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Thursday, July 18, 2024

What's Better - the Stream or the Ocean? Reflections from a Peaceful Summer

A path through the Big Tujunga Wash, July 2024

 
Summer is the time of doing nothing. Or it used to be, way back when in Poland: when I truly "vacated" my mind after working hard and getting all these "A"s in two parallel high schools - math-physics division of High School No. 33 named after the astronomer Mikolaj Kopernik, - and Music High School named after Jozef Elsner, Chopin's teacher... Two achievements stand out from the high school years - winning the school-level Copernicus Physics competition and defeating all the boys who thought that a girl cannot have a brain (in my freshman year) and getting a tie for the highest score on IQ test at 143 with the school's math genius (in my senior year, when I became the school's only valedictorian, and paradoxically, decided to study music history instead of something practical and useful, like medicine or economics...

So, after burning my brain on problem-solving, math formulas and 3-D "stereometry" I was ready for long hikes in the fields and forests, picking mushrooms and blueberries, making strawberry preserves, arranging wildflower bouquets, and reading the silliest fantasy books and light-weight magazines in the orchard, under trees full of fruit and birdsong. . . Two full  months of brainless fun and relaxation. I could add to the list (from my college years) sailing, singing all-night by the bonfire, or (from my childhood) - jumping off the top of hay stacked up in the barn, and meticulously peeling green walnuts - the kernels are really sweet if the yellowish thin membrane is taken off! That latter job was performed on boring, rainy days. Oh, the blessed time of slow living... 

Big Tujunga Wash in bloom, May 2024

At this point of my Californian life, I take "mini-vacations" of one day, one afternoon, or just an hour for a walk in the Big Tujunga Wash, wading in the stream, watching the quail quench its thirst without paying any attention to me. I stop and look at the leaves of the cottonwood shaking in the breeze, under the clearest azure sky. I admire the breaking pattern of reflections, tree-trunks shape-shifting on the smooth surface of the wading pool, made by a mini-dam of rocks. (Very controversial, these mini-dams; some people put them up, other dismantle them, and so it goes, on and on). After an hour drive west, I become still and silent in front of the never-ending procession of ocean waves, crashing and crashing and coming back to crash again... 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7syvHytux2Q&t=14s

    

    The Stillness of Trees


The singing tree sings just for me.

Its song flows around the globe        in murmuring waves of leaves

   that caress each other and 

   twirl away in gusts of wind

longing for freedom.

 

It is the stem that gives them life, pours nutrients into the heart—shaped cottonwood marvels. 

It is the connection, the lifeline 

that matters.

 We are the leaves on the cosmic tree,        

                    linked by bright cords of energy—

                                  the crystalline liquid, golden light.

    We dance in the breeze of time.

We sing

our song of joy— the joy of light—

the light of dawn—

of high noon, of afternoon’s

golden hour, waning into dusk—

in that peculiar soap-bubble sky, 

              ready to burst open and reveal

                          the velvet coat of the night 

with diamond star buttons.

 

Is it all clear for you, too?

                      Have you found your 

                                             glowing bubble of the sky?

 

I’m here, singing to the singing tree, learning to dance from stiff leaves

on flexible stems, in strength and grace 

of twigs and branches — healing, laughing,

humming with me, singing 

                               a miraculous song 

                                                 of the cottonwood tree.


(C) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, published in the "Crystal Fire" anthology (2022). 


Alchemy in the Hills


Rarefied air opens up to reveal 
rocks in the mountain stream,
scattered sparks of reflected sunrays, 
shimmering golden waves of water 
spreading in circles from where
I stand on thick grains of sand. I watch
a wild sunflower unfurl its petals.
I smile at the aerial acrobatics of sparrows, 
orioles and the small yellow-gray
birds of unknown names. The scents 
of white sage and sumac fill the valley, 
ringing with the buzz of a myriad of bees
hovering about cotton-ball arrays 
of wild buckwheat. It is not much,
but it is enough: rock, sand, and leaf enough.
 
