From Shelter Warm
• 05/08/24 at 02:34AM •From shelter, warm,
to darkness, cold,
my love for you,
will never get old.
Weather storms,
spawns a heavy rain.
Must I tell you?,
Must I explain.
From shelter, warm,
to darkness, cold,
my love for you,
will never get old.
Weather storms,
spawns a heavy rain.
Must I tell you?,
Must I explain.
The harsh light,
pours from skylights above.
Harsh on these old eyes,
still searching for a lost love.
We wonder about the unknown.
It raises many questions.
Midnight strangers, dare to meet,
At the darkest hour of night,
In caverns, caves and deepest woods,
Where sunlight never peeks.
The grasping, clutching pull of
Hands, are tugging at the sleeve,
Of those who wish to depart from
Here, where darkness never leaves.
All the pities and sorrows of the
World, gather, all massed around
The entry to the depths of hell.
He lies, awaiting you, in shadowed
Corners.
Beware, if he offers you his hand,
For you will be dragged,
To the depths of oblivion.
Long grow the shadow,
beyond the far, away hill,
where you will find plants,
like the golden Daffodill.
A plant grown commercially,
for many a year,
but in the wilderness,
will suddenly appear.
Resulting from a Pioneer,
family who built a home,
where the wildlife was plenty,
and the buffalo would roam.
How hard it must have
been to start with nothing
and rebuild your home
comfort, safety again.
There are those we know who
made the greatest sacrifice.
My short acknowledgement.
Gone, forever, from our sight,
Gone, to be no more.
Long remember those,
Who were here before.
Be proud to know,
They did not die in vain.
We are here, because
They cared, to give their lives
For those, yet unborn,
For those, yet unknown.
There are those, who will take a dream
And build, for a brighter morrow,
Have faith for there are those,
Among us, who will carry forward,
That which we believe in
And that we work for.
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
What happens when a black hole devours a star? Many details remain unknown, but observations are providing new clues. In 2014, a powerful explosion was recorded by the ground-based robotic telescopes of the All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (Project ASAS-SN), with followed-up observations by instruments including NASA's Earth-orbiting Swift satellite. Computer modeling of these emissions fit a star being ripped apart by a distant supermassive black hole. The results of such a collision are portrayed in the featured artistic illustration. The black hole itself is a depicted as a tiny black dot in the center. As matter falls toward the hole, it collides with other matter and heats up. Surrounding the black hole is an accretion disk of hot matter that used to be the star, with a jet emanating from the black hole's spin axis. Fall towards eternity: It's Black Hole Week at NASA!
Once, in the beginning,
at the start of life,
an imagined beginning.
Life is like a tunnel.
In the beginning, darkness.
Darkness, with faint light,
in the distance.
As we travel, the light brightens.
Suddenly, all is brightness and noise.
Such must be the
feeling of life,
in the beginning,
at birth.
There lies a creature,
within my soul, at rest
There, its lain, since I was,
born out of wedlock, not the best.
I know it's true,
for I've been told,
You will soon be free.
Out in the cold.
Why is persuasion so hard, even when you have facts on your side? More at The Conversation ➜
NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day:
This is how the Sun disappeared from the daytime sky last month. The featured time-lapse video was created from stills taken from Mountain View, Arkansas, USA on 2024 April 8. First, a small sliver of a normally spotted Sun went strangely dark. Within a few minutes, much of the background Sun was hidden behind the advancing foreground Moon. Within an hour, the only rays from the Sun passing the Moon appeared like a diamond ring. During totality, most of the surrounding sky went dark, making the bright pink prominences around the Sun's edge stand out, and making the amazing corona appear to spread into the surrounding sky. The central view of the corona shows an accumulation of frames taken during complete totality. As the video ends, just a few minutes later, another diamond ring appeared -- this time on the other side of the Moon. Within the next hour, the sky returned to normal. Celebrate the Voids: It's Black Hole Week at NASA!
Video by Reinhold Wittich; Music: Sunrise from Also sprach Zarathusra (R. Strauss) by Sascha Ende
"What are you doing?",
said a voice, sounding like Doom,
as it rang out from,
the back of the room.
I'm speaking to a friend,
if you'd be so kind, to not
butt into my conversation,
for it is his ear that I've got.
Just go away,
leave me alone,
it's my new place,
which I call home.
I sit in wonder,
now alone,
with no one close,
who I could phone.
Not talking about
my family,
but about my
missing thee.
Thee who was,
my lovely wife,
no longer here but
now gone, from life.
I talked with her,
about daily events,
we had our positions,
weren't on the fence.
This luxury is
no longer here,
so I sit alone,
she's not near.
I know this sounds,
like a "Woe is Me,"
but in fact,
it's my reality.