Monday, January 31, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

wishful thinking
..entering uncertain sea
....tread water and swim
Haiku Moment
By Don

smiling face
..spring orange blossoms
....freeing the laughter within me
Monday Thought: Approach the Week with Enthusiasm

"None are so old as those who have outlived enthusiasm."

--Henry David Thoreau

Sunday, January 30, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

mill towns
..more things emerge
....let them go
Haiku Moment
By Don

cornstalks in snow
..imagine sun-graced pyramids
....let the stoic melt within you
Haiku Moment
By Don

stretching
..yogi emerges
....vastness fills me
Lost in the act of translation...

"How so I explain these poems? Not at all. I quit teaching in colleges because it seemed so criminal to explain works of art. The crisis in my teaching career came, in fact, when I faced an audience which expected me to explain Dubliners by James Joyce. I was game. I'd read the book. But when I opened by big mouth, no sounds came out."

--Anne Sexton
Sunday Thought: Good Poetry

"A good poem is a contribution to reality. The world is never the same once a good poem has been added to it. A good poem helps to change the shape of the universe, helps to extend everyone's knowledge of himself and the world around him."

--Dylan Thomas

Saturday, January 29, 2005

James Wright Poetry Festival

What are you doing on April 15-16, 2005?

Nothing special you say. Well, why not join us at the James Wright Poetry Festival in my hometown, Martins Ferry, Ohio?

Who was James Wright, besides being the 1972 Pulitizer Prize winner for poetry? Excellent question. Here is what the Eastern Ohio Arts Council has to say about him:

"James Wright, a native of Martins Ferry, is widely recognized as one of America's finest 20th century poets. He has left behind a body of work admired by fellow poets as well as critics. The Encyclopedia Britannica entry nicely captures his work, saying that he "wrote about sorrow, salvation, and self-revelation." His images arise from the natural and industrial landscape of the Ohio Valley: the football stadium in Martins Ferry, the blast furnaces of Benwood, Wheeling Steel, Hazel Atlas Glass, the suckholes of the Ohio River. His complex outlook was marked by despair and hope; in his dark vision a spirit of affirmation persists."

For those wishing to know the man that wrote the poetry, click
here to download a wonderful essay by Richard P. Gabriel about Wright. It is a simply marvelous piece!

Click here to get more information about the festival. It's a wonderful event, a chance to meet two wonderful poets, Gerald Stern and Linda Gregg, as well as Wright's delightful and engaging widow, Annie Wright. Poetry writing workshops will be offered at the festival.


Haiku Moment
By Don

still night
..courage takes hold in my heart
...love bursts forth
Haiku Moment
By Don

from the forest center
..gentle song bird
....giving voice to love
On being a poet...

People wish to be poets more than they wish to write poetry, and that's a mistake. One should wish to celebrate more than one wishes to be celebrated.

--Lucille Clifton

Saturday Thought: Poetic Observation

"I prefer to explore the most intimate moments, the smaller, crystallized details we all hinge our lives on."

--Rita Dove

On second thought...

"It takes courage to grow up and become who you really are."

-- e. e. cummings

Friday, January 28, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

st. clairsville
..playful teenage wildflowers
....dreaming of worlds beyond home
Haiku Moment
By Don

martins ferry
..powerful river painting
....magical dream-filled cloverfields

Haiku Moment
By Don

worldly spiritual eyes
..seeing with the heart
....feet still on the ground
Haiku Moment
By Don

ohio
..late autumn frost on pumpkins
....human smokestacks calling out for love

Haiku Moment
By Don

cleveland
..steel gray skies
....bathed in afternoon sun drops

One for the road...

"To be a poet is a condition, not a profession. "

--Robert Frost
Friday Thought: Poetry

"A poem . . . begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. . . . It finds the thought and the thought finds the words."