Children’s laughter flows towards me 
from another wading pool, upstream. 
They splash and laugh, laugh and splash,
 amused by every droplet. I rest in
the center of my universe, at a still point
f my turning world, where all elements— 
air, rock, sand, water, sunfire—
merge into one blessing of being here, 
sharing this space, this time with 
children’s laughter, with lily-white
yucca blossoms stretching to the sky, 
and a single blade of grass guarding
its spot between stones on the creek shore.

(C) Maja Trochimczyk, published in the "Crystal Fire" anthology (2022)


Big Tujunga stream, July 2024

What pastoral beauty, pure serenity, tranquil charm!  But the stream has not always been as placid. After rain, it was filled with muddy brown swirls and cappuccino-like foam (video from March 2023, one in a series of four). This muddy river inspired A Ballad of New Heart a while ago, posted on this blog in 2019: https://poetrylaurels.blogspot.com/2019/02/blog-post.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpcaAMHF9kM

The video of the muddy stream is from March 2024 though, when the stream jumped out of its bed and shifted 50 meters south forming a new bed, cutting out our pathway... This is just an inkling of the immense power of water in motion. To fully grasp this concept, you have to go to the coast and visit the Pacific Ocean. Luckily, it is only an hour away by car; a mere 53 miles... Perfect afternoon of doing nothing,  watching the water come in, and out, and in and out. Smaller waves, bigger waves, reaching my toes, leaving too soon, and in and out and on and on... Endless motion, always different, always the same...

Mandalay Bay in Oxnard, 2023

Pacific Ocean, July 24, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSL_tyrsdpQ&t=9s

The Ocean of Jade

  

spoke to me  

yesterday

waves came to the shore

to caress the sand

and paused in midair

waiting for me to notice

their smooth jewel surface

their secret glow and the wisps

of  white sea-foam  twining through

 

  the air like lace on a collar

or an intricate shawl 

                         worn by an ancient Lady Wisdom

the ocean of jade

spoke to me

look         and love

look                   and     breathe            be        in awe

 admire the infinity of magic

jewels hidden and revealed

        in one sweeping motion

               the same wave that came

to the shore

to caress

the sand

and paused

in mid-air

                                                                                    just for me

  

 (c) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, published in "Bright Skies" (Moonrise Press, 2022) .

That's where I got to fly my kites. I recently got a new one, three-D parafoil kites without any skeleton in it, the air fills it and gives it the proper shape of a black-and-white Orca, the Killer Whale... The Kitty Hawk website has the most astounding selection of kites... 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyWGLTd11Bg


A Whale of a Song


They sing, as they ride the waves,

laughing.  They sing to the depths

of the ocean, reaching its sandy bottom,

submerged peaks and valleys.

 

Their song echoes through

the crystalline expanse of the sky,

bounces off the translucent

rays of starlight.

 

They dance on the waves, weaving

the web of love from their song.

 

In the invisible rhythm of seven billion

heartbeats, they encircle the globe,

traversing all the oceans.

 

Did you know

that whales and dolphins

are our cosmic guardians?

 

Did you know

that Orca, the whale,

is my patron saint?

 

I have a totem stone to prove it,

a gift from a seer who once told me:

 

Do not forget to listen

to life-giving music.

Do not ever forget

the song of the whales. 


(C) 2016 by Maja Trochimczyk, 

published in "Into Light. Poems and Incantations"


The daily dose of peace and relaxation may also be found in the spring in my garden.  The mockingbird filled it with song in April, May and June.  By July, the curious, mechanical screeching of the orioles replaced the melodious voices - they are so beautiful, with gold and black plumage, so that's why their voices are nothing at all. In contrast, the mockingbirds sport camouflage beige-brown hues so they look like rocks on the ground and branches in the trees... But their voices fill the air with beauty....

Rose Garden where Mockingbirds like to sing, May 2024

To Mock a Bird in Ten Stanzas

 


I listen to its song every morning,

yet I’m still surprised when it opens its wings

in flight, moving to a new perch for the next tune

to claim its territory in my garden.

