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SARAH KENNEDY
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Avicenna makes mention of a certain member situated in the female genitalia which he calls virga or albathara. Albucasis calls this tentigo, which some- times will increase to such a great size that women, while in this condition, have sex with each other just as if they were men. The Greeks call this member clitoris, from which the obscene word clitorize is derived. Our anatomical writers have completely neglected this and do not even have a word for it.

Fallopia's Observationes anatomicae (1561) tr. H. Andreadis


Wonder of wonders,
contra naturam,
unnameable
(not to say
unspeakable),
chain of being's gap
			gash
slash,
that thing that
is no thing—
		no,
			this is something 
other.
Better to regularize,
to be rid
of excess
		(a woman too whole).
						In his
Fourth Book of Practical Physick
							(not to
indulge in mystery, 
in boundary
blurs),
					Nicholas Culpeper recommends
(circa 1664)
excision
of labia and clitoris,
what won't
fit definitions
must go,
					recommends
that the surgeon make his patient
"normal,"
"right" again, which is to say
						what is left.

--copyright SARAH KENNEDY. SARAH KENNEDY 's books of poems include A Witch's Dictionary (Elixir Press), Consider the Lilies (David Robert Books), Double Exposure (Cleveland State University Press), and Flow Blue (Elixir Press). Her most recent, Home Remedies, is forthcoming from LSU Press. Sarah Kennedy, who has received grants from both the National Endowment for the Arts and the Virginia Commission for the Arts, is a contributing editor for West Branch and Pleiades, Sarah Kennedy is an associate professor at Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia.

poetryREPAIRs: Concourse or confluence of people at or in a place; resort, frequent or habitual going; making one's way; to arrive; to dwell; to heal, to cure, to recover; to renew; (AND!) to fix to original condition - Oxford English Dictionary.
"Poetry endangers the established order in the soul."
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STEVE GILLMAN
The Art of Thinking

What do I mean by the art of thinking? It may seem that powerful thinking should simply be logical, and nothing more. The ideal thinker then, might be Spock, the "Vulcan" in the "Star Trek" television show and movies. Of course, if you watch the program, you may recall that the humans aboard the spaceship had most of the solutions and new ideas. Spock only knew how to analyze.

The most useful processes of thought need to do more than run a "logic program." After all, we need to choose what to think about, and we also sometimes need new ways to think about things. These tasks are not a matter of applying logic, but of choosing values and pursuing them creatively.

This is where the art of thinking comes into play. A definition of art: "Disciplines, or those parts of disciplines, which do not rely solely on the scientific method." This includes such arts as economic forecasting and psychological therapy, which might someday rely solely on the scientific method. However, at the moment neither these nor thinking can be described, taught, or practiced solely as a scientific method.

To understand this it might help to use another art as a metaphor. Painting, for example, can shed some light on thinking. The goal is to express something on canvas. You start with the paints, brushes, palettes and other tools. But all the best tools aren't enough.

You need to learn how to paint. You learn to draw, and perhaps learn the geometry of creating perspective in a scene. You learn how to mix the colors and how to show light reflecting. This is the science of painting.

The tools and science still aren't enough, though. You need to practice, so you paint again and again to learn how to best get various effects. Then, with the tools, the knowledge, and the practice, you are ready to create something new of your own. Perhaps. Of course there is nothing in your painting books that says, "This is what you want to say with your painting." Here, the "art" enters. First, you choose according to your values what you will paint.

Then you find a way to express yourself creatively. You rely on your intuition to show something new, some unique perspective that means something to you (and hopefully others). How do you know how well you did? First, the painting either makes sense to you or it doesn't. Second, it makes sense to others, or not. Of course, some won't appreciate a good painting, but if nobody sees the value in your painting, it isn't likely that they are all aesthetically "blind." Feedback matters, because painting is not just about expressing yourself, but also about communicating your vision to others.

Painting With Thoughts

Want to improve your art of thinking? Start with better tools. Just as a better paintbrush can help produce a better painting, better reasoning skills, or more observation, or more experience can lead to more useful, valuable, and even beautiful thoughts. Your intuition, which guides you in the use of these other tools, should be developed. But good tools are not enough.

You need knowledge. Knowing more things gives you more options in combining those things into new ideas. Practice gives you more skill in doing this as well. Expand the base of your knowledge then, and practice thinking of new ideas. But tools, knowledge and practice are still not enough.

Like a painter, you need to start with your values to decide where to apply your thinking. What is worth thinking about? Then you need to look at your thoughts and ask if they make sense. You also need to throw them out there into the public sphere - at least among friends - to see if they make sense to others. Do at least some people understand the picture you are painting with your words?

By the way, talking to others is a form of thinking (at least it can be). Just as the communication between the various parts of your brain creates new ideas, so does the interplay of two minds in a conversation. Good conversation can be an important part of the art of thinking.

What else? Like a painter, you should experiment. You should mix those "paints" up differently from time to time, just to see what you get. You should try a new type of canvas (think on paper, in poetry, in stories?), or a new subject matter.

You should watch the process of your own thoughts, learn from it, and adapt accordingly. Much of what you learn will be at a level below consciousness. To use this, even as you guide your thoughts consciously, you have to allow for the intuitive as well. It is in this interplay between the conscious and unconscious that the art of thinking really blossoms.

Copyright Steve Gillman. For more on How To Increase Brain Power, and to get the Brain Power Newsletter and other free gifts, visit http://www.IncreaseBrainPower.com

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ANDREA FORBING
I'll go blind			

She watches me thru the crack in the Venetian blinds
I know she is there,
but continue on with my routine

I know that she could bust
me out--embarrass me beyond belief,
but she never speaks.

I wait for the day

that she interrupts me,
tells me that it's time to stop

but that day hasn't come yet.
I wonder what attracts her more?
	Watching me do it?
 
	or the fact that she gets to watch?
previously published on poetryREpairs 02.01:003.

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