The Glorious Voice of the Psalmist

Today I am thankful for those people who share their gifts and musical talents with songs and melodies that lift my heart and bless my soul.

My friend Pam Singer is one of those people. I met Pam in 2007 on a trip to Israel to attend a School of Ministry. Her beautiful voice and songs always lead me to an uplifting worship time where I find the Peace of God.

“… be filled with the Spirit; speaking one to another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord” Eph 5:18-19

“In Everything” from the CD “Home” by Pam Singer – Used with Permission

There is no video, just close your eyes and hear the deep gratitude for the blessings of God.

https://youtu.be/LY-ujtX2__w

More of the story;

Today I Worship and Give Thanks

After yesterday’s post I feel I was put to the test to… “find the good in every situation.” It was as if I posted it and satan mocked me with a challenge. I reminded myself all day that there is good even in this situation. Answers not so much yet.

I struggled through last night, woke up early. Today’s quote is another reminder. I can respond with worship.

Along that line, I am putting my ear buds in and playing some of my most loved worship songs. Many of these are from my friend and psalmist, Pam Singer.

Her voice is so rich and her music comes from her heart. It draws me deeper into a peace that only comes from God.

There is a link in this blog post to one of Pam’s songs. No video. Just close your eyes and listen.

“I have learned that in every circumstance that comes my way, I can choose to respond in one of two ways: I can whine or I can worship! And I can’t worship without giving thanks. It just isn’t possible. When we choose the pathway of worship and giving thanks, especially in the midst of difficult circumstances, there is a fragrance, a radiance, that issues forth out of our lives to bless the Lord and others.” ~Nancy Leigh DeMoss

Poetry and Poets

Can any poetry be dismissed if it is inspired in one’s heart? ~trish

I sometimes express myself through poetry, so did my mother. She wrote many poems in her 87 years. Most of hers were about her faith and God’s love for her. Mine tend to be about life, my crazy thoughts and experiences.

For more than twenty years I wrote a Christmas poem as part of the holiday tradition with friends. It was right in there with, and as expected as, the turkey and plum pudding. At the urging of my Auntie in 2017, I created a small illustrated book with them all.

When I was little, I would memorize long poems and bible verses. Once I remember reciting all of Luke 2:1-20, the nativity story of Jesus, at a church Christmas event.

I still remember “The Duel” by Eugene Field that I memorized in 2nd grade. “The gingham dog and the calico cat, side by side on the table sat.” Also “My Shadow” by Robert Louis Stevenson. “I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me, and what can be the use of him is more than I can see.”

I have collected many poems since then. I gathered them from clippings and hand wrote copies of ones I found in books. More recently, I search the internet to find poems that helped me through a particular joyous or trying time. Here are just a few.

As far as the great poets, I have to admit I have not dug deeply into a lot of their work. I have a book of Walt Whitman poems. I connect with Emily Dickerson’s poem, ‘Hope is the Thing with Feathers.” We must always have hope even in the harshest of times.

I have a verse taped above my desk from a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. It was printed on a set of stationary I bought in the 70’s. “Friendship like the flight of birds cannot be put in written words, Never yet has poet penned, all it means to have a friend.”

Another poet I like is a newcomer. He began writing around 2015 during a faith crisis while suffering from depression. His work is real and raw about the human condition and his questions and doubts about life. These are questions that touch us all. He has written a series of books called, “Hey God.” In these books, he poses his questions to God. He then writes what he perceives God’s answer would be. His name is John Roedel.

I have a few that I have connected with in different phases of life. I love the poem, “The Song of the River” by William Randolph Hearst that gives an analogy of life and death.

I adopted the poem, “May Our Friendship Last Forever,” by New York Poet Nicholas Gordon, as a poem for me and Chrissie. I send it to him every year on our anniversary.

A short verse I read everyday, because I have a worn handwritten version of it that I made over 30 years ago in my closet, is by G. Sterling Leiby. I keep it there as a daily reminder to not dwell on the past. I tried researching more about Leiby. I didn’t find much except that he wrote short verses that appeared in the Wall Street Journal and other magazines.