--Robert Frost
On A Seven-Day Diary
By Alan Dugan

Oh I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
and ate and talked and went to sleep.
Then I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
from work and ate and slept.
Then I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
and ate and watched a show and slept.
Then I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
and ate steak and went to sleep.
Then I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
and ate and fucked and went to sleep.
Then it was Saturday, Saturday, Saturday!
Love must be the reason for the week!
We went shopping! I saw clouds!
The children explained everything!
I could talk about the main thing!
What did I drink on Saturday night
that lost the first, best half of Sunday?
The last half wasn't worth this "word."
Then I got up and went to work
and worked and came back home
from work and ate and went to sleep,
refreshed but tired by the weekend.

From: "On a Seven-Day Diary" from New and Collected Poems 1961-1983, by Alan Dugan (Ecco Press). © Alan Dugan 2000.

POEM
By Alan Dugan

After your first poetry reading
I shook hands with you
and got a hard-on. Thank you.
We know that old trees
can not feel a thing
when the green tips burst
through the tough bark in spring,
but that's the way it felt,
that's the Objective Correlative
between us poets, love:
a wholly unexpected pain
of something new breaking out
with something old about it
like your new radical poems
those audible objects of love
breaking out through nerves
as you sweated up on stage,
going raw into painful air
for everyone to know.

From: Poems 6 New York, NY: The Ecco Press, 1989.

Thursday, January 27, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

fleeting seconds
..between breaths
....life abounds
Haiku Moment
By Don

wind chime
..loose association
....back to the moment
Haiku Moment
By Don

stardust
..glittering spectacle
....hopeful dreams on display
On second thought...

"The object of art is not to reproduce reality, but to create a reality of the same intensity."

--Alberto Giacometti
Thursday Thought: Art

Art is lies that tell the truth.

--Piccaso

Wednesday, January 26, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

wanting and suffering
..cease wanting, then
...suffering ends
Haiku Moment
By Don

leadership
..listening
....following the heart
On second thought...

"If you live the sacred and despise the ordinary, you are still bobbing in the ocean of delusion."

—Lin-Chi
Wednesday Thought: How We Walk Through Life

"Thus we see that the all-important thing is not killing or giving life, drinking or not drinking, living in the town or the country, being lucky or unlucky, winning or losing. It is how we win, how we lose, how we live or die; finally, how we choose. We walk, and our religion is shown (even to the dullest and most insensitive person), in how we walk. Living in this world means choosing, and the way we choose to walk is infallibly and perfectly expressed in the walk itself."

—R. H. Blyth

Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Tuesday Thought: Give Your Mind a Rest

Give your mind a vacation today. Try to minimize how much you think.
Haiku Moment
By Don

slumbering leaves
..naked tree
….dreams of spring

Haiku Moment
By Don

within
..lies the question
….you are your own answer

As If Some Little Arctic Flower
By Emily Dickinson

AS if some little Arctic flower,
Upon the polar hem,
Went wandering down the latitudes,
Until it puzzled came
To continents of summer,
To firmaments of sun,
To strange, bright crowds of flowers,
And birds of foreign tongue!
I say, as if this little flower
To Eden wandered in—
What then? Why, nothing, only
Your inference therefrom!

Monday, January 24, 2005

Poem by Joseph Campbell

"If you will think of ourselves as coming out of the earth,
rather than having been thrown in here from somewhere else,
you see that we are the earth,
we are the consciousness of the earth.
These are the eyes of the Earth.
And this is the voice of the earth."


Walking the Truth
By Don

Walk alone.
Walk along.
Let your feet
--carry you
--where you are
--and where you need to be.
See the truth
--where you walk.
Seek the truth
--wherever
--it may lead you.

Monday Thought: Underestimate Nothing in Life

Life is sacred. Everything about it is. Therefore, we should never under-estimate even the smallest sign we receive about our interconnectedness.

Often small things are indicators of much larger things we should pay attention to in life, like an email from a man in Missouri who has found his special "power" place on Earth.

The Great Spirit speaks to us in amazing ways. Sometimes we manage to find special listening places where we can hear our Creator better. Tom, maybe that is what you've discovered.

Sunday, January 23, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

white birches
..snow-covered limbs
....inspiration takes root
Haiku Moment
By Don

plump brown bird
..seeking food
....delivering hope
One for the road...

