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132 · Mar 2017
Reality A Twin
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2017
The inside looking out,
   the outside looking in

Two sides of the same mirror,
—reality a twin

(Villanova Pennsylvania: March, 2017)
132 · Feb 2024
This One Bet
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2024
Were I to explain
what then would I say …
That the moon loves its axis
that each dog has its day
That the question unanswered
most answered indeed
That each start an enigma
and truth often bleeds
That the mind unexplored
without mention at all
That from season to season
time stumbles and falls
Against my better nature
I’ll place this one bet
The answer you hoped for
— you’re never to get

(Dreamsleep: February, 2024)
132 · May 2019
Reality's Hymn
Kurt Philip Behm May 2019
Be-bop, shu-baby-bop,
  the blues on fire

The strings an accelerant,
  the harp but a pyre

The melody unseen,
  its heartbeat within

Be-bop, shu-baby-bop
  —reality’s hymn

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2019)
132 · May 2024
Never Really Gone
Kurt Philip Behm May 2024
That ulcer
in his
consciousness
bleeding
to be heard
A canker
of a
muted past
abscessing
every word

Cold sores
of detention
that fade
but never
cure
A virus
of his
hopes and dreams
recurring
— untoward

(Septa R5 Train: May, 2024)
132 · Oct 2023
Scripturam
Kurt Philip Behm Oct 2023
Writing …
first last
and always  
—its own reward

(Dreamsleep: October, 2023)
132 · Feb 2024
One Voice
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2024
The playing field level
your words versus mine
A race to forever
embedded in rhyme

The score has been tied
neither side giving ground
Both phrases and couplets
inscribed to astound

It’s late in the game
when a stanza takes off
Outpacing the others
no images lost

As darkness approaches
but one voice remains
Returned from the heavens
— posterity claimed

(The New Room: February, 2024)
132 · Feb 2024
Cold Feet
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2024
You’ll never find out
where you might have gone
If you don’t leave
where you’ve been

You’ll never approach
who you might become
If you change
with every whim

You’ll never discover what’s
over the hill
With both feet stuck
in the sand

You’ll never discern the
right from the wrong
Indecision
—your command

(The New Room: January, 2024)
132 · May 2017
Destiny Marked
Kurt Philip Behm May 2017
The wandering Poet,
  so wild—so free

With each mile walked,
  a new reverie

Eight Muses to guide him,
  his steps fall in line

Their prophecy calling,
  their message sublime

The wandering Poet,
  won’t stop till he’s done

All motion incessant,
  all verse zero-sum

His trail can be seen,
  by those willing to climb

Their destiny’s marked,
—their pasts left behind

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2017)
132 · Jun 2017
His Wishing Well
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2017
Always drawn to stronger women,
  in a cerebral kind of way

He missed the charm of a softer maiden,
  the joy her flowers splayed

He married a woman just like him,
  who made life a living hell

To die while dreaming of that one sweet lass,
  her heart—his wishing well

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2017)
132 · Jan 2021
Twin Fusion
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2021
With one pen in the inkwell,
eternity got wet

The words to dance and laugh and pray,
phrasing’s still unmet

With one pen in the inkwell,
the future kissed the past

The moments now, the moments then
—Siamese at last

(Haverford College: January, 2021)
132 · Jun 2022
Cherub's Promise
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2022
Beyond despair
new light is found
where wasted moments
live again
Befriending capsules
lost to time
the air forgiving
free of sin
Beyond all hope
there lies a wish
where cherubs promise
saving grace
And hopes and wishes
are reborn
as memory resets
—love embraced

(The First Book Of Prayers June, 2012)
132 · Jul 2022
A Regent's Tale
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2022
Those hidden lies
breed louder cries,
deception setting in

What’s birthed in darkness
kills in light,
exposing deeper sins

The poison fostered
regent’s tale,
its message civic spun

For us to swallow
not to chew,
inscripted zero-sum

(The New Room: July, 2022)
132 · Aug 2019
Blindfolded
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2019
Dying the slow death of political infection,
it hides within our words

As we try to run, and try to hide,
its plague a constant scourge

Poisoning the water, despoiling our thoughts,
all freedom it commands

Directing the folly, conscripting all joy
—our blindfold it demands

(Dreamsleep: August, 2019)
132 · Aug 2019
Nulla Universitas
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2019
Behind ivy thoughts and mortared speech,
my soul cannot be bought

