Archive for the ‘poetry’ Category

March 9th, 8th day of the fast

March 9, 2011

In the last hour of the 8th day of the fast. 11 more days to go.

My hands go cold at this hour. They are like ice. Of course, the pouring down rain of the afternoon doesn’t help either. Couldn’t quite get myself into “work mode” yet today, so I took a few hours to find 2 gravesites for 2 different people, one in C. and one near D. Island. This is my new hobby. I am a contributor to other people’s family history searches, hoping that someday, this valiant effort on my part (catch the humor here) will be rewarded in solving the mystery of my great-grandfather James Agnew. I am resigned to the fact that this may never happen, and if it does it will be after much tedious effort on my part with little reward. I am at the end of the easy search part. The rest, if there is anything out there to find, will not come easy. The few remaining survivors on my Agnew side do not answer my calls or letters. It is a family doomed with some secret curse of unrelenting antagonism that never goes away. So, I find a relative’s address and even their phone number, but they don’t answer my letters, and do not take my calls. If they really are out there, they are either too old to remember who I am, too young to know who I am, or they just don’t care.

Spent a couple days in Charleston which was a fun little break w/ my husband. We found time for a walk on the ocean, 1 museum, 1 poetry venue, the only tea plantation in North America, and a 300-400-yr-old live oak tree that sprawled all over a small park. It was a good time and a good getaway.

I wanted to write a poem for my husband’s poetry night tonight, just for fun, not polished, just spew something out. Here it is:

Life at 57

I would like to write a brief synopsis

of life at 57.

Last night, I heard a woman read,

Her poems full of small children

 and the wonders of playing with a 2-yr-old,

watching her children take their first steps,

wondering who they will be when they grow up,

She called home

As soon as she finished reading,

To see how they were doing,

A few brief hours without her,

Were they still alive??

— Oh, okay, GOOD, fine,

She left soon after,

And I wanted to tell her,

She could have sold more books

If she had stayed,

MY children are all grown up,

Two happily married,

One never married,

One now twice divorced,

Four children

in four different states,

My husband and I in yet another,

Come together for vacation once a year,

Post pictures and statuses

On Facebook,

Four grandchildren –3 boys, and a girl,

Decorate our office walls,

And I   – I have made it

To each and every birth so far,

One time traveling by greyhound bus,

Which is all we could afford,

My intuition telling me not to wait,

I left a day early,

Received the call at 2am,

Her water broke,

She was in labor,

I arrived, my daughter kneeling by the bed,

Her moaning telling me there was not much time,

We barely made it to the Birthing Center,

Four years later, I held that one in my arms

When baby sister arrived –

I have outlived the age of my father’s death

By 7 years, so far,

I have buried my mother, my older brother,

A woman in her 50s has a certain perspective

on death – and life,

She perhaps picked up some wisdom along the way,

You don’t care to PLEASE so much anymore,

You don’t always feel the need to smile,

There is not as much DEMAND to look your best,

Men don’t honk, or proposition you,

when you go walking,

Life slows down,

You notice a flower blooming,

A walk by the pond will make your day,

You develop an appreciation

For an evening with friends,

THIS evening –right now– is as important as any other,

And NOTHING, anymore, surprises you.

You know that no matter WHAT you do,

Some people just plain WON’T LIKE YOU,

There is nothing you can do about it,

And it doesn’t even matter.

Life is not about that.

It is more about moments – and your response to them,

And it is very, very sweet.                  …. To be continued….  3/09/2011       Carol F. Black

Little Boy

November 22, 2010
Little Boy
 
I am thinking of a little boy,
who did not talk until 3 years old,
 
got the award at summer camp for “boy sick most often,”
had ear infections so rampant,
a doctor inserted tubes to take them away,
 
which improved his hearing,
which allowed him to hear language,
and he began to speak;
 
I am thinking of an 8 year old,
stealing packs of baseball cards,
he and 3 buddies deciding to do this
all together — at the SAME TIME,
 
We allowed the police to take him to the station,
Getting finger printed scared him so bad,
he refused to enter this store again,
 
I am thinking of a 12-year-old
confiding to me in secret,
face beaming with pride,
“Mom, I want you to know,
I quit smoking.”
 
We praised God when he graduated from high school.
Posing as his father, he called in sick so many times,
We made a deal with the school:
Only his mother could call in for him;
 
This child, bounced on his head in the locker room,
unconscious in the ambulance,
awoke on the way to the hospital,
where we met him at the door,
 
This child whose soccer team won regional
the last game of his senior year,
now keeps in touch with teammates,
his loyalty to school and friends unmatched,
Goes away to college and finds
he can wake himself up
with something called “an alarm clock“,
Graduates in May after I get my PhD,
 
This son, our youngest,
so stubborn, so headstrong,
outmatches his father in being opinionated,
manages to offend
half of those he ever meets,
 
The world is black or white to these two,
and there is no such thing as gray,
 
This son, to whom family means so much,
loves caring for his nephews,
watching football with his dad,
This son now finds a job,
1000 miles from the nearest relative.
 
