Welcome to The BeZine’s online,
virtual 100,000 Poets for Change event!
This past week, an international aid convoy in Syria was attacked with devastating results, during a ceasefire. Bombs went off, as usual, in Iraq. They also went off in New Jersey and New York. There were terrorist knife attacks in Jerusalem. And knife attacks also in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Police shot (at least) two unarmed African-Americans in the United States. Police shot “terror suspects” in Israel. Iran arrested dissidents. China gave a dissident’s attorney a 12-year sentence.
Climate change has reduced the arctic ice sheets at record levels, this summer just ended. The Fertile Crescent, where Western civilization began, has suffered such a devastating drought that farmers have fled it for years now—a contributing cause to the Syrian civil war and the refugee crisis. The hardened, drought-stricken soil in the region, broken up by heavy war-machinery, artillery shelling, and bombs, has turned into dust that the wind picks up—a contributing cause of record dust storms throughout the region.
It is time for global change
For the past six years, 100,000 Poets for Change (100TPC) has inspired and supported events on a Saturday in September. This year, there are over 550 events scheduled throughout the world. This blog/zine is one of them. The goal is for poets (artists, musicians, actors, even mimes) to band together and perform / exhibit their work in a call to change the world for the better.
The 100TPC themes are peace, sustainability, and social justice. The September 2016 issue of The BeZine, edited by Priscilla Galasso and Steve Wiencek, focuses on environmental justice. This focus relates to social justice and sustainability, but is a necessary part of obtaining peace.
If we still have poverty and homelessness, what is sustained other than inequality? And, without social justice and a sustainable environment, could there be peace? Could peace be maintained without both social and environmental justice alongside environmental and economic sustainability?
Share your work here, today, as part of our 100TPC online event—help us create a space for change. As in past years, the event will be archived and made available later on The BeZine’s website and will also be archived at Standford University in California.
Here’s how to post your work
For today’s online event, our choice is not to put one of the three themes—peace, sustainability, and social justice—above the others, but to recognize that all of these three necessary areas of change interrelate in complex ways.
We invite you to participate. Share your writing, art, music, videos, thoughts that relate to these themes on our website today.
It’s actually easy to do.
- Click on Mr. Linky below and follow instructions for posting a link to a post on your blog:
- You can also post a link or writing directly into the comments below!
Come back during the day
Please return often today (Sept. 24, 2016) to read what others have posted, follow links, like, and leave comments—and to see and reply to what others have commented on your own posts and links. We would love to see an active dialogue!
Peter Notehelfer posted Cricket’s Chirrup on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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John Anstie posted Earth Prayer on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Sonja Benskin Mesher posted . humans . on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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I just posted a link to two poems, one by Mike Stone and one of my own on my blog via Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Nice! 🙂
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Thank you!
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Hi all! I have a few haiku that I have been saving for this day. 🙂
old growth forest tree
webs wicking barren branches
looks are deceiving
move your gaze upward
canopy of green extends
an elder tree’s reach
…
soft moss-hued bark
dresses the risen cedar
anchoring the earth
…
petite brown squirrel
scampers, searches, and plays
people arrive
Love you all!
-Terri Stewart
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A very nice set of Haiku, Terri. A calming moment. Zen. Lovely.
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Fine work, Terri. Bravo! A lovely collection.
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Thank you, Jamie! You are too kind. 🙂
Thank you to you and Michael for hosting and running this effort. I’m about to set up the peacemaking circle! I’ll snap a couple photos of the set-up and post it in our group.
Much love to you all!
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Great minds. I was just going to put up a reminder thinking you wouldn’t have time. I’ll leave it to you then. Blessings, J.
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👍🏼
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I put Robert into service today. That way I can be in two places at once!
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The Husband as Clone … (I feel a little mystery story coming on.) Thanks and blessing to Robert. We need all the hands and hearts we can gather.
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Send photos or links to them to Michael Rothenberg, too. He makes sure they get to the Stanford archive.
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And I can include them in the PDF I’ll send as well.
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I posted it into the group.
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Thank you! I wrote them on my vacation in the mountains of the PacNW. 🙂 It was calming.