 

White stripes on the wings and tail shine brightly

like a child’s toy, the old-fashioned wiatraczek

twirling in the wind, delighting the girl

with the beauty of time-space in motion.

 

Why am I here? Loving the sounds of unfamiliar birds,

surprised that I made it so far, to the shores

of the Pacific, into the depths of the English language

I only pretend to master—still unfamiliar after 40 years.

 

Was this the purpose then of my mad pursuit

Of happiness? My American, naturalized birthright?

This feeling of estrangement, of non-belonging

in the garden, among lush greenery and warm rose hues?

 

White, cream, gold, pink, orange fuchsia, wine-red

from rosé to burgundy—ever more fragrant

in each iteration of petals, unfurling

under the symphony of mockingbird’s melodies.

 

He out-sings himself this April morning.

A territorial male , he chased away his rivals

to the riches of abundant nectar, seed, shelter

in a space that I care for, so birds can sing.

 

Sing away their love of life and sing

just for me, so I’d learn to love my life as well,

even though—even though—come here, come here—

laugh—laugh, laugh, laugh, laugh—with me—

 

with me —with me—what a bright day –

bright day—see—see – see – see – see—

it is done! Done! Lovely—lovely—lovely—

day—day day day day—smile, smile—don’t fret!

 

Would I have the courage to accept

this invitation be always present,

serene—overflowing with the pure joy

of living in the moment?

 

After sixty years of never-ending failures,

can I even try again? Try again—try again

—again again again — New song. You sing.

I sing. Too—too too too too too—here—here—

here—and now


(C) 2024 by Maja Trochimczyk


Mockingbird in a rose garden, April 2024. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdS-nTsj1dk&t=36s

But peace and tranquility can be found everywhere, even without the songs, without the stream, without the ocean. . . I wrote new poem while looking at my mantelpiece with souvenirs from Poland, Arizona and California....


An Ode to My Heart, or The Ultimate Tribute to Myself

 

 

The heart in the middle of my stained-glass souvenir

from Tucson, Arizona, shines opalescent green, more precious

than an ancient jade bracelet of Chinese Empress.

 

It is carried by twin wings of three feathers each:    

—red, orange, and gold on the right,

—the wing of the body, blood and bones,

    of my shape and strength in this incarnation—

I am a woman now

 

—aqua, azure, violent on the left,  

—the wing of timeless flight from emotions

    into words, into thoughts, into the purest state

    of being—intuition—expression—contemplation

                                                                        I am a human now

 

My heart is not alone. The ruby-and-amber,

3-D Merkabah star glows on the right — —— — ——

  here—the Earth

The pearly white, softest blue, and clear crystal,

double-six-pointed star shines on the left ——————

       there and nowhere—Heaven

 

I’m well protected. I’m well guarded.

I’m well guided on my way through the thicket

of chaotic entanglements in a convoluted mess of desires.

 

With this heart, with these wings, with these stars

I can rise above the daily turmoil of fabricated news,

spurious pursuits, and needless temptations.

                                                                       

I can be—I am —FREE —to be

myself, to find my true heart—

deeply hidden beneath masks that grew in decades

of conforming to other people’s plans for me—

do what your parents say

do what your teachers say

follow the leader

 

No, I will not follow.

 

I will blossom into my own intense, immense,

crystalline star of cosmos, star of order, star of beauty!

The magic star of delight. The brightest star

of all-encompassing Love—for which this word

is woefully inadequate, as if it truly belonged with all the other

four-letter words— Fear—Hate—Shit—Fuck—Death—

No, that’s five letters—

 

—So, maybe, just maybe, it should be—

                        Six —               DIVINE

                        Eight —           PRESENCE

                        Ten —             PERFECTION

                        Twelve —        TIMELESSNESS

           

Or, perhaps just   Three —   WHY

                                             Two —    AM

                                             One —    I?

 

                      Why am I?