As for a favorite, which is not really “the favorite” but one I have favored for a while is transcribed below. It provoked a lot of thought and inspired me to dig deep for inner strength, to look to myself for happiness first and it made me realize no one can make you happy unless you are happy with and like yourself. It is, “Comes the Dawn.”

The poem itself is surrounded by controversy because several people claim to be the author. In 1973 a woman named Veronica Shoffstall claimed she wrote it when she was 19. Several other women have also claimed to be the authentic author. Others (those who are in-the-know about poetry and literature) say the poem is one half of a longer poem “Aprendiendo”, which was written in Spanish by Jorge Luis Borges (24 August 1899 – 14 June 1986), an Argentinian poet, writer and essayist.

I first read it in the early 70’s. My memory says it was in the book, “Our Bodies, Ourselves,” that came out in 1973. However, I can’t find any information that the poem was included in its pages. That book started a firestorm itself, but we’ll save that for another time.

Comes The Dawn

After a while you learn the subtle difference,
Between holding a hand and chaining a soul.

And you learn that love doesn’t mean leaning,
And company doesn’t mean security.

And you begin to learn that kisses aren’t contracts,
And presents aren’t promises.

And you begin to accept your defeats,
With your head up and your eyes open,
With the grace of a woman, not the grief of a child.

And you learn to build all your roads on today,
Because tomorrow’s ground is too uncertain for plans,
And futures have a way of falling down in mid-flight.

After a while you learn,
That even sunshine burns if you get too much.

So you plant your garden and decorate your own soul,
Instead of waiting for someone to bring you flowers.

And you learn that you really can endure…

That you really are strong,
And you really do have worth.

And So it Ends

The Lord’s acts of mercy indeed do not end, For His compassions do not fail. They are new every morning; Great is Your faithfulness. Lamentations 3:22-23 NAS

This year, as in many others, I have spent the past few days reflecting on the past twelve months… its joys and sorrows.  

The highlight of my year was in May when Chris and I went to South Africa on a trip with his college buddies and their wives.  I was a little apprehensive about the trip, not knowing anyone, but in the end I formed some awesome friendships.

The country of South Africa was so beautiful, the wildlife, the scenery, the people, the history, it was all an awe inspiring experience. So amazing I can’t believe I didn’t write about it. I did upload photos and some narratives as we travelled on my photo blog.

Part of the reason I didn’t write about my trip as soon as I returned, was because I was instantly plunged into a healthcare issue. I required surgery within only a few weeks that consumed all my time, concentration and energy.  Thankfully everything was sorted out with surgery and a few months of recovery time.

In September, I made a whirl wind trip to Texas starting in Austin. I visited my cousin Debbie in a nursing facility. I saw her daughter my 1st cousin once removed and her new baby (1st cousin twice removed). I had lunch with my friend Debbie just south of Austin. Then, I drove 170 miles to an area just outside of Houston.

That evening I had a lovely dinner on the shores of Lake Conroe with a lady who worked with me 26 years ago. It was warm night and so relaxing listening to the water lapping against the rocks. We laughed and shared stories together as if no time at all had passed.

The next morning I got up and met my niece for breakfast along with her mom and my three grand nieces. After breakfast, I drove north and stopped in Centerville for quick visit with a childhood friend. Finally, made my way to Corsicana to see my sister.

Paulette and I spent several days catching up and visiting friends and family. Together we completed a long overdue task at mother’s grave. After having driven over 600 miles in a week, I drove to Dallas and flew home. It was a full busy trip. I got home tired but with a heart full of love.

Sadly the review of every year ends with memories of those we lost. The most tragic loss for us was in November when 17-year-old son of a dear friend drowned. Hard to accept and understand why someone dies so young. 

Additionally, in the past month, two friends and my sweet cousin, Debbie, passed away.  I am so thankful I had that visit with her in September.

For the past several years, at the new year, I read the poem God Knows. A poem written by Minnie Louise Haskins in 1908. More about the poem and my thoughts in this blog post from 2020.

This is the end, and tomorrow I begin again looking ahead to 2025. I do so heeding the guidance given by Ms. Haskins.

And I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year: “Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.” 

And he replied: “Go out into the darkness and put your hand into the Hand of God.
That shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way.”

