Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Editor's Corner

 

 

 

By Mary E. Adair 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Winter’s done, and April’s in the skies.
  Earth, look up with laughter in your eyes!”
 — Charles G.D. Roberts
 
Greeting April and the idea of consistently warmer weather, hopefully with more gentle winds, is a pleasant prospect. We know that it is possible that weather will be vastly more capricious. It has even been labeled by some as the year's cruelest month. We shall stay aware, but hope for the best.
 
Many of our poets do that: the "hope for the best" but others brace themselves for adventure whatever betide. For instance, although once forced to flee from a burgeoning flood by the same named body of water, author Marilyn Carnell penned "Ode to Big Sugar." That creek and Little Sugar creek both feed into Elk River at Pineville, MO, MacDonald County, furthest Southwestern county in the state where I was born but didn't grow up there, while Marilyn who wasn't born there did grow up there, and eventually was the Mayor awhile. Her other poem this month is a tribute composed for her husband at his death, "Abe Lines."
 
Our poet Walt Perryman, grew up in Ward County, TX, attending the Grandfalls School which I did also during WWII, living with my paternal grandparents while my  parents worked in the Vancouver, WA Shipyards. His two poems for April are "Cell Phone Addiction" and "Do Not Stay Mad."
 
Bud Lemire's poems are "Elsa The Blizzard" and ""Through Every Season." Two encore poems from our most prolific poet John I. Blair, still recuperating from heart surgery, are "Ival is My Name" and "Garfield University." Bruce Clifford sent "In My Heart." 
 
"War" was written by one of my Grandsons Joshua Adair Wadford while stationed at Ft Bliss, El Paso, TX. "Check On Me" and "No Rhyme Nor Reason" were written by yours truly. 
 

The article is by the renown Psychic Healer, and spiritual teacher Christopher Reburn. The title "The Mysterious Cycle of Life: Exploring the Concept of Reincarnation" certainly intrigued your editor.  You, whether a believer or a newbie, can learn more on the subject.

Judith Kroll whose column "On Trek" is long standing, describes her reaction to facing the world outside her window.  Marilyn Carnell tells about her many Uncles in "Sifoddling Along." The column "Introspective" by Thomas F. O'Neill in his professor mode, disseminating info but not taking a stance, discusses how Buddism is viewed in different locales.

Melinda Cohenour currently does two columns, taking the helm for the cooking column which her late husband authored, and continuing her acclaimed "Armchair Genealogy." Her expertise in clarifying the intricate DNA capabilities used for instance in police work. has led to other fields. For April she shows how family tales and detailed histories can be shown in your family trees.  April's recipe in "Cooking with Rod's Family" is titled "Ms Fresh, Fruity and Filling Pasta Salad."

Pauline Evanosky, long time chat friend, does the column "Woo Woo" for us but has many publishings in several other sites including her own "Talking with Spirit." So, we can benefit from advice on many subjects, written with her psychic flare and disclosures.

"Irish Eyes" by our Dublin, Ireland author Mattie Lennon always alerts his readers to new volumes or plays by Irish authors and actors, singers, and/or other professions. A beginning into discussing Thaddeus  O Buachalla's "EL" an Irish language winning book, with quotes (in English) from the book.

We as an internet magazine and Blog  would not exist but for the expertise and driving force of Michael Craner, our co-founder and webmaster. Happy to have some words from him at his place here: Mike's Desk. Recent deployments awakened his memories. We honor his military service. We rely on his webworking expertise. Thank you Mike for all that you do.

The next issue is planned for June 1st, the May/Jun issue will be the fourth of this 29th year of  pencilstubs publication online. Watch for us!  


Click on the author's byline for bio and list of other works published by Pencil Stubs Online.
This issue appears in the blog www.pencilstubs.net with the capability of adding comments at the latter.


Mike's Desk


 



By Michael L. Craner 

 

Mike Craner, March 12, 2026

 
I'd be a liar if I said I don't miss the deployments, the comradarie of all the guys that I trusted my life to, and who trusted me.


I served side by side with Army, Airforce, Navy, and Marines.  Green Berets, Rangers, and these other guys  who never said who they were. But I have a pretty good idea.

 I've flown on "Air America" Airlines.

 Even after I got out of the Army, I went places and supported our nation.

 Our leaders don't always make the best choices, and I have issues with that, but I've always supported my brothers and sisters in arms.

I'm proud to be an American and a Veteran.  I regret nothing.