         Yucca whipplei gone to seed, Big Tujunga Wash, July 2024


 

Friday, July 5, 2024

Poets in the Parade - Celebrating Independence Day in Sunland-Tujunga

 


I wrote a new poem after I came back home after my favorite July activity  participating in the 87th annual Independence Day Parade, organized by the Rotary in Sunland Tujunga. "Freedom is not free"  we heard at the Holiday concert at the Hollywood Bowl - with a tribute to our armed forces... So I wrote about freedom, why not? After all, here in the U.S. we are free! In 1776, the colonists decided to liberate themselves from the yoke of the Empire, the British power stretching "from sea to shining sea" around the world. And yet, a small group of brave freedom-lovers stood up to oppose the global hegemony of the King. The first act of freedom  rejecting the "divine right" of the monarchy to rule over its subjects.  (My "oath of citizenship" in Canada still stated "I swear allegiance to the Queen and to be a loyal and faithful subject..."  I really prefer to swear allegiance to the flag these days...)

Freedom is not Free

 


Someone works to keep it.

Someone stands guard for the republic.

Semper Fides. Always Faithful.

 

Would I be brave enough

to stand guard with them?

 

Freedom is not free.

 

I work hard to win it for myself.

I strive to not be swayed left or right.

I stand tall with the eyes on the prize ahead.

My steps — on the straight and narrow.

 

Free —

            from vain ambitions, obsessions,         

            sorrows, fears, resentments and regrets.

Free —

             to live well, create, speak up,

care for, share joy, and love.

 

“I am You are  We are”—this love,

the glue that holds the cosmos together,

in harmony — a forgotten word 

“harmony” — the order of beauty and peace.

 

What is freedom?

            Cosmos, not chaos. Harmony, not discord.

            Gratitude. Divine perfection blooming in all. 

            Red-white-and-blue waving in the breeze.

            Fireworks in July evening sky.

            

 

 

Maja Trochimczyk, © 4 July 2024



Two poets in red-white-and-blue - with Alice Pero, CSPS Monthly contest Chair and the former Poet Laureate of Sunland Tujunga. We are very patriotic and festive, with tri-color umbrellas, flag-themed scarves, and clothes. In addition, I have a Polish wreath of red and white flowers on my hat... the Polish flag is red and white, without the blue... 

Joe DeCenzo, Grand Marshall, with Josefina Gutierrez, Alice Pero and Maja



The Grand Marshall, Joe DeCenzo prepares the flag for  his "cherry picker" - a good choice of vehicle, given the fondness of George Washington for cherries and blooming cherry alleys in Washington, D.C.  According to Joe, "the use of the truck was donated by Roland Gutierrez who was very helpful and generous (the truck is from BK Signs). He was also very diligent in keeping pace with the parade. And he got out of the vehicle to request one of the motorcycle riders go and seek the assistance of police when 200 people spilled out onto the street when Danny Trejo was hit with water balloons."


The presidential couple - George Washington with Martha, that is, Joe DeCenzo, 
the Grand Marshall of the 2024 Parade with Josefina Gutierrez, in well-selected 18th-century costumes  complete with Joe's three-cornered hat, white wig,  and golden buckles 
on the shoes. 

Martin, our driver, with Poet Laureate of the Foothills 2024 - Kathleen Travers 
(and somewhere below, her dog)


George and Martha Washington put their flag with a circle of stars on the cherry-picker truck. Previously Pamela Shea, Poet Laureate in 2017, rode the Parade in a costume as Betsy Ross, the maker of this flag... On the 4th of July we celebrate the birth of the republic.


The presidential couple is ready to roll... among soap bubbles from the truck of State Senator Caroline Menjivar who should win the trophy for "best sport" - since she rode an ice-cream vendor bicycle and gave away free popsicles to children watching the parade. How nice! Not pompous and stuffy but a people's person... 