So I went forth, and finding the Hand of God, trod gladly into the night.

And He led me towards the hills and the breaking of day in the lone East.

So heart be still:
What need our little life
Our human life to know,
If God hath comprehension?
In all the dizzy strife
Of things both high and low,
God hideth His intention.

God knows. His will
Is best. The stretch of years
Which wind ahead, so dim
To our imperfect vision,
Are clear to God. Our fears
Are premature; In Him,
All time hath full provision.

Then rest: until
God moves to lift the veil
From our impatient eyes,
When, as the sweeter features
Of Life’s stern face we hail,
Fair beyond all surmise
God’s thought around His creatures
Our mind shall fill.

Christmas

For 35 years Chris and I have celebrated Christmas with the same friends on Christmas day. One year quite by accident a tradition was born of writing a poem on Christmas Eve.

I have over 30 of these poems, some funny, some reflective, and some downright Scrooge-ish. In 2017, compiled all these poems into a book that I had printed and gave to some friends and family.

Over 20 years ago, I gave up all the traditional wrappings of Christmas, no tree, no lights, no cards, and no frantic preparations. However, I still find meaning and reflecting on the end of the year and the season of peace and hope. 

Sharing this poem from 2007 and wishing you all a very Merry Christmas and happy holiday season in whatever way you choose to celebrate. May you have joy, faith, hope, love and most of all Peace.

Drama

So much drama! I read the news, I look around me and it seems the drama is never ending and I want it to stop. It is exasperating. Yet, I wonder if the generation before me felt the same? I definitely had some strange ideas and beliefs when I was young.

Not only did I have some strange ideas, I also did some foolish things. There are things I would really like to forget, but they serve a purpose to remind me about how far I’ve come and what I have learned along the way.

This morning, I came across this poem I wrote in 2016. After reading it, I have some hope that one day, just as I did, these drama creators will look back and realize it was only a lot of drama.

Perception © by Trish B.

Christmas Spirit

Most of this twenty-first century and the last few years of the twentieth, I wrote an annual Christmas poem. Some were better than others and some possibly down right corny however, it was part of a tradition that was expected on Christmas day.

For 33 years, minus the past two when ‘the virus’ interrupted many traditions, we have celebrated Christmas with our British friends, Tony and Jen. Jen always made the traditional Christmas meal with all the British favorites turkey, fresh-made rolls, roasted potatoes, bread sauce, Christmas plum pudding which was doused in brandy and set ablaze.

One year, Jen wrote ditty and by coincidence I did too; they were just short little poems about the Christmas season. So for the next few years it was a challenge to produce a new one. Year after year the poems became longer and more elaborate. After a few years Jen bowed out, saying she would leave the tradition to me. So I continued.

Every year a poem would start brewing in my heart somewhere around Thanksgiving. I would start gathering thoughts in my mind and occasionally write down snippets, but the actual assembly of those thoughts came together on Christmas Eve when my poems were actually written. I would be in a rush to finish them; they were often typed and printed just minutes before we had to leave.

The first ‘virus year’ even though we did not gather to celebrate, I still wrote a poem. Last year I had nothing to give and this year it appears the prose in my heart have gone cold once again.

Twenty twenty-two was a tough year for many close to me. Tough is really an understatement for the tragedies they have endured. So with that in mind, I am sharing my poem from 2013 (a tough year for me) and hope that whatever is going on in your life, you can look around you and still find the joy and blessings this season brings.

Christmas Spirit

Another year is at it’s end,
For Christmas time is here again.

Can’t grasp that Christmas spirit thing;
Jolly men, sparkling lights, carols and bells that ring.

No can’t grasp it, but what appears as this year slowly ends…
Is a greater appreciation for loved ones and friends.

They are life and joy, they are the gifts with no costs;
Yet remembering with sadness those that we lost.

Some far too soon approached heaven’s gate;
Others are treasures, as heaven can wait.

And if one Christmas Day, so far off, or very near,
We gather to celebrate, and one of us is not here;

Remember the joy that was shared each year, by each one,
And know that our Christmas’s were about loved ones and fun.

Remember the warmth, the love and the laughter,
Because after all, that’s what we were after.

