Category: Musings/Poetry

  • The Dock & The Rescue

    _____

    _____

    When I was younger,
    nineteen or so
    and needed to be rescued
    I stopped by the liquor store?on Green Oaks
    and bought a small bottle of vodka.

    they never carded me.

    I’d continue down the curvy road
    down to the place where people parked their boats
    and I’d hide my car, and walk down to the dock.

    Like a buoy, the dock would raise up, raise down
    with each roll of the lake from the night to the shore
    and I’d walk to the end, where I’d lay flat on my back
    in the silence and with the stars
    letting the vodka warm me
    as I continued to bob up and down
    with the lake and the dock.

    I suppose I hoped that my rescuer would find me
    and hear?the quiet screaming of my heart:
    alone! afraid! lost!
    and he would simply sit next to me
    his hand on my knee or my arm or my face
    and with his presence I’d know that
    in the end, when I’d sober up and leave
    that everything would at least be a little bit okay.

    For a couple years I did this
    even when I moved two hours away
    I found my way to the dock several times
    waiting to be rescued
    and looking to the stars for hope.

    A decade past, there are still moments
    when I want to lay on my back on the dock
    a thousand miles away
    although now, I know my rescuer is
    and was and has always been
    Yet the stars still bring me hope
    and with them I’m reminded
    I am not alone, even in times
    when the loneliness is loud

    Because we all seek out the star
    that guides us to our rescue;
    captivating us with a holy
    gravitational force.

  • Holy, Restless Anticipation

    ___
    ___

    Holy, Restless Anticipation by Anne Jackson

    Stay right here a little while

    Stay right here my dear

    Hear me whisper to your heart

    And take away your fear

    For you soon will see

    An unlikely king

    And you soon will feel

    A flesh that will heal

    Oh, Divine, my Word on your lips

    Find refuge in a holy kiss

    Stay right here a little while

    Stay right here my dear

    Hear me whisper to your heart

    And take away your fear

  • Are You Listening?

    I’ve said it a million times myself.

    “I want to give a voice to the people that don’t have one.”

    But after going to India a few months ago, it began to occur to me that my philosophy is completely off track.

    Everyone has a voice. Even the people who are the most overlooked.

    They have beautiful voices.

    Broken voices.

    Voices pleading for help.

    Voices singing with hope.

    Even their silence says something…

    The phrase “I want to give a voice to the people that don’t have one” has to go.

    It’s dehumanizing.

    THEY have a voice.

    The problem is WE don’t listen.

  • Old Woman

    Sometimes I wonder what I?m going to be like as an old woman.

    When I was eighteen, I wondered what I would be like when I was thirty and my imagination then and the current reality are very far apart from each other.

    I think I would like to be the kind of old woman who wears chunky necklaces and has bright white hair and that could tell tales of when I was thirty and forty and people would lean in and be mesmerized by my whimsical stories and the way I uncover timeless truth.

    But then I wonder if I?ll just end up alone in my bed with hairy legs and maybe a slight mustache. And I’d be laying in a sea of cookie crumbs watching marathons of Law & Order (and all the while my cat is licking the back of my hand).

  • Accept the Anxiety

    Patient Trust

    Above all, trust in the slow work of God.
    We are quite naturally impatient in everything to reach the end without delay.
    We should like to skip the intermediate stages.
    We are impatient of being on the way to something unknown, something new.
    And yet it is the law of all progress that it is made by passing through some stages of instability?and that it may take a very long time.

    And so I think it is with you.
    Your ideas mature gradually?let them grow,
    Let them shape themselves, without undue haste.
    Don?t try to force them on, as though you could be today what time
    (that is to say, grace and circumstances acting on your own good will)
    will make of you tomorrow.

    Only God could say what this new spirit gradually forming within you will be.
    Give our Lord the benefit of believing that his hand is leading you,
    and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete.

    Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (via Ian Cron)

  • Transformation

    There are six billion people in the world.

    Give or take.

    Each with a purpose.

    A dream.

    A fear.

    A place.

    And I’m learning that there is an increasing need for love and hope and faith in each of these six billion people.

    And as someone once said…

    “I can’t change the world…but I can change the world in me.”

    In fact, by doing it the other way around, I’m actually quite hypocritical.

