And I are both about to get cleaner.
Maybe I will be editing
When the recycling truck comes by.


Fox Sniffing a Flower


Relishing Nature's perfume,
he thrusts his furry nose among yellow petals,
showing us that "joie de vivre" is not just a fancy French phrase,
but an attitude possessed by all blessed animals.




Facades

Arrogance protects
fragile egos
from connecting
with non-admirers.

Superiority uplifts
the lowly,
who envy
the confident.

Disdain attacks
the best
to maintain
the worst.

Goodwill empowers
the needed
and needy,
balancing life.


The Power of Innocence

Tiny hands with dimples where knuckles will be
have incredible power to
force smiles
fade worry lines
elicit silly faces and high-pitched voices,
and to loosen tight shoulders
by pulling burdens down our sleeves
to be shaken out
as we bounce babies in our arms.


Who Can Write a Poem

If you can listen and sway and dream to music
You can write a poem
If you can clap a beat or play a tune
You can write a poem
If you photograph an image that captures eyes and awe
You can write a poem
If you use a brush and paint to awaken scenes like a magic wand
You can write a poem
If you give new life to clay or wood or stone, to dirt with seeds and plants and love
You can write a poem
If you can remove yourself from the world long enough to see the world, the whole world, in a moment—long enough to feel a realization,
You can write a poem.
Yes, you can write a poem.


Ripples

Ripples in a pond
overlap, blend, create currents,
spread themselves outward to touch more of the shore,
without pushing each other aside--
no egos involved in maintaining the power of their circles.
Unlike many ego-driven "philanthropists."
Give and let give.


Poem About a Poem

My child’s old poem,
“Rolling with Laughter,”
a poem she wrote at 12 years old
to celebrate the various sounds of our mirthful family,
translates in today’s language to:
“LOL,” or “ROTFL,” or “LMAO,”
in a world where laughter is not heard as much as it is read,
because people spend more time texting and “messaging”
than they do speaking
or laughing together.


Worn-Out Shoes

The shoes I’ve worn since childhood,
Have been patched and polished
To conceal old scuffs,
Have been re-soled
To keep me balanced and stepping forward;
Yet they still cause blisters
Whenever I walk too close to “home,”
And they still make me trip
If I don’t watch my steps on old territory.
Why do I even keep them in my closet?
When will I throw them, once and for all, in the trash?
Maybe after I type the period at the end of this poem


On Education

Teaching to prepare for tests—
At best, I call that “training”;
Teaching means igniting thoughts,
Not pouring facts, then draining.
Writing is an art, a skill,
One not quantifiable,
Rated best by knowing nods,
Feedback that’s reliable;
Questions that elicit thoughts,
Encourage their revisions,
Coaching that enables them
To make their own decisions.
I want to spark awe for words,
For clear communication;
I want to teach not for scores,
But for true education.

 
Cool Hair

We’ve always imitated
What Nature has created,
This view makes me elated:
Jacaranda emulated
With purple hair—berated
No doubt, by those related
To her, and she has waited
For them to say, “Cool hair!”




Blood Moon

Why do we call the eclipsed moon “blood” red,
Not rose red,
Or tomato red,
Or licorice red,
Or wine red,
Or candy apple red,
Or any other red that has no ominous associations?
Could it be that scientists named it so?
Or was it the name coined by media writers,
Hoping to evoke more awe from the public.
As if it weren’t awesome just by being red.


Passover

Assembly of free people,
Commemorating enslavement of our ancestors
Symbolically—
in stories, songs, prayers, and food metaphors—
Because we CAN.
WE CAN.
Thank God.

 
Erosion


Erosion creates unique beauty
In bland smoothness,
The way wrinkles etch a face
With evidence of smiles.


Drama

In plays, as in life,
an "aside" allows a character
to establish a True Self,
to connect with an observer,
while the other characters remain but
dimly lit players
in the background,
players not meant to hear
shared hushed confidences that
break through fictional walls
long enough to shift and extend spotlights
for a moment of candid communication that
adds depth to a series of acts and scenes.
Trust, in plays, as in life,
may start with a stage whisper
of truth,
away from the other players,
who feign ignorance
and listen only for their cues.