Christmas Spirit where are you this year?
You’re in my heart and with memories I hold dear
❤️

© Trish B 2013

Four Husbands No Fathers

I wrote a verse in 2014 on Father’s Day, called “Fatherless,” because my biological father was out of my life before I had any memories of him. My mother was married three more times each time bringing a new father figure. Last month I found out the last one had died and left me contemplating the roll of each.

My biological father was a tormented soul. He served in the Navy in WWII and I am told he was never the same when he returned. His torment drove him alcohol which became a demon to him. He would drink, become abusive, and then take his rage out on my mother. I heard once, overheard, that her final straw was when he held a gun to my head and dared her to scream. {{Deep breath}} yeah, that was hard to hear. Thankfully, she dug down deep, and even though she was a young 25 year old with small children she left him.

I have no memory before that and he never visited us but when I was 27, I went back to Virginia to visit my Auntie, his sister. He was in the VA hospital suffering ill health from years of alcohol abuse. With my Auntie by my side, I went to see him there. I have to say, I only went out of curiosity. He appeared to be an old man with many regrets. He told a couple of innocent stories about memories he had when I was young. That was it, maybe less than an hour. Strangely enough, I don’t remember how our visit ended. Did I extend an obligatory hug? I don’t know but I doubt it, I was very protective back then.

When my mother left my bio-father, we lived in Texas. She was supporting three small children on her own and working at the Walgreen’s lunch counter in downtown Houston. It was there she met a young East Texas bull rider six years her junior. He was tall and handsome with red hair. They married in 1959; I was three and half years old.

He was not an educated man, but a hard working good ol’ country boy. He did construction work, dug ditches and worked hard to support us. He became my daddy. He held me, brushed my hair and provided lots of love and affection which was tempered by the fact he was a old-school disciplinarian – spare the rod, spoil the child. Any act of disobedience was met with a “whipping” often with a belt. I went to school many times with welt marks across my legs. Today such actions would send child protective services to the home but back then that was the way it was.

When I was fourteen, he left my mother for another woman and just like that he was gone out of my life. I saw him a few times over the years. In the last twenty or so years he would call me on my birthday. I think he remember it because it was two days before his.

As quickly as the tall red-head left, on the rebound, my mother within six months jumped to another marriage. This man was eight years my mother’s senior. He was rough, from North Carolina and he had been in jail, supposedly for check fraud. I don’t know what his intentions were with my mother, but he was wholly inappropriate with me. He was not a father but an abuser. He moved my mother from Texas to Florida where his son lived. I married early and was removed from the situation. After only 3 years my mother left him and moved back to Texas.

Back in Texas, my mother connected with my father-in-law (correct, my husband’s father) and they married. I had always had a strained relationship with him. He was also southern Texas old-school with a bit of the alcohol demon mixed in as well. He could be sweet and caring, or sarcastic and abusive… the more alcohol the more abusive. My kids loved him and his grumpy, cantankerous ways. He was the kind of grumpy old grandpa that young boys find fascinating; they laughed and wondered over his antics.

However, I never understood why my mother tolerated this behavior, but I think she felt she could show him some sort of acceptance and love he lacked in his life. I don’t even want to get into how many run-ins I had with him. He could be inappropriate too, with other women including me. He never became physically abusive like the prior one, mostly inappropriate suggestive speech. Some of it was done in a joking good-old-boy way often in front of my mother.

To say our relationship was contentious was an understatement. I hated the way he treated my mother but my mother would defend him. Once at Father’s Day I made a comment to my mother that I didn’t have to worry about that holiday and she became upset and offended. I told her I did not consider him my father. She harshly reminded me of that statement for many years and would tell me that he really loved me… well, he had a strange way of showing it.

Now they are all gone.

A few years ago I found out that the abusive husband from North Carolina had died in 1980, just seven years after my mother left Florida. I feel nothing. He was dead to me the moment she left him. That marriage was a mistake in every way, and he was certainly not any sort of father figure.

My biological father died in 1986 just three days after his 60th birthday. He died of lung cancer in that same VA hospital I visited him in just a few years earlier. My mother called to tell me he had died. My reaction was unexpected. I cried and cried and I could not understand why. I had not known him at all except through hearing about him and I only had one memory of him. It was perplexing. After a while I became to understand that I was mourning the loss of what could have been, what might have been, but was never to be.

