32
No Regrets Journal Spring 2010

No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

A journal of poetry, words and images documenting twists and turns of the human condition in the search for love, meaning and community.

Citation preview

Page 1: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

No Regrets Journal

! ! ! ! ! ! Spring ! ! ! ! ! ! 2010

Page 2: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

A journal of poetry, words and images documenting twists and turns of the human condition in the search for love, meaning and community.

No Regrets JournalWebsite: noregretsjournal.comemail: [email protected]

2

Page 3: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

EditorClayton Medeiros is a poet and collage artist interested in love, the human condition and the search formeaning. [email protected]

Contributors

Kim von See grew up in Garland, Texas and escaped tothe Pacific Northwest as soon as she could. She lives indowntown Bellingham with several plants.

Neil McKay is a Bellingham poet and provider of technical assistance to the web site.

Robert Lashley was a semifinalist for a 2007 Pen/Rosenthal Fellowship. He is trying to be an honest manand a good writer.

Submissions

Submissions are by invitation of the editor or contributors.

Copyright May 2010

3

Page 4: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Contents

Compassion ! Clayton Medeiros

Lonely ! ! Kim von See

Home Boy Paints a Northwest Mural! ! ! Robert Lashley

Sunday Morning! ! ! Clayton Medeiros

Three Sheets to the Wind! ! Kim von see

Grandpa Tasting the DirtFrom his Sweet TomatoGarden! ! ! ! Robert Lashley

Turn of Mind! ! ! ! Clayton Medeiros

Wrong Numbers! ! ! Kim von See

Disarray in Gray ! ! ! Clayton Medeiros

Love Butchered! ! ! Clayton Medeiros

How Not to Think of Slavery While Watching theYing Yang Twins Rap on a Georgia Plantation: AUsers Manual! ! ! Robert Lashley

Does God Hear Us! ! ! Clayton Medeiros

4

Page 5: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Contents

Wislawa Symborska! ! Clayton Medeiros

All Collages and Photographs ! Clayton Medeiros

5

Page 6: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Compassion

The greatest gift we can offer is compassion. The greatest gift we can receive is compassion. When asked what the most important practice was, meditation, asceticism or other acts, the Buddha said, if you could only do one thing, you should be compassionate. The Lurianic Kabbalah describes how God tried to create the world with equal parts compassion and judgment. Each creation fell apart until more compassion was added.

Much of the difficulty between groups, whether they are gang members or church members, is the belief that they possess an exclusive truth. A truth that distinguishes them from others. This truth can be religious, political, racial or cultural. The problem with exclusive truth is it isolates believers and closes them up in a box surrounded by righteousness. Only those who are true believers are allowed in. All others are excluded. It is like tribes where the only word for humanity is the name of the tribe. Any one who is not a tribal member is not a full human being.

Righteousness turns everyone else into an other who is somehow less. The beliefs of the other are less righteous, wrong headed or even evil. Soon the other is a danger to the true belief be it religious, political, racial or cultural. Laws that discriminate against outsiders are passed and their rights are narrowed. As their humanity is stripped from them, they are arrested and branded as outsiders. This is soon followed by blood shed as the police increasingly operate outside civil rights guarantees and vigilantes are encouraged to take action as authorities look the other way.

Religious truths are epitomized among the sons and daughters of Abraham, Jews, Christians and Muslims. Each group, along with theirtrue believers, knows that their God is the only God. All other gods are mere superstitions at best and blasphemous at worst.

6

Page 7: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Societal beliefs are equally powerful and pit capitalists against socialists and liberals against conservatives. When civil discourse deteriorates into hateful speech and death threats, civil liberties are violated and violence is not far behind.

When religion provides the basis for government, prejudices are amplified and utilize the power of the state to ban other beliefs within the society and wage war against non believers from other societies. Church and state must be separate to allow for religious freedom and space for civil discourse and freedom of speech.

Compassion opens a place for others. It makes room for the shared divinity of all human beings, even those who disagree. Compassion is love bereft of needs and wants. You are compassionate because it is the right thing to do not because you garner some return from it.

Compassion must begin with yourself. You cannot accept others and their flaws until you accept your self and your own flaws. If you open to the possibility of forgiveness, you will find that it is already within you waiting to be recognized.

Once we define the other and try to disenfranchise them, subdue them or go to war with them, we have compromised our own humanity. Soon we look at the other as less than human, as objects that can be manipulated and dispensed with.

