Guest Post Tonight
May 21, 2008

- Location: The Stranger newspaper box, Georgetown Truck Stop, Washington State
- Date: May 8, 2008
- Description: white crane with hand-drawn 3-D pie chart sliced up, with the word “piece” pointing to a slice of the pie
My friend Liz, who I like to call “the poetry doctor,” was on sabbatical this past spring and spent her time traversing the country. You may remember her from this post. Liz is a crane-folder who, out of the blue, sent me an email with today’s post. Thank goodness, or else you would’ve had to see pictures of my most recent artwork (this could’ve gotten ugly). Her whole email is peace-like, right down to the quote at the end. Here’s what she wrote:
This craning episode comes from Washington State, where I visited the family earlier this month. One day I hung out with my brother in Seattle and we had breakfast at a great spot — The Georgetown Truck Stop. My brother is the one who first taught me how to fold cranes, and who folded me a thousand cranes when I was finishing up my Ph.D. He has a mess of tiny paper cranes in his car because he folds them habitually from ferry receipts. He says receipt paper is excellent crane folding paper, by the way. Anyhow, his car cranes made me think of the Crane project and how I should have my brother fold a peace crane (or, as it happens, a ‘piece’ crane) while we were in Seattle. So, after our fabulous breakfast, I commissioned him to fold one. From a receipt. We left it in a newspaper box on top of the May 8 issue of The Stranger, right next to the Georgetown Truck Stop. I’ll also paste in a poem I wrote years ago (published in Prairie Schooner at some point) about folding cranes (and my brother, and other stuff):
The Thousand
In memory, cranes have wings –
but in the now, this one’s flightless,
its wings somehow folded safe
inside the wrinkled body.Some folds seem familiar
like streets I’ve driven twice,
but with the inevitable wrong
turn, the incorrect fold.He taught me to fold them
with a trained patience,
talked me through and showed
my fingers what his already knew.I thought I’d fold a crane a day
until I hit the thousand –
transcendance, wishes granted,
the number of will and desire.Like other plans, this one
never took shape, never fleshed
out past the mere bones
of an idea. Today, though,I’m suddenly needy for it,
wanting to do it, or just
to know I know how to do it –
but I can’t call it back.I remember so much: the wristed
trick of cat’s cradle, the folds
for hats, boats, and the squared-off
finger fortune tellers from school.But not this simple skill, a gift
of one winter afternoon
when I asked and he agreed
and he was my teacher.The thousand cranes I never
folded? The wish never asked for
or even imagined? Maybe today
they call to me, try to remind mehow to gather and fold –
this crease a beak, that fold
a wing — an envelope
that’s closed and open, containingand becoming the wonderful news
of itself. The paper-thin whispers
of the not-yet-cranes, and the fingers
of my brother, folding.Happy craning!
Liz
‘War is God’s way of teaching Americans geography.’ — Ambrose Bierce
Here are some more of their photos. Good stuff, Liz!
If you’ve made it this far, don’t forget to check out my picture from yesterday, which I haven’t uploaded yet, but I have faith in WordPress, so I’ll tell you to go check it now now and then go try to upload.
Entry Filed under: Picture Cranes, Poetry Cranes. Tags: ambrose bierce, crane project, friend, georgetown truck stop, origami, paper crane, peace, peace crane, piece, poem, poetry, war, washington.
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1.
Judy | May 22, 2008 at 8:11 am
What a beautiful entry! The picture itself is poetic, but the poetry is wonderful…full of rich images. Thank you!
2.
cassie | May 23, 2008 at 10:56 am
I think this is one of my favorite pictures! I love the headline and the photo next to the tiny crane. Good job Liz.