Archive for August, 2009

Working thru a few things here… don’t not adjust yr set.

Friday, August 28th, 2009

I sitmy-place

I sit

pulling hairs out of my

chin

getting fat off

the land in a

recession

While watching

Face book

videos of artists

in Canada

Dancers, Cellists

Bach suites and originals

music

movement made

by lithe and supple

women

Women I once knew

And danced with too

While I sit

pulling hairs out of my chin

getting fat off a land

in a recession

Watch muscular women

play fight

and swing

fall, slide

leap and contract

Dancing in unison

moving within time

gesture the present

and sweat out the past

While I sit

pulling hairs out of my chin

getting fat off a land

in a recession

Watch myself not

doing what I once did

across a floor

barefooted and thin

looking like the next one

standing  in the line

choreograph my exist

and bow for spare change

While I

in a recession

of a fat land,

chin out,

hair pulling,

sit.

*********************************************************************

Tonight the Written Word Weekend presents the first

Open Mike Poetry and Prose Night at Berry’s Tavern 8:30 to 10pm

Then I’m scurrying up the mountain to Club F to perform at a Ukulele Hooley where three uku players are on the bill ( i’m the first up)  Followed by one lad from Limerick and  then a young woman from the USA.

meanwhile… its raining cats and dogs over here. 10 am Friday morning with fresh towels on the line and the good rain giving them an extra wash and the wild wind whipping.

And for those readers this side of the pond and up here in the north west the

Carrick -on-Shannon Creative Writing  Class resumes September 23rd at the Breffni Family Resource Centre, with yours truly leading the practise.  Get over and get yer pens out.


Written Word Weekend

For the latest YouTube on the subject and more about what else is going down. There’s the link. Please use it.

Cheers my dears thanks for clicking on

always eileen

The Pig Executives at the Electric Picnic

Monday, August 24th, 2009

“pools of forgotten


pools of regret


dancing on the fingers of musicians that we’ve met


bananas, bananas,concertinas and cell phones

KFC  in Leitrim,

The Assassins have come home”

excerpt from-pools of forgotten

Back from the heady heights of the Flatlake Festival in Clones County Monaghan and into The Electric Picnic  in  Stradbally Hall, Stradbally, County Laois

Watch for the The Pig Executives at the Picnic Saturday at noon and Sunday at noon. In the Spoken Word Tent. We’re not actually listed on the line-up, but we got an hour each day to do our business and we’ll be there.

smiley-swineThank you  Pat McCabe and thank you Keith Allen and thank you to Hilton Park and the crew and a pleasure meeting you Margo.

Plus, a big wet  piggy kiss to Dermot Healy from all of us at the Glens Centres Writers Group ( snort ha ha)

Who loves ya babe!!!!!

The Pig Executives

always eileen (aka) Whee whee whee all the way home…………………..

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

moving-clouds

“What to do when your hard drive is full”…Look.. I have to write this down somewhere so I’m writing it here and in doing so, I’m telling you a secret.

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

a-walk-on-a-sunny-winters-day

I rarely share this aspect of myself because its private, precious and slightly un-comprehensible. Words don’t always come when I’m speaking about my own spiritual path, however, I’ve decided to use this site for an immediate need which is to record the past 48 hours in which I have had a profound series of events.

Do not trouble yourself with what you might read.

Though it is not dangerous to anyone per se, it might be  stirring for some, heinous for others, a crock of bull perhaps  for even more.

But don’t  worry  and do not trouble yourself should you continue to read.  I can see ye now ,eyebrow cocked… finger on the delete button. Thats  fine. Thats fine. Yer alright. If you must read it and you think I’m half mad to begin with then think of it as a piece of fiction I’m sharing with you but please, I have to get this out of my system.

Let me write this down.

I have been over the course of this year studying the practise of Core Shaman ism.

This is the ancient experience of communing with Nature, the Elements and the Divine.

Within this study one practises a form of mediation called journeying. Like all mystic traditions there are three worlds upon which can enter and learn. The Upper World, the Middle World and the Lower World.

Like all traditions, there are Guides who come to your aid, to assist you, to instruct, and protect you. The Lower World has Animal Guides that may appear to share common trait by which you can see your reflection and perhaps take some insightful knowledge about a situation or about yourself

In the Core Shamanic practise there are a number of ceremonies constructed to release karmic bondage or ties that constrict you from your true self. Ultimately I think, we all want to be the best person we can possibly be and we have that birthright to  obtain this. The discussion about the millions of people subjected to incredible cruelties and poverty is one that I  cannot tackle at this moment, perhaps I can another time, but for the here and now, let me state that my life’s purpose is to be the highest and best person I can be, hurting no one and bringing blessing to everyone involved.