* * * * * * *

 March 27
As a young man, pre-teen or teen, I visited Arlington.  It was a powerful moment. And I cried, understanding the significance an honor that laid before me.

 As a veteran, I know I have a place there, but I just did my job. Nothing special like the men and women laid there.  I'm not fit to be laid to rest with them.

 If you've never been, go.  Go and know our heros and veterans also lie all over this country as well as other countries.  Many did not come home.

 But when you see Arlington....it will change your life.


Click on the author's byline for bio and list of other works published by Pencil Stubs Online.
This issue appears in the ezine in the blog www.pencilstubs.net at Google Blogger with the capability of adding comments at the latter.


Cooking with Rod's Family


 

By Melinda Cohenour





This weather is just too unpredictable!!! It's not even Easter yet but we're seeing triple digit temps! I was scrolling through my recipes for something really enticing that would not heat the house preparing but would satisfy taste and hunger ... VOILA! My recipe for this really good pasta salad. Can't go wrong, as I explained when first published last Fall. 

 ENJOY!! I'm sure you will.

 

Old Intro:

Summer is just about over. Leaves may have already turned in your area. A crispness is felt in the air, and your day may be cooled by a sprinkling rain or mist.

Time to fire up the grill one last time or maybe it is even cool enough to heat up the oven for some type roast - pork, beef or even chicken. 

This pasta salad provides just the right balance of flavor for any of those choices - barbecue, grilled meats, oven prepared roasts, a quick sandwich utilizing cold slices of yesterday's roast perhaps. My family has even opted to grab a glass of iced tea or lemonade and enjoy the salad on its own. Goes great with toasted crisp bread or crunchy crackers. 

Think you will find this pasta salad refreshing, tasty and satisfying. 

Bon appetit ~!

  Ms Fresh, Fruity and Filling Pasta Salad

 Ingredients:

* 32 oz. Box Elbow macaroni 
* 1 or 2 Granny Smith apples
* 1 or 2 14.5 oz cans pineapple tidbits, drained (reserve juice)
* 1-2 carrots (if possible select skinny ones)
* 1 medium green bell pepper 
* 1 medium red, orange or yellow bell pepper (consider a bag of the colorful mini bell peppers to furnish the color variety needed)
* 3-4 large sweet red radishes (optional)
* 1 small can sliced water chestnuts 
* 1 small sweet white onion (like Vidalia)
* 2 cups freshly grated mild cheddar cheese
* 1/2 cup Miracle Whip (or to taste)
* Ground black pepper to taste

 
Instructions:

1. Cook macaroni according to package directions. Do NOT cook to soft stage, just past al dente is perfect. 

2. Prep veggies:
Rinse bell peppers, remove stem, internal white ribs and seeds. Dice to match pineapple tidbits size. Set aside in small bowls.

Rinse and scrape carrots, removing root tip and stem end. Using slicer/dicer equipment, food processor, or peeling tool slice THIN dimes. Set aside.

Rinse and trim stem end and tips from radishes. Only use crisp, fresh vegetables, discarding any that are mealy when cut. Pare into thin slices. Set aside.

Rinse onion, cut in half and remove paper shell and tough outer layer. Dice fine, about 1/2" each. Set aside.

3.  Prep fruit:

Drain pineapple well, reserving juice. Set both aside.

Rinse apples, removing stems and seeds. Leave peel on. Cut thin slices then cube. Drop into reserved pineapple juice until ready to use. (This serves two purposes, prevents browning and leaves slightly sweet taste. You will drain before adding to salad.)

Drain water chestnuts, rinse and set aside.

4. Prepare salad:  

Add carrots, peppers, radishes, onions and gently stir. 

Add water chestnuts, pineapple and drained apple.

Add grated cheese at the very end to prevent it absorbing moisture. If chilling your salad for more than an hour, consider adding the cheese just before serving. Fold in carefully. Try not to break up pasta.

5. Prepare dressing:

In small bowl add Miracle Whip. Judge amount needed to LIGHTLY dress pasta salad. Add a teaspoon of pineapple juice and whisk. Add black pepper. Whisk and taste. Adjust quantities of those three ingredients until satisfied with taste 

Add to pasta salad. Toss to dress all the salad. Make more dressing to suit your taste.

Cover and chill in refrigerator to let flavors blend. One hour at minimum but don't let it sit long enough for the pasta to lose its firmness or the cheese to become moist (see note above about adding cheese just before serving.)

