Monday, April 20, 2009

Philisophical Torment


The media writes chaos into our lives -

Each story
Every voice
reaches out to the weak and torments them.

Many can see a light through their negative portrayals
of the world;

and as the bloodshed and horror tear across tv screens and
newspaper headings,

those with hopeful hearts and peaceful spirits see
beauty and love
underlying the illusion.

Pray for humanity -
Pray for love -

For darkness is merely an error
waiting to be enveloped by light....

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Help Her!

She wraps her words around the silence,
hoping they might understand.

A new culture strips her of confidence.

She uses her children to shield her from
participation,

yet she wants so much to learn.

She is a refugee,
we must help her.

She is our hope for the future,
We must teach her.

She gives America
a reason to succeed;

We MUST,

or she will be forced back to War,
where learning is nearly a crime.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Father's Wisdom

A note from my enlightened father, who shared some light with me this morning on the question of "Ego."

The ego is simply the wrong minded, flip side of your right minded essence that wants to exclude so it/you can be separate and "special" rather than one and the same with all that is. Only the ego wants praise and recognition because it sees itself/you as a separate entity. The only way it can make this work, in it's logic, is to make everyone else the enemy. The guilt that this position generates is intolerable so it created "projection" which shifts this felt guilt outside of it's "oneness" creating the perception of "others" so they can be guilty and it/you can be the innocent bystander. This created the world as we see it but it's an illusion. The only thing that's real is God and his created Son which is also not separate but part of the "oneness." That is why anything perceived as a form----- bodies, animals, and all inanimate objects---- are seen incorrectly because all that is, is contained in the inseparable oneness of God. I am on the 16th day of the workbook (Course in Miracles), which i have never done. The truth is----nothing matters at this level of form. We all want to clean up the mess in our perceived world, and it is a complete waste of time. I realize that to actually accept this seems impossible but until we do, we will stay STUCK in this nightmare constantly trying to make it seem bearable. If one could stop running the mental tapes and be totally still,awake, present and aware of only this moment one would see what is real and that is my goal!

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Together Again

Undress me
Strip me away from these thoughts
that isolate.

Bare my soul to the world,
I want to leave this ego behind.

I’m ready to lead again –
ready to pour my words over your
wounds, and heal you
with the love you deserve.

Undress me;
strip me down

Naked:

I’m ready to expose
our Essence and lift it
away from the judgment
that has pulled us apart
for so long

it’s time to become
One again

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Fiction

Find the wisdom for today.

Give me a piece of yesterday,
and tell me that it shall remain.

A piece of you withers away in silence,
while remnants of your battered body
slowly fade into sunset.

Tomorrow remains untouched -
just a fragment of your reality,
and yet - it is your only peace.

But tomorrow might never come my friend....

So please, please:

Remember Now

We are all waiting.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Tranquility's torture

DEATH
they finally uttered.
You are fluttering
between worlds,
in limbo with time
as we know it.

At least you're sober,
you tell me before
checking-in.

I wait at your bedside
finally at peace with
who you were as a person,
as a father,
as a friend,
and as my mentor.

I only wish you
would have known
what life might have
been like without
addiction. . .

Sweet Dreams

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Charmer


A memory of you
slid into my dream
last night.

Like a venomless snake,
you slithered past my heart
to terrify me without leaving
a mark.


I stretched my fingertips
to that beautiful mouth,
but found myself clawing
at those charming fangs instead.

Paralyzed, I waited until the
fear transpired and reached
up to kiss you, when suddenly:

the alarm ripped my eyes awake.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Then and Now

I have been absent from life again.
Like a switch or a plug that forgot to be grounded properly.
I am volatile: sometimes shocking even the air around me.

Absense from Self is destructive:
if you're gone too long, it's difficult to find your way back...
and you become used to the Other - the chaotic abyss.

Yet I am back. I managed to pull myself from yesterday,
and into this moment - Now.
I remember why I left, and shall forget to do so again.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Finish it

Flip me inside out
and tear the
skin off.

Let me bake
the shards
of glass
in hell.

Jump start a fire
under my
steel heart.

I have forgotten
what it feels like
to hurt.

Oh wait -
you gently reminded
me today,
when you
stumbled
into Cirrhosis.

Monday, December 8, 2008

2:00 on February 30

Write me into
your day
sometime.

Allow me to wedge myself
into your notebook,
between
phone calls
and meetings.

Has it been so long,
that you have you forgotten
how to share space
with another?

Or have you just
typed yourself
into oblivion?

Vanished somewhere
between Outlook
and Word Perfect?