So one of the ceremonies is call the “Cord Cutting Ceremony”. Here the Shaman consults with her guides to discover where the cords of negative energy are twisted between two people. The cords are stretched from one person chakras to the others’.  It makes sense when we hear conversational lines lines,                                                                                                    ” He’s got a hold on me”.

Or                  ” I ‘ve been hurt so badly, I cannot trust or love ever again”

For whatever reason, this ceremony is beautiful release of emotional baggage and cleansing and strengthening of your personal energy centres.

Thursday August 21st was the new moon. New Moons are very good for release old patterns. Getting rid of clutter, stuff, ways of thinking . I was scheduled to have a Cord Cutting Ceremony performed between myself and my father who had died four years ago.

I should also say that I have been actively working on my relationship with my father since is his death. That sounds strange doesn’t it. Me self and me father couldn’t actually come to an easy peace between us while he was alive but in death I have worked hard to understand him as a man, and a father. The best thing I could do for the both of us is  to cut the cords for not only do you come into your own power but as well it allows the other to come to into their own power. They understand their truths. Perhaps, no longer live vicariously through you (as parents tend to do with their children), or perhaps remove the protective measures taken on behalf of one person to one another, which seizes to help and instead, binds and block , limits  your choices

These cords can trap a soul to this plane of existence. Cutting them gives everybody a chance.

So…. to my story………Wednesday I began to prepare myself for the Thursday New Moon Cord Cutting Ceremony. I took myself and my dog Pup down to the Sluice Gates and turned right through a small lane way  that is used by fishermen ( and fisher women) . At the bottom of the lane the shore is line a wide and I took a fancy to drive the car right onto the beach so I could see Lough Allen and the great mountain Sleive An Arran. In the distance on the bank of the shore was lone pony looking toward to mountain. I took this as good sign that I might meditate here for one of Guides is horse and I have often rode him across the waters of Lough Allen to strange and wonderful places.

This meditation that I am currently practising consists of listening to either a half hour or a fifteen minute CD of Shamanic drumming.The tempo of the drumming, the beats per minute are equivalent to a baby’s heartbeat and the internal rhythm found in the core of the earth.

( more on that another day perhaps)

When we mediate or journey or quite frankly, do anything in this life, we always have an intention. The clearer our intention is, the more likely we shall obtain it. My intention was to go the Lower World to meet my Guides and ask if the Cord Cutting Ceremony with my father was a correct thing to do.

So off I went on my horse. I saw much on my journey but the end result was a conversation I had with my father who met me and agreed that the ceremony would be the best for all. Three times during our meeting he asked me if the horse was still on the shore. Each time, I raised myself form one state and looked through my fingers to see the horse still on the shore. when he asked me the third time, I remembered a conversation my sister-in-law Caroline had told me she had with Dad before he died. He had always suffered from bad eyesight and while in the hospital he turned to her and said how remarkable that his eyesight was fine. He could see better than ever. She was sitting there, as clear as could be, he could see the horses on the beach just fine, everything was great.

My conversation with my father came to an end I felt assured that the moving to the Cutting Cord Ceremony would be a healing measure for the both of us.

I thanked him, my Guides and I returned to what some referred to as this mundane state of reality. When I opened my eyes, I though my vision had blurred because there were now two horse on the beach. They turned and looked in my direction and then began to slowly make they’re way towards me.

From out of the shrubs. another horse joined them.And suddenly they surrounded the car. The eldest even tried to put his hoof on the bonnet of my vehicle. My little car tooted it horn in a most child-like fashion . And the horses kept circling us.

Eventually I was able to back up the car and leave. And the next day I fulfilled my promise and Daddy-o and cut the cord that strangled us budgeter and we now sit in peace with each other.

On the way back from the ceremony I was to visit a friend who attends to hair. I loathe hairdressers because of the mirrors and false glamour and idle chat to say nothing of the rotten music and toxic fumes and peering eyes. I rather let my hair go to rats- which some of you might shake your in agreement- yes eileen your hair a rats nest. Nevertheless, you’ll all be glad to know that I now I have a personal stylist who give me head a good shake when it needs it. And I was slated to go to her after the ceremony. Funny thing, before I left the Shaman I ask her if I should go and get the hair down,         I wasn’t at all sure about it because the work I finished involved  the crown chakras work which is a highly sensitive energy centre.