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That comes across. That is also a change we need in our culture—more contemplation, calm, in the moment.
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Lovely peace-hued collection. Thanks for sharing.
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Thank you! It was my pleasure.
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Hello. My name is Jonathan Freed. I attempted to add content through Mr. Linky and added the wrong URL. Only wish I could change that. Sorry.
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Jonathan—send me the correct link on FB direct message —Michael Dickel
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News of the shooting and carnage in Cascade, WA is yet another devastating reminder of the current state of our country, our world. Peace and love to survivors and to the rest of us who endure.
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I only learned of this from your post. So sad. Yet again.
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Thank you for your sharing and certainly we are at one with you and your community in prayer .
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Thank you, Jonathan, for sharing here and I see that Michael Dickel has helped you out. Glad you pursued. Blessings, Jamie
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Ready to. Still waiting for the correct link 🙂
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Reuben Woolley posted veins of red dust on Mr. Linky. This is from his excellent site, I am not a silent poet.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Reuben Wooley also posted human it is on Mr. Linky.
Here is the YouTube of him reading the poem:
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Beautifully done, Reuben! Thank you.
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Ampat Koshy posted Shaman on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Thank you, Ampat, for so graciously sharing work here. It is valued.
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As life has been interrupted and ceased before it has again here in Washington State. I felt compelled to write and look forward to seeing what others have written.
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Renee Espriu posted ***Many Colored Patterns*** on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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It seems it’s never ending. Thanks for sharing here. xo
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Reblogged this on Words for Life.
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Thank you, Robin!
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Thanks to you Jamie for all of your hard work. Michael has let me know you set this up and as always you have done a great job.
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Thank you, Renee! You and others make the work worthwhile and I am so touch by how many are so graciously opening their hearts via their art and sharing here. Happy day, Renee, hope all is well in your world.
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I’m enjoying the beautiful poetry that’she been posted here and on Mister Linky. In a world that often appears broken, it’s comforting to know there are people who want to be the caretakers and peacemakers to ensure that future generations have something to hold onto.
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That is one of the graces of all of us coming together like this. We know we are not alone in our loves and our concerns. Thank you, Robin.
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Agreed, Jamie!
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Osama Massarwa, an Israeli Palestinian reader last night at the Tel Aviv said something about this, too—that he wanted also to bring more people from the West Bank to join such meetings / readings so we could make peace together. Osama, from Taybeh on the West Bank, is a poet-writer in Hebrew, Arabic, and English.
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Wonderful. I hope he is able to do that.
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Osama Massarwa asked me to post the poem he read at the Tel Aviv 100TPC event:
contemplations
I look back and see through the mist
How a ruthless and angry fist
Has been crushing my precious peace
And devouring it piece by piece.
I was born on a land of mine
Beautiful, splendid and fine,
But, unfortunately, I am now
A stranger and I don’t know how.
A citizen of a third rate
That’s what I’ve become, what a fate!
A man who is always busted
Because he cannot be trusted.
I’m the native of this great land
Just like its shores and golden sand,
My rights are elementary,
Say geography and history.
It’s my right to grow and prosper
And lead a life nice and proper.
I’m not to be bound and deterred,
And ultimately be transferred.
I should be allowed to survive,
Live in peace and, hopefully, thrive.
Remember this is also my state too
Whatever you inflict or do.
Compromise is the stepping-stone
Toward peace in this, land war-prone;
Peace is the greatest gift and grace
That can save us from this war-curse.
Peace depends on the sanity
Of those who deplore enmity,
And those who have seen so much blood
That can begin a second flood.
Treat the others with the respect
And love you demand and expect.
Be curious to learn their culture
That adds to the human structure.
The world’s full of different colors,
Like a garden full of flowers,
Ah, what a dull and boring place,
The world will be with just one race.
Respect every identity
And every race’s entity,
Don’t hate this or that religion,
Every one has its origin.
If you form the majority,
Still you are a minority,
For it’s a relative matter
So think it over, don’t stutter.
I’m a man not just blood and flesh,
You can’t treat me just as you wish.
I’m a man as free as the wind
That all enmities can transcend.