Monday, November 24, 2008

Slide into my soul.
Tiptoe around the boundries of reason
and gently place your hand in mine.
Join presence :
a place where spirituatlity
and nature coexist -
where you may wander through
the five stages of grief
and yet still inhale
life. Walk gently into solace,
where love
stifles guilt.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

The Secret

Stamped -From his heart to the grave. He carried it on his chest until the day he died. Some say he wanted to start fights, others say he was just a believer. I knew better. I had heard the story more than hundred times, how he escaped prosecution. The beatings were terrible. They pushed and pulled his skin so many different directions that in the end, it was better they finally branded him. It was a mark that defined him: his life, his hardships, his hatred, and his reason behind his final act. Joshua Adam Slepinksy. Born 1916; Died 2006. The man who forgot what real was.

A long, long time ago, Mr. Slepinsky was my neighbor. I used to awake in the middle of the night to his screaming, and would run next door, terrified that he might wake up and think I was one of them. I would hurry and turn on the light, and quickly wrap a warm wash cloth around his sweaty forehead to calm him. Sometimes he cried, other times he would scream at me in a language I wished I didn’t know. Other people in the neighborhood were afraid of Mr. Slepinsky. They thought he was crazy – some even thought that he had gotten out of prison, but I had learned early on never to make assumptions: people can be wonderful, despite their battered shells. Looking back, I think I was the only friend the old man had. I never saw another car at his place, or any visitors stop by. In the five years he lived next to me, I never once saw another person knock on his door. Most of the neighborhood shunned away from him.

One cold Winter day I was out getting my mail, and I heard a crash. Mr. Slepinsk had slipped on his icy driveway. He had lost his footing, and had landed square on his back – the wind knocked completely out of him. That was how I met him. I went over to give him a hand – and although he glared at me through steely eyes, I knew in my heart that he was grateful.

From that day forward, I went over to my neighbor’s house daily. I would bring him the mail, cook him dinner occasionally, and clean his house while he would tell me stories of how he had been punished. He told me of his hatred towards them, and how they had maimed him for life. One day he lifted up his shirt to show me the mark that caused him so much grief: a swastika tattoo spread across his wrinkled chest – faded from years of neglect. The tattoo was so large, it nearly covered his entire torso. The ink had faded to a medium shade of gray, but it clearly was done with more emphasis than I could imagine. Mr. Slepinsky told me that he was a victim of the Holocaust. Sometimes while reliving the stories, he would start screaming in German – and I would pretend not to understand. Generally he would scream phrases consistent with torture, but occasionally throughout his ranting, he would mumble “Sieg Heil,” or Hail Victory – a term used by the Nazi’s throughout the War. I imagined he had heard the phrase so many times that i t was his subconscious reminding him of the terrible atrocities committed against his Jewish brethren.

I was making dinner for him one night during the Christmas season – Hannukah for Mr. Slepinsky, and he began his usual diatribe. He complained of his days of torture, and gave me a graphic representation that I shuddered when imagining. I asked him if he had any oregano – I was making lasagna, and wanted him to enjoy my homemade recipe, but I had forgotten it next door. He said that he did, and came over to the cupboard next to the stove where I was cooking. I’ll never forget what I saw next. Mr. Slepisnky was wearing a white tank top – with a light jacket draped over him. As he reached his frail arm above me to get the spice, I noticed a small scar on the inside of his left underarm. Old tattoo ink remained around the scar – and I was horrified by what it meant. For the next few weeks I would continue to visit Mr. Slepinsky, but in the back of my mind, the sinister memory burned.

My final visit came one night 13 years ago. He invited me for dinner to tell me about his life prior to the mark. He began lamenting about his wife and four children. Nostalgic memories poured from his heart, about the beautiful life they lived, and the warm Sunday dinners they shared. He told me about growing up in Germany, and the friends he once had. He rattled on about his mother and father, and the care they provided for their family. His father had two jobs and worked tirelessly to provide for little Joseph. He began to cry as he told me how his family had been taken from him. While tears rolled down my face, without thinking, I blurted out: “Es tut mir leid," the German phrase for “I’m sorry.” Mr. Slepinsky jumped out of his chair -seething inside. I have never seen such hatred from a person. He tore across the table in less time than it took me to realize what I had done. He shouted at me to get out of his house and never come back.

Two weeks later he moved, and for the next 12 years I wondered what had become of the bitter man. I prayed that he had met someone else to take care of him, and that he had somehow forgiven the young boy who lived next door so many years ago: a boy who himself had lost his grandfather many years ago the same War fighting against the Americans. Then last week, I stumbled across this headline, and knew that the man I wished I could have saved would have known the secret that I discovered:


Waffen-SS Survivor Shoots Himself in Chest, Carves
“I’m Sorry” Into Swastika Tattoo; Identified as Jewish Traitor