Click here to see some wonderful photographs by Gary K., a self-avowed storm-chaser from the Lake Tahoe area. Wow!
Sunday Thought: Seeing

The eyes are just one way to see in life. Words are another. Through prayer, meditation, and ways of connecting with the Divine, we can catch a glimpse of our own inner beauty and the beauty of spirit.

I love things of beauty. This morning allow yourself to "see" the beauty of the North. Click
here to see some splendid photographs of the Lake Superior environs. I recall a visit to the Apostle Islands in northern Wisconsin several years ago while working on a Native American project near there. All I can say is "Wow!" A special thanks to the photographer, Dennis O'Hara.

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

morning snowfall
..my mind drifts
....peace falls upon me
Haiku Moment
By Don

lineage
..across many generations
....people chains
On second thought...

"Forgiveness is an embrace, across all barriers, against all odds, in defiance of all that is mean and petty and vindictive and cruel in this life."

—Kent Nerburn in Calm Surrender
Saturday Thought: Wholeheartedness

"The antidote to exhaustion may not be rest. It may be wholeheartedness. You are so exhausted because all of the things you are doing are just busyness. There's a central core of wholeheartedness totally missing from what you're doing."

-- Brother David Steindl-Rast

Friday, January 21, 2005

"It's coming," he says excitedly.

That is my response to the frequent question I have been receiving about the new poetry book. Look for it to hit the newstands in mid-March or so.
Haiku Moment
By Don

seeing
..without eyes
....honesty crushes dispair
Haiku Moment
By Don

echoes
..filling the canyon
....traveling on the eagle's wing
On second thought...

"I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand."

--Confucius
Friday Thought: How Fast Word Travels

"A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes."

--Mark Twain

Thursday, January 20, 2005

On second thought...

"Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much."

--Oscar Wilde
Thursday Thought: What We Do for a Living

"All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind."

--Aristotle

Wednesday, January 19, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

distant glimmer
..love's sweet embrace
....January gives birth
A Birthday Poem
By Ted Kooser

Just past dawn, the sun stands
with its heavy red head
in a black stanchion of trees,
waiting for someone to come
with his bucket
for the foamy white light,
and then a long day in the pasture.
I too spend my days grazing,
feasting on every green moment
till darkness calls,
and with the others
I walk away into the night,
swinging the little tin bell
of my name.

On second thought...

"Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts."

--Rachel Carson
Wednesday Thought: Hug a Mountain

"Great things are done when men and mountains meet."

--William Blake

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

There is Another Sky
By Emily Dickinson

There is another sky,
Ever serene and fair,
And there is another sunshine,
Though it be darkness there;
Never mind faded forests, Austin,
Never mind silent fields -
Here is a little forest,
Whose leaf is ever green;
Here is a brighter garden,
Where not a frost has been;
In its unfading flowers
I hear the bright bee hum:
Prithee, my brother,
Into my garden come!

One for the road...

"Leadership is an action, not a position."

--Donald H. McGannon
On second thought...

"The first responsibility of a leader is to define reality. The last is to say thank you. In between, the leader is a servant."

--Max De Pree
Tuesday Thought: Leadership

"Leadership is the ability to hide your panic from others."

--Anonymous

Monday, January 17, 2005

all ignorance toboggans into know
by e.e. cummings

all ignorance toboggans into know
and trudges up to ignorance again:
but winter's not forever,even snow
melts; and if spring should spoil the game, what then?

all history's a winter sport or three:
but were it five, i'd still insist that all
history is too small for even me;
for me and you,exceedingly too small.

Swoop(shrill collective myth)into thy grave
merely to toil the scale to shrillerness
per every madge and mabel dick and dave
--tomorrow is our permanent address

and there they'll scarcely find us(if they do,
we'll move away still further: into now

On second thought...

"Your joy is your sorrow unmasked. And the selfsame well from which your laughter rises was oftentimes filled with your tears. And how else can it be?"

--Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet

Monday Thought: Live Freely

"In order to live free and happily, you must sacrifice boredom. It is not always an easy sacrifice."