The last one, (my ex-father-in-law) stayed married to my mom for thirty-four years. He was stubborn, cantankerous and abusive until the end. I was there when he passed in 2009, as was my husband, my step sister, my ex-husband (now step-brother) and his wife. It was a hard watching my mom go through this loss. I did what I could to honor her wishes and help her through this period. I bought yellow roses for his casket but I did not shed a tear.

The most touching thing that stays with me about the day he died was that as one-by-one we slowly left the room, my ex-husband stayed behind with his father. As I looked down the hallway, I saw my current husband waiting as if standing guard outside the room while my ex said his goodbyes. When my ex left the room, my husband reached out and embraced him. It was surreal watching the two men in my life, one grieving a loss and the other comforting him.

Finally, I learned last month that the man who had been my father through my childhood years had died. I had heard from him like I said off and on through the years but much more in the last 3 or 4 years. Several times when I would go to Texas to see my mom, I would try to work in a visit. However, Texas is a big place and there was never enough time.

The past year after my mom passed away he began calling me more often. Even though he was a strict hard disciplinarian , I certainly had an affection for him. He filled a void in little girls life, but it was not going to take up where we left off fifty-three years ago. When he left my mother, he abandoned me. The last year he was in a nursing home and began calling me at work, and after the calls got more and more frequent I blocked his number from my work phone.

Early this year he called me one night at 11 pm, I was already asleep and did not answer. He left a very strange message that seemed like he was confused and thought he had called someone else. After a few days I tried to call him back and got no answer. When our birthdays rolled around in September, I called his cellphone, it was disconnected. I called the nursing home and they would not tell me anything. I looked for obituaries, nothing.

Finally, I found a phone number for his younger brother. I called and left a message within the hour he called me back. He told me his brother had passed away March 30 which was only few weeks after the strange late night call.

His brother didn’t really remember me; he was nineteen years younger than his brother and three years younger than me. I thanked him for calling me back and told him that I would be forever grateful to his brother for the role he played in my life. He was harsh at times. He was barely 19 when he married my mother. A woman 6 years older with 3 children. Grateful, but no tears, no grief. Strange really. It has been on my mind the past few weeks as I tried to sort out these feelings. Why did I not have any emotional reaction to his death?

Now they are all gone. Did they shape who I am? I think it comes back to my verse so many years ago, I was – Fatherless. That is truly how I see it.

Fatherless

Celebrate your Fathers today,
Know that you are blessed
To have had a loving guiding protector,
That allowed your soul to rest.

To a girl without a Father,
Life lessons were hard learned.
Looking to fill that empty space
In a heart that always yearned.

Substitutes stepped in at times
With promises to love and protect,
But they always went their own way
and left a heart with reject.

I envied and I longed
For a Father to hold in times of need,
Offering comfort With his strong arms ~
In every word and deed.

Now I know, I always had a Father dear.
Present at every trial and turn, sending down his love;
Each time life’s journey overwhelmed,
He was watching from above.

Father’s Day, yet I have none on earth to call my own,
But in heaven I have a wondrous One.
And I will see my Abba’s face,
When my days on earth are done.

© Trish B. 2014

Link to 2014: https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2014/06/15/fatherless/

Is Hate Winning?

It seems the winds of hatred are still blowing and they are like flames that are destroying lives, faith and hope for the future. Some days it weighs on my heart more than other days, some days it seems as if evil is winning and that there is no longer any truth. All truth has been painted over with the lust for power. Some days I wish I could close my eyes go to sleep and not have to see anymore, hear anymore or care anymore.

Is Hate winning? Who is in charge of this mess? Who can we believe?

I don’t know if hate is winning. I don’t know who on earth is really in charge. Is there a group of elites that are playing chess with all our lives? I don’t know who on earth we can believe… so many lies, so much deceit, so much, so much.

What I do know is that God is in control. Whatever His plans we are not to know, we probably could not comprehend if we did know.

