(for Shelley Burns, who brings happiness to so many, especially when she sings)
“Forget your troubles and just get happy,” she sings. “You better chase all your cares away.”
We walked carrying our cares, toting heavy concerns and fears, but when Shelley sings at the close of the show,
“The sun is shinin’, c’mon get happy” her voice hallelujahs us into sunshine, the blues chased away to a place
where there is no judgment— the promised land as promised. Some of us oldsters might remember
Garland’s version of Harold Arlen’s first hit, but tonight we who sit in the dark listening to this good band
find ourselves grateful for a here-and-now rendition that reminds us that our times,
fear-filled as they are, are not the first we or the worst that this country has seen.
We are not alone in wishing for fewer troubles, for more happy. Our hearts sing along, too—
please let us get to happy, to that place where it’s all so peaceful on the other side.
•••
Thanks to Shelley Burns and Avalon Swing for their great show at The Side Door Oct. 3, 2025, featuring the music of Harold Arlen, including “Get Happy,” which he wrote in 1929 with lyricist Ted Koehler and became the songwriting duo’s first big hit.
•••
You can watch Shelley Burns and Avalon Swing perform part of “Get Happy” here.
Avalon Swing—(from left) Tom Phillips, Shelley Denny, Shelley Burns, Bill Dendle and drummer Jeff Minnieweather (not pictured) perform at The Side Door Oct. 3, 2025.
Listen: Fungus gets a bad rap. But the intricate microscopic web of lacy white filaments
that make up mycorrhizal fungi— in existence for 400 million years—have learned to live
in symbiosis with 90% of all species on the planet. You can sometimes spot them branching
atop soil, their delicate strands entwined like fingers. But they typically connect plants via
underground fungal highways— the wood wide web, scientists joke— sharing nutrients and sending
warning signals about drought or pest attacks. Literally feeding each other, these invisible helpers
bolster the resilience of every living thing around them as they sink carbon into soil, fostering growth,
as they’ve done since the planet was young. We topside beings might take a lesson from such
supportive soil engineers that work in harmony, in the dark, in silence, forming mutually beneficial relationships
with species quite unlike themselves— earthworms, fruit trees, tomatoes, peppers, squash, flowers, grasses—
unseen threads that weave communities together, never asking anything of those they so peacefully serve.
•••
I learned about mycorrhizal (migh-koh-RIGH-zuhl) fungi decades ago from Dr. Jane Goodall when I heard her speak in San Francisco at the California Academy of Sciences where the Jane Goodall Institute was located. The notion that unseen networks can feed living things, in this case by a particular kind of fungi, was one of her metaphors for cooperation so desperately needed by humans. From chimpanzees to fungi and so much more, Dr. Goodall’s vast knowledgeand gentle wisdom changed the world for the better in so many ways.
Driving down H Street Tuesday midday when I come to a dead stop behind several cars in a spot that is unusually backed up.
I wait, wondering if there is a slow someone in the crosswalk ahead.
Only when the single file of cars begins to move forward do I see them—a gaggle of two dozen processing slowly, ceremoniously, their heads held high and proud atop slender black necks, silent and stately as princes,
unflappable, their feathers not at all ruffled by the humans in their wheeled machines who—to my great surprise and delight, do not honk or try to rush the proceedings—
instead wait respectfully, bystanders observing nature on foot, until the parade passes serenely by.
He rings the doorbell hard, repeatedly, as if it’s an emergency, the original bell in this old house mounted in the kitchen pealing like a fire bell, insistent in a way that cannot be ignored,
summoning me from wherever I am, from whatever too-important something I’m doing. So I come, heart-pounding, because, although I have lived in this house for 38 years, the urgency seizes me every time—What now? Oh, no… Dammit, I’m in the middle of…
But then I see him outside the screen door, Lanky and blonde, this man as old as gray-haired me, standing over his latest latest creations fanned like a wildly colorful deck of cards on my tomato red porch.
It’s Robert, our neighborhood artist who, bless him, stops by regularly with all manner of found objects that he’s daubed paint onto—boards and picture frames, the box he’s turned into a slot machine that dispenses words for the writer, or paint-stirring sticks morphed into zombies, sometimes even canvases when he can get his hands on them—
talking before I open the door, gesturing with can’t-stand-still excitement, showing off his latest fever dreams of creation.