As I did a couple years in a row, I walked down the parade route and gave out postcards with poems, from Kathleen Travers (I had no copies left, nor a scan to post here), Marlene Hitt and myself. I also gave out postcards of America the Beautiful with text - in two layouts, with one stanza and three... This deeply moving patriotic anthem does not talk about violence and war, as the current US and Polish Anthems do, but, instead, celebrates the beauty of the country, and the blessings of its inhabitants, Native Americans and Pilgrims alike. Maybe human history could have been different, if more nations on earth adopted songs of blessings instead of anthems of war, battle and struggle for their national symbols? Words do bring worlds into being, after all....


These are not bombs
up there in the sky
only fireworks
It's the Fourth of July!

Bursting to celebrate
freedom for all,
sparkling promises
begin to fall

         (c) Marlene Hitt

My  "Independence Day" poem was given out as a postcard previously in two parades already. It is time for a new Independence and freedom poem! I wrote it after the 2024 parade and it is copied above, but it does not have a postcard yet!



Independence Day

Red  are the rocks of the Grand Canyon
White  are the mountains, covered with snow
Blue  are the waves of Pacific Ocean

Red, White and Blue  colors of all.

Red  is the Earth from which we come
White  is the Air that fills our lungs
Blue  is the Water inside us, with Stardust

Red, White and Blue  connected in all.

Red  is pure Love, deep in our hearts
White  is the Brightness of our minds
Blue  is the Peace of well-lived lives

Red, White and Blue  freedom for all.

(C) 2018 by Maja Trochimczyk

Again, I distributed the card with poem from Bright Skies - a version of a poem written for one person (Today ,I'm perfect), now transformed from singular into plural mode  so it is a poem about all of us, about our strengths, our perfection, celebrated together. Today we are  perfect! 

Today – For Us

 

We are a miracle of life.
We do what we want,
we want what we do.

We are perfect!

 
We are a cosmic tree growing 
by the calm lake of light.
Its smooth, opal surface
reflects the sun’s smiling face.
Our roots drink pure nectar.
Our crown sparkles with stars.
Our leaves are green with peace.
Our flowers are gold with joy.
Our fruit is ripe with wisdom.
We are a living miracle.

We are perfect!

 
From noon to midnight.
from midnight to noon,
we love what we do,
we do what we love.
We are — we shine —
we are one with the One.

We are perfect!

                     (c) 2022 by Maja Trochimczyk, from "Bright Skies"

The problem with this poem, converted from a different version, is that every time I read it I want to change it. Therefore here, below the postcard with the text from 2022, is a new version of 2024. Maybe I'll put it on the next postcard, or maybe I'll change it again. The poem does  sound better to me this time, but it also may keep evolving. In this instability, it is also perfect!


The parade sign should say "Independence Day Parade" but the 4th is shorter, apparently. 


Who is not in the parade is on the sidelines watching it. The whole community comes out! 

Greetings from the Grand Marshall, under the Jacaranda blooms.

Joe DeCenzo, who had allowed the poets to use his own convertible for 12 years, and who was active in all the parades I've been in since 2010, was elected the Grand Marshall in 2024. He had the following to say about the Independence Day Parade: 

"Our 4th of July Parade is the single most unifying event of the year here in the foothills.  Regardless of your background or cultural origin, the celebration of our independence 248 years ago gives us cause to wave our arms and raise our voices in cheer.  The ideals set forth in the Declaration are ambitious yet highly attainable as with each generation we move a little closer to honoring those principles.  My deepest appreciation to the Sunland-Tujunga-Shadow Hills Rotary Club for keeping this tradition alive for more than 55 years.  It was positively thrilling for me to serve as the Grand Marshal and to see thousands of our neighbors lining Foothill Blvd. cheering in concert for our hard-won liberties."

 Joe continued: "My beloved Josefina Gutierrez was excited to play dress-up and accompany me as Martha Washington.  July 4th is particularly meaningful for her.  Four years ago she passed the U.S. Citizenship test and took the official oath to become a naturalized citizen of the United States of America." 

 Josefina says, "In Mexico, we have many colorful parades, but this is the best!  Riding in the parade, I see many kinds of faces, people from many countries saluting the flag of our country where we have more freedoms."