By building barriers and that wall,
Of course peace will eventually fall.
They’ll definitely undermine
All efforts for peace just and fine.
We need to remove every cuff
That hinders peace or such a staff.
Don’t talk about equality,
Do make it a reality.
We all have to be courageous
To do what’s just and righteous.
To no avail is every deed
That we do if it hate does breed.
Why is it so easy to hold
Onto prejudices so old?
Why do we stick to a belief
That leads to bloodshed and mischief.
Why is it easier to stir
The inhuman elements’ flare
Than build up the mutual trust
Between nations which is a must.
Why should I prove my loyalty
Every day to the royalty?
Why can’t a citizen pursue
His dreams despite what may ensue?
Between the hammer hard and cold
And the anvil they me do hold.
Am I guilty of no reason?
Is my survival a treason?
Life by itself is a value
Not land or any revenue.
Love, compassion, and tolerance
Are the paths to coexistence.
Killing and assassinations,
Violence and accusations
Repeatedly reiterated
Make me feel so irritated.
Your arrogance and vanity
Won’t make peace a reality.
It can’t grow and it never will
As long as you destroy and kill.
Peace can’t live and dwell in a swamp
Where prejudice does leave its stamp.
Peace needs leaders brave and plain
Who seek no political gain.
Nations can’t live just by the sword,
However strong they are and bold,
Constant wars are to no avail,
They only let hatred prevail.
Peace is the key to all conflicts;
War only disasters inflicts.
There are no winners or losers,
At war we’re all the abusers,
Let’s all set up peace high and grand
And not put it down to the ground,
Narrow mindedness only leads
To destruction and pains it yields.
It is much wiser not to fall
In faults whether big or so small.
Why aren’t we any more thinkers?
Why can’t we remove our blinkers?
How can you get the other’s trust
By being unfair and unjust?
How can you be safe and secure
While the other’s rights are obscure?
Acts of mutual violence
Lead to more and more vengeance.
Compromise, on the other hand,
Will make us share this splendid land.
Greatness is the ability
To give up one’s hostility.
Only just peace can make amends,
And make previous foes become friends.
We need a world of peace and love
That glitters like the stars above.
We don’t need the narrow minded
Who make the world with blood flooded.
Peace won’t come through a gun’s barrel,
This way you can’t win this battle.
Peace comes through reconciliation,
Not through acts of retaliation.
To make peace a true prophesy,
You have to change your policy.
With love, honesty and good will
We all can stop this useless kill.
A ceaseless conflict nothing brings;
It will render peace without wings.
We have to live in harmony,
Not in despair and agony.
It’s the duty of everyone
To fight for peace not for the gun.
It’s a pity that the extreme
Have become here the ruling stream.
If we focus on the welfare
Of nations and not on warfare,
The world will be a better place
In which everyone will live in grace.
You can’t be oppressors for long
Even if you’re now great and strong.
You can survive by honesty,
As well as thrive by modesty.
Wars can end everything but hate
Which keeps running deep like one’s fate.
Mad power is self-destructive,
However, it seems productive.
I’m optimistic I confess
No matter how much you oppress.
I do believe that tomorrow
Will yield no more pain or sorrow.
However, it will take some time
To get peace precious and sublime.
Peace will eventually come true
For your own good and mine too.
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Please to post this on behalf of Thomas Higgins. Look for more from him – including artwork – in future issues of the Zine.
It’s a Hard Life
How hard it must be
To make your living from
Making bombs, and missiles
and planes,guns and shells,
and mines, and tanks
and helicopter gunships, and drones,
and rpgs and nerve gas,and training mercenaries,
and marketing them
as if they are as harmless as sofas,
but selling them to every thug and
murderer, and gangster and dictator
on the planet.
It is obviously difficult for you to make a decent living,
but very easy to make a killing, or two, or three,or……………………..
Tom Higgins 22/09/2016
My name is Tom Higgins, I am sixty two years of age, and I live where I was born in Northwest England in an area known as the English Lake District. I have been married to my wife, Gill for thirty three years and we have two daughters, and so far one baby grandson, who is three months old.