I wasn’t in the chair twenty minutes when I started to feel sick. I took a break and sat down again and my dear friend could see me turning a shade of green that wasn’t at all my colour. She suggested we do this another day and led me to the washing basin to wash the dye out. I could hardly keep my stomach from heaving.

Finally I was at home.

I must say that both the Shaman and the stylist knew that this month was very bad for me financially, but as September is around the corner and my work will resume then, they generously allowed availed of their talents and I will remunerate them next month.

Without a penny in my pocket, my hardrive just about to collapse, my car in a dire need of attention with the possibility of blowing a gasket any day now… and my cat Declan had been looking at me as if to say that I better be bring home the bacon or the little songbirds are dinner.

I entered my home and picked a letter deliver through the mail slot, patted the good cat and looked for the hot water bottle because I had cramps in my abdomen just like a school girl- and I ain’t no school girl no more.

I filled the bottle with hot water and tucked it into my bed to warm it up and I turned to see a old stream truck that I have carted around with me for the last fives for no reason other than I heard a story that the trunk once belonged to a woman who left Ireland with it bound for New York City and after fifty years or so returned to Ireland with the same trunk. I found the trunk abandoned in a field across the yard from a house I lived in and as it was a perfectly good trunk, took it in, dried it out , used it for a few years, but now it, upright on its side, not really used and quite frankly in the way in the bedroom. back the new Moon thing and getting rid of stuff. So I heaved this old trunk out to my front yard with my collection of birch tree poles and potted plants and as an after thought, I opened it to see if there was anything worth salvaging. At first glance, there wasn’t A large bag of red twist ties was there and a broken plastic ruler,three or four pinky-white altar boy cassocks the local nuns gave for children’s plays and then I saw it.

My father’s buckskin jacket. His touring jacket. My dad was a drummer and had a band that in the 70’s. One of my favourite picture of the band was them standing beside a small air plane that took them to the Yellowknife, in what was called the North West Territories. The rest of the band looked frozen and ill equipped for the Arctic weather. But Daddy-o had his sheep lined jacket on and looked fine.

I got the jacket when he came off the road and I was in my 20’s. I took everywhere. Even when it seized to fit me, my Dad was a small , thin man, And I was once thin, but you’d never call me small.

Now I pulled it out And I hugged it for all I was worth. It smelt of moth balls and old wool and memories.  I went inside with it, Sat down still hold onto it. The I found the letter delivered to me that day and I opened it.

It was cheque for 34.00 euro.

The next day. Friday. My female cycle returned after a 8 month absence. The last time the old red cousin came to visit I was in Canada during the Christmas holiday. I landed in Toronto, took one look at the clan and bled for 10 days. Lovely.

Right so.. like I said at the beginning, I need a new hard drive and currently can’t save a thing in the Word Program. Which is pain being a writer all….so I have to blog this stuff out. If no one reads… ah sure thats fine..just a as well. I have written down.

And you happen to read, okay…here you go. A bit of hard cold reality of the life of Eileen O’Toole.

A bit of dynamic synchronicity as Carl Jung would say or as Deepa Chorkra says recently  - SynchroDestiny is about becoming aware of the incredible possibilities that always surround us . . . realizing that the universe is constantly sending us clues and messages in the form of serendipitous events. SynchroDestiny also means understanding and participating in the process of meaningful coincidence. It means lending your attention and intention in order to bring the process to fruition.

Thats a kinda cool thought… his e-magazine for the month of August arrived yesterday and there it was.  Another way to define the obvious.

This is maddening….I had finished this piece, made the conclusion, signed off and everything… Then someone rang on the phone, and instead of saving the work I went straight to previewing the page, which does not save the new material…. oh….my …the most delicately written truths are gone……………………………… Alright.

I don’t have instant recall. My parting lines before the delete button was pressed were something of the effect that I found this moment, these revelations, a bit comical, a bit sad and a bit strange to think that after lessening the chains that bind I should wake up and bleed. Perhaps it’s gift of sorts from my father who took some innocence from me and  with my mother’s agreement urged me never to marry, never to trust, never to bear children. To always keep my career first and foremost in mind.

This is blood is perhaps nod to my fertility untapped, my guarded womanhood, the strength and conviction of my spirit that could not be moulded by another, lest of all my parents.