A brief video from the Parade, notice that the dirt bikers in the next parade entry had tons of fun!  They amused the audience with their tricks, riding on one wheel, making circles... 

The best biker, though, was State Senator Caroline Menjivar, who rode an ice-cream seller's bike with a big box and gave away popsicles to kids on the roadside. 

State Senator Caroline Menjivar riding a bike with popsicles for kids watching the parade.


The Poets' Convertible with current and former Poets Laureate, Kathleen Travers with 
the umbrella (current), and Alice Pero in the white hat (former).  (Their "Passing of the Laurels" ceremony happened not too long ago). I gave out postcards, so I walked the whole route. Alas, I ran out of them before the end. We have to print more next year.

Alice Pero commented about the poets' presence in the parade: "a wonderful experience seeing the hundreds of shining faces and hearing 'Happy 4th!' reverberating through the air. People seemed honestly awed that poets rode in the parade. Several of my former poetry students spotted me in the car and were surprised and delighted. We were not hit by a single spray of water though I would have appreciated it in the heat."  While there was no water showers onto the convertible, the back of my dress got wet - upon my request, no less. Kids were showering with water other kids. Boy Scouts in the parade had water guns and had a water fight with their friends on the sidewalk. Not solemn and respectful, but still fun!



Maja With her basket, now empty, Roland Gutierrez who donated "cherry-picker" use for Grand Marshall Joe DeCenzo,. Here with Josephine as George and Martha Washington.

After the parade: Kathleen Travers, current Poet Laureate, Joe DeCenzo, josephine, Alice Pero, Maja Trochimczyk

My 2024 costume was a result of last minute decisions  to add one scarf as a ribbon pinned with roses to the bottom of the old navy dress, then to make a bow of the other scarf, and put the Polish red-and-white flower wreath on top of my standard Independence Day white hat with navy and red stars. Without the diagonal sash I sported often in years past, this costume worked! I got many compliments about my attire along the route  "your dress is so beautiful! Can i take a picture?" I felt like a real star of the parade! It helps to work really hard and walk the whole route!


I am so proud to say that I started the tradition of poets in the parade. In 2010 after I was elected Poet Laureate of Sunland Tujunga, I rented a convertible for $130, asked my kids to join me and a friend to become a driver for us in a fancy hat - and there we were, proud parade attendees!  The idea to walk and give out postcards came much later when our group of Village Poets increased in size and there was not enough room in the convertible. 

First Poets' Convertible with Elizabeth Kanski as driver, Anna Harley Trochimczyk and me in the front seat. In 2010 we have not figured out yet that we can sit on top of the car, to be more visible.


Since I ended my term, we used Joe DeCenzo's convertible for the parade care. Even if it is 20 years old, it still looks good covered with flowers, flags, and diverse decor.  When Dorothy Skiles was the poet laureate, she ordered magnets with single words in red and blue, that could be combined on the car to form mini-poems, and these magnets have served us well since then. One year, Joe ordered a banner for Village Poets, another year, he walked in front of the banner with an Irish folk drum. Those where the days... of endless fun.  For my first parade I wrote the following poem, focusing on the amazing composition of Charles Ives, that I think should be played every year at the Hollywood Bowl to celebrate the Independence Day....

The Color Guard

Above the hills' crooked spine, clouds dissolve
into the azure. A red rose lazily unfolds its petals.

Mr. Lincoln blossoms by the birch tree,
glowing with the innocence of lost summers.

White bark hides among green leaves.
pale oleander spills over the picket fence,

shines against the deepest blue of the iris.
Its yellow heart matches sunshine's gold

bouncing off the brilliant sphere of stamens
in the bridal silk of matilla poppies.

My garden presents the colors at noon 
dressed in the red, white and blue of the flag.

                         At night, fireworks tear the indigo fabric
                         into light ribbons and multicolored sparks.

                                          The visual cacophony echoes the loudness
                                          of sound explosions imagined by
   
                                                            that quaint musical genius, Charles Ives.
                                                           The orderly march of brass anthems
             
                                                                               scatters into the chaos of laughter -
                                                                                a child's delight - the Fourth of July.