As I worship freely deep within
—the truth forever caught

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2017)
132 · Apr 2021
Sub-Zero
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2021
You know it’s the end
when shadows abandon

Memory fades
as light is recalled

No longer master,
time is imploding

Wishes undreamed
—then nothing at all

(The New Room: April, 2021)
132 · May 2024
Dark Star
Kurt Philip Behm May 2024
Two contradictions
meet intertwined
Are they or aren’t they
YES, the reply

The black hole of reason
dark matter of mind
Imploding explosions
— together in kind

(Dreamsleep: May, 2024)
132 · Aug 2022
Rebirth
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2022
To **** the dreamer
not the dream
Each wish reborn
—all hope redeemed

(The New Room: August, 2022)
132 · Apr 2024
Directional Synthesis
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2024
Does your life then come together
front to back
or
back to front
It takes years to clearly see
that both
directions
are a ruse
Life revolving as a circle
with you
inside
its center
All phases caught in a whirlpool’s tide
that ebbs
and flows
— divine

(The New Room: April, 2024)
132 · Oct 2016
The Wind
Kurt Philip Behm Oct 2016
When the emptiness,
  outweighs the content

The wind,
—forever ceases to blow

(Villanova Pennsylvania: October, 2016)
132 · Jul 2019
Uncertainties Lair
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2019
Sneaking into the enemy camp,
the guards all fast asleep

Crawling past the sorrow and pain,
old promises to keep

Deep within the saboteurs grasp,
for one last time, alone

Burrowing into uncertainties lair
—to despoil the unknown

(Villanova Pennsylvania: February, 2017)
132 · Feb 2018
The Rim
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2018
Living along the ledges,
  life is about the edges

The meaning sharpens and cuts
  —the higher you go

(Bryn Mawr College: August, 2014)
132 · Jan 2022
Medium Vitae
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2022
What is the value
of faith without doubt
Love without hatred,
peace without routs

What is the meaning
of joy without pain
Words without silence,
sun without rain

Into the middle
both sides fall within
Dimension redundant,
all endings begin

The yin and the yang
the long and the short
When hands clasp together
—right left to import

(The New Room: December, 2021)
132 · Aug 2023
Dusk To Dawn
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2023
Life …
changes color
when twilight returns
Darkness
a palette
remixing your doubt
Stars
a backdrop
canvassed with unknowing
Rainbows
left truant
—moon shadows about

(Dreamsleep: August, 2023)
132 · Sep 2023
Towers Of Shame
Kurt Philip Behm Sep 2023
Academicians …
masticating and
grinding their ‘truth’
Spewing out
what they would have us swallow
in gagging choking egotism
Regurgitating it back
in the toxic chunder
of a narcissistic reality
Papering the walls
of modern thought
with the bibs of their retching
As they hide within
their ivory towers
—festering in mass

(St. David’s Pennsylvania: September, 2023)
132 · Aug 2021
Just Passing Through...
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2021
Your mountains and prairies are safe from me,
it’s only your roads I want
89 in Utah, 191 in Montana,
route 50 cutting Nevada in half
I’m not looking to stay or upset your order,
like New Yorkers and Californians do
I just want to ride to tomorrow and back
—the view and the memories my home

(Dewey Montana: September, 1996)
131 · Apr 2017
My Parting Wish
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2017
When lost inside a world of dreams,
  the Muse becomes my guide

The days and nights stand juxtaposed,
  the sun and moon collide

And though my eyes desert me now,
  the past and future blind

My parting wish is not to wake,
—this sleep forever mine

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2017)
Kurt Philip Behm May 2024
Chapter 7:  Learning To Share

At St Thomas Of Villanova Grade School we learned how to share.  We had shared desks, shared inkwells, shared coatrooms, and no individual lockers.  Any valuables that we did have were out in the open and under the protection of all.  This honor system was developed over many generations, and one that had its own measure of checks and balances.  Things did occasionally get lost, but in my 8 years at St. Thomas,’ I can’t recall one thing ever being stolen.

If you talk to anyone who grew up in the 1950’s, you’ll hear things like this repeated over and over again …

: In my neighborhood we never even