I started writing poetry when I was fifty five, and prior to this I never wrote anything more than business reports, and when I was sixty I started to draw and paint, another pleasure which now enhances my life.
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The second of three from Tom Higgins
Cannon Fodder.
I was too young
before I lived,
much too young
to die,
I never thought
my family
would ever
have to cry,
because they had
lost a son
who died
in a needless war,
without them
being given the chance
to talk to me once more.
I heard the clarion call
I saw the banners wave
they beckoned me and I
went off to an early grave.
I died before I
had a chance
to be a creative man
and do whatever
a thoughtful young man can
and work to make the world
a better place for all,
a place where
we can live a life
without the bugle’s call,
a world where
we can grow in peace,
and never be stunted by
those who pay the bugler
to call us up to die.
(c) Tom Higgins 15/04/2015
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The Third of Three from Tom Higgins
Blessed are the Meek.
He awoke under the rubble
the weight pressed down
his breathing laboured,
he tried to move
but he had trouble
feeling his legs
or his arms or hands,
only his mind was not numb
he could hear the screams,
and he could see the flickering flames
and he could taste the dust,
and smell the blood,
and the bitterness of burnt meat
rising from below him
within the smoke and
the heat.
He tried to shout
he raised a squeak
he was six years old,
“blessed are the meek.”
Tom Higgins 20/07/2015
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oh! heartbreaking!
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It is. Sad.
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Reblogged this on BUTTERFLIES OF TIME- A CANVAS OF POETRY.
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Thank you for reblogging, Leslie!
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Thank you, Phillip!
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Reblogged this on femidadaadedina and commented:
It is the paradox of the black dot in the middle of the white paper. Those who made violence, injustice and inequalities their sonata are very few in the world. The armoury merchants, the sponsors of violence and the barons of industries are a small percentage of the billions in this world. However, they are empowered and and have the media which they use in cowering the 90 something percent down . A forum like this is an attempt to poke injustice in the eye. Read the tarry a while postings , most especially the “tarry a while vii ” on my blog- https://femidadaadedina.wordpress.com/ . This is a good project but we can go further than words by networking and contributing to raise funds and start projects that will contribute to fighting social injustice and bring about sustainability.
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Thank you for reflagging and also for you comment. Amen to all that you are saying here. Well done.
Warmly,
Jamie Dedes
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Ditto!
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Check out http://100TPC.org and https://www.facebook.com/groups/100TPCHub/ for a community of like-minded poets and artists, many of whom are activists in their communities around the world—doing, not just writing. We are all together in this!
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Modified Justice Statue Iran: From Wikimedia Commons
Modified Justice Statue Iran:
From Wikimedia Commons
empty pages
embossed
with
invisible ink
pages
that
blisters
when
hate’s heat
of
reality
is applied
and
another mother’s son
lies bleeding
along
a city street
warm blood
fuels
the fires
so
the words
no justice
appears
upon
the page
[audio mp3="https://slpmartin.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/posca.mp3"][/audio]
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posca…
empty pages
embossed
with
invisible ink
pages
that
blisters
when
hate’s heat
of
reality
is applied
and
another mother’s son
lies bleeding
along
a city street
warm blood
fuels
the fires
so
the words
no justice
appears
upon
the page
[audio mp3="https://slpmartin.files.wordpress.com/2016/09/posca.mp3"][/audio]
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Charlie, thank you. Another wonderful poem from you. As always, on target. And you are right, no justice … and here it is the 21st Century. We hoped to be way past this by now.
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Here is another poem from the out of print Poems, Parables and Prayers for the 3rd Millennium (Plain View Press, 2001) for the occasion:
Who will stop the tanks from grinding under gardens,
the mortar shells from shredding towns, homes, and
children who. pray for deliverance that never comes?
Who will dig up mines hidden under roads
that weary fathers travel, looking for work
so they can feed their children,
knowing they can survive the mines and
still find their homes ground under and
their children’s bodies shredded by
mortar shells, or grenades, or charred by napalm or
buried under rubble or bleeding to death
while watching the medics who rush to save them
float toward the sky on shrapnel clouds and
land with a leg here, an arm there,
eyes glazed, not comprehending?
