And There’s the Peace
It’s said
that all that lives is truly one.
Yet life
devours what lives with scant remorse.
And though
we’re linked together in a web,
Like stars,
we burn in dismal loneliness.
And some forget
this as they live their lives.
They find
connections and their sense of place.
But comes a
time, when ties are severed and
With what
they are, they then come face to face.
They spend
their years, their labor and their lives
And when
they realize they’ve little left,
How many
then must bear futility
As one more
weight to carry till the end?
We let the
world define our roles and selves,
And when the
act or play has ended, then
We look for
yet another role to play
Or else
despair and curse our nothingness.
But there’s
a thread, unbroken, in our lives,
That can’t
be sensed until we turn away
From all the
sound and fury of the race
And find,
within, our gentle, silent place.
How many are the horrors that we face --
How fierce, the wars that ravage lands for years...
But even where the wars are distant, there
We toil and suffer in our little hells.
How many are the horrors that we face --
How fierce, the wars that ravage lands for years...
But even where the wars are distant, there
We toil and suffer in our little hells.
How many
live, while wishing they could die,
From death
prevented by their duties or
Their
fears? Tormented are their weary days,
Demented are
their nights, as reason ebbs.
But some
there are, who find philosophy,
That ancient
balm that served the ones before.
It still can
let the ravaged pauper find,
In losses,
more of comfort than in gains.
The less one
has, the freer is the soul.
There’s less
of worry. Where’s the fear of loss
When
nothing’s left? And yet, where one sees
naught,
Another sees the treasure true that’s left.
The eye that
still can see, the ear that hears,
The nose and
tongue that smells and tastes – and yes,
The skin and
heart that senses pleasure, pain –
Who asks for
more, when such things still remain?
And when,
like all that blooms and wilts and drops,
These leave
in turn, there’s freedom in their place.
We turn from
sound and light to silence, dark.
And there’s
the peace that all the world has lost.
Observe the
grandma with her grandchild. See
The love
that flows from her to offspring’s child.
But grandmas
wise remember it's a role
And so
prepare for when that act will end.
When those we loved have long departed, gone,
We've still the strangers whom we serve in turn
With humble acts of kindness, while we can,
And gratitude for those who do the same.
The stars
above will burn and fade away,
And who will
mourn, for each of them, the loss?
We do not know
the reason why we came,
But let us
leave in love and gentleness.
2014 March 27th, Thu. night & 28th morning
Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, New York
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