Auntie’s Lament
Something so monumental
To my vaporous life
Yet I’m not at the center
but off to the side
Gone in a day
Packing up a child’s life
How can we fit such lively memories into this suitcase?
Our goodbyes so concise,
Make it mean something, make it sound nice
Women with briefcases holding a match to the gaslight
But the truth was a knife,
And it cut me twice
two toddler shaped holes in my life
Dreading waking up tomorrow
To remember it’s real again
No laughter, no crying, no children in sight
Can’t seem to reason why
Did I think that He has loosened His grip on them
That He has forgotten His own heart
That He has loved them less now than eternity past?
Did I think that His word would return void
That His providence was untimely
That His sovereignty won’t last?
Did I think that His mercies have grown old
That His lovingkindness grown cold
That His plans have been dashed?
But alas, It is my grief
To think that the right hand of the most high has changed
But His great faithfulness endures,
Praise the Lord
He is the same
Dives
Ringing in my bones
Something I did not know
Like a platform for my feet
Before I leap
That wide eyed wilderness
White capped bewildering
My ears wide open
To the song that it sings
Soft and quiet like,
Dust landing on strings
A subtle correspondence
for my mind
breathes in my contusions
And my doubts alike
Exhales fondness
Wrapped me in neoprene
fibers of my thoughts dance
With purple swaying
I’m pierced through
Can it heal if it does not sting?
To soar over fields again-
Salt in my longing
Memories of shiny substance
Like recalling a dream
I yearn to call it home
But it’s never belonged to me
Wrestling with grace
Here we are again playing tug of war.
Your intentions aren’t for me but you,
Who is keeping score?
Another ploy to mold and manipulate, you win again.
I’m trying so hard not to add this one to the heap out back near the trash
It’s trickling food
For my resentment in the alley
“You can’t get mad at me if I don’t do what you want”
Somehow this child has more backbone than me,
Is my freedom more crucial
Than your supposed misery?
From where I stand it doesn’t look so bad
Hard, yes, but the pit of despair?
It’s not fair
And yet I’m here most months of the year
Where I pitched my tent under the bus
Should I lay across this pothole again so your tires don’t pop?
Shamed if I do, shamed if I don’t,
What does it matter?
But then,
I remember.
“How many times?” I ask
“Have I kept count?” He replied.
“Has my grace run out?”
And just like that my sin is magnified and His grace displayed
And I’m sure it’s written all over my face,
But I remember.
I was one that lined the streets, mocking and screaming “crucify!”, While my Hope walked by, dragging His cross up the hill.
I was the one that provided the hammer that would drive the nails into His hands, I was the one that wove together the thorny strands that carved His scars upon His crown, I was the one that beat Him and spat on Him, who painted the earth with His blood, just as I too was the one who looked the other way.
I remember what I’ve been forgiven from,
I remember the places I’ve been in sin,
I remember the depths of despair where there was no air and my necklace was a noose and they called it pretty, sinking in the sand with my hand outstretched toward loose branches that were uprooted as I touched them, I remember being pleasantly sedated in daylight by a lie that I was fine but at night I remember I was hunched over in the bathroom, heaving emesis, doors locked, my fears a mess on the floor and no one to come in and mop them, I remember the weight was so great that I couldn’t go another day without Him.
Something
had
to
give,
and
He
gave
me
grace.
And now, somehow, I’m saved and free
Which also means, free to forgive. Free to suffer joyfully. Free to give grace simply because I have received it.
Free to sit in the midst of the mess with others, to wait out the wind battering His temple, knowing that the God of grace and glory sits on His throne already.
Plumbism
I’m handing you a bullet
It’s lead and heavy
And heavy laden,
Been in my pocket for a long time.
Don’t shoot me with it, please.
I know you have a gun,
You bring it out of it’s hiding place
When you are
Angry, Sad, Alone
You wave it around in my face.
Don’t shoot me with it, please.
My initials are engraved
On that lead bullet
It’s a piece of me
I wasn’t supposed to keep to myself
And you have it now, I gave it to you.
You gave me one of yours too
And you said,
“Don’t shoot me with it, please”
We should disarm ourselves,
Don’t you think?
Make amends,
Let enmity shrink?
I only have so many bullets to give-
When you pull that trigger,
The gunpowder ignites,
In a flash of white, it’s gone.
Don’t shoot me with it, please.
338
jaundice
because he has a buildup of anger
so yellow like that carbonated drink
[i need a map to navigate his needs]
breathing like a woodwind now
they pushed his tongue away
from the roof of his mouth
never spoke up before, now he can’t
day and night
determined by the dimming
of the fluorescent light
death and life
determined by the rush of people
across the hall
is his anger still there,
just below the surface,
or is that gone too?
Trapped
When I scratch my head, I recall the Venus fly trap that sprouted there.
It grows hungry at night, and snaps at the dreams above my bed.
It prowls among my thoughts;
Tonight it pounced on the nakedness of desire.
I cannot drown out this fire.
These embers still burn despite my flooding fear-
I cannot drown out this fire.
A sodden coat,
Damp with defeat,
Shrouds my shoulders. So I sigh-
And feed the trap another cinder from the burning pile at my feet.
Small Talk
My love language is touch;
my atmosphere is distended from my eyes, reaching out and craving contact with you.
Look at me!
Your mortality touches mine when these spheres in our heads align
And
I
feel
grounded.
I am reminded that I am interactive;
Part of me is body.
I wish I was acquainted with humility and didn't feel the need to be known,
But I do.
Will you know me? Will you ask?
Terminus
“I cannot wait to transition from this vapid exile of decor and detour into something less of a sham than what I already am.” The creature spoke faintly into her neck.
“Can’t you breathe, sir?” she replied, concerned for her companion.
He sighed and wistfully said, “I do not know where to find the air.”
It may not matter. “I am aging, and so are you.” She whispered.
It was a sudden change, yet it spanned across a lifetime.
She broke.
This meant that he too, could no longer be.
Their souls were radiant as they glimmered through the cracks of her decaying body.