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#Pat Schneider
forbescaroline · 6 months
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235 FAVORITE SHIPS OF ALL TIME (ranked by my followers) 124. penelope alvarez and pat schneider - one day at a time
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gloriapritchetts · 1 year
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No, ma’am.
ONE DAY AT A TIME Season 1, Episode 13
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dk-thrive · 1 month
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And what is more generous than a window?
It is a kind of love, is it not? How the cup holds the tea, How the chair stands sturdy and foursquare, How the floor receives the bottoms of shoes Or toes. How soles of feet know Where they're supposed to be. I've been thinking about the patience Of ordinary things, how clothes Wait respectfully in closets And soap dries quietly in the dish, And towels drink the wet From the skin of the back. And the lovely repetition of stairs. And what is more generous than a window?
— Pat Schneider, The Patience of Ordinary Things (via Regina Rosenfeld)
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ma-pi-ma · 4 months
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Lasciati guidare dalla tua gioia.
Pat Schneider
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i feel like we don’t talk enough abt the fact that one day at a time is the only tv show (that i know of) that featured characters with neopronouns. and everything was cool. in 2018
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the-feral-gremlin · 8 months
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Hi where can I get a group of people in real life and not a thousand miles away who will respect my pronouns regardless of what I wear, how long my hair is, etc like the Alvarez’s (including Schneider, obviously) did for Syd?
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rachelspoetrycorner · 2 months
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The Patience of Ordinary Things (2005) by Pat Schneider
In Episode 293, Rachel shares a patient and spectacularly ordinary poem!
Rachel: [...] And I think she really became aware of the challenges of... What she called “traditionally silenced populations.” So she founded Amhurst Artists and Writers, which was a non-profit that focused on low-income women and children. Sponsoring writers workshops and retreats. Because I think, and I read an interview with her where she talked about the fact that just even putting content on a page is a barrier in itself.
Rachel mentions that this poem reminds her of a previous rec she'd brought to the Corner, and that is Naomi Shihab Nye's Famous. Both the similarities and the differences between them are fascinating; this idea of an assigned purpose that objects/things are destined to follow, and they do (they commit to the bit)!
If you’d like to hear more, you can do so here: Towels Drink the Wet from the Skin of the Back, from 3:30 - 11:48
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dysphoresque · 1 year
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Pat Schneider, The Patience of Ordinary Things
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Instructions for the Journey  :: Pat Schneider
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la-scigghiu · 4 months
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È’ una specie d’amore vero? Come la tazza contiene il tè, Come la sedia si regge gagliarda sulle quattro gambe Come il pavimento riceve la suola delle scarpe. O le dita dei piedi. Come la pianta dei piedi conosce dove si trova. Stavo pensando alla pazienza delle cose comuni, come i vestiti che aspettano rispettosamente negli armadi. E il sapone che si scioglie quietamente sui piattini, E gli asciugamani che assorbono l’umidità dalla pelle della schiena. E l’amorevole ripetizione delle stelle. E cosa, infine, è più generoso di una finestra?
.🦋.
🔸Pat Schneider
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elizabethanism · 2 years
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more-than-ideas · 1 year
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the patience of ordinary things
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dk-thrive · 4 months
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It is a kind of love, is it not? How the cup holds the tea, How the chair stands sturdy and foursquare, How the floor receives the bottoms of shoes Or toes. How soles of feet know Where they’re supposed to be. I’ve been thinking about the patience Of ordinary things, how clothes Wait respectfully in closets And soap dries quietly in the dish, And towels drink the wet From the skin of the back. And the lovely repetition of stairs. And what is more generous than a window?
—Pat Schneider, “The Patience of Ordinary Things,” Another River: New and Selected Poems. © Amherst Writers and Artists Press, 2005. (via Vale of Soul Making)
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ma-pi-ma · 4 months
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È una specie di amore, no?
Come la tazza contiene il tè,
come la sedia sta solida e salda sulle gambe,
come il terreno riceve la suola delle scarpe
o le dita dei piedi. Come le piante dei piedi sanno
dove dovrebbero essere.
Ho pensato alla pazienza
delle cose comuni, come i vestiti
attendono rispettosamente negli armadi
e il sapone si asciuga discretamente sul piattino,
e gli asciugamani assorbono l'umidità
della pelle della schiena.
E l’adorabile ripetizione delle scale.
E cosa c'è di più generoso di una finestra?
Pat Schneider, La pazienza delle cose comuni, da La pazienza delle cose ordinarie, 2003
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kingworm · 7 months
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The Patience of Ordinary Things - Pat Schneider (2005)
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dreamlogic · 2 years
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The self you leave behind is only a skin you have outgrown. Don’t grieve for it. Look to the wet, raw, unfinished self, the one you are becoming. The world, too, sheds its skin: politicians, cataclysms, ordinary days. It’s easy to lose this tenderly unfolding moment. Look for it as if it were the first green blade after a long winter. Listen for it as if it were the first clear tone in a place where dawn is heralded by bells. And if all that fails, wash your own dishes. Rinse them. Stand in your kitchen at your sink. Let cold water run between your fingers. Feel it.
“Instructions for the Journey” by Pat Schneider
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