Category Archives: Musings

Thoughts on Taste…

Taste

Taste, may be delightfully delicious and new
Then again it may sour your point-of-view
Or rather pleasing to your mind’s eye
Or else make bitter your tongue fly
A sign of refinement and class
Or courage of flavor in a glass
And maybe joy of salty and sweet 
Dressed up carefully pretty and neat
Taste tied to excellent olfactory senses
And social awareness and good graces
Tastes are sometimes good, sometimes bad
And you’ll get a special treat if you’re a good lad
And a taste of soap if you swear
Or print with stripes you wear
In enormously bad taste
Because you dressed in such a haste
Or forgot to savor and sip your wine
While considering another tasteless rhyme

 

 

Thoughts on Choices…

Choice

Could it be
That whence one has one
One wants the other
As much as
One wanted the former?

Does a choice
Versus, no choice
Imply inherent
Wealth? 

If a choice
Is made by chance
Of coin flip
Is it really a choice?

Does not
Advice on choice

Just presents a
New choice 
On advice?

Okay.. Just decide… 

 

 

Anonymity…

 

Anonymity 

It’s hard to know who you are
If you never reach for your star
If you never say your piece
Or sign anything more than a lease
And have an opinion you never share
Even though you privately do care
Seeking someone to say for you
That you want something new
That the world could really change
If your words could just be rearrange
Maybe your thoughts are needed
And we’d be better off
               if your words were heeded
But no one may know all you think
If you don’t occasionally make a stink
Yet it seldom matters much today
Because they don’t listen anyway 
As anonymity of the masses rule
Forwarding some mindless drool
That you know is about winning a game
And it’s all done without label or name

 

 

Long Hair…

 

Long Hair

For 40 years it was all about looking as if I belonged
To a world of business of results and performance
On a stage, I had to perform, say the right things
Do the right things, make the best-right decision possible
Sometimes make lives miserable, just to allow a business survive
Recover from so many mistakes and persist and pretend I had answers… and convince, convince everyone… so,
I had to look the part, wear the right clothes and grooming
Then, suddenly I don’t
Then, there’s a pandemic
And so it goes
Long pants seem ridiculous and unneeded
And there are dozens of ties with nothing to do but gather dust
If I’m not wearing exercise shoes, who needs a pair of sox
Button down shirts are an anarchism
Haircuts don’t happen because they are dangerous
But I’ve come to remember the 70’s and long hair
And for the first time in decades the wind has something to move
But it never quite looks the same… and so
I’m told I look ridiculous… which, I have little doubt is true
Thus it’s time to find a new barber as the world has changed
And the barber on the corner is gone, sadly
And my hair continues to grow… a good thing I suppose
But by tomorrow, my long hair will be no more!

Part of a Picture we are…

 

Part of a Picture

As creatures of a tribal ilk
Suckled with the milk of storied past
Smoothed and blended, soft as silk

Asked to be a puzzle piece that conformed
One of a million pieces, of a million pictures
Painted, cut, bent and transformed

Beaten into place, to ensure the flow
Of past to present to future alignment
To imagery that everyone will now know

And the songs, stories, we will applaud
Because we’ve always done so
No matter if some of us are appalled

But we cannot hear we cannot see
For we have no need of wisdom
We know who we are 
               and what our children will be

Then we hear some whispers in the night
Doubt is her name, or is it Wisdom
To challenge, to make us wonder what’s right

But we drown her with our coffee or tea
As we consume our silky, insidious breakfast news
And take comfort in our picturesque painted sea

Where all is as it should be, perfect and blue
No matter the doubts of distant storm
Making for rough seas, which we always knew

Would be here someday to beat on our shore
And mess up our perfect picture story
As the appalled are beating on our cottage door

For there is no other refuge from the coming storm
And we are now challenged by our doubts, or wisdom
As it may be, and the altered reality we need to form

A new picture, new pieces, a new me
That will be something better, something sweeter
And a more beautiful and peaceful sea

Silent Majority …

What if the silent majority of this country, is not moved by divisive politics, what if the silent majority believes in the ideals of this country, and that All Men Are Created Equal, means that black lives matter too… and that we have been guilty of riding on the shoulders, and labors and suffering of those less fortunate, and what if that silent majority is really about advancing  humanity to a higher purpose and broad inclusion of what it means to be a member of society.  What if silent majority means being Christian in the sense of following Christ’s teachings and loving one another instead of hate and prejudice and abhorrent lack of empathy?  What if being of a silent majority means that we respect and honor those that worship and believe different than we do?  What if the silent majority says that it matters not who you love,  how you love, only that you do not hate.  What if the silent majority is in the streets demonstrating for justice?  What if they are in their homes, rooting for someone to help articulate that we want to be prosperous but not by pushing others down to lift ourselves up, but rather lifting all of us through education, through opportunity, through understanding and empathy.  What if we are no longer silent?