Compassion is required in all actions, whether between individuals, between countries or between the earth and its inhabitants. Humility is required if we are not to self destruct. Compassion is at the heart of humility and a sensible society.

Clayton Medeiros

7

Page 8: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

lonely

when everyone is gone she will

yell, as if tiny and injured,

from the bedroom. madeline the cat has nothing to hide. "come here,"

and she does, chirping a response

as she creeps along the sofa like a

face painted soldier in a trench.

"madeline!" i say, just to say something friendly and familiar.

"yes!" she says, excited

to hear a word that has, slowly,

woven itself into her cat-language.

"yessss!" madeline disagrees with very little. food and water are fabulous, an open

door or a sunbeam, all of it is good

to her except the loneliness. having just

realized the house is too quiet and

the lamps have been left on unattended, she calls out to the

washing machine or the stove,

whoever will listen.

the lamps ignore her.

"madeline!" "yes!" and she races toward the voice that is connected

to the hands that stroke and feed

her, to the hemisphere of

light where i type.

Kim von See

8

Page 9: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

9

Page 10: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Homeboy Paints A Northwest Mural  in the beginning was the wall; a slab of brick  mortar, industry concrete  reformed to formelessness by the miracle of krylon  reformed by a line almost moving itself    in layers, tags, accents; spray painted breaths  of grass and the earth  a signature of dawn alive in the sideswipes spoken in the nature in the bubbles 

  and the homeboy laid down his can   and smiled   and said it was fly

Robert Lashley

10

Page 11: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

11

Page 12: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Sunday Morning

There is loneliness, From a tableMeant for two,On Sunday morning,Dull eyes stare overCoffee cups to no Particular thing.

An infinite distance,Not to be overcomeOn this day of days.Hours meander,Empty moments,No difference withWhat came before.

What will follow,In circuitous purposeAgainst the clock’s Linear tick and tock.Arbitrary minutesAcross life’s surface,Held in memory.

As if past and presentWandered indifferently,Until there’s no center,Just random dotsWithout a Seurat To color and shapePerpetual picnics,

Where eyes stareOver grass and waterTo no particular thing.

Clayton Medeiros

12

Page 13: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

13

Page 14: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

three sheets to the wind

a figure in the dark of the sidewalk, outside the door-handle store,

danced a scattered jig, his bag threatening to lose its lunch. his friend

walked behind, confused maybe, just following the sidewalk. the dancer noticed me, alarmed under his driver's cap—my friend from

the coffee shop. we exclaimed and hugged as if we haven't spoken in

months which we haven't, only he's up to here with whiskey. he says

my name again: "it's so good to see you!" i say his name again,

hoping i've got it right, tripping a little. the whiskey sloshes about inside of him, organs pickling beneath it like strange olives. he

compliments me on my scarf. i am so beautiful and the night is so full

of myriad nights viewed from the sea inside of him. he will go dancing,

kiss a girl or humiliate himself wildly on the dance floor. the days will

layer themselves on top of each other like fossils. his skin is so clear and his hat still standing on the porcelain pedestal of his body, shoes

still tied. the dancehall will beat inside of him like a second stormy

heart.

Kim von See

14

Page 15: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

15

Page 16: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Grandpa, Tasting The Dirt From His Sweet Tomato Garden. An intimacy, invisible, yet vivid in movements.A interchange of earth and the body

In the garden, all agony is sanctified, made holywashed clean in the sediments, the purifying of mudand the field, for a moment, redeemed in the spring crop, in the renewal of sweetness and the seasons.

Taste, and what is broken becomes whole in the roots.Taste, and all is vivified in the body

Robert Lashley

16

Page 17: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

17

Page 18: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Turn of Mind

A turn of mind Sustains the romantic In spite of indifferentUniverses that expand, Round and round. Perhaps dreams about Midnight curved space, Time’s back and forth,Mind’s Mobius strip. Alchemical wizardry Justifies forlorn query.Heaven incented mindsPerform the impossible, Unlike slippery ends, Clearly in doubt, Caught in twisted fabric,Finite beginnings,Wrapped one in another.

Fruits of constellations,A saintly tinged ZodiacBridge cavernous gaps,Moment of moments,Time hesitates.We look backward,Curves and corners, Before story tellersFrame how it was.

18

Page 19: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

The bent, whirled medium,Fertile escapades,Searches for answers,Fate, faith, free choice.Moments that will not,Cannot, come again,Because there isNo return trip in thisEpisode of reality.

