For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: burble.
She walks the beach, strong and durable.
Her mother’s voice and the ocean merge, burble.
Is my daughter strong and durable or is it the beach? What do you think? She turned 21 this week.
For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: burble.
She walks the beach, strong and durable.
Her mother’s voice and the ocean merge, burble.
Is my daughter strong and durable or is it the beach? What do you think? She turned 21 this week.
I wrote this after working at Madigan Army Hospital in 2009 for three months as a temporary doctor. I am posting it here because Shoreacres sent me this link about poetry and medicine.
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I would pray if I could. It seems ludicrous to pray for a poet, but there it is.
It started with two soldiers. The Army was embedding a behavioral health specialists (the new politically correct term for mental health specialists) in units starting before 2010. Soldiers were trained in suicide prevention, instructed to stay with a buddy if they made any comments about suicide. A soldier was to walk his or her buddy directly to the behavioral health specialist or to to higher rank. As soldiers went on their fourth and fifth tours, post traumatic stress disorder, depression and traumatic brain injuries were rampant. Unfortunately, psychologists basically felt like they were putting Power Ranger band-aids on hemorrhaging brain arteries. It wasn’t working.
A soldier was accompanying a convoy in Iraq when an IED went off. Right through the bottom of a convoy truck. The driver died screaming from an arterial groin bleed. Two of the eight soldiers were killed. The truck was abandoned and the rest of the convoy got back to the safe (mostly) zone. That soldier had the glassed ghost look in her eyes and got quiet. The usual response was to avoid someone’s eyes and hope for the best, but another soldier wouldn’t let her alone. She kept asking, “Tell me. What happened?”
The first soldier finally snarled out part of the story.
The second soldier pinned a poem to her pillow, describing the event. Our first soldier came in screaming and threw the crumpled ball of paper at her chest. “That’s not what happened! That’s not how I felt! Not even close!”
“Well, what DID happen!” The rest of the unit tried to hide in plain sight or disappeared to the bathroom or got really interested in books or watching the same video over and over, but the two of them stood face to face and went at it. Words, not fists. The crumpled paper was retrieved, the poem rewritten. It took two weeks before soldier one suddenly said, “That’s it. That’s pretty good. For a poem.” But she was back, her gruff foul mouthed efficient self.
Of course it wouldn’t have gone anywhere if the behavioral health specialist hadn’t joked about it to his superiors. The Army was really desperate. In spite of all the work, the suicide rate was still challenging the combat death rate, and there just weren’t enough people to deploy.
The Army went looking for poets. Four were promptly deployed into units. Two of them turned out to be pretty useless, but the other two: the units thrived. Word started getting around. The poets were swamped with people from other units.
The recruiting campaign: “We want you, yes we do, poet show your heart so true!” was painful, but the Army did not care. And poets stepped forward from within the ranks! Don’t ask, don’t tell turned on it’s head. In spite of the medical community’s cries for waiting until more scientific studies were done, and the press and cartoonists drawing pictures recruiters welcoming wimpy pale asthenic writers with open arms, the Army embedded a poet in every unit, right beside the behavioral health specialist. Oh, of course they tried prose too. The academics had a field day fighting about why prose didn’t work. But it didn’t.
It’s the height of irony that we’re cut off with everything we need, except a poet. A water source, food, ammunition. We’re holding our position. Our back up poet is dead ten days ago, but our main poet got an IED blast. Traumatic brain injury, two weeks ago. We can’t get him out, of course. You would think someone would bleed if they were that bad, but he just can’t hold on to any memory. The soldiers tell him their stories, he struggles and tries, but he can barely hold on to one line. Can’t read, though he can write. Can’t see very well either.
The whole unit is starting to look glass-eyed and haunted. Smith asked to go in the jail yesterday and for the door to be closed. He promptly started screaming. It got quiet after a while so they went in. He was sitting on bunk. “Ok.” he said. “I might come back tomorrow.” Some soldiers are writing their own limericks or free verse. It’s ironic that it hurts morale so much, knowing there’s help available. Knowing the chances of a poet reaching us in time are very slim.
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I will use this for the Ragtag Daily Prompt: comeback.
For mindlovemisery’s prompt: opposing forces. The prompts are admit/deny and presence/absence.
The pairs bring up my current sadness right away. I am struggling with the realization that we have a pervasive legal substance that works at the opiate receptor, is all over the US, and I have to send out urine tests for ALL of my chronic pain and opiate overuse and anyone on any controlled substance. You say, “but it’s legal”. I say, “Overdose and death risk. I can’t ignore it.” Here is the resulting poem.
admit deny
admit to yourself you deny your addiction
the presence of the drug means the absence of the one I love
sunrise
light spilling through clouds
across water
waves and wind
or still
time outdoors
beach or lake
sky change
water change
water changes fast
For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: fast.
on the rocks, the canadian shield, old rock
rock that extends for miles and miles
water cupped in the rock
cupped like a hand, holding a lake
you say
You seem so deeply at peace
I say
No, I am not at peace at all
then I say
Yes, in the depths I am at peace
like the lake
the surface is all weather
glassy sometimes
then surface chop
then rain singing and bouncing
then waves crashing on the shore
reflecting the sky
light, dark, blue, the green of trees
pale pink in the morning
or orange and blue with the setting sun
the depths change slowly
not that slowly
in the fall the water temperature drops
to 4 degrees
and the lake turns over
all the 4 degree water dropping into the depths
and the warmer water rises
until the whole lake is 4 degrees and most dense
and then the surface freezes
the ice is lighter and floats on top
until it is solid and deep
and the lake winters over
in the spring the ice melts
and the ice breaks up
and the lake rolls over again
my surface is choppy with emotion
memories
grief and joy
my slow depths turn over
and there is deep peace
Come in
It’s an ocean
Big enough for us all
Float under the bridge with me
Or wander out to distant ships at sea
Stay on the surface
Or come down in the depths
Leap out and crash back in whale form
Or surf the wake of a boat
Or in the waves to catch a fish
Storms come and rain and rainbows
Sky with clouds lightening sun stars
Climb a rock or lighthouse or cliff
Or stand on a boat
But then return oh love return to the sea
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from 2015
For Mindlovesmisery’s Saturday Mix: double take.
he’s lain in the lane
on the hill, he’s a heel
waking drunk, he’ll wonder
has he the will to heal?
someone said
we all contain all the archetypes
which archetype do you reject?
you say no, I contain no mother no father
no murderer no priest
rich woman poor woman beggar woman thief
doctor lawyer indian chief
princess is the role I reject
as a child as a girl
fearing to be used
fearing to be taken
wanting to be mine not his
not his ever
not chattel
not property
not owned
divorcee is a role I reject
realize I scorn it
then turn my face from abuse
and embrace it fully
lonely is hard
alone is easy
what is the difference?
my uncle says
I’ve never been alone before
I’ve always been the most
important person in someone’s life before
at least he thought so
which archetype do you reject?
we all contain all the archetypes
all the stories
all the stories that we know
if the only story that we know
is of poverty and despair
and hiding and war
discrimination and hatred
while the lighted box shows happiness
elsewhere while we suffer
the arch of the rainbow
may not be a story
that can be imagined
all the stories that we know
and tell
tell
_________________________________________________________________________
I will add this to the Ragtag Daily Prompt #54: reflection. Because it fits.
Β
For RonavanWrites Weekly Haiku: child and safe.
The toys are beached, lost
here in the sand, I hope the
child is safe home, safe.
Here is the prompt: a write up on (sorry. the ethics of the site changed, precluding my linking to it).
You cannot be in love with every beautiful thing you see
I cannot be in love with every beautiful thing I see
why?
what is beauty?
what is beauty to you?
what is beauty to me?
I like the trees
I like the ocean
I like the dunes
I like the grass
They don’t lie to me
They don’t wear masks
If they gossip, I don’t understand
so it doesn’t matter
When birds sing
I sing back
I don’t know what they are saying
but I try
They sing back to me
My cat is here
talking to me
meow, mew
I can tell when she has a toy
or a mouse
(or a bat)
by her voice
The dunes will fall
in an earthquake
I may be buried
if I am on the beach
like lava eating houses
lava burying people alive
suffocating
though on the beach
I’d be crushed
it’s not like snow
our dunes come down with trees
when they come down
yet I walk the beach anyhow
go about my life
in love with every beautiful thing I see
BLIND WILDERNESS
in front of the garden gate - JezzieG
Discover and re-discover Mexicoβs cuisine, culture and history through the recipes, backyard stories and other interesting findings of an expatriate in Canada
Or not, depending on my mood
All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain!
An onion has many layers. So have I!
Exploring the great outdoors one step at a time
Some of the creative paths that escaped from my brain!
Books, reading and more ... with an Australian focus ... written on Ngunnawal Country
Engaging in some lyrical athletics whilst painting pictures with words and pounding the pavement. I run; blog; write poetry; chase after my kids & drink coffee.
Coast-to-coast US bike tour
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imperfect pictures
Refugees welcome - FlΓΌchtlinge willkommen I am teaching German to refugees. Ich unterrichte geflΓΌchtete Menschen in der deutschen Sprache. I am writing this blog in English and German because my friends speak English and German. Ich schreibe auf Deutsch und Englisch, weil meine Freunde Deutsch und Englisch sprechen.
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