Who will stop the bombs from falling,
from laying waste to block after block,
burying living and dead under cinder and
rubble while fires sweep from ruin to ruin?
Who will stop the terrorist bombs from
reducing buildings to flesh and debris,
crushing victims who never realized
that time had stopped for them?
Who will stop the death squads,
using the night to steal away someone’s
father, or mother, or brother sleeping
beside books which inspired his letter of protest
about which they will question him before
tossing what’s left of his body into a
pickup truck and dumping it in an alley
as a message, a cipher written in blood,
a symbol of hope’s futility?
Who will stop the mobs from pulling drivers
into burning streets. from smashing store windows,
from torching neighborhoods to unleash their rage?
Who will stop vigilantes, filled with hatred,
who dress their children in field gear,
teach them to field strip rifles in forty seconds, to
target the Black, the Atheist, the G-Man, the Jew?
To target teachers, skeptics, and, sooner or later, their friends?
In church we pray for God’s love
to heal our hearts and planet,
to deliver us from evil and
bring justice, freedom, peace.
We pray in safety, we pray from sanctuary,
we pray in our living rooms far away
from mortar shells and gun fire.
Love that costs us nothingI is whimsy,
as powerless as an infant
trapped in the predator’s teeth.
Do we lay in front of tanks before they roll?
Do we storm air fields before the bombers fly?
Do we offer our bodies as instruments of peace?
Or do we write checks and poems,
attend concerts to write more checks,
send care packages to wish the dying well?
Who has tested the power of love
to turn back the power of hate?
What kind of love can stop a bomb
when it can’t stop pointing fingers,
child beating, or even divorce over
petty grudges. different faiths,
wounds nursed for years until the
infection kills any feeling that remains?
What kind of love heralds peace on earth
when it can’t stop the day-to-day
carping and back stabbing in the work place?
What kind of love can restore the soul when
a question, a disagreement, a point of departure
can tum one holy Catholic church into a
million squabbling screaming factions with
their own initiations, colors and turf?
I don’t mean the Beatles kind of love,
the teary-eyed, hug-giving,
all you need is, endorphin pumping,
brain-wave altering, sing along with
your neighbor. revival meeting
kind of love that sends you home filled
with fuzzy feelings and grandiose resolutions that
fade with your buzzing alarm clock.
I don’t mean tough love,
the kick the kid out or get daddy into detox
because coddling will get them nothing,
they have to take their problems head-on
kind of love that leaves them to succeed on
devices that failed them for years.
I mean the God-given,
takes practice to do right.
lots of practice every day
with people you can’t stand but
try to love anyway kind of love.
The kind of love where you dig in,
grin and bear with people who could care less
if you’re dead, and, if the truth be told,
would probably like you better dead, and,
even worse, you have to love them enough to
respect their beliefs and not shove
“Jesus loves you” down their throats
every chance you get, but bide your
time and find ways to support their needs
and respect their beliefs. and
(and this is the hardest part of all)
be content to help them with the problems
they want help with and resist the. need
to make them just like you.
That kind of love.
The kind of love that makes you
hold your child to your breast
after you bailed him out of jail and
he won’t even look at you and
says, “Fuck you, I don’t need your help.” and
still you hold him to your breast
even though you realize you have a
lifetime of work ahead of you.
The kind of love that leads you
into the county jail to talk to
a prisoner who hasn‘t bathed since Monday,
who’s sweating out the whiskey, and
whose smell overpowers you in the close room
with no fan and no moving air,
and you help him work through
his anger without trying to sell him
the prepackaged belief system you
keep on the storage shelf of your faith.
The kind of love that makes you pray
with those who meditate,
to meditate beside those who pray,
to pray in silence beside those
who prefer to pray out loud for hours,
to pause from your own eloquent prayers
to hear the chants and mantras of others and to
hear the silence in a room filled with
those who pray in silence without,
even for a moment, questioning their love for God;
to choose not to lift yourself up and
the god of your understanding for
others to see, but to lift up others and
the god of their understanding to ask,
“Where is the God we worship in common and
how can we show our love?”
