We call ourselves so many names:
I am sorry…tired…hungry…hired
I am late…glad…irate…bad
I am fearful…sad…joyful…mad
I am pretty…fearless…weepy…friendless
God says
“I am Who I am”
And calls us beloved.
We call ourselves so many names:
I am sorry…tired…hungry…hired
I am late…glad…irate…bad
I am fearful…sad…joyful…mad
I am pretty…fearless…weepy…friendless
God says
“I am Who I am”
And calls us beloved.
I remember that old saying,
“If you love someone, let them go. If they come back to you, they are truly yours.”
Or maybe the ending was, “…if they don’t come back to you, they were never truly yours.”
Does that apply, I wonder, to faith?
I have let my faith go so many times.
Always it returns.
Will it always?
Perhaps my hope lies in changing the subject (of the sentence).
Not it always returns.
But God always returns it.
Faith is the object of God’s sentence.
God the eternal, the unchangeable, the divine lover,
will always return my faith to me.
[My last prompt from Two Sylvias Press – written with a little help from my friends.🙂 Happy New Year, everyone. I hope you will join me in helping, each in our own small way.]
Imagine
I make my bed
Every day
Imagine
Everyone makes their bed
Every day
(Of course, everyone would need a bed)
Imagine
I eat a good breakfast
Every day
Imagine
Everyone eats a good breakfast
Every day
(Everyone would need enough food)
Imagine
I do what I love
Every day
Imagine
Everyone does what they love
Every day
(Everyone would need opportunity)
Imagine
I have contentment
Every day
Imagine
Everyone has contentment
Every day
(Everyone would need peace)
Just imagining
That isn’t hard to do
Every day
Helping
To make it true
Every day
For everyone
Now, there’s a resolution!
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace
You, you may say I’m a dreamer
But I’m not the only one
I hope someday you will join us
And the world will be as one
[The prompt a few days ago suggested writing a poem and then reversing the order of the lines. This is what I wrote. Try reading it backwards for a bit of fun.]
Advent calendar village with all doors and windows open
Reblooming Christmas cactus in the middle of the advent wreath
Candles gone, tucked away, burned just slightly lower
Angels on the mantel, more above the mantel
Unmoved by the nativity still life below
Gift bags, box of chocolate truffles, new work gloves
A book or two, no electronics
Under the nativity table
No tree in sight
Several somewhat wilting poinsettias
Poinsettias really are not poisonous
Just early victims of disinformation
If I hear that saccharine sappy ad for donations to some animal charity
One more time, I swear
As I lay on the sofa surrounded by old Christmas
AAARRRHHHGGGG I shall go mad
I might smash mom’s TV
I will spare the neighbors at least
Every decoration so carefully placed a few weeks ago
So enjoyed through celebrations and quiet times
Now somewhat hackneyed, overdone, trite, tiresome
The old year fast fades
No new year yet brightens hope
[I wrote this poem pretty quickly in response to yesterday’s prompt from Two Sylvia’s Press.]
We await their coming each year
Those three old men of wise repute
who traveled far to come near
with Herod’s wrath in close pursuit.
What strange star guided their far search?
What star still guides our belief?
To find God far from any known church
Seek a baby for sin’s relief.
[Life is getting close enough to normal for me to find a little time to have some fun with today’s prompt from Two Sylvias Press.]
The first day of Christmas Santa came
Or the baby Jesus or maybe both
The second day of Christmas relatives left
And we pretended to celebrate Boxing Day
The third day of Christmas we traveled
Not far and just for the day
The fourth day of Christmas we rested
And settled down to enjoy our gifts
The fifth day of Christmas we visited
And laughed as a toddler showed off
The sixth day of Christmas I wrote
This poem thinking it should be tomorrow
The seventh day of Christmas I go
To see The Rise of Skywalker again
The eighth day of Christmas we play
With old friends in a new year
The ninth day of Christmas we rest
And go back to enjoying our gifts
The tenth day of Christmas we continue
Amid aging Christmas decorations still left up
The eleventh day of Christmas we wait
For the end of Christmas coming tomorrow
The twelfth day of Christmas is Epiphany
When wise people end the Christmas season.
Today’s challenge was lines of just seven
It should really have been tomorrow given
Lines of seven on Christmas Day seven
Might be a poet’s kind of heaven.
[As my brain slowly begins to function again, I have an idea for using the pantoum form to retract an earlier belief. This is a rough approximation of what I would like to do. It needs a lot of work and may yet morph into something quite different. Still working with prompts from Two Sylvias Press.]
The Catholic priesthood, I believe,
Dry rots from the inside out
Those doctrinal decrees only deceive
Bar half of humans without doubt
Dry rots from the inside out
Crack open St. Peter’s throne
Bar half of humans without doubt
With women unworthy and alone
Crack open St. Peter’s throne
Allowing women priests cannot save it
With women unworthy and alone
No man nor woman should brave it
Allowing women priests cannot save it
The Catholic priesthood, I believe,
No man nor woman should brave it
Those doctrinal decrees only deceive
[I am afraid this prompt, and my tiredness, brought out the worst in me – at least I hope it is the worst.]
I wore a fedora
To enhance my aura
When I casually went
In the Jaguar for rent
To a movie theater
On a street called Decatur
In old New Orleans
A city of red beans
And rice every Monday
But Never on Someday
What movie did I see
So happily?
I can’t quite remember
Something Something September
Or was it The Rise of Jedi
Or Mary Popeye?
The Return of Skywalker
Or The Victory is Darker?
Enough of this prompt’s foolery
Of meaningless buffoonery
[Written in response to the Christmas Day prompt, in the form suggested by the prompt.]
A warm Advent season, a warm Christmas Day. Birds – and squirrels – flock to the bird feeder outside our dining room window. Our two dogs prowl the deck outside the sliding glass door, ever hopeful for a leftover snack, while someone’s black and white cat sneaks along the porch railing. We gather at table. Mom worries about old age clumsiness. Woody worries about unexpected visitors. Adrienne worries about food too cold or too hot. Philip worries about his toddler eating a purple marker. Andi worries about Philip’s anxieties. Galen worries because he can’t hear very well. Mary Lou worries, just worries, always, as if it is her duty, or her privilege. Everyone happy, if not totally content. Everyone relaxed, if not totally at ease. Everyone pleased, if not totally sure of themselves. We are human, humans, individually and together, gathered on Christmas Day. Family incarnate. Love newborn and everlasting.
Emmanuel, God With Us. Even as I am thankful, I spare a little envy for the animals. For their uncomplicated self-love.
[For the Christmas Eve prompt from Two Sylvias Press]
Friendships start
often
in
good times
easy times
hopeful times
eager times
Friendships fade
often
through
changing times
hard times
sad times
withdrawn times
Friendships deepen
sometimes
through all times
even times
without contact
for years
Then a lunch, maybe,
with hands held
for a moment
remembering
shared private losses
hard choices
disappointments
Friendships deepen
sometimes
through all times
even times
living apart
maybe for years
Visits and phone calls
FaceTime and Skype
virtual shared cuppas
travel together
rejoicing together
laughing together
sorrowing together
crying together
sharing wisdom and folly
Acquaintance, colleague, chum
come and go, start and end
In my life just a few become
a treasured wondrous friend