“Look! Look!” the kid inside him cries, and I look, I look, astonished at his informal art show, smiling at his rat-a-tat stream of semi-consciousness flowing over me like the circular stream of the garden hose.
He’s perennially in media res, in the middle of whatever thought he’s having, always happy, chattering about something wonderful that’s happened—
the head shop downtown that’s featuring his art, someone has asked him to paint stands and signs for a pumpkin patch, the beautiful woman he met in a bar (“I’m in love, I’m in love,” he sings).
Plus, he’s a sweetie who knows of my affections, painting typewriters on a rough plywood rectangle, the Tower Bridge on a gift box lid, cameras for my retired newspaper photographer.
“Get Rich! Write A Book!” trumpets one masterpiece. “For you, the writer!” he exclaimed when he brought it to me. And I’d be lying if I didn’t say how touched I am by his thoughtfulness, this artist who never asks for anything but my smiles of delight.
If I saw this guy on the street and didn’t know him, I might veer away from his exuberance, his over-the-topness, unsure of his intentions, torn by dual self-protective urges of wanting to praise the weirdos and avoid the crazy.
In truth, I carry a bit of both, too, as we artistic ones do, as every appearance of the doorbell-ringing, zombie-painting artist reminds me.
Wake up! the doorbell calls. Creativity is literally knocking. Open it and step into a moment that will make you smile—a little weird, a little crazy, every piece unique, a beacon of brilliance in this topsy-turvy world that so needs splashes of whimsy, of spontaneous delight delivered right to your door.
Did the first one come with me at birth? Or did I just began poeting without one as soon as my mother put a pencil in my hand?
Certainly I didn’t wait until I was sixteen to careen into metaphor, stomp on alliteration, speed into images that, with luck, might evoke some emotion in a reader.
What made me think I could poet? For years I deferred to male colleagues who were well published, confident, matter of fact about their admirable abilities.
I hid my proverbial light under a journalistic bushel until, licensed or not, lines burst out of my pen, onto electronic paper, not necessarily good but true, like these, I hope.
Come to think of it, my best friend bestowed my poetic license upon my old baby car—
GUD WRTR—
as she assured me that it wouldn’t seem like bragging to have it emblazoned on my car—
“not spelled like that”— and she was right. Though she and that car have long vanished into the who-knows-where,
they remain right here, tucked into a poem, which may or may not be good, but, I promise, it sure is true.
•••
Poetic license / by the fabulously prolific poet/story writer/author/lyricist and, of course, artist Sandra Boynton (with decades of appreciation and admiration)
It is a strange and wonderful fact to be here, walking around in a body, to have a whole world within you and a world at your fingertips outside you. —John O’Donohue
•••
We talk about the re- (as in incarnation) with great hope (even if we’re mostly joking) about perhaps getting another body, another chance to do it again, get it right, maybe.
But haven’t you already gotten your money’s worth out of this body, despite its trials? Apparently, thankfully, the warrantee’s not up yet.
Who could’ve predicted, when you were a tiny person fresh out of the egg, precisely how this body would grow and change, would love and be loved, would stumble and bumble and become so humbly human?
Sure, you look in the mirror and don’t recognize that gray-haired woman or thinning-haired man, a far cry from the younger you still deeply imbedded in your bones—no matter how much they ache. You may wish for a do-over, another incarnation.
But not so fast, my friend.
These bodies, each one a garage for our souls, with our beating hearts and breathing lungs, contain a whole world inside us, moving through the world outside us.
And if we’re here, organs still breathing and beating, it means that this incarnation— when you’ve gotten so much of it right— isn’t over yet.
There’s more to this wild ride, as frustrating, bumfuzzling, mystifyingly joy-filled as it is—such a marvel, this strange and wonderful adventure, indeed.
•••
(Wishing Guy Howard Klopp a most happy birthday, with love and gratitude from his fans, including me.)
The Face in the Stone / Thobar Phádraig, County Clare, Ireland Photo: David Whyte