(C) Maja Trochimczyk, 2011.


My parents in Abu Dhabi, where my father worked for 20 years.

The 4th is not all joy, fireworks and laughter for me. In 2013, my Mom died on the 4th July in the morning, in a Polish hospital after a brief illness and a long ten years of being in poor health - since that horrid bullet in her lung caused an amputation of one-third of it. Two centimeters from the heart, the doctors' said.  My dad faired worse after that fatal April 2000 day, he died in May 2001, having spent most of the year in the hospital, with multiple blood transfusions, dialysis, and surgeries.  When Mom died, I decided to not cancel my participation in the parade, in festive attire - I decided that that was what she would have loved - to see me in the parade. She loved life and sharing joy above all!


John Trumbull's 1819 painting, Declaration of Independence, depicting the five-man drafting committee of the Declaration presenting their work to the Congress. The painting can be found on the back of the U.S. $2 bill. The original hangs in the US Capitol rotunda. It does not represent a real ceremony. From Wikimedia Commons. 

Independence Day is honoring the Declaration of Independence of former British colonies from their colonial masters.  The signatories payed a price with their lives for this act of celebrating freedom.  As my poem above says, "freedom is not free."  Here is a summary of what happened to the 46 signatories of the Declaration of Independence after their rebellious act.

Five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons in the revolutionary army, another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships of the revolutionary war.
They signed and they pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor. 
       What kind of men were they? Twenty-four were lawyers and jurists. Eleven were merchants, nine were farmers and large plantation owners, men of means, well educated. But they signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
        Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags.
        Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward.
        Vandals or soldiers or both, looted the properties of Ellery, Clymer, Hall, Walton, Gwinnett, Heyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
         At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson Jr., noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. The owner quietly urged General George Washington to open fire. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt.
        Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months.
        John Hart was driven from his wife’s bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his children vanished. A few weeks later he died from exhaustion and a broken heart. Norris and Livingston suffered similar fates.
        Such were the stories and sacrifices of the American Revolution. These were not wild eyed, rabble-rousing ruffians. They were soft-spoken men of means and education. They had security, but they valued liberty more. Standing tall, straight, and unwavering, they pledged: ‘For the support of this declaration, with firm reliance on the protection of the divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other, our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.’”
                                                                                                                                ~Michael W. Smith


We have not been asked to make such sacrifices yet for the wellbeing of our country, but that time may come and we should be ready. Meanwhile we should walk "the straight and narrow path" of the Oath of Allegiance, celebrate the Independence Day in "red -white-and-blue", volunteer for community organizations, and be good neighbors in our communities. 

Susan Rogers, Josephine, Joe DeCenzo, Barbara Nowicka, and Maja Trochimczyk, 2018.


VILLAGE POETS AT THE PARADE IN THE PAST

Josephine, Joe, Beata Czajkowska, Bory Thach, Ambika Talwar, Elzbieta Czajkowska, Maja, 2022

2022: https://villagepoets.blogspot.com/2022/07/happy-independence-day-2022-village.html

California State Poetry Society poets at the Parade: Maja Trochimczyk (President), Bory Thach (Editor) and Ambika Talwar (Secretary) in 2022.

Maja and Marlene Hitt, 2018




Elsa Frausto, Joe DeCenzo, Dorothy Skiles, Marlene Hitt, Maja Trochimczyk, 2015

Joe DeCenzo with second Irish drummer in the parade, 2015

Dorothy Skiles, Maja Trochimczyk, Marlene Hitt, 2013


Maja as Poet Laureate in 2011


Photo by Susan Rogers, 2011


The very first Poets Convertible with its passengers - Maja and Ania! July 2010. The same scarf that ornamented my 2024 dress, back then served as a ribbon on my hat and a bowtie for my daughter... In 2011, the bowtie was on my white dress, the hat remained the same. If it continues, that scarf would have to be placed in a museum!