So much good news for the master poets among us! This week it seems better to be a full-time poet than a full-time teacher: I am Tired and Emotional despite two days of freakishly May weather, ample use of sunlamp, and efforts to remember to dance. I am discouraged.
First response: give in and wallow. Here's a song--were you listening to this in 1979?--that I've rediscovered and that seems to speak to the moment. #lyricsaspoetry
Thank you for being Tired and Emotional with me. Now here's an antidote. This is a poem by an unassuming Unitarian Universalist minister that was read in my service recently. It makes me feel.......encouraged.
LET THE ARTISTS WIN | Bob Janis-Dillon
I vote we let the artists win
the ones covered in paint from their last attempt
to smuggle across the beauty of a bowl of fruit
the 14-year-old rapper learning to spit
throwing life's chaos on the rhythm wheel
uncovering the shapes that live on after the next break
I say we let the food bank volunteers win
the ones always carrying around their agenda
for the meeting, waging campaigns
to stock shelves with bread
I would like to see the nurses extend their string of victories
from the hospital bed to the nation's boardrooms
until we care for each other as if death
were inevitable and mercy was the only thing
that made the rounds bearable
I say we let the kindergarten teachers win
as they raise up small edifices
for the beauty words
will never capture or reveal
Maybe even let the helpless drunkard win sometimes,
when she cries into her beer
and declares it's all too much
I will let the grandmothers win
when they tell the old stories
that hold me in their keeping
And the children yelling
play! play! The ones who have already cost us so much
of our final productivity
the only tyrants who can command
the true attention of the wise
I want them to win too
again and again
without pity
and then when the men with guns come
we can say I'm sorry
but whether you win or lose
it's really never been my game sir
I have lost
and lost again a thousand wars of the heart
and those to whom I have waved the white flag
those to whom
I have surrendered
the whole and holy of my life
will never
never
let me go
*********************
There are too many soul-thumping moments in this to list them all...but let me tell you, when my minister read the words "I say we let the kindergarten teachers win," and three people sitting close to me reached over to touch my shoulder or look in my eyes, their acknowledgment mattered.
And now I'm off to school, to
"raise up today's small edifices
for the beauty words
will never capture or reveal."
The round-up today is hosted by Liz--long time no see!--at her blog Elizabeth Steinglass.
the ones covered in paint from their last attempt
to smuggle across the beauty of a bowl of fruit
the 14-year-old rapper learning to spit
throwing life's chaos on the rhythm wheel
uncovering the shapes that live on after the next break
I say we let the food bank volunteers win
the ones always carrying around their agenda
for the meeting, waging campaigns
to stock shelves with bread
I would like to see the nurses extend their string of victories
from the hospital bed to the nation's boardrooms
until we care for each other as if death
were inevitable and mercy was the only thing
that made the rounds bearable
I say we let the kindergarten teachers win
as they raise up small edifices
for the beauty words
will never capture or reveal
Maybe even let the helpless drunkard win sometimes,
when she cries into her beer
and declares it's all too much
I will let the grandmothers win
when they tell the old stories
that hold me in their keeping
And the children yelling
play! play! The ones who have already cost us so much
of our final productivity
the only tyrants who can command
the true attention of the wise
I want them to win too
again and again
without pity
and then when the men with guns come
we can say I'm sorry
but whether you win or lose
it's really never been my game sir
I have lost
and lost again a thousand wars of the heart
and those to whom I have waved the white flag
those to whom
I have surrendered
the whole and holy of my life
will never
never
let me go
*********************
There are too many soul-thumping moments in this to list them all...but let me tell you, when my minister read the words "I say we let the kindergarten teachers win," and three people sitting close to me reached over to touch my shoulder or look in my eyes, their acknowledgment mattered.
And now I'm off to school, to
"raise up today's small edifices
for the beauty words
will never capture or reveal."
The round-up today is hosted by Liz--long time no see!--at her blog Elizabeth Steinglass.