--Richard Bach

Sunday, January 16, 2005

Boy at the Window
By Richard Wilbur

Seeing the snowman standing all alone
In dusk and cold is more than he can bear.
The small boy weeps to hear the wind prepare
A night of gnashings and enormous moan.
His tearful sight can hardly reach to where
The pale-faced figure with bitumen eyes
Returns him such a god-forsaken stare
As outcast Adam gave to Paradise.

The man of snow is, nonetheless, content,
Having no wish to go inside and die.
Still, he is moved to see the youngster cry.
Though frozen water is his element,
He melts enough to drop from one soft eye
A trickle of the purest rain, a tear
For the child at the bright pane surrounded by
Such warmth, such light, such love, and so much fear.

Full Moon
By Tu Fu

Above the tower -- a lone, twice-sized moon.
On the cold river passing night-filled homes,
It scatters restless gold across the waves.
On mats, it shines richer than silken gauze.

Empty peaks, silence: among sparse stars,
Not yet flawed, it drifts. Pine and cinnamon
Spreading in my old garden . . . All light,
All ten thousand miles at once in its light

On second thought...

"Pain is inevitable, suffering is optional."

-- M Kathleen Casey
Sunday Thought: Give It Away

"All we can hold in our cold dead hands is what we have given away."

--Sanskrit proverb

Saturday, January 15, 2005

One for the road...

"Cast no dirt into the well that gives you water."

Korean Proverb
On second thought...

"We will be known by the tracks we leave behind."

Source: Dakotan Wisdom
Saturday Thought: Anger

"Anger has no eyes."

--Hindu Proverb

Friday, January 14, 2005

Where are Don's poems this week?

Don is putting all his poetic energy this week into finalizing his forthcoming book of poetry, which must go to the printer next week. Stay tuned. There shall be more poetry!
Introduction to Poetry
By Billy Collins

I ask them to take a poem
and hold it up to the light
like a color slide

or press an ear against its hive.

I say drop a mouse into a poem
and watch him probe his way out,

or walk inside the poem's room
and feel the walls for a light switch.

I want them to waterski
across the surface of a poem
waving at the author's name on the shore.

But all they want to do
is tie the poem to a chair with rope
and torture a confession out of it.

They begin beating it with a hose
to find out what it really means.

One for the road...

"To love someone deeply gives you strength. Being loved by someone deeply gives you courage."

D.H. Lawrence
On second thought...

"A bird does not sing because it has an answer. It sings because it has a song."

Source: Chinese Proverb
Friday Thought: Distinctions We Don't Need

"The master in the art of living makes little distinction between his work and his play, his labor and his leisure, his mind and his body, his information and his recreation, his love and his religion. He hardly knows which is which. He simply pursues his vision of excellence at whatever he does, leaving others to decide whether he is working or playing. To him he's always doing both."

Source: Buddhist Wisdom, No specific source

Thursday, January 13, 2005

Advice to a Prophet
By Richard Wilbur

When you come, as you soon must, to the streets of our city,
Mad-eyed from stating the obvious,
Not proclaiming our fall but begging us
In God's name to have self-pity,

Spare us all word of the weapons, their force and range,
The long numbers that rocket the mind;
Our slow, unreckoning hearts will be left behind,
Unable to fear what is too strange.

Nor shall you scare us with talk of the death of the race.
How should we dream of this place without us?--
The sun mere fire, the leaves untroubled about us,
A stone look on the stone's face?

Speak of the world's own change. Though we cannot conceive
Of an undreamt thing, we know to our cost
How the dreamt cloud crumbles, the vines are blackened by frost,
How the view alters. We could believe,

If you told us so, that the white-tailed deer will slip
Into perfect shade, grown perfectly shy,
The lark avoid the reaches of our eye,
The jack-pine lose its knuckled grip

On the cold ledge, and every torrent burn
As Xanthus once, its gliding trout
Stunned in a twinkling. What should we be without
The dolphin's arc, the dove's return,

These things in which we have seen ourselves and spoken?
Ask us, prophet, how we shall call
Our natures forth when that live tongue is all
Dispelled, that glass obscured or broken

In which we have said the rose of our love and the clean
Horse of our courage, in which beheld
The singing locust of the soul unshelled,
And all we mean or wish to mean.