Released, finally, from self imposed obligations and ideas. Released.

To speak a sky blue truth. My truth.

Moving ever  firmly towards my True Self.

Without self-pity. Standing, not swaying.

Not collapsed under the weight of others expectation. Or my own expectations.

What my parent did unwittingly gave me was the courage to be alone in world.

To understand how to be alone and to hold the welfare of my life in my two hands.

I have not reached the dizzy heights they sought for me.

Nor the fame I dreamt for myself.

But I am firmly rooted to the Earth. And I am stronger than I ever thought I could be. For that I am grateful.

For that , I do love my family.

Though I am thousands of miles away from them, I’m sure this love is felt.

It  reverberate sand that is worth more than all the gold records and all the standing ovations that were ever thought to come  my way.

This moment is supreme.

I am done.

It is written. And with one more step, saved.

thank you for clicking on

take care

always eileen x

yes Iknow its been awhile…

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

It has been awhile since my last post. No excuse really but my own editor nagging every now and then , telling me to get back at it and while I’ve tried , I haven’t tried all that much. But now, suddenly I feel a jolt , a burst and dare I say a joy at returning to the old blog and rolling on with whats been happening here at Artist in Ireland.

Hords, I tell you.. Tons of stuff… But where o’ where to begin?

The first big thing of the summer for me was my collaboration with video/film maker Stephen Rennick. We chatted in May about the things that happening in our town of Drumshanbo and discovered that there wasn’t anything on the boards for the August Bank Holiday weekend, so we decided to make an event. We created The Written Word Weekend. It was decided that what we wanted to do was to have a opportunity for writers of any description to share their work, hopes and fears in an informal, comfortable atmosphere. We spoke to Mags Campbell who runs  Berry Tavern in town and asked her if her place could house some kind of an event with this description. Mags didn’t have a problem with that so we went about sources locals writers who fit certain criteria. We wanted published writers, unpublished writers, hobby writers, writers of all ages.  Stephen created a blog and set himself the task of creating videos and films on the topic. he did a bang up job of coming home with the good. Then we listened to what the people of Drumshanbo said when we spoke to them about our ideas. And we took their thoughts on board and went about for filling the wish list. One of the things that was mentioned was that we should get some writers that were born and raised in Drumshanbo and have gained literary success. Ita Daly was one name that kept coming up. So I contacted Ms Daly’s agent in London and asked that a letter be directed to her. Ita Daly responded so quickly and so enthusiastically , we nearly fell off our chair. It was especially touching for us that she should be so gracious because Ita’s husband, David Marcus, a well -known literary editor in Ireland who gave much of our established writers of today their first break by publishing their work in the Irish Independent in the ’70’s. Sadly Mr. Marcus passed away this year , so it was much to our amazement that Ita said she would be delighted to return to her home and give a reading. he also sought out Dermot Healy and ,as well as poet John F.Deane who has a family home in the area. Also we asked New York/Keshcarrigan writer Masha Mehran to read and we asked our own local writer Natalia Beylis. Natalia is a great asset to the county for a number of reason , one of which is that she and her husband Willie Stewart run the Stitchy Press Publishers and they sell the finest used books  at various farmer’s markets. Natalia also agreed to run a workshop on DIY publishing. A workshop that was filled to capacity and that we held in Paddy Mac’s old pub/chemist store.  I ran two workshops for children writers in the library which went done a treat, but we had to cancel the teenagers writing on the wall workshop because of weather.

( It really rained hard over that weekend. )

The first night was geared as an open mike. Not a lot of people showed up, which suited me fine because as the host of the event, that meant that I could read more of my stuff that planned. So it was fine. The second day, Saturday was the workshop day and they went over well and that evening we held a bit of a cabaret where we featured one of Stitchy Press’s  newest writers Boris Belony. Some of the member of  the Pig Executives travelled to the event to read and by and large the night went down well.  The next event was held on the Sunday night. First off we had a walking Tour of Drumshanbo with Eamon Daly and Noel McPartland. About 40 people turned out to walk through the town , sharing memories and stories and it was so well received we’ll be doing it again next year for sure. Then everyone marched into the Tavern where more people joined them and we had the published writer read with the afore mentioned published people .

Oh it was so good. everyone throughly enjoyed themselves. Myself and Annie Perry thought we’d make a few tasty sandwiches for the night and thinking that we’d have the some small crowd at the Sunday event, only made bites for thirty people. Ninety people were in Berry’s back room and well, I couldn’t very well hand out food to only a few, so I waited until the event finished and those who were still talking and sharing got themselves a nice little something to nibble on.