During the times I am feeling this way, I read Ecclesiastes. In this book written by Solomon, Israel’s King known for his wisdom nearly 3,000 years ago, he set out to understand life’s meaning and purpose, good and evil, wisdom and folly, and justice and injustice. In the end he concluded:

Now all has been heard; here is the conclusion of the matter:
Fear God and keep his commandments, for this is the duty of all mankind.
For God will bring every deed into judgment, including every hidden thing,
    whether it is good or evil.

Ecclesiastes 12:13-14

In Proverbs, which was also written by Solomon, it says;

Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all offenses.

Proverbs 10:12

Below is a short verse I wrote on Hatred in 2018. I keep reminding my myself how easily it can creep into my life. Praying for love that covers all and that hate is purged from my thoughts and actions.

Gladys

Sharing a verse from 1978 written by my mother about her cousin Gladys. It is about a person that loved her through a time of loss and change.

In tribute to Gladys 12/31/33 – 8/23/20

GLADYS

Once, so many years ago; a time came in my life: a time of change-

    A change of place, a change of face, a change of family came into my life –

Once so many years ago; once so many years ago I gained a sister in my life-

    Not a REAL sister – in that way-I wasn’t blessed, once so many years ago.

This sister that I did acquire, once so many years ago, was truly of the family,

    The family kind; because as close as we could come was through our mothers,

Once so many years ago; For 14 years we did not know, this sister of mine-

    We did not know that such a closeness, a love, a kindredship could exist.

Once so many years ago.

Sometimes I wonder as I think back on once so many years ago, if there might –

    Just might have been some unspoken thoughts between us two; so many years ago,

Unspoken thoughts that may have said—I don’t want you here—you intrude—intrude

    On me and my family – go away – Did she think these things, many years ago?

Once so many years? If she did – she didn’t say – didn’t say these things out

    Out loud to me, once so many years ago.  We fussed, we played, we grew,

We fell in Love ( Oh! How many times?) Once so many years ago. 

    Such great, great things. Great things as we plundered through the years,

Once so many years ago.

Once so many years ago, 14 can seem so old, so old we really thought we were,

    Once so many years ago—we thought we knew just everything, just all the-

The world was at our feet — boy we were really dumb, once so many years ago.

    Once so many years ago? Ha! Have we ever changed? This “sister” and l –

Have we changed from once go many years ago? This “sister” is my cousin, my

    Cousin, or did you know? This cousin that I loved so dear, so many years ago!

No we haven’t changed from once so many years ago—we haven’t changed, but years,

    Years have changed, changed us both, we’re not as near as once so many years ago.

But, Love? Yes love is there—is there any doubt it’s so? Any doubt it would not—

    Would not live—from once so many years ago? Oh yes – it lived, it lived and

And even grew – grew into a different kind of love from once so many years ago.

    We don’t climb trees, or run through orchards, or eat ice cream brunches,

Like once so many years ago. Or even sit on top of the bunk beds and play rummy —

    Yes, for hours, once so many years ago. There are so many things that over,

Over, over the years we’ve out-grown, since once so many years ago.  When we —

    When we were only 14, only 14, so many years ago and thought the world was ours.

Once so many years ago, are days l won’t forget, wouldn’t want to even If I could—

    Could forget those years – those years before we grew so fast and grew away—

Away each other in miles, in miles but never in thoughts, in miles but— 

    But once in a while. not often, but once in a while—a letter, a talk, a talk,

Once go many years ago – I had “sister-cousin” — once so many years ago, and yet

     Tho’ oh so many years have passed, I have that sister still—to share our—

Our thoughts, our loves, our disappointments, our sorrows, our plans for things–

    For things yet to come, to come to our children, things that maybe we missed.

We missed once so many years ago —Missed?  Us? No we didn’t miss out-out on any –

    On anything once so many years ago, because I had a sister to love and who–

Who loved me in return, even tho’ it was never said; said outloud, but still —

   Still was there and is today, the love, I have for her, Gladys, this sister –

Whom I love today and never see, oh, seldom, yes but

   Not like once so many years ago, when 14 was  just

Just the age to be — with Gladys

Once so many years ago.

