Wednesday, April 1, 2026

The Luniferous Gazette #42: Creasing Paper Wishes into Catalogs

 And Bookmarking in the Age of Digital Glow 

  *Mock page of a catalog offering 
(Made with a 100% thrifted butterfly brooch, 1 sprig of broken hair clip, and a glass locket)

Recently, I realized that I don’t chase after wishes in the same way anymore. My coveting has grown rather dull and routine in practice! If there is something I desire, I simply bookmark the object on my phone, adding yet another tab in the bloated halls of my invisible data shrine. 

Maybe I peruse the reviews of others to see if they agree with the polished advertisement’s promises, and scan review photos for a discovery of flaws that might dissuade me from purchasing the item in question. And after much digital dithering around and price checking, perhaps I finally purchase said item. 

That cyber bookmark is promptly deleted as if it never existed beyond a passing breeze in my mind . . . . 

But when I was growing up, I didn’t have a fancy techno-tile in my pocket that could feed me endless images finetuned to my algorithm profile. I had a wooden magazine rack in the living room that was overflowing with catalogs! I don’t remember all their names anymore, but one stands out for its wonderful whimsy—dear Hearthsong. I eagerly looked forward to each issue as a child, for its pages were always bursting with creative toys, arts and crafts. 

I remember saving up my allowance to buy semi-precious stone marbles, and feeling absolutely thrilled when they arrived in a plastic vial lined up like a perfect row of jewels.  

 (*A handful of my most prized catalog marbles)
 
I didn’t have access to online reviews back then. So I simply hoped, I dared to believe without doubt that every object in a catalog was as truly fabulous as showcased in those glossy pages! My mother would crease page corners to tab items of interest, and mark x’s next to her very favorites. So would I, but after too many crinkles from my grubby kid fingers, the pages would eventually become crumpled after a while. For unlike the pristine nothingness of a digital bookmark, these pages betrayed the physical mark of my wishful anticipation. 

The vast majority of these x’s remained unfulfilled wishes, but oh, I enjoyed the sparklestars out of all those catalogs! I’d cut them up and save my favorite items in journals. Sometimes, I’d make my little sisters flimsy “surprise” purses with construction paper, staples, and glue, and stuff them with two-dimensional riches ripped straight from the pages of our most treasured catalogs, like princess tiaras from The Oriental Trading Company. As I got older, I’d save velvet cloak cutouts from catalogs like The Pyramid Collection and tape them into my fantasy notebooks under character wardrobe notes. 

There was still so much tangible fun to be harvested from those pages, even without purchasing one single thing! I don’t get many physical catalogs anymore, but I’ll never forget the powerful glow they cast over my imagination as a child.   

Do you have a paper wish that lingers in your memory, too? 
 
~*~ 
 
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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

The Luniferous Gazette #41: If I had a thousand feathers

The Tug Between Baggage Claim and Letting Go 

~*~

“Wherever you go,
The rigid lie low
While the weightless in the sky,
And all that is gentle
Fly boundlessly high.”

—Tao Te Ching 
(A New Translation and Commentary 
by Ralph Alan Dale)

I shan’t preen like a feral mermaid over her shiny shipwreck hoard, but I will confess that I’ve amassed an excessive impressive assortment of stuff over the course of many years. Secondhand knicknackeries, dust bunny trinkets, crates of Christmas ornaments my father gathered for decades, and three prized bookshelves, two of which are filled mostly with my mother’s carefully curated collection. 

I was in my early twenties when she passed away suddenly, and my later thirties when my already ailing father died a month after catching COVID-19. It’s a privilege to be able to pass on anything to others, but at the time, I didn’t know how to handle sorting out my parents’ entire lives into neat little boxes.  My younger sisters and I found ourselves drowning in way too many belongings for us to possibly keep them all. 

I won’t pretend that I haven’t come to deeply regret some of the things I gave away, and I don’t think my little sister M will ever forgive me for accidentally donating my mother’s entire Dick Francis (mostly hardback) collection of horse mysteries! But the older I get, the more I am wearied by carrying so much with me through life, and I feel the urge to sort through everything I kept in my haste to lose nothing important—

And let go of what I no longer wish to carry with me for the rest of my days. 

So, I’ve decided to go through all my books to rediscover old favorites and make room for new! That’s how I stumbled upon this splendiferous translation of the Tao Te Ching by Ralph Alan Dale. 

*Enjoy a rare glimpse of an investigatory Purrito 

Last week, I was randomly flipping through it when I came across the final lines of Verse 76, and I couldn’t stop returning to them again and again as I rolled the words over in my mind:

“Wherever you go,


*   

The rigid lie low


*

 While the weightless in the sky,

*

 *

And all that is gentle

*

*

Fly boundlessly high.”

*

Not all the baggage we carry in life is visible to others, but it weighs us down, nonethelesscrushing us from the inside out. Sometimes, we fill it ourselves and drag it behind us. Other times, it’s handed to us whether we wanted it or not. Life parcels out both pleasure and pain in unequal bursts. 

Yet I still want to believe that even our heart’s most heavy wishing tears may eventually evaporate, finding their way to such a boundless and gentle sky as painted by the Tao Te Ching.  

 


Archilochus colubris

by S.E. Page 

The Ruby Hummingbird
has less than
a thousand feathers,
and a heart full of sky.
The secret is,
She knows it.
All her thoughts
are air-bent,
a bliss of wings
and wandering—
I would learn
her iridescence. 

*Feather Dreams of Sky
Herkimer, New York. September 2025. 

 

P.S. Wait! You didn’t think I forgot my March Artweaver Practice Pony, did you? Okay, I almost did. I whipped this mossy beauty up while stuck at the car dealership today. I shall call her Esmerelda.  

 


Source:

Dale, Ralph Alan, Translator. Photographs by John Cleare. Tao Te Ching: A New Translation and Commentary by Ralph Alan Dale. Barnes and Noble Books, New York. Arranged by Watkins Publishing. 2002. P. 153.

~*~ 

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The Luniferous Gazette #42: Creasing Paper Wishes into Catalogs

 And Bookmarking in the Age of Digital Glow     *Mock page of a catalog offering  (Made with a 100% thrifted butterfly brooch, 1 sprig of br...