the flutter of the vocal chords
words I can almost understand,
and sounds that make sense.
Audio of another language I begin to love.
Is it too late?
It is 72 degrees there,
and seeing that stat gave me a moment of access
to how much I loved being there and didn't want to leave.
the final night
looking sadly in the face of the blazing moon
fluttering curtains
breathing that place,
tears.
I must relive a little in order to press on.
and
/finally, a little rain!
Saturday, October 18, 2014
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
Writing on the wall
It's not the little guy but his brother
who lead in a whole gang
and the ostriches are bagged,
oh Lord, I am feeble in heart
as the money machines with the souls of tight-lipped or drooling demons
make batteries out of a million ants.
Help me to stop trying to save my life,
as this ship heats up.
I remember Your magnitude
because I am just a dust mote.
The sheep stone the shepherd
and they skip every direction, bleating.
I lose my interest in all this cardboard,
history of a people and its art
who sigh under squidly beaks
and laughing, laughing, drinking, sinking.
Fixed gazes, inward stares;
drink the kiss and paint the frack-well green.
a screen.
I have no sustainable resource to configure upon this stone of grace--
Help me stop trying to save my life--
my soul faints--
Oh, my beloved Shepherd.
Monday, October 13, 2014
When Airplanes Land
Far above the Great Sea the airplane approached a coast I have known since childhood. I pressed tears against the porthole, thanking God for the moment. The view did not flash by; that airplane gently circled and circled while I drank in the sight of the waves far below and that coastline, for a full half-hour, before a straightened course took us lower and lower among the popped-up concrete, until tires caught onto the runway.
Coming out of the cradle of the sky is always a bit of a letdown until the beauty that is to come takes over and new combinations of laughter ring. And a little girl loses her balloon and cries while Bugs Bunny grins down at her from the ceiling. It was easy for us to laugh while she grieved.
Inside Zeno's paradox, still shots crowd in upon themselves to resist the passing of time.
But at 16, 24, or a thousand frames, the reel clatters on.
I think there is something deeply disobedient about clinging so furiously to still shots of time.
(As I thought about this, an mp3 sang:
Lesson number one, overcome
Every fear of regret and confusion
It’s all illusion, delusion
Sent to disconnect the holy fusion
Of spirit and the flesh
http://joshgarrels.bandcamp.com/track/the-resistance)
Losing myself in Zeno's paradox may be so much like sitting down cross-legged on the race track set before me (and the clock still ticks).
Coming out of the cradle of the sky is always a bit of a letdown until the beauty that is to come takes over and new combinations of laughter ring. And a little girl loses her balloon and cries while Bugs Bunny grins down at her from the ceiling. It was easy for us to laugh while she grieved.
Inside Zeno's paradox, still shots crowd in upon themselves to resist the passing of time.
But at 16, 24, or a thousand frames, the reel clatters on.
I think there is something deeply disobedient about clinging so furiously to still shots of time.
(As I thought about this, an mp3 sang:
Lesson number one, overcome
Every fear of regret and confusion
It’s all illusion, delusion
Sent to disconnect the holy fusion
Of spirit and the flesh
http://joshgarrels.bandcamp.com/track/the-resistance)
Losing myself in Zeno's paradox may be so much like sitting down cross-legged on the race track set before me (and the clock still ticks).
Sunday, October 12, 2014
Good and bad? Or just different colors?
Jehovah-Jireh
I have enough.
Bless the Lord.
the knot of searching for answers melts:
I have what I need.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul.
I have what I need--
I have enough.
The answers do not lie in the things piled high that hid a king,
He provides and has provided
the answers are not merchandise to find.
Thank the Lord.
Provider.
I have enough.
Bless the Lord.
the knot of searching for answers melts:
I have what I need.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul.
I have what I need--
I have enough.
The answers do not lie in the things piled high that hid a king,
He provides and has provided
the answers are not merchandise to find.
Thank the Lord.
Provider.
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Sunny and Blue
Good news can come in such a devastating fashion: we want to take it as bad news. We want to let it wound us deeply
(if only it would catalyze a great rainfall, how I long for rain as a droughted land!)