This Fresh, Fruity and Filling Pasta Salad is a perfect side for any barbecued or grilled meat, savory pork chops, pork loin, or roast. It also enhances fried or baked chicken. It can be served alongside any type sandwich as well. Try it with beef roasts, too. A perfect counterpoint in flavor is coleslaw or a cabbage and beet dish.  

 


Click on the author's byline for bio and list of other works published by Pencil Stubs Online.
This issue appears in the blog www.pencilstubs.net with the capability of adding comments at the latter.


Irish Eyes



 



By Mattie Lennon


EL



“But what is the opposite of fidelity?' asked Professor Playfair. He was approaching the end of his dialytic; now he needed only to draw it to a close with a punch. 'Betrayal. Translation means doing violence upon the original, it means warping and distorting it for foreign, unintended eyes. So, where does that leave us? How can we conclude except by acknowledging that an act of translation is always an act of betrayal?” (R.F.King, Babel.) 

Some of you may agree with that or even with some of that, but that will change after you have read EL, By Thaddeus O Buachalla who  wrote EL ,in the Irish language in 2022. It was awarded Irish Language Novel of the Year at the An Post Irish Book Awards AND  won an Oireachteas Literary Award. The author is an Irish language author, poet, and musician from Cork City who has toured with his show Immram an Phréacháin, a long epic poem depicting a journey through Cork City at night. He has now translated EL into English and in doing so has captured all the nuances, gloss, blás and innuendo found in the original written in our own native language.  O Buachalla says, “While actually translating the novel myself may have had its own benefits, I cannot say that I found the process to be entirely an easy one. No two languages operate in the same way, and simple technical differences can have huge effects on the style of the language. Translating your own work has its own set of challenges in that you will be more precious about a text on which you’ve already expended so much care and devotion.”   Perhaps the challenges that he refers to are partially the reason for the perfection in this work. All aspects of the original are preserved and yet the English version stands very much on its own. 

 This work is the story of an academic, Sean,  from Cork (Where else)  Who makes a discovery of microscopic humanoid beings living inside flies,  The story is set in a modern day Cork City and the narrator leaves no stone unturned to show how the  urban densely populated area is today and how the everyday scene can be transformed by a fertile imagination.  It is a work of fiction today but like ski-fi works of the past, who is to say that it won’t be fact in some distant or not so distant tomorrow.     Where did the idea come from? Better ask the author, “I was sitting at a kitchen table one evening in Cork City and noticed a couple of flies making misshapen patterns around the overhead lightbulb. Zipping around each other, or occasionally engaging in what seemed like a dogfight, I imagined them not to be little insects at all but rather tiny flying machines piloted by microscopic people within. “

   I always wondered what Political Science was all about but Kate a fictitious character who is studying that subject provides some information for me and other readers like me, if such exist,

“Choose systems that are controversial and will incite the public “
she says,  "but rather to the person with their most righteous-sounding voice. Tell them that not only what you’re doing is righteous but it’s the most righteous thing in the history of the world. Always remember that your audience was raised looking at epic films and has an enormous desire to be in the midst of a great historical event.”     And Kate has given another bit of advice which has already been taken on board by many of our politicians, “Accuse your opposition of the things that you yourself are guilty of , so that when they rebuke you for it, it will appear that they’re just copying you and don’t have proper arguments of their own. If they put ‘facts’ before you, it doesn't matter. Let the public believe that these facts were created   only to have an undue influence over them.” O Buachalla has succeeded in seamlessly joining the experiences of Sean  at the back-lanes of Cork  in this modern age of smartphones and Laptops  and such 21st century gadgets with those of Jan Swammerdan in Leiden in the Netherlands on 03rd of September 1663. 

And the gap between Galilio and Brexit is neatly filled with a mixture of historical fact and fiction. But is the fiction really fiction or simply a premature fact?

The work is written in three “acts”, each with several scenes.  And that is right and proper because EL is nothing short of a classic drama. In the 12th and final scene of act Three, Sean gives the reader  plenty of food for thought, food that takes some digesting. But. . . he comes back in the epilogue to bring us up to date on what happened to each and every character after he and they left us at the final curtain.

IL is published by Mercier Press.  www.mercierpress.ie

Happy reading and remember who told you about EL.

 And speaking of great literature, Ireland’s, if not Europe’s greatest literary festival will open for the 55th year on May 27th. Here’s the Link:

https://writersweek.ie/about/ and I’ll have an update from the Culture capital of Ireland next issue .

See you in May/Jun issue.

 


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This issue appears in the blog www.pencilstubs.net with the capability of adding comments at the latter.