The final event was held on the Bank Holiday Monday and much to Stephen and mines surprise we had a terrific turn out for the Poetry and Prose Brunch, held in the front bar of Berry’s Tavern. Now the “Brunch” aspect of the event was a ploy to get people in- I used to run shows in Toronto where if you bought a ticket you’d get a beer and I thinking along the same line. but I didn’t think that..

A) people would actually come  out for the event in the first part- I mean, we held it at 2pm in the afternoon for goodness sake.. and

B) that someone would take us serious and be just a bit more than contrite when there was no food.

She fortunately settled on a glass of Guinness, which as everyone know, is a meal unto itself.

But imagine our surprise when 15 people arrived to read their work and more people arrived just to listen!!

At the end of the day, we created a well received weekend, marking the first of many Written Word Weekends to come.

Please click onto our blog to catch up with the goings on.

Written Word Weekend

Then what happened?

well word spread fast about our success and didn’t the program director of the Carrick-on-Shannon Arts Centre, The Dock give us a call asking us to produce an event for them. On Thursday October 1st, the country celebrates poetry with National Poetry Day ( Actually its not called National Poetry day, but something very close to that… I’ll have to look it up .. never mind)

Once again we got on the horn and set the task to create and interesting and inviting event. Once again, we contacted Dermot Healy and he agreed to conduct a poetry writing workshop form 3-6 on that day and then I rang around to some of the writers that graced our stages at the written word weekend. One of these such writers is a man named Michael Herron. He attended the Poetry and Prose Brunch. Now the funny thing about him is that he found the blog site of the Written Word Weekend all by himself and clicked onto our YouTube videos where Stephen employed the use of my songs as the sound track. Michael enjoyed the music and somehow ( still don’t know exactly how..) somehow, he got my phone number and gave me a call.

The day he called me I was working on the bog. I took a part time job over the summer picking up sods of peat  and stacking them onto 6 ft high banks. It was great, peaceful work. You’re all alone on the bog. Miles and miles of flat, lush, rich land. Soft on the feet and clear, clean air around you. I had my dog with me. She LOVED it. Anyway , there I was, up to my knees in thousand year old soil, heaving away at it when the phone rang and this ever so elegant English accent filtered through my ears. He said who he was  and that he looked at the videos and was impressed with the sounds and wanted to buy my CD.  I replied,

” You want to buy MY Cd?” Don’t know why I was shocked. In fairness its not a bad CD but I was.

Anyway the long and short of it was that Michael was earnest and I sent him the thing and he sent me the money. That was it. A few weeks later, I’m checking the local paper to see if our press release was printed and there above our piece was an article on the last “iYeats Poetry Winner” And who was it? One Michael Herron.

So having his email address, which we dutifully swapped, I invited Michael personally to read his work. And  he attended the weekend.  So when the Dock asked us to find more writers I thought of him, and joy, he agreed.

I’ve also invited one of the Pig Executives, our True Poet in the group- David Cameron. David is a poet down to his Scottish socks and darn it all,, he’s a beautiful poet at that.

Then fate did a star turn in our direction. Last week I got a call from Dermot Healy telling me that the just got off the phone with a produce from RTE who is going to do a documentary about him and a particular poem of his . Dermot said that the RTE crew was going to the Flatlake Festival to film his work ( more on that soon) and that  RTE also wanted to come to the Dock and film him while he taught the poetry workshop!

A few feather landed nicely in everybodies hats that day, I can tell you!

Thats David there at the Story-a-Thon at the Yeats Library during the Sligo Festival

this July.

david-close-up_1

Well thats good deal of info don’t you think?

How about some pictures?

Okay eileen

the-audience-in-the-yeats-buildingSome of the audience members at the Story-a-Thon

The writer/reader took the picture

(thats me)

aoife-hillman-scan-of-handwritten-poemAoife Hillman’s poem at the writing workshop for children under 8

written-word-weekend-banner-signThe writing is on the wall

and in this case, on the gable end of the library wall!

the-french-nursethe French nurse

bonhams-on-ted-moles-farm1

and now something completely different

THE IRISH TIMES !!!!!

We’re mentioned in the first paragraph of the Irish Times!!!