We plan to stay in touch on facebook,
share lives by cell phone,
visit by train,
Somehow in the last 25 years,
This child became a man.

new day

October 19, 2010

–this just came to me this morning:

New day, it’s a new day y’all,

Tuesday morning sunshine,

The birds do not yet know

winter is coming,

They sing their hearts out

for the new sun arising,

New day, it’s a new day

Make some noise,

Walk forward

into the Light.

heart to heart

September 19, 2010

I went reluctantly to a music night tonight w/ my husband and then of course enjoyed myself thoroughly.

I don’t like going to things where I don’t know people. Moving down here to the south, we are always outsiders and we didn’t know anyone. The friends we have now are mostly from our faith community. I have a hard time going to parties or gatherings where I don’t know anyone. It is not pleasant for me to make “small talk” and try to get to know people. If they talk to me, I’m fine. It’s just hard for me to adventure out and be the instigator. So I come off looking very stuck up I suppose. I am just shy, and it seems to get worse as I get older.

We were treated to an accomplished song writer, guitar player and poet, as well as one who sang before this main person came on, just sitting in someone’s LIVING ROOM. Everyone who attended paid $15. to the poet and he also sold CDs. We didn’t have the extra money but pd the $30. and did not  buy a CD. It was a very enjoyable evening.

He had one new poem which was about writing poems and reading them to others. The main point was, the poet knows what his words mean. The listener has to guess. They may or may not “get it”. Usually, the poem is read, everyone claps and that is where it stops. There is no sharing heart to heart, no real back and forth understandings shared. The audience people would be embarassed to admit they didn’t “get it” even if they didn’t, and everyone just claps politely. So his poem ended with the words, “Why don’t we just talk?”

It occurs to me that what we all really desire and need, is someone to care what the words mean, and talk it out. Actually what we need is to share heart to heart what’s going on within us, with someone else. I wonder with technology, if we are moving away from this heart to heart sharing, and we are just twittering. Or texting. Little quips and jokes are all we get, are all we share. Can 2 people sit face to face and share what is really going on inside them? Do we know how to do this anymore? Or do we just write it on a blog and post it to the world.

Traveling (a poem)

September 15, 2010

Traveling
To travel
is more important than to arrive,
 
To live
is more important than to survive,
 
To work
is more important than to retire,
 
We need to appreciate
every hour,
 
To think
means more than to pass the test,
 
To strive
means more than to be the best,
 
To climb
means more than to reach the summit,
 
While walking the path,
see the flowers on it,
 
To act
Is more important than to fear a fall,
 
And to Love
Is the most important of all.

poetry night

September 9, 2010

My husband’s sponsored poetry night tonight, was a really good night. I just enjoyed all the people. Lots of different people, different colors of browns, tans, whites, musicians, readers, some reading for the 1st time, others more practiced and professional moving to the beat of their words. European- background-New-Yorkers who read with little emotion but a wry sense of humor in the background of their words…. Friends showing up unexpectedly…..I just enjoyed myself.

When you listen to others’ poetry, it makes you want to go write some of your own. Tonight I had the thought to write one for Zakiah. I don’t know what it will be yet, but we’ll see if it comes to me. I love his spirit, his playfulness, and his 4 yr old sense of humor.

The other thing I enjoyed tonight was the featured poet. A lot of what she said meant something to me. I like thinking of women over 50 writing, and what they would write about compared to a woman of 25. It is just different. And it is different from what men of 50 and CERTAINLY men of 25 would write. I really like where I’m at, this age, and being creative this way. Women over 50 don’t really care who thinks what of whatever we write. We’re not so concerned to “impress”. It is a nice place to be.

I think Karl Marx was wrong in that work does not do away with our ability to create. It comes out in other ways, whether it be poetry, doing cross stitch, or making a power point. He was right in that it is much of what makes us human. The human spirit has a NEED to create. If we were working in a factory 12 hours/day, 6 days/week, alongside children, as in his day, perhaps we wouldn’t have time to do anything creative. But today? We may not LOVE our jobs, but we have enough time to create. We find a way to release that creative drive.

Now I really need to set my alarm and go to bed.

poetry night / music night

August 13, 2010

My husband has this incredible skill of organizing events and getting people involved in things. His latest kick is poetry. Not only has he started a poetry venue twice/mo., but he holds it in downtown Columbia, he gets professors of English, musicians black & white, people from the Columbia Arts Federation and many others to come. His venue is now booked through November. What are his qualifications? None! Except for this talent of his to organize people to get to events, and a new avid interest in writing and the muse.