HPVHA 2-16-78

Unclear Vision

2020 Vision
A perfect sight they say
But this year
That is 2020
Didn’t turn out that way.

Winter’s end turned to spring
And started with great hope,
Sadly spiraled downward,
When people started buying
All the TP and soap.

The virus that at first
We were told was not a worry,
Soon showed it had a deadly side.
The future became uncertain
More crazed, weird and blurry.

The message came,
Fifteen days to slow the curve.
With lockdown it was slowed
But days grew into months
Which cause many to unnerve.

Keeping a six foot distance
Our faces fully masked,
Lest we make a human touch.
Following all the protocols
Doing what was asked.

One tragedy upon another
A murder lit a fuse
Protests turned to violence
Lawlessness arose
The situation to abuse

Phases of reopening
Now we’re into summer
This has become a waiting game
And this year of 2020
Is thus far a real bummer.

2020 Vision
Is always better in hindsight.
Knowing what we know today,
We wonder
If all choices were exactly right.

Hopefully by year’s end
We’ll see the past more clearly
With empathy and wisdom
Not taking for granted
All the freedoms we hold dearly.

Trish © 8/4/20

 

Not all Hope is Lost

This year 2020 is now more than half over and I revisited my New Year’s Day poem that expressed my hope for the coming year and decade.  As I read it now and knowing all that has transpired, I couldhope3 easily toss it all away and say there is no hope left.  However, I refuse to do that.  I will not let the virus, the unrest, the violence or the drama get me down.  I will continue to believe there is HOPE for a brighter future for us all, but we must look towards the future, learn from the past but do not live there.

Hope for a New Year and a New Decade

As we start a new decade,
Begin a New Year
I am encouraged with hope
For all I hold dear

Hope for family,
The old and the young,
Hope for dreams for a future
And every song unsung

Hope for those who are struggling
With trials in their life,
Hope that would well up inside them
Through the turmoil and the strife.

Hope for friends and for family
Living near and faraway;
Hope for the day that we are reunited,
In our homes or on holiday.

Hope for peace far and near,
For nations and people everywhere,
Hope that we can explore
more kindness
As opposed to the tension in the air

A new year is dawning
Three hundred and sixty-six
days ahead,
Hope that each one is full of promise
With never a kind word left unsaid

A new decade is before us,
Ten years into the unknown,
May hope always be a our
guiding light
Knowing we are not alone.

Trish © 1/1/2020

The Last Time

I wish I could remember
The last time I touched or saw you,
As I departed was it with a joke and smile,
Or were you sad or blue?

I wish I could remember
What the words were we said,
And as we said our goodbyes
If any tears were shed.

I wish I had only known
That touch would be our last,
And that we’d be kept apart
By a quarantine that came along so fast.

I’m certain that we always
Left with an embrace and a kiss,
But little did we know
About the time we’d miss.

I wish I had only known
That visit would be the last
And with this awful illness
You’d be gone so fast.

I wish I could remember
If I held you extra tight
Or if you stood to watch
As I disappeared from sight.

I wish I could remember
That day so long ago
A day that was like any other
Except for what we didn’t know.

I wish I could remember
As it held our last earthly embrace
But we’ll embrace again
When we see the Father’s face.

Trish ©️

Child of my Childhood

just a young girl, a child
very meek and very mild

suffering abuse
of adult mistrust and misuse

desperate to escape
the next incident of childhood rape

summer of nineteen sixty-nine
appeared a tall hero and seemingly lifeline

not as much a child as man
together, young formed a plan

to many foolish though it seemed
somehow a life was redeemed

a child within the union set
left behind the evil threat

this child born of desperate time
a living doll that was mine

infant years held strong love
this doll of mine i write of

so many years between
understanding was lost… unseen

mother child in heart retains
regrets of youthful mistakes and pains

now this child of my childhood
long has left age of boyhood

starting now a fiftieth year
since child became a mother here

love, frustration, hope and despair
all have been a part of this pair

both older now and wiser still
overcoming lost good will

reaching out to understand
events that all the years have spanned

child of my childhood know
love was always there to bestow

to a child who forever changed
a life that needed rearranged

the years that life will here to span
know you were part of God’s intended plan

from a burden path a child was set free
heart full of gratitude forever for thee

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