The kind of love that happens in small steps,
one at a time,
whose results you can’t measure
for years, if ever. the kind of love that says
you sit in a room of Southern Baptists
if that’s what it takes to bind together to
pray for peace, and sit down with
the Pentecostals and speak in tongues
if that’s what it takes to bring justice to the world,
and then go the next step and bring
the Pentecostals together with the Baptists and
toss Catholics into the mix. and Episcopalians and
then Buddhists, Krishnas, Moslems.
Taoists, those who seek the goddess to
transform themselves, transform the world, and
stop speaking their names with contempt and
stop, arguing ahout salvation and how to pray, and
whether we worship a godhead, goddess or trinity,
but to agree to love each other. and
send up prayers of love, and do it now,
not to wait for the millennium or the proper
alignment of the planets or the Harmonic convergence
but now, this minute, at the first opportunity,
even if we’re in a room hy ourselves,
or a handful of us in a living room,
or in our offices remembering to
hold hack those unkind comments
or handing a dollar to the homeless
or refusing to flip off the driver
who pushed us out of our lane.
We could unleash the power of love
onto the planet, pour out God’s spirit,
unleash a tidal wave of compassion
that will push hack the tanks,
bury the mortars under dirt,
and bring the death squads to their knees
begging for forgiveness from their victims.
lnstead we argue about the nature of God,
the manifestations of God, and the shape of the afterlife
while the tanks line up at the edge of our own city
and the soldiers drop shells into their mortars
and our factories open their sluices
to release their toxic sludge into our river,
and the death squads prepare their lists of victims
which include every member ofour families.
In our domain we point out each others’ frailties
to mask our own self-righteousness. The prudent
accuses the activist of hrashness, the activist
accuses the reveler of levity, the reveler
accuses the diligent of obsession, the diligent
accuses the skeptic of godlessness, and the skeptic
chides the alcoholic for her lack of self-control.
In God’s domain alcoholic leans on the prudent to learn sobriety,
the prudent leans on the activist to leam initiative,
the activist leans on the reveler to learn humor,
the reveler leans on the diligent to learn restraint,
the diligent leans on the skeptic to learn judgment,
and the skeptic leans on the alcoholic (who prays to the
God of her understanding for one more day of sobriety)
to learn faith. As we lean we support each other,
and as we support each other we build an unbroken
circle of power, a ring of love, a wall of forgiveness
and compassion to drive away the demons
we created to destroy our world.
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Readers: check out Wind Eggs for more by Phillip.
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No option to peace
Paris
Beirut
Belgium
Mumbai
London
Bamako—
The list is endless.
Terror is unleashed
By the masked young
Spouting venom on everything.
The violence, murders, mayhem
Caused by random acts of hatred
Choreographed by the merchants
Of death has, always, an opposite effect:
It unites Paris, Brussels, Mumbai and others
With a grieving world.
Masses turn out offering flowers, candles and tears
To the slain innocent persons.
Love united common humanity
That chants Peace!
And hatred gets defeated.
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Reblogged this on reubenwoolley.
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Thank you!
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If I understand time zones enough and my calculations are correct, it remains the 24th of September until noon UTC-0 (GMT) in the last time zone before the International Dateline. I think this covers Samoa. In honor of the Pacific Islanders from Hawai’i to Samoa, I have chosen to continue to check in as EmCee through 14:00 my time, at which point it should be the 25th of September in 23 time zones and the 26th in one.
That means, in simpler words— three more hours from the time stamp on this post.
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M Zen McClellan posted Continental Drift on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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L. Moon posted Nature’s Example on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Reena Prasad posted It is a Sunday on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Sunil Sharma posted a link to his blog on Mr. Linky.
Go to Mr. Linky to share links to your 100TPC works!
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Thank you everyone for your participation! The BeZine 100TPC 2016 event will soon be archived. In the meantime, please feel free to browse the comments and links. We received a lot of wonderful poetry!
Thanks to Jamie Dedes, Terri Stewart, Priscilla Galasso, and Steve Weincek and all of the rest of the Bardo / Beguine Again / BeZine community.
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