 

Thoughts on Education

This is an excerpt from Darkwater,  written by W.E.B. Dubois and published in 1920.   I find it valuable and insightful today.  If we think of the problems of our time, I believe the source of much of our discontent remains, as a cause, inadequate education.   We often see our histories as we want to see them, not as they really are, we see our world as it is and think it has worked for us, why won’t it work for the next generation.  We invest so much into policing, criminal incarceration, and welfare, and other programs. When possibly investments that would better serve our society would improve our children, making them better people.  Improving how they see themselves, how they think and how they can be the source of our future advancement.  Alas however being honest about who we are and what we are doing and where are we going is a necessary first step.

From Darkwater:

“We have a right to assume that hundreds and thousands of boys and girls today are missing the chance of developing unusual talents because the chances have been against them; and that indeed the majority of the children of the world are not being systematically fitted for their life work and for life itself.  Why?

Many seek the reason in the content of the school program. They feverishly argue the relative values of Greek, mathematics, and manual training, but fail with singular unanimity in pointing out the fundamental cause of our failure in human education: That failure is due to the fact that we aim not at the full development of the child, but that the world regards and always has regarded education first as a means of buttressing the established order of things rather than improving it. And this is the real reason why strife, war, and revolution have marked the onward march of humanity instead of reason and sound reform. Instead of seeking to push the coming generation ahead of our pitiful accomplishment, we insist that it march behind. We say, morally, that high character is conformity to present public opinion; we say industrially that the present order is best and that children must be trained to perpetuate it.

But, it is objected, what else can we do? Can we teach Revolution to the inexperienced in hope that they may discern progress? No, but we may teach frankly that this world is not perfection, but development: that the object of education is manhood and womanhood, clear reason, individual talent and genius and the spirit of service and sacrifice, and not simply a frantic effort to avoid change in present institutions; that industry is for man and not man for industry and that while we must have workers to work, the prime object of our training is not the work but the worker—not the maintenance of present industrial caste but the development of human intelligence by which drudgery may be lessened and beauty widened.”

Truth in a box…

The other night we were watching the last in a series called Rectify  on Netflix.   It is very good, well-written.  I thought originally it was about the soul and what happens when it’s contained in a box for 20 years on death row, but it was far more complicated, and it really was about not just a search for truth, but how truth is used, distorted, or maybe half told, and its many versions.  It inspired this:

Truth in a Box

A tool, without a manual
A weapon,
Less often a shield,
Maybe as a key
To something before unknown
Maybe a half that shields

The other half for your good
Always there in some form
Possibly hidden
And elusive
Malleable as gold
Complex, and possibly ornamental
Sometimes dark

Pulling in all light
Other times bright
Reflecting light
If so allowed Inside the box
Without windows
But just maybe
There’s a
 way in…

 

If God Said a Prayer…

I was trying to imagine if God said a prayer, what might it be…

God’s Prayer For Us

I am, and will always be
Can you not hear
Do you not see
That you are Me
Therefore you too
Will always be
And life is but a
Part of your journey
From forever
To now and back
To forever
And your co-travelers
Are each and everyone also Me
So please treat Me accordingly 

 

A Poem of The Day, from Poetry Foundation

This poem is amazing… written a hundred years ago or more… it is asking us about God’s will and Can we ever really know our purpose As the pen complains of the words it must write that is beyond its knowledge (ken)

The Masked Face

I found me in a great surging space,
At either end a door,
And I said: “What is this giddying place,
With no firm-fixéd floor,
That I knew not of before?”
“It is Life,” said a mask-clad face.

I asked: “But how do I come here,
Who never wished to come;
Can the light and air be made more clear,
The floor more quietsome,
And the doors set wide? They numb
Fast-locked, and fill with fear.”

The mask put on a bleak smile then,
And said, “O vassal-wight,
There once complained a goosequill pen
To the scribe of the Infinite
Of the words it had to write
Because they were past its ken.”