Ask us, ask us whether with the worldless rose
Our hearts shall fail us; come demanding
Whether there shall be lofty or long standing
When the bronze annals of the oak-tree close.

Thursday Thought: Adopt a Literary Mind

It's winter. In Cleveland, that means there is
plenty of time for reading. Most of us read on
a daily basis, if only the local newspaper, an email
from a friend or work colleague, or an ad for 20%
off canned cat food at the grocery store.

The thought occurred to me that whatever we
read during the course of our day might be
greatly enhanced if we approached our reading
with a "literary mind." What does that mean?
Simply that we see ourselves as literate and
capable of seeing the presence or absence of
value in whatever we read. Moreover, that we
read with an eye for those themes, ideas, and
notions that keep popping up across history.

Novel idea, I say. Give it a try!
The Daisy Follows Soft the Sun
By Emily Dickinson

The daisy follows soft the sun,
And when his golden walk is done,
Sits shyly at his feet.
He, waking, finds the flower near.
"Wherefore, marauder, art thou here?"
"Because, sir, love is sweet!"

We are the flower, Thou the sun!
Forgive us, if as days decline,
We nearer steal to Thee,--
Enamoured of the parting west,
The peace, the flight, the amethyst,
Night's possibility!

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

How happy is the little stone
By Emily Dickinson

How happy is the little stone
That rambles in the road alone,
And doesn't care about careers,
And exigencies never fears;
Whose coat of elemental brown
A passing universe put on;
And independent as the sun,
Associates or glows alone,
Fulfilling absolute decree
In casual simplicity.

Canis Major
By Robert Frost

The great Overdog
That heavenly beast
With a star in one eye
Gives a leap in the east.
He dances upright
All the way to the west
And never once drops
On his forefeet to rest.

I'm a poor underdog,
But to-night I will bark
With the great Overdog
That romps through the dark.

One for the road...

"Do not let what you cannot do interfere
with what you can do."

--John Wooden
Wednesday Thought: How You React

"It's not the situation ... It's your reaction to the situation."

--Robert Conklin

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Cold Poem
By Mary Oliver

Cold now.
Close to the edge. Almost
unbearable. Clouds
bunch up and boil down
from the north of the white bear.
This tree-splitting morning
I dream of his fat tracks,
the lifesaving suet.

I think of summer with its luminous fruit,
blossoms rounding to berries, leaves,
handfuls of grain.

Maybe what cold is, is the time
we measure the love we have always had, secretly,
for our own bones, the hard knife-edged love
for the warm river of the I, beyond all else; maybe

that is what it means the beauty
of the blue shark cruising toward the tumbling seals.

In the season of snow,
in the immeasurable cold,
we grow cruel but honest; we keep
ourselves alive,
if we can, taking one after another
the necessary bodies of others, the many
crushed red flowers.

Tuesday Thought: Vision Questing

"Questers venture into the unknown, confront difficulties and dangers, and return home with new understandings of themselves and of the world. A pilgrimage, part trip and part ritual, is prescribed in all the religious traditions for those seeking healing and renewal. The impetus for the journey could be an urge to explore one's spiritual roots, a desire for absolution, a wish to pay homage, or a question that needs answering.

To practice questing, you have to leave home, both literally and figuratively. Travel to a sacred place where something has happened before and see what happens to you now. Don't stop, even if you stumble, until you have found a gift or an insight to bring back with you. If you can't go far, make an inner journey. Ask questions. Look for replies in areas where you have never thought to go before."

Source: Spirituality and Health
One to consider...

"The cultivation of mindfulness is an invaluable means of appreciating the present moment and healing the body. This discipline also opens our senses and gives us a way to cope with the distress and dissatisfaction of our lives and move toward the creation of a better world. That's the important message of Coming to Our Senses, the opus magnum of one of the pioneers of mind/body medicine.