Woo Woo

By Pauline Evanosky 

 

                       Overcoming Distressful Situations

 

I have lived with distress before. Sometimes it is of short duration, but more often it is some situation that can last for years.

 I have a friend who is now in a situation, not of her own making, but in her work. People just are not behaving fairly. In some cases, they are acting in an almost criminal manner. She feels helpless and takes so much of it to heart. She is sad. She is in despair, and yet, she can’t do anything about it.

 I can relate, because I worked in a similar job for many years. And I was just as miserable as she is now. 
It took me many years to learn an important lesson. I was not responsible for other people’s conduct. I was only responsible for myself. However, at some point, it became too much for me, and I retired.

 I also have to admit that although I say I learned the lesson, that doesn’t mean it still doesn’t pop up again once in a while. Sort of like a quiz.

It’s easy enough to say to just ignore what others do. In my case, I grew up as an Army Brat, and the solution for anything that was distasteful was to just suck it up, and eventually you or whoever was pestering you would move on.  

 But I am telling you it makes life so much easier when you can take a deep breath and just move forward, attending to your own business. Getting people in trouble because of their malfeasance really doesn’t do anything but make you an enemy. 

 Try to remember that they are answerable to God or Karma in the long run. Just live your life as you see fit, watch out for your own behavior, and allow the world to move on.

 In my case, as I aged, I began to think of what I really wanted to do. I knew that I wanted to write. I didn’t know what I wanted to write about. I didn’t feel I was very good at it. I just knew, as the sun rises every day, that I wanted to be a writer. I also knew that to be a writer, I needed to be a reader. What to read? Anything and everything.

 I began with a journal. It was personal stuff that never saw the light of day as far as being publishable material. It was a healing and a growing of Pauline. I knew it was what I needed to do. This, all while I was working under stressful conditions. Somehow, I had figured out that I could not solve anything. I could only do my best, make suggestions that might or might not be accepted. I could only try. 

 If you find yourself in a similar situation, push yourself to move away from the situation. Take some classes. Learn a new skill. Volunteer your time somewhere that might, eventually, lead to employment somewhere else. But, most importantly, it is to remove yourself from other people’s problems. Because if you don’t, your involvement in other people’s problems will follow you wherever you go.

 Another thing to do is to start networking. Decide where you want to go, and the journey will almost unfold like magic. Hunt up people you knew in the past and say hello. Eventually, you can go to them and say, “Hey, I’m looking for work. Have you heard of any job openings?” Print up some business cards for yourself. I do my own ten at a time on a piece of cardstock on my printer. I change the design as I like. In fact, I’ve got two versions in my wallet now. Those cards are for people I meet on the street, and the other cards are for people who might be interested in either lessons on becoming psychic or a psychic reading.

 I’m not sure how to describe this other than that a disagreeable person will be a disagreeable person no matter where they go. They will be a pain to family members, to neighbors, and to people in the workplace. Is it their fault? Never. They are disagreeable all on their own. But they don’t see it that way. They see themselves as living upright lives, no matter what they do. You can’t change them. My advice is to distance yourself from them. Is this going to be easy? Never. Especially if they happen to be a family member. 

Here is a for instance. You can never, not in a million years, make an alcoholic stop drinking. That alcoholic will have to stop drinking on their own. I know family members who have supported their loved ones' bad and reckless behavior for years. I was there, too. My husband and I are both alcoholics. I know what I am talking about.

 Here is something else to consider. Not everybody fights fair. There are lots of people out there who will knife someone in the back, figuratively speaking, to gain an advantage. There is the old standby of gossip and whispering that is effective no matter how old you get.

 Perhaps, my idea would be to always have a Plan of sorts. Take a few minutes and think to yourself if there was anything else in the world you’d rather be doing, name it now. I don’t care how outlandish your answer is; it is your answer that is important. 

You can’t run from your problems, and running from a job with people in it who are unpleasant to work with is only going to almost guarantee that your next job will be the same. What to learn is how not to let those unpleasant people bother you. Pretend you are a duck, and rain flows off your back easily. Ducks don’t mind. The rain will always be there. Be like a duck. 

 I have always recommended that people keep their resumes updated. You never know when you are going to need one.

Best of luck to anybody out there living with a bad situation. Just remember, they won’t change. You can’t make them change. You can only change yourself.

 Thanks for reading. 
Pauline Evanosky from the WooWoo Side of Life

 


Click on the author's byline for bio and list of other works published by Pencil Stubs Online.
This issue appears in the ezine in the blog www.pencilstubs.net at Google Blogger with the capability of adding comments at the latter.