But it is good news.
It is exciting, joyous news (but not mine).
she grew very quiet.
I got very quiet and I remember the voices more than the words: the congealing dark blood of knowledge blocking my senses from a stirring dialog.
Instead I replayed an old thought:
"will not hurt..."
And did not.
"will not reject..."
that's right.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul.
(When the darkness closes in, still I will say,)
My thoughts travel far away and I know I can never, ever again believe the lie that somebody introduced, suggesting I am a sociopath.
For far away, over there, in someone else's shoes, a woman experiences a redemption and a healing that was missing (dare she hope?) So well I know the icicles in the heart, the cold cold, frozen summer of the heart! The sluggish crawl of a chilled animal trying to find the sun. "how could you--" yes, that is the midnight blue of a river deep as the ocean.
He gives and takes away
Could it be? the right time, (the dream, the recurring glimpse of perfectly placed out-of-place sunshine?) for a woman
and I can find myself in my place and glad for the passing flash of gray-and-beige laughter on its way home.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul, who gives and takes away.
(if only it would rain, on a weekend, flooding the streets and leaving them shining).
(if only it would catalyze a great rainfall, how I long for rain as a droughted land!)
But it is good news.
It is exciting, joyous news (but not mine).
she grew very quiet.
I got very quiet and I remember the voices more than the words: the congealing dark blood of knowledge blocking my senses from a stirring dialog.
Instead I replayed an old thought:
"will not hurt..."
And did not.
"will not reject..."
that's right.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul.
(When the darkness closes in, still I will say,)
My thoughts travel far away and I know I can never, ever again believe the lie that somebody introduced, suggesting I am a sociopath.
For far away, over there, in someone else's shoes, a woman experiences a redemption and a healing that was missing (dare she hope?) So well I know the icicles in the heart, the cold cold, frozen summer of the heart! The sluggish crawl of a chilled animal trying to find the sun. "how could you--" yes, that is the midnight blue of a river deep as the ocean.
He gives and takes away
Could it be? the right time, (the dream, the recurring glimpse of perfectly placed out-of-place sunshine?) for a woman
and I can find myself in my place and glad for the passing flash of gray-and-beige laughter on its way home.
Bless the Lord, oh my soul, who gives and takes away.
(if only it would rain, on a weekend, flooding the streets and leaving them shining).
Sunday, October 5, 2014
Horizontal cold sky while warmth dances among nimble gloves!
After a great journey, there is a lingering joy and desire to share the details with people, for those you love to feel some measure of the impact you felt by experiences in a foreign land...
"I look the same as I did, but I have changed... oh, won't you try to get to know me again?"
Then there are wonderful days around home that sound so mundane by description (which is why people who have not traveled also deserve to be rediscovered).
Here is my mundane joy.
Yesterday, I spent the day at my family's house with some of my sisters, my mom, and SJ, cleaning up a section of the yard's landscaping. We got so much done!
Whereas, a traveler might say,
"Yesterday I was in London, and I rode the London Eye, I visited Big Ben, several museums, and five other famous sites. It was awesome!" The listener wouldn't be able to disagree, really, since visiting famous sites is supposed to be awe-inspiring (even if, in reality, it is possible to be absolutely bored or unhappy while visiting famous places!)
I started this blog because I was just traveling myself, and it was ABSOLUTELY AMAZING, but a week after my return, I hit a wall of a fog, depression, reverse culture shock. The shock was not that people weren't overwhelmingly curious about my experiences (I had stories to tell!) But realizing people expected me to be who I was, to act as if I had not been gone. I have treated returning travelers the same way. People at work are happy to have me back... but they didn't really give two beans about what I was feeling inside about my travels. That is a sulky comment: of course they would listen to my stories given the chance. But as is common, they didn't really have any curiosity that spoke for itself. After all, they had been holding down the fort; they were exhausted from an entire summer of physical labor, while I had been off having the time of my life, studying my brains out, and then traveling around the world.