Jon Kabat-Zinn, the founding director of the Stress Reduction Clinic and the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine, Health Care, and Society at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, leads workshops on stress reduction and mindfulness for doctors and other health professionals and for lay audiences worldwide. He is uniquely qualified to explain why "meditation is not for the faint-hearted nor for those who routinely avoid the whispered longings of their own hearts."

Source:
Spirituality and Health

Monday, January 10, 2005

Monday Thought: What Is Ours, Really?

"To live a pure unselfish life, one must count
nothing as one's own in the midst of abundance. "

Source: Unknown
My Life
By Billy Collins
Former U.S. Poet Laureate

Sometimes I see it as a straight line
drawn with a pencil and a ruler
transecting the circle of the world

or as a finger piercing
a smoke ring, casual, inquisitive,

but then the sun will come out
or the phone will ring
and I will cease to wonder

if it is one thing,
a large ball of air and memory,
or many things,
a string of small farming towns,
a dark road winding through them.

Let us say it is a field
I have been hoeing every day,
hoeing and singing,
then going to sleep in one of its furrows,

or now that it is more than half over,
a partially open door,
rain dripping from the eaves.

Like yours, it could be anything, a nest with one egg,
a hallway that leads to a thousand rooms--
whatever happens to float into view
when I close my eyes
or look out a window
for more than a few minutes,
so that some days I think
it must be everything and nothing at once.

But this morning, sitting up in bed,
wearing my black sweater and my glasses,
the curtains drawn and the windows up,

I am a lake, my poem is an empty boat,
and my life is the breeze that blows
through the whole scene

stirring everything it touches--
the surface of the water, the limp sail,
even the heavy, leafy trees along the shore.

Untitled

Each time I go outside
the world is different.
This has happened all my life.

*

The clock stopped at 5:30
for three months.
Now it's always time to quit work,
have a drink, cook dinner.

*

"What I would do for wisdom,"
I cried out as a young man.
Evidently not much. Or so it seems.
Even on walks I follow the dog.

*

Old friend,
perhaps we work too hard
at being remembered.

From Braided Creek: A Conversation in Poetry by Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser


Note: Ted Kooser is the current U.S. Poet Laureate.

Sunday, January 09, 2005

Poem of a Buddhist Nun

Only within burns the fire I kindle.
My heart the altar.
My heart the altar.
One for the road...

"People in the West are always getting
ready to live."

—Chinese Proverb
On second thought...

"Since everything is but an apparition,
having nothing to do with good or bad,
acceptance or rejection, one may well
burst out in laughter.

—Longchenpa(14th century Tibet)
Sunday Thought: How We Choose

"Thus we see that the all-important thing is
not killing or giving life, drinking or not drinking,
living in the town or the country, being lucky or
unlucky, winning or losing. It is how we win, how
we lose, how we live or die; finally, how we choose.
We walk, and our religion is shown (even to the
dullest and most insensitive person), in how we
walk. Living in this world means choosing, and
the way we choose to walk is infallibly and
perfectly expressed in the walk itself.

—R. H. Blyth

Saturday, January 08, 2005

One for the road...

"Spirit is the real and eternal;
matter is the unreal and temporal."

~Mary Baker Eddy ~
On second thought...

"The spiritual quest begins, for most people,
as a search for meaning."

~Marilyn Ferguson ~
Saturday Thought: Native American Version of 23rd Psalm

The GREAT FATHER above a SHEPHERD CHIEF is.
I am His and with Him I want not.
He throws out to me a rope
and the name of the rope is loveand
He draws me to where the grass is green and the water is not dangerous,
and I eat and lie down and am satisfied.
Sometimes my heart is very weak and falls down
but He lifts me up again draws me into a good road.
His name is WONDERFUL .

Sometimes, it may be very soon,
it may be a long long time,
He will draw me into a valley.
It is dark there,
but I'll be afraid not,
for it is between those mountains
that the SHEPHERD CHIEF will meet me
and the hunger that I have in my heart
all through life will be satisfied.
Sometimes he makes the love rope into a whip,
but afterwards He gives me a staff to lean upon.