The Flatlake Literary and Arts Festival
Clones, Co Monaghan
The Flatlake Festival does its best to dodge stereotyping and prosaic attempts to lump it in with the ever-growing festival scene in Ireland. It is a madcap, wonderfully shambolic and creatively mixed affair. The event is more closely described as a large outdoor gathering of thoughts, torments and half-baked notions, many of them coming from the minds of the organisers. Cue Pat McCabe. Holed up for most of the weekend in a caravan under a sheet of canvas, the festival’s co-founder became “Captain Butty”, and hosted his own festival radio show at the Mondo Rancho Tent. The open back of a trailer allowed for impromptu performances of poetry, song and spoken word from many passers-by, including The Pig Executive from Leitrim, or the wonderfully entertaining Poetry Chicks, or whoever happened to have a few thoughts scribbled down.
McCabe also announced the day’s line-up every morning (all liable to run behind the scheduled time or change at a moment’s notice) and had special guests that ranged from Stephen Rea to his own relatives who would pop in for a chat. He played music ( Living Next Door to Alice , Spaghetti western soundtracks, and show band parodies) and divulged personal insights, such as: “Later on, of course, we have the big GAA debate, hosted by Tom McGuirk. I couldn’t kick snow off a rope myself, but there you go.”
As the rain introduced itself on Friday evening, Liz and the Relatives went down a stormer in the Butty Barn. Take the best of the McGarrigle Sisters and add a bunch of accomplished musicians and some finger-clicking blues, and, well, could there be a better setting than a straw-filled barn on a Friday night? At the open-air stage, Mik Artistik threw out boxes of straws (rhymes with “rounds of applause”, get it?), and sang about how Jimmy Savile had bought his album once and was going to fix it for him.
Some bands over the weekend had never actually played together before. The creative results were mixed, naturally, but even when it was really, really bad, it was good. Whether it was nervy singer songwriters struggling to play basic guitar chords, or technical glitches and unrehearsed additions to the programme, it didn’t matter really. The artistic participation in the festival was above all else, honest. And how many arts festival can you say that for anymore?
One of the largest gatherings of the weekend was on Saturday afternoon for a tribute to Harold Pinter, presented by Fintan McKeown and featuring Keith Allen and Dominic West from the US series, The Wire . All three read from articles, political statements, poems and excerpts from other works, with Allen a little too blokey for my liking and West emerging as a fine actor’s actor. Who would have known?
Actor Cillian Murphy had the front row swooning for his DJ set late on Saturday night. For the most part he stuck to foot-stomping faithfuls - Beck’s Loser , Nena’s 99 Red Balloons , Eurythmics’ Sweet Dreams , and plenty of funk, some soul and a little early 1990s rock. If he ever gives up acting, there are plenty of student bars up and down the country who would be delighted to have him on a slow Tuesday.
Of the more interesting film offerings were highlights from the Clones Film Festival Scanbitz Challenge, where competitors had to shoot and edit a film in 48 hours. The Ferret was suitably bizarre and not a bad return for only two day’s work.
During the afternoons, sports such as “toss the sheaf” or “catch the pig” went on, with clowns or performers also roaming the fairly small geographical area of the festival site, in front of the big house, Hilton Park.
The estate’s owner, Johnny Madden, mingled with the crowds over the weekend, and must have been touched to receive a personal dedication from Jinx Lennon, when performing the song, Gobshite on the Hill . Lennon drew a large crowd, but didn’t quite follow through on the expectation. Jack Lukeman delivered with a Paul Robeson tribute, rehearsed, he said, that afternoon in a Clones hotel, or perhaps he says that to all the festival audiences. BRIAN O’CONNELL


The Pig Executives

From Lovely Leitrim

Writers with oink

Mucky Pig

Kamikaze Pig

The Anti Pig

Prima Banbh

Whee, Whee, Whee All the Way Home

Suckling Pig

Snowball


just to name a few

Under the snout of

writer/poet

Mr Dermot Healy


Right so..


I’m going to leave this here for a


few reasons. One being that I can’t


seem to get rid of this type face and


its way over the top,


the second reason is that I’ve just


had a call from my blessed Irish


mother living in Canada and we


spoke for the last hour and I’m


bagged.


So fare thee well my own true love.

Good night Sweet heart.


Thanks for clicking in.


And we’ll continue this merry tale


another day soon


All the very best to you wherever


and whoever you are.


always

eileen

at-the-funny-farm-july_07At the funny farm

2007

photo by Jeri Reilly

(aka Pig Executive

…….Pearl)