    Plain and simple.

    Serving the world while serving myself?

    Heal the broken while I hide my own brokenness?

    Impossible.

    Inconsistent.

    Action without personal transformation is empty.

    And transformation without action is impossible.

    ===

  • i wrote this just for you.

    it’s okay to slow down.

    don’t check your email tonight.

    leave your computer at work.

    turn the TV off and read a book.

    go for a walk.

    go for a drive.

    go for a beer.

    go with your friends.

    go with your wife.

    go with your husband.

    go with your kids.

    tell your wife she’s beautiful.

    tell your husband he’s all you need.

    tell your kids they make you proud.

    step away from the addiction.

    whatever it is.

    even if it’s just for a night.

    and look up into the stars.

    into the clouds.

    into the sky.

    into the eyes.

    of someone you love.

    and love.

  • temptation and confession

    sometimes

    i just want to turn the comments off.

    i wonder if

    this space becomes a boxing ring

    instead of a place where truth and love

    (and truth in love)

    is spoken.

    where grace is demonstrated.

    i love a healthy discussion,

    but the unhealthy ones

    break

    my

    heart.

    and i just want to hit

    [delete]

    but backspacing isn’t always enough.

  • the starry clay pot

    the knock on the classroom door took nobody by surprise. in between defining the X and the Y axis, ms. gibson strolled over to let the visitor in. it was shirley, the school’s office assistant. at least, it looked like shirley. curly ribbons covered her arms like thin, plastic bracelets and balloons floated up and down, hiding her face. but it was shirley alright. her blue-gray hair peeked out just enough to identify her.

    after she handed ms. gibson the balloons, she closed the large metal door as quietly as one could. even with her extra effort, the slam echoed down the empty hall, vibrating off lockers and the shiny tile floor.

    ms. gibson looked down at the card sticking out of the vase where the balloons and a few flowers had been planted.

    “it’s for you, jannelle. for your birthday. from your dad.”

    blushing, yet secretly proud, jannelle walked to the front of the class to retrieve her gift. she didn’t like knowing every kid in her fourth grade class was watching her, but she couldn’t help but feel the swelling in her heart, knowing her dad remembered her birthday. he may not have been around much, but this yearly tradition always was a perfect reminder that she was loved.

    while the rest of the class continued on to geometry, jannelle stared at the vase. it was short…more like a pot, really, than a vase. there were glittery moons and stars painted on the dark, midnight blue ceramic. it was just like the sky she would look out at every night from her front yard.

    eventually, the balloons deflated and the flowers died a few days later, but jannelle held on to that pot like it was her most valued possession. she placed it prominently on her dresser back in her bedroom, using it as a container for jewelry or candles or other knick knacks that she picked up along the way.

    and then jannelle grew up like most fourth graders do. she found her own two feet and started out on her own. the starry clay pot went along the journey with her.

    from her first apartment to her first condo, through various rooomates and even different cities, the starry clay pot was like a quiet whisper of affirmation from her past. she got married, and as she unpacked her belongings in her new home, she carefully unwrapped the pot and placed it on the ledge above her kitchen sink.

    she took a step back and stared at it. twenty years later, it was still in perfect shape. yet her heart grieved, knowing her relationship with her father and her family hadn’t traveled as well as this clay pot had. in fact, they hadn’t spoken to each other in quite some time.

    one quiet, sunday afternoon, jannelle walked through the front door. casually, her husband said,

    “you know that blue pot with the stars on it? i hope that wasn’t very important or anything.”

    she could barely catch her breath.

    “why?”

    “it got bumped off the ledge. it shattered.”

    the grief she felt earlier traveled from her heart into her stomach and then back in her throat again. there was a sad irony about the pot breaking. maybe it was time. time to embrace the fact that life and love looked different now than they did in the fourth grade. that family doesn’t always mean flesh and blood, but those who surround you and care about you and support you during all the seasons of your life.

    no doubt there was something sentimental about a starry clay pot. and even though what’s left is now thrown out with empty cereal boxes and soda cans, jannelle can take a deep breath and let go. because she knows that outside, a real midnight blue sky with swirls of stars and a sparkly moon are waiting for her. and under that moon and those stars are people that love her.