He spreads a table before me with all kinds of foods.
He puts His hand upon my head and all the " tired " is gone.
My cup he fills till it runs over.
What I tell is true. I lie not.
These roads that are "away ahead"
will stay with me through this life and after;
and afterwards I will go to live in the Big Teepee
and sit down with the SHEPHERD CHIEF forever.

Friday, January 07, 2005

Friday Thought: Remember This

"When in doubt tell the truth."

--Mark Twain

One of my favorites...

The Road Not Taken
By Robert Frost

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
And be one traveler, long I stood
And looked down one as far as I could
To where it bent in the undergrowth;

Then took the other, as just as fair,

And having perhaps the better claim,
Because it was grassy and wanted wear;
Though as for that the passing there
Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay
In leaves no step had trodden black.
Oh, I kept the first for another day!
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh
Somewhere ages and ages hence:
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I-
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.

Thursday, January 06, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

heartful
..full heart
....fulfilled
On second thought...

"The heart that loves is forever young."

~ Greek Proverb ~
Thursday Thought: Being an Indian

"Being Indian is an attitude, a state of mind,
a way of being in harmony with all things and
all beings. It is allowing the heart to be the
distributor of energy on this planet; to allow
feelings and sensitivities to determine where
energy goes; bringing aliveness up from the
Earth and from the Sky, putting it in and
giving it out from the heart."

~ Brooke Medicine Eagle ~

Wednesday, January 05, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

nut hatch
..flies with tilted wings
....safe landing in the wind
On second thought...

"Beware, you who call yourselves
perfect in your obedience of the law.
You pay your taxes but you ignore
justice, mercy and honesty. You
should practice these things first.
You wash the outside of your cups
and plates, but inside you harbour
thoughts of greed and theft. Wash
the inside of the cup and it will all
be clean."

--Jesus

Wednesday Thought: Start With Yourself

"We should love, respect, and nurture all
life. That process needs to begin with
yourself, because your life is representative
of the life force within each and every living
being."

--Bhante Y. Wimala

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

gratitude
..melting away fear
....like the sun on snow
Tuesday Thought: Which Path?

"We all have the karma to meet one
spiritual path or another, and I would
encourage you, from the bottom of my
heart, to follow with complete sincerity
the path that inspires you most."

--Sogyal Rinpoche

On second thought...

"Often people ask: How long should
I meditate? And when?... The point is
not how long you meditate; the point
is whether the practise actually brings
you to a certain state of mindfulness
and presence, where you are a little
open and able to connect with your
heart essence. Five minutes of wakeful
sitting practise is of far greater value
than twenty minutes of dozing!"

--Sogyal Rinpoche

Monday, January 03, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

see
..with your heart
....a loving world appears
Haiku Moment
By Don

commit
..don't cling
....to living
On second thought...

"If instead of a gem, or even a flower,
we should cast the gift of a loving thought
into the heart of a friend, that would be giving
as the angels give."

--George MacDonald
Monday Thought: Seek the Right Time

"Never cut a tree down in the wintertime.
Never make a negative decision in the low time.
Never make your most important decisions
when you are in your worst moods.
Wait. Be patient. The storm will pass. The spring
will come.”

--Author Unknown

Sunday, January 02, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

sunrise
..celebrating rebirth
....finding a lost moment
Haiku Moment
By Don

fear
..blocking love
....the most common cause of death
On second thought...

"No man knows he is young while he is young."

--G.K. Chesterton
Sunday Thought: New Perspective of Death

"When it comes time to die, be not like those
whose hearts are filled with the fear of death,
so when their time comes they weep and pray
for a little more time to live their lives over
again in a different way. Sing your death song,
and die like a hero going home."

--Tecumseh

Saturday, January 01, 2005

Haiku Moment
By Don

new year
..new beginnings
....we return to the East
Haiku Moment
By Don

rejoice
..in the light
....where we discover joy
On second thought...

"There is no death. Only a change of worlds."

--Chief Seattle
Saturday Thought: Happy New Year

Welcome to 2005. I wish all those stopping
by Conscious Living a healthy, spiritually rich,
happy, and prosperous New Year.

May each of us look to the Great Spirit for
guidance on how to best employ our talents
in 2005.
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