Archive for: ‘May 2009’

We’re going on an expedition you and I. We’re going into the wilderness n search of a child. It will be a difficult journey, but she’s worth it.

05/18/2009 Posted by mindsinger

You see, someone told her to hide,

and no one else told her

she didn’t have to do that..

They told her to be good,

to be helpful,

to be quiet,

to love God

and to obey her elders.

But no one told her she didn’t have to hide.

They said, “Children should be seen

and not heard.”

“I’m too busy, go play.”

They said, “Don’t interrupt when

we’re busy

or talking

or resting.”

But no one said, “Don’t listen to him or do what he says.”

So, she carefully hid herself

from them

She became a conspirator

in a game she didn’t want to play.

She’s hiding now.

Her screams are silent,

her rage is bound within

clenched jaws

and knotted stomach.

The walls of her dungeon

are thick and high.

It’s hard to see people through them.

It’s especially hard to see God.

She has left us clues

because she doesn’t want to stay there.

She wants to break out

and dance in the sunshine.

She wants to know it’s OK

to be pretty and feminine

and even sexy.

But the fear that caused her

to build her own prison

is very strong.

And it’s hard to trust those

who would tear down the walls.

After all, he might be gone

but the rage is not.

Where will the rage go?

Who will it hurt?

Will it be as uncontrollable as a breaking dam?

She has a lot to fear.

We know she’s nearby.

We can feel her trembling.

We can almost hear her

telling the story

over and

over

and over.

Endlessly repeating it

where no one hears.

Keeping the grown up child

so busy

she cannot concentrate

on important things.

The whispering child

sitting in the darkness

holding tightly to all

the feelings

I need to feel.

THE JOURNEY BEGINS by donna swanson c.2008

A wind from the mountain swirled in misty billows of silver swept down the arroyos of time, And left us lonely. And on that wind came Wind Walker.

05/17/2009 Posted by mindsinger

Fleet of foot he was

Silver as a mountain mist

Head thrown high to taste the rain

His hooves struck fire from the shifting sands.

We watched, enthralled

As he came near

and standing just beyond our grasp

he blew softly through flared nostrils.

Like music he moved

Like wildfire flowing across the horizon

Spirit of freedom on four legs

Oh, we tamed him,

Bound him with cords

Placed fetters upon his neck

And tied him to a plow.

We bred him to meet our needs

Until he ranged from huge and slow

To a diminutive toy fit only for a household pet

But shape and bind as we would

Wind Walker will never be completely bound

Thoroughbred

Lipizzaner

Tennessee Walker

Secretariat

Dan Patch

Seabiscuit

In back lots and modest pastures

The seed of Wind Walker reflects his glory.

The proud tilt of a head

The staccato rhythm of ebony hooves

And where the spirit soars

Wind Walker lives.

WIND WALKER by Donna Swanson c.2009

SCRAPS

05/16/2009 Posted by mindsinger

We called him Scraps.

That seemed to be mostly what he was. We’d met him down at the mission one night as we volunteered to work the bread line. He sat there in a baggy coat and too-tight jeans – a scrabble of hair that couldn’t rightly be called a beard.

We called him Scraps,

because he’d never give a name. He had these wrinkled up, yellowed papers that looked like they’d been folded at least a thousand times. He would spread them out across the oil cloth and stare at them while he ate.

We called him Scraps,

partly because of those bits of paper. If we tried to talk to him, he’d just shake his head, nod toward the papers and look away. And we’d smile our easy smiles, pat him on the shoulder and walk on.

We called him Scraps.

That seemed mostly what he was. Until one night we sat beside him and read his faded yellow papers. A theater program with a familiar name underlined, newspaper clippings about shows and charity events – that name appeared often. An obituary fluttered from his hand, about a child of three… A page from a bank book lay to one side, the credits at 0, the withdrawals like none we’d ever known.

We called him Scraps

because that’s the way his life was and he wouldn’t give a name. When we pointed to the one we thought he owned, he shook his head and, before he turned away, we saw his eyes fill. Sometimes we’d see him on the street, shuffling along with his life in a beat-up backpack. Once in a while he’d pick up a scrap of paper someone had discarded, carefully smooth it, fold it and put it with the rest of his life.

We called him Scraps.

We don’t know what God called him.

Donna Swanson c.2008

From Splinters of Light