Showing posts with label General Inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Inspiration. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2014

The Silent Night #poetry #poem


The Silent Night....
It lingers deep in desert canyons
wafting with a gentle glow
over jagged rocks and dusty hollows
marking every crevice
hard to hold
and yet
so worth the effort!
Don't let go.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Inspiration

Here's a new one, hot off the presses! I'm not sure of the title, but.....


Inspiration

Pretend it’s a mirage.
Ignore it.
Walk away.

You can’t, can you?

It follows you
like a painting with haunted eyes
tracking you across the room
the desert
the ocean
the seven seas.

It finds you.

It always finds you
because you let it
because you want it to
because you need it as much as it
needs you.

It feeds you
your instincts
your desires
your endless, timeless appetite for
adventure without risk
comfort without pain
hurt without damage
scars that never linger
yet never heal
because they never really were.

It’s all make believe.

But for you
it’s as real as stardust
splashing over moonlit sands.


Friday, January 4, 2013

White Linen


White Linen

Find truth in white linen
strung on a line in the yard
buffeted by breezes
flitting the fabric in code.

'Course, no one hangs linen anymore...


Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Where there's life, there's hope

Where there's life, there's hope.
Where there's hope, have faith.
Where there's faith, find peace.
A soul at peace breeds miracles,
and we are all miracles, 
because it all begins with life,
and life is everlasting.


Monday, May 28, 2012

Dreaming



Dreaming

Dreaming in that way I do, I melt into the mist
where edges fade, and darkness too, and I need not resist.
My journeys there are safe and warm, for I have full control
in that place where wild adventures form – amusement for the soul.

It takes me to the Amazon, or some new, exotic land
for a dangerous liaison with old foes there, close at hand.
It takes me into forests dark, and deserts harsh and wide;
it shows me stars that fade and spark, then leads me deep inside

to find the damsel in distress, or the brave and noble knight,
or perhaps the warrior at rest from some preempted fight.
I might find a crumbling ruin or perhaps an ancient tome,
or the chords of some forgotten tune meant to guide ancestors home.

Whatever lies in wait for me in that netherworld of mind,
it gives me hope to wander free through portals locked in time:
a trip into the wild west with a horse and holstered gun,
like cowboys on some desperate quest to avoid that setting sun;

or a journey down the Nile, where the pyramids still shine
like castles reaching skyward along the river Rhine.
The stories never cease to rise, the heroes never die,
and they yield the greatest prize when they let me see them cry.

Dreaming in that way I do, I find a kind of peace.
Reality might be the glue, but I prefer the crease
between what is and what can be and perhaps what never will—
the place where legends climb with me to the top of every hill.

I have to take this time to dream before tomorrow comes
and challenges the things that seem the fear of all our sums.
 




Friday, March 30, 2012

What 50 years have taught me

Life is less about finding answers than it is about seeking them.

An ideal life is not a steady, consistent progression. It involves 2 steps forward and anywhere from 1 to 3 steps back. It involves peaks and valleys. The peaks feed your soul and fuel your strength to endure the valleys. The valleys feed your heart and build your wisdom to appreciate the peaks.

Whatever ideal life I can envision with clarity will always remain elusive. The true ideal is one I cannot see. It will only be revealed to me in time, and it will only be revealed if I keep my eyes and my heart open enough to see it.

The only certainty in life is that it will be fraught with uncertainty.

Promises are not guarantees, and even guarantees can be voided by the uncertainties of life. Each promise that is fulfilled should be recognized for the gift it truly is.

If I limit my expectations to the unexpected, I will never regret what never comes to be.

I thrive on stories and dreams, the greatest of which highlight compassion, understanding and brotherhood, and serve as reminders that love and faith really can conquer all.

And lastly:

Life really is a walk in the park...at least, that's where the filter is, the one that sorts fiction from truth and helps me to see who's really behind the curtain.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Out of Hibernation

Where rainbows recline along fog-laden hills
and slip under swift flowing streams,
where icicles drip into heavenly spills
to revive a dry thirst for lost dreams,
a sacred asylum from binding regrets,
a time and a place for rebirth,
a spiritual passage, a chance to forget,
rekindle new hope, renew worth,
like a daffodil raising its head to the sky
in spite of the lingering frost,
there, rooted to freedom, one heart learns to fly
there, the burden of winter is lost.

A Bubble in Tim

Wrapped in white cotton 
a piece of the world
is trapped in a bubble in time.

The sun has no hold.
The rain has no flow.
It is simply a moment, sublime.

Songbirds, symphonic
sing trebles and trills
to an undertone cicada buzz.

Seagulls are squealing,
crows squawking gossip
of the world as it should be, or was,

while I sift through silence,
my heart spinning tunes,
hearing music and humming along,

for the sake of this instant,
for the sake of this bubble,
for the sake of life's own precious song.

A white, cozy blanket
has covered the world
and taken me under its wing.

