Skip to main content

Seasons

Past blew its frigid wind at me
And shut me in the cold
I opened hands to newer years
To fit into its mold

But hands that reach for what’s not there
Will seldom feel the same
When tucked for warmth into the years
That will not speak your name

Again I reached reluctant palm
To grasp ephemeral mist
But found this tear-drenched hand of mine
Was balled into a fist

Now drunk on rage I used that hand
To rap upon that door
To throw all those who meant me pain
To storms I felt before

But what I heard within those walls
Helped draw a list’ning ear
To hear the words of those who hurt
Conversing of their fear

With rage that sank to sympathy
I listened to them strain
To tell of all their inner angst
That left them none the same

I looked again upon my hand
Once clenched to end a fight
And see again the tears that fell
Now glist’ning in new light

I turned away now lost in thought
Prepared to face the cold
Prepared to thrust away the past,
Now broken from its mold

But as I turned to face alone
That barren, frozen place,
I felt a warm and gentle breeze
That breathed against my face

Alone, I walked toward this spring
Along that greening land
And found upon my open palm
Forgiveness in my hand.

Comments

  1. A friend turned me on to your blog, and I have been reading your poems. I find myself having to think hard to fully grasp the meanings, but this one definately had the overriding theme of forgiveness. Nicely done! You seem to be very deep and intelligent. I have some poems on my blog if you would be interested in reading them.

    ~ roadtoholiness.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the comment. My poetry is few and far between, but maybe you will enjoy some of my other writings too. I find blogging to be such a great outlet and witnessing tool ~ especially for shy people like me!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Nice Guy Fallacy

I read part of a poem recently by one of my favorite poets. It reads: I envy not in any moods The captive void of noble rage The linnet born within the cage That never knew the summer woods. I envy not the beast that takes His license in the field of time Unfetter'd by the sense of crime To whom a conscience never wakes. Nor what may call itself as bles't The heart that never plighted troth But stagnates in the weeds of sloth Nor any want-begotten rest. I hold it true, whate'er befall I feel it, when I sorrow most 'Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all. At base, Tennyson contrasted a life of risk, and consequent pain, with one of security. He sides conclusively with the life of risk, and says he fails to envy those who have faced no hardship. I agree with him; and, for good or ill, his words are just as relevant today as they were in the nineteenth century. Like then, there are those today who choose to live their lives with as little risk as...

Heroes

Although we have several examples of heroes in our day, one of the best known is of a woman named Agnes Gonxhe Bojaxhiu (“Gonja Bojaju”), who devoted her life to sustaining the “poor, sick, orphaned, and dying.” Her venue was Calcutta, India, where she served as a teacher until she began to take notice of the poverty there. Seeking to do something about it, she began an organization that consisted of just thirteen members at its inception. Called the “Missionaries of Charity,” the organization would eventually burgeon into well over 5,000 members worldwide, running approximately 600 missions, schools and shelters in 120 countries; and caring for the orphaned, blind, aged, disabled, and poor. As her personal work expanded, she traveled to countries like Lebanon, where she rescued 37 children from a hospital by pressing for peace between Israel and Palestine; to Ethiopia, where she traveled to help the hungry; to Chernobyl, Russia, to assist victims of the nuclear meltdown there; and to ...

Haiti 2012

In case anyone would like to help this trip, or would like to know what we will be doing, here is my support letter for our Haiti trip in June. February 11, 2012 Dear Friends, Family, and Fellow Believers: Last year, a group of eleven people traveled to an orphanage in southern Haiti called the Hands and Feet Project. During the week we were there, we witnessed poverty, disease, and overcrowding. We heard stories of abandoned children, natural disaster, and the uncertainties and isolation of missions work. We felt tangibly the confusion of a country wracked by hopelessness and overwhelming difficulty. In the midst of it all, however, we experienced something more. We witnessed the hope of future orphanages and clean water, heard stories of unity and compassion for children left behind, and felt tangibly the love of God for the people of Haiti through a group of unified people whose goal is to serve him. It was these experiences of hopefulness that left many of us change...