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ELISAVIETTA RITCHIE
Covert Matters, Sofia			

The palms of strangers 
	spill their secrets 
		before my greedy eyes 

Yet here in a chill foreign town
	suddenly  in my own hand 
		new lines are etched

Unexpected mystic 
	crosses appear
		beneath the head line 

My inconstant heart line 
	doubles then splits   
		charges across the plains

Beneath the Girdle of Venus 
	which long has betrayed
		my sensual tastes

lies a shadow sister or ghost crescent 
	the books seldom note
		the singular Arc of the Seer 

In this country of Gypsies 
			 only I 
		cannot decode my own fate


previously published in: Poetry Now and Gnosis; reprinted in The Arc of the Storm, Signal Books, Elisavietta Ritchie, 1998]
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."   poetryREpairs v07.11:125
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ROBERT F. ABBOTT
The Significance of the Mundane

This article begins with a tip of the hat to a scholarly publication called the Journal of Mundane Behavior. Unlike other publications, which herald important issues, this one trumpets everyday, but rarely noticed, behaviors. It sees what the rest of us overlook because that stuff is so, well, mundane (my dictionary defines 'mundane' as being ordinary or common).

For example, I just read an article in the Journal about beards and shaving, one that interests me because I've had a beard for almost as long as I've been able to shave. And while that subject may interest me, it doesn't mean much in the great scheme of things.

Today, I'm interested in the connection between the mundane and communication. In this article we'll explore how great strategies can emerge from observing not great, but everyday events. We'll use our understanding of seemingly insignificant things and behaviors to come up with grand strategies.

Federal Express, for example, used to run humorous television ads that showed ordinary people, shipping clerks I suppose, and how scared they were that their shipments might not get to their destinations on time.

Clearly, a case of using the mundane to craft a great marketing strategy. That advertising strategy, coupled with a strong business strategy, led to one of the entrepreneurial success stories of the 20th century.

And that business strategy might not have been so successful without the advertising strategy. After all, most companies would have opted for commercials showing shiny cargo planes, pilots in crisp uniforms, or bright people figuring out cargo scheduling.

From that example, we might think of crafting our own communication strategies, based on the mundane.

One of the great difficulties with the mundane, of course, is that it's harder to see and to grasp. After all, it's the absence of something rather than its presence. The classic expression of this phenomenon may have been Sherlock Holmes‘ remark about the dog that didn't bark.

Having identified a mundane phenomenon, we're next faced with the challenge of understanding its significance. If not a single customer calls with a complaint or compliment, what does it mean? If there haven't been any resignations lately does it mean your employees are more loyal than they used to be? Or is it just a statistical blip?

And, one final issue: how will you explain the significance of the phenomenon to others? Will you explain it for what it is, or what it is not?

You may remember the Show About Nothing episode of the Seinfeld television series. George Costanza tries to explain to TV executives how a new show would be about nothing, while the executives look bewildered. And, switching quickly from art to life, a show about the mundane life of Jerry and friends became one of the most successful television series ever.

In summary, the common and ordinary things of life, the mundane, offer untapped opportunities to create great communication strategies.

Robert F. Abbott writes and publishes Abbott's Communication Letter. Learn how you can use communication to help achieve your goals, by reading articles or by subscribing to this newsletter. An excellent resource for leaders and managers, at: http://www.communication-newsletter.com

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from poetryREpairs MM.11:123

JOSEPH LISOWSKI
Still Life		

Grief is an amputated hand,
blood fast running out,
each cell yearning for connection,
finding only empty air.
Then a numbing.
Edges curl back
first blue, then grey.
Then black. It becomes
a lifeless thing
that hardens
and in slow measure
becomes ash.

Poem, © 2000-2007, JOSEPH LISOWSKI
(all rights reserved; To copy or translate this poem, 
please contact the poet) Site design, © 2000=2007, 
John Horvath Jr., www.poetryrepairs.com (All Rights Reserved).
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