This past week I attended my first one. Fourteen different individuals got up and recited or read an original piece of poetry (including myself and him). Two were African American high school students who had won some recognition or contest. There was an upbeat excitement in the air. The bagel shop said it was worth it for him to open his shop and he was pleased. A poet/musician sand and read his featured work. I read my poem in honor of Naylah’s birth, but it was about the waiting time just before she arrived.

Then the next night we attended an informal music venue at a small restaurant. We all sat outside where there were white and colored lights hung around a small stage. People were drinking beer and a faint mj smell at times appeared. The people were relaxed and friendly and everyone had a good time. There was a young teenage band playing when we arrived. Lots of different types of singers played their tunes and a featured local singer played guitar and sang from about 10-11. I always personally feel uncomfortable at these events, because I want to hide from people and it is scary to me, to be in a crowd of people I don’t know at all. That’s just my gut feeling. They were all fine people, I know this about myself, and know that this too shall pass. So I sit and smile, enjoy the music and force myself to interact somewhat. I’d really rather be invisible.

The other thing that bothers me is, these people are all really nice people but they all write “poetry” and sing songs about drinking, smoking and getting in bed with someone. That’s really what it’s all about, that’s what they write about. It just gets tiring after awhile……………… like watching 6 movies and they all had the same theme. Ok, what else are we? What are we really here for? Can we think outside the box of what’s immediately in front of us and tonight’s posibilities, come on. There is more out there folks. We are near 60 years old and some of you are still making jokes about smoking weed. I don’t really know how many nights per week I can do this…… I don’t drink, don’t smoke and don’t really think of getting laid all that often anymore….. and I love life, kids, interaction, walks, my job, and swimming. I just don’t think of getting high like I did when I was 20.

Indiana Baha’i summer school

August 3, 2010

a little poem dedicated to:

Indiana Baha’i Summer School

Lovers of His Light

from whichever vessel It appears,

We are many lamps,

different shades of brilliance,

some farther, some nearer,

we circle around the Center,

intermingle, interact,

sing praises, dance, talk, teach,

swim, play, reflect, learn,

and most of all,

We love one another,

Come in, come in,

Stay with us awhile,

Where else can one go

but to the Land of His Beloved?

Praise God

from Whom all blessings flow!

I am (my ancestors)

February 28, 2010

I am (my ancestors),

They are carried deep within,

Embedded in my memory

are all the places they have been.

I am – my grandfather

reciting the Lord’s prayer,

in his low and formal voice,

with his head bowed low, 

I am – his courage,

hiding behind those German lines,

on a secret frightful mission

trying to make it back home,

I am – poor Dutch farmers,

moving south from Chicago,

selling vegetables in the summer time,

and trying to get by,

I am immigrant, I am Hollander,

sailing here with hopes and dreams,

I am 17-year-old great-grandmother,

on a ship from the old country,

I am also Scotch-Irish,

or English as the case may be,

migrating westward from Ohio

to the southern hills of Indiana,

I work for the Monon railroad,

working hard for my family,

move them a little farther north,

follow the tracks to industry,

I am poor boy in the north end,

studying hard for my degree,

first one ever to go that far,

first one to earn a PhD,

I am farmer, railroad worker,

car mechanic, security guard,

domestic worker,  church janitor,

painter and professor,

I am — all of these and more,

they are a part of me,

Stories of struggle embedded in my bones,

DNA memories mapped onto my own.

I am my ancestors

February 28, 2010

Went to a Book Fair in downtown Columbia today, w/ my hubby. Listened to poets read their own work, & got inspired to try to write something. Also heard an excellent session by women from USC who collaborated on a 3 vol. series on Women of South Carolina.

Both of these sessions got me to thinking, & to connect the dots between the two, who are we really? People from South Carolina take such pride in being that. It’s like, you’re from here, or you’re from the rest of the world. To be in the “club” you got to be from here for at least 3-4 generations. Though so-called educated folks like to think they are above and beyond that, they do the same thing. It is fine to be proud of your roots, to write a book on women who contributed to whatever is South Carolina today, because their stories are left out of the history books. We have to write “her-story” because they are left out of his-tory. And I was fascinated with what I learned.

But there is more to my thought.

People speak of their ancestors. It is good to know who you are, where you are from. We are all connected to those before us. There are some who believe we have some sort of memories embedded in our DNA, so to speak, which are connected to generations past. For example, I may be drawn to water because my ancestors lived near the sea, and not have any understanding of that in a conscious way. It is an interesting idea.

But most of us don’t know much about our ancestors other than 2-3 generations back at the most. So my thought is to write a poem that expresses connections to those I consciously knew, or knew through stories that have been told by someone I knew. And that will be my next post.