But my mundane joy, yesterday, was not at all mundane. The actions don't speak for themselves, though. There is immense subtext that made the day so joyous!
Here are just a few of many elements of the subtext:
In the last two years, Dad had a stroke.
Mom's gardens went completely wild.
Family healing.
Teamwork among siblings.
Pushing through the first really chilly day of fall to accomplish something massive!
Laughing and singing.
SJ monkeying up a tree to saw off a couple limbs and rocking my aviators to keep sawdust out of his eyes.
Cheerfully picking up a million black walnuts with the help of two cheerful sisters (and a third who brought hot refreshments!)
Pushing on!
Raking, weeding, trimming.
Revelation of the true shape of things!
Coffee and cinnamon scones!
Healing of a sorrow that I had not moved home last year to plug away at this task alone... doing it as a team is so much better! This gave me so much peace!
Bless the Lord, oh my soul!
Bless the Lord, who sent sleet instead of rain so we could keep working without getting wet!
And Mom, MY MOM, glorifies God in her humble, hard working, mild manner of wonderful teamwork and leading the way!
And hugs. They do something to your heart, you know.
"I look the same as I did, but I have changed... oh, won't you try to get to know me again?"
Then there are wonderful days around home that sound so mundane by description (which is why people who have not traveled also deserve to be rediscovered).
Here is my mundane joy.
Yesterday, I spent the day at my family's house with some of my sisters, my mom, and SJ, cleaning up a section of the yard's landscaping. We got so much done!
Whereas, a traveler might say,
"Yesterday I was in London, and I rode the London Eye, I visited Big Ben, several museums, and five other famous sites. It was awesome!" The listener wouldn't be able to disagree, really, since visiting famous sites is supposed to be awe-inspiring (even if, in reality, it is possible to be absolutely bored or unhappy while visiting famous places!)
I started this blog because I was just traveling myself, and it was ABSOLUTELY AMAZING, but a week after my return, I hit a wall of a fog, depression, reverse culture shock. The shock was not that people weren't overwhelmingly curious about my experiences (I had stories to tell!) But realizing people expected me to be who I was, to act as if I had not been gone. I have treated returning travelers the same way. People at work are happy to have me back... but they didn't really give two beans about what I was feeling inside about my travels. That is a sulky comment: of course they would listen to my stories given the chance. But as is common, they didn't really have any curiosity that spoke for itself. After all, they had been holding down the fort; they were exhausted from an entire summer of physical labor, while I had been off having the time of my life, studying my brains out, and then traveling around the world.
But my mundane joy, yesterday, was not at all mundane. The actions don't speak for themselves, though. There is immense subtext that made the day so joyous!
Here are just a few of many elements of the subtext:
In the last two years, Dad had a stroke.
Mom's gardens went completely wild.
Family healing.
Teamwork among siblings.
Pushing through the first really chilly day of fall to accomplish something massive!
Laughing and singing.
SJ monkeying up a tree to saw off a couple limbs and rocking my aviators to keep sawdust out of his eyes.
Cheerfully picking up a million black walnuts with the help of two cheerful sisters (and a third who brought hot refreshments!)
Pushing on!
Raking, weeding, trimming.
Revelation of the true shape of things!
Coffee and cinnamon scones!
Healing of a sorrow that I had not moved home last year to plug away at this task alone... doing it as a team is so much better! This gave me so much peace!
Bless the Lord, oh my soul!
Bless the Lord, who sent sleet instead of rain so we could keep working without getting wet!
And Mom, MY MOM, glorifies God in her humble, hard working, mild manner of wonderful teamwork and leading the way!
And hugs. They do something to your heart, you know.
Saturday, October 4, 2014
chirp
Ghost Groceries:
about two days after you went shopping, you suddenly know you left one
of your bags at the checkout.
The Xbox
Egg: where you break an egg into
the frying pan, and streams of egg shoot at you in four arcs like the Xbox
logo.
"A plant
has learned to survive" must reference a teacher imparting knowledge
without killing the student by the first of its million errors.
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