There's no better tribute
to give for this shielding
than to join in the chorus and sing.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Pebbles

There are many battles being fought, perhaps against cancer, perhaps something else. But what do you do when the time comes to stop fighting? And what do we do, those of use you must leave behind?

Pebbles

You want to fight, and you do. You fight. And perhaps you even seem to turn the battle. You start to believe, to really believe you can win it after all. And then…a sudden thrust. A jab from behind.It strikes you unaware…unexpected. Your eyes widen in surprise.Your breath quickens.

You want to continue the struggle, but against what?

The damage is done, and you know that.It was a mortal blow. There is no earthly science that can fix it, not this, not now. Perhaps one day, but not this day, not for you. And the enemy is beyond your reach.

No. You cannot fight. You can only…accept.

Accept.

It is an easy word to say, falling from your tongue, from your lips with barely a breath of your waning energy expended. But the thing attached to that word, the feeling, the concept…now that is a different matter entirely. 

What does it mean, really, to accept what is to come? Can there still be fear? Can there still be sadness? Regret for things left undone? 

If you say you accept your fate, can that statement really erase all those feelings, those emotions?

Or…like the fireman rushing into the flames for the sake of another, are they merely set aside for the sake of something more important, a purpose greater than your own?

When a pebble on a mountain tumbles into the sea, it leaves an emptiness behind, a space that can never be filled. Still, the mountain itself will not crumble. Not yet. Not all at once. But what of that pebble? Does it fade out of existence?

Or does it simply become a part of something new, setting the foundation for another mountain, one that will rise out of the sea reaching endlessly toward the stars? 

It might even be the pebble that does the reaching.

I, too, am a pebble. Today, perhaps I have no choice but to watch you tumble. I can no more hold you back than you can fight an enemy no mortal sword can strike. But the day will come when I must tumble on behind you, as other pebbles must tumble on behind me. And as that new mountain rises, I gain hope in knowing
it has been raised on pebbles like you with the wisdom, the courage and the heart to hold it firm.

Tick Marks

Tick Marks

A robin drops to the pavement,
grabs a twig
and is gone. 

An ant zips past, caught in a steady gaze
that follows it across asphalt
and around obstacles --
a stone,
a helicopter seed pod,
a plastic straw --
the gaze traces its determined path to the grass
until it, too is gone.

And the sun slips from its zenith,
sinking slowly,
unalterably toward the depths.

It could be a measure of life,
that slow sinking --

that and the steady stream of people and things
passing in and out as though carried by industrious ants
that take it all away,
undaunted by our fortress walls,
leaving nothing behind but a mark on one's soul,
the tick marks of time,
of moments,
gathering and growing,
molding us into what we must become,
what we will be at the end of  our vigil,
the one borne by each of us alone,
a vigil crowded with memories, both wanted and wanting,

the vigil that has brought this watcher here
to this place,
to this now,
to this tick mark
where he sits watching a robin,
an ant,
a squirrel,
a dog and its oblivious owner,
a man wearing faded blue jeans
and a crumpled tee shirt,
his face unshaven,
his eyes haunted,
his brow furrowed in the way of those
who have watched their own tick marks
tick away,
taking a dream,
a life,
a love out of reach,
leaving them lost,
confused,
lacking direction.

He watches until the other feels a gaze
finding his tick marks,
fusing them to its own.

The crumpled stranger turns,
and begins watching the watcher
who sits on the edge of a bench
on the edge of a path
into the darkening woods.

And there it is --
the end of the vigil.

The stranger's eyes find the watcher's tick marks,
filling the chasm another passage has left.

As a moist tongue strokes the watcher's hand,
he laughs at the uncanny instincts
of a wise, old golden retriever.

And he feels retrieved.

He rises, wipes his hand and reaches.

The stranger is hesitant, but his grip is firm.

And then his eyes gain focus

as the sun drops to the pavement,
chases two shadows to the trees,

and is gone.

What 50 Years Have Taught Me

What 50 years have taught me:

Life is less about finding answers than it is about seeking them.

An ideal life is not a steady, consistent progression. It involves 2 steps forward and anywhere from 1 to 3 steps back. It involves peaks and valleys. The peaks feed your soul and fuel your strength to endure the valleys. The valleys feed your heart and build your wisdom to appreciate the peaks.

Whatever ideal life I can envision with clarity will always remain elusive. The true ideal is one I cannot see. It will only be revealed to me in time, and it will only be revealed if I keep my eyes and my heart open enough to see it.

The only certainty in life is that it will be fraught with uncertainty.

Promises are not guarantees, and even guarantees can be voided by the uncertainties of life. Each promise that is fulfilled should be recognized for the gift it truly is.

If I limit my expectations to the unexpected, I will never regret what never comes to be.

I thrive on stories and dreams, the greatest of which highlight compassion, understanding and brotherhood, and serve as reminders that love and faith really can conquer all.

And lastly:

Life really is a walk in the park...at least, that's where the filter is, the one that sorts fiction from truth and helps me to see who's really behind the curtain.