Friday, June 24, 2022

Times and Seasons


Times and Seasons
 
Our dawns were then like rising tides,
Our dusks were gentle ebbs—
And every time of day had moods,
Reflected in our minds.
 
******
 
Our days and nights were full of hope,
As joy was in the air.
Though suffering was all around,
We did not then despair.
 
The times have changed and we have aged,
Yet dawns and dusks proceed—
And seasons come and seasons go
Of sun—and fear and greed.
 
Our days have darkened and our nights
Are not of restful sleep.
We slide towards the precipice
And glimpse the waiting deep.
 
******
 
The seasons of our lives, once lived,
Do not return again.
And so, while still in fading light,
The darkness is embraced.
 
2022 June 24th, Fri.
Brooklyn, New York

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

The Song Primeval

 
The Song Primeval
 
The songs we sing have words and tunes
And ancient, primal roots.
We sang before we talked, perhaps,
And songs transcend our speech.
 
** * * * *
 
There is that pulse within our arteries,
That rhythm of the breath,
And all the cycles of the many worlds
Of which we are a part.
 
The buzz of pleasure and the stab of pain,
The happiness and grief:
They each vibrate within our bodies, minds
And also in our songs.
 
** * * * *
 
We hear the shaman and the medicine man
And feel that primal bond—
That strong connection to the universe
That many now have lost.
 
So also in the temple, synagogue,
Gurdwara, church or mosque—
As in the chanting at the Buddhist math—
We hear the spirit-sound—
 
** * * * *
 
The sound from deep within that when intoned
Out in the open air
Then calls to Sky and calls to Earth—
To Mountain, Stream and Wind—
 
And reaches out to all of life on Earth
And seeks to reach, it seems,
To whirlpool-galaxies of fiery stars,
With all their planets, moons.
 
** * * * *
 
And so the songs we hear in foreign tongues
And those of insects, birds—
And whales that sing across the ocean leagues—
Are recognized as bits
 
Of that great song that binds the universe
That dances to its tunes and beats—
In rhythms fast and slow, with life and death
And all the victories and defeats.
 
* * * ** *
 
The songs we sing are ancient ones
In newer forms reborn—
As some have said of life itself
That cycles through its births.
 
2022 June 22nd, Wed.
Brooklyn, New York
 

Friday, June 17, 2022

Efficient

 
Efficient
 
We’ve learned to be efficient, work at speed—
To squeeze production out of everything,
Including time and people. So it is
That things requiring patience, things unclear
Are things avoided. Who has time for that?
So all that’s muddled or entangled is
Not clarified—as that would take our time—
But left for others—or is left as is.
 
And so we also have no time to hear
What others, troubled, have to say to us—
Or even look, beneath the surfaces
Of people and of things, to try and see
The causes of the problems that arise.
 
So everything is black and white and clear,
And those who see the grays and speak of these
Are shunned. So problems grow, in scope and strength,
And go unrecognized and unaddressed—
Until disasters come—and then we find
Some things or people that can take the blame—
And then we’re done with that, and saunter on.
For some of us, there’s neither guilt nor shame.
 
2022 June 16th, Thu.
Brooklyn, New York
 

Monday, June 13, 2022

Isolation

  
Isolation
 
We live on islands that are now connected
By pulses coursing swiftly through the lines—
Yet still, in much that matters, disconnected,
As fear and distance carve dividing lines.
 
So what was joined—and one—is split in two
And then in even more of pieces. These
Are pushed and pulled apart, as in-between
The chasms fill with ever-growing seas.
 
We spend our leisure time on mobile phones—
As work consumes the lives of those with jobs.
What time is left for looking in the soul
Or feeling in the heart that quietly throbs?
 
We seek to bridge the gulfs of distance, time—
And realize, too late, how hard that is.
And meanwhile, we neglect the ones nearby,
Who need the time for just a bit of bliss.
 
We each need solitude at times, but not
This fragmentation of the parts. The whole
Is part of what we are. A leaf that's plucked
Will shrivel. So, the isolated soul.
 
2022, June 13th, Mon.
Brooklyn, New York
 

Judgement and Blame

 
Judgement and Blame
 
So easy it can be—to find a thing
Or person that we blame for this or that,
Neglecting all the things, combined, that might 
Have brought the circumstance to where it's at.
 
At every moment, we have choices that
We make, although we may not be aware
That we are doing so. And yet the past,
The present and the future still are there
 
To influence that choice. The future? Yes—
The one that we perceive, with hope or fear.
And yet, we have to act, and take the blame
Or credit for the action. That is clear.
 
It will do not do to blame the past for this
Or even present—or what these portend.
We each should bear the weight of what we do,
For action is what matters in the end.
 
******
 
But still, let's slow the judgement and the blame
We cast on others. Let us try and pause
To understand what brought the acts to be,
And not be hasty in ascribing cause.
 
We cannot see within another's mind
Or gauge the pain within another's heart,
But we can pause to try and think and feel—
And this has always been a practiced art
 
That now is more neglected. Who has time
To pause, reflect and try to comprehend?
It's easier to quickly blame and judge—
For breakage can be difficult to mend.
 
The habits that we have are useful but
They might be harmful if we let them steer
Our thoughts and words and actions. In our lives
We need at times to pause to see and hear.
 
2022, June 13th, Mon.
Brooklyn, New York
 
 

Monday, June 6, 2022

A Precious Thing

 
A Precious Thing
 
Appreciate the ones who are sincere,
Who think of others, not of just themselves,
Who do their work with diligence and care,
Who see the good in others, not just faults,
Who look beneath the surface, see the grays—
Remember what they owe, are slow to judge—
And speak and act with kindness, seeking still
The truth in full—and not convenient part,
Rejecting falsehoods and eschewing hate,
And seeing, in the “other”, also self.
 
To varying degrees, we see these things,
As well as opposites, in the ones around
Who’re neither saints nor devils, but a mix
Of virtues and of vices, old and new.
 
Courage joined with kindness can be rare—
And that is why it is a precious thing.
 
2022 June 6, Mon.
Brooklyn, New York

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Virtues


Virtues
 
What substitutes are there for caring, truth—
For courage and for vision, wide and deep?
What doctrine can replace our empathy?
What law, the sense for fairness, equity?
 
Can supervision make us diligent—
In all the matters where attention counts?
What substitute is there for honesty?
Can “training” truly open hearts and minds?
 
There is a place for slowing, gentleness—
For acts of kindness born from looking deep.
Embrace the new and welcome it—and yet
Remember that the old is ours to keep.

Among the things that humans long have prized
Are all the virtues that were recognized
In ancient times. Though vices new appear,
We need those virtues still—and always will.
 
2022 June 1st, Wed.
Brooklyn, New York