Celebration of Silence

Silence is the soundtrack of blessed moments,
filling my ears with oft-muted sounds
of my own breathing,
of these words spoken in my head as I transcribe them,
of the birds outside my window conversing with the wind chimes,
of my fingertips clicking the keyboard as I write this poem,
of my little dog’s sweet snoring, 
of my oblivion to the bad news surely streaming on TV if I were to turn it on,
of the hum of introspective thoughts brewing softly, like coffee, awaiting sips and sighs and pouring.
Silence carries into the foreground of my mind
a soothing darkness that illuminates the usual din
so that I may see what is worth hearing,
and hear what is worth listening to,
and feel blessed by the silence that elicited these words
from nothingness.


Shaded with Light

Shading creates new life
On slices of dead trees—
New life that, off paper,
In soil,
Seeks the opposite of shading
To live.
This shading is enlightening
Like chiaroscuro.


Willful Words

The badge you wore,
identifying you by your work,
no longer displays your name and role.
You gaze into your mirror, squinting at the empty spot
above your heart
that now reads: “Unemployed.”
Friends ask you how it’s going, and you mutter,
“Out of work,” “laid off,” and “jobless,”
your will draining with each reply,
as your patience is dying.  
“Willful words hold the key to healing and rejuvenation,”
prescribes this spin doctor,
injecting positivity into your will-draining replies
and transforming them into                                 
 “Between jobs,” “self-marketing,” “free to pursue a new career”—
words uttered (not muttered)
willfully,
even though at first you don’t believe them.
“The more you practice, the easier it gets,” advises the spin doctor,
and sure enough, your dull eyes spark,
your chin rises,
and your posture lifts your stature.
You no longer look in the mirror for an old badge on your chest.
Now you look at your own eyes and smile,
Preparing to do the same with others.                    


Digest This!

If social intolerance for minorities
could be modified by enzymes,
like lactose intolerance,
then the verbal diarrhea
spewed by bloated egos
would be mitigated,
and the acid of cramped minds
would not by regurgitated;
then all would feel settled,
and the growling and discomfort would cease.
In the absence of such enzymes, though,
we might try dietary restrictions:
limiting our slanted media consumption
as a first step.


Detour from Laundry Folding

Our thin, white cotton helmets shifted
as we jumped from the spaceship to the moon,
sending piles of sloppily folded clothing into orbit,
and then bounced back without noticing the gravity
as we almost hit the open dresser drawers.
We’d tuck the elastic underwear bands,
meant for thighs,
behind our ears,
to keep the “face window” in place,
garble our voices to sound like radio static,
and took turns playing lookout for the commander,
who would surely abort our mission,
if we didn’t “crack open” our heads first.


Puddles of Wax (for Holocaust Remembrance Day 2014; in memory of Irving Lipson)

A candle flickers in my heart for you;
I symbolize it with a wick just lit,
Commemorating millions also due
For honor as we rise from where we sit
To sing of lives snuffed out before their wicks
Had burned for all the years they should have glowed,
Before they were consumed in flames like sticks,
Or piled in pits and ditches by the road—
A road less traveled by the ones who’ve dug,
Unearthing truths embodied by their bones,
The ones who will not sweep under the rug
The evil echoing in ghostly moans.
The candle flames will end in puddles here,
While yours will burn and shine in every tear.


AN OLD POEM I POSTED SINCE I WAS STILL IN THE SONNET MOOD, AND HAPPENED TO FIND THIS IN A FILE OF PUBLISHED CLIPS FROM THE ‘80s…




Blessing for Anonymous Laborers

Predrilled tiny holes in picture frames
evoked a blessing from me today
for the anonymous hands that helped mine
perfectly place the tiny screws in the hangers
to ease my hanging of the picture
that will now brighten my day
every time I glance at that wall.
And come to think of it, I also bless
the hands that crafted my computer, too,
for allowing me to type and save this poem--
oh, and the hands that cut the slab of granite
upon which my elbows rest as I type--
and the hands that crafted the wooden parts of the chair I sit upon,
parts that I assembled with my hands,
thanks to the mind that wrote the directions for the assembly of those wooden parts--
AND, I can't forget to mention, too, the hands that...



 Sorry To Burst Your Bubble, but…

Possessions
Or
Positions

Persuasions
Or
Permissions

Politics
Or
Pontifications

Pop
Fizzle
Fade
Fly

Only Love survives.