Clayton Medeiros

19

Page 20: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

wrong numbers

people calling, sometimes urgent, asking for robbie. early in the

morning i tell them

i'm not who they thought i was.

my phone came with

someone else's number. he could be in prison somewhere,

or anywhere. one woman

is incredulous, heartbroken even,

the wash of sound behind her

voice sounding like a highway. no, i don't know where he is.

Kim von See

20

Page 21: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

21

Page 22: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Disarray In Gray

Sky and ground in disarrayRain slants across windowsStreet framed bricksTilt the world’s structureBut no end of timeJust tangential streaksEntertain my eyesIn morning’s gray scale

Windy walkers tug coatsHats yearn to be freeSail for points west Follow Gaugin’s trailEscape human frailtyEndless pushes and pullsYesterday tomorrowAs if they meant something

God’s desire for companyA break from infinityAllah kept writing From the angelsWho watch and waitFor our enlightenmentEven on this gray dayOf splattered side walks

Someone retains faithIn sometime sunshineJustifying sufferingThis leaden morning

Clayton Medeiros

22

Page 23: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

23

Page 24: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Love Butchered

Faced with love’s butcheryHope lost once againAs if childhood never wasFairytales endlessly spinNo kiss saves the dayFor sleeping princesses

They dream onBooks rot on the shelfTales are forgottenTragedy and comedyA single story lineUsurps Greek Myths

No end of day fanfareJust darkest simplicityDisarrayed ConstellationsAstrological chaosChildren lie awake Wait for stories

Angels and wizardsDiscuss time’s passageForward and backUnsure of their roleIn the growing silenceOf useless wands

24

Page 25: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Once upon a timeThere was the wordA sense of purposeEverything namedHierarchies of beingWith no end of days

A tree grows quietlyPrepares the needed cross

Clayton Medeiros

25

Page 26: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

How Not To Think Of Slavery While Watching The Ying Yang Twins Rap On a Georgia Plantation: A Users Manual. Look away from the Ice, the glitter and such. Do not think of cattle, oxen, or pain for the pictures, though silent, say far too much.

Don't think of the blood, the soul catchers punch the taking of bounty with encrusted chain. Look away from the ice, the glitter and such.

Don't think of the gentry, the dawg's or the dutch nor the color of dirt, the clay or the grain for the pictures, though silent, say far too much.

Don't think of the auction, the prod or the touch the sizing of the breast, testicles, brain. Look away from the ice, the glitter and such.

Dont think of the bee, the chopping block crutch and the cut of the day, come shine or come rain for the pictures, though silent, say far too much.

To think of it all is to think far too much. To think far too much is to think your insane. Look away from the ice, the glitter and such for the pictures, though silent, say far too much Robert Lashley

26

Page 27: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

27

Page 28: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Does God Hear Us?

Our voicesCry out to GodWords and musicRachmaninoff’s All Night VigilChrist born of womanGod’s commitmentDeath understood In heaven and earth

Adam’s sin overcomeEve bears God’s sonForgives fallibilityEarthly love’s limitsVoices rise in unisonCelebrate the crossAbandonment’s painForsaken by the FatherHope in faith alone

Psalmist songsSung once againOld Testament timesSupport good newsSome don’t believeA prophet answersTimeless questions In parables openTo all comers

28

Page 29: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

An immanent saviorFrom Abraham’s seedMuslim Jew ChristianA redeemer couldBring something newLong awaited ofAll that wasAll that isAll that will be

Clayton Medeiros

29

Page 30: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

Wislawa Syymborska

A rose by any other name Smells just as sweet,But Szymborska knows You still can’t be one.Holding a breath doesn’t help,No leaves grow,You will not be a rose. So after this effort,If flowers aren’t possible,Live peacefully with a body.A final acceptanceThat things will not change,No matter the coins tossed, Or otherwise conveyed,To the world’s fountains.

Quietly rendered memories, Others would understand.Dismal categories no poemsMeant for reader’s eyes.Leave critics behindSeek solace in words,Life’s bounded cultures,Genders oblivion, Many years familiarity.Unnecessary languageOvercomes the darkness,Both sides are seen,With apologiesTo anyone forgotten,To anything forgotten,

Living, dead, Or yet to come.

Clayton Medeiros

30

Page 31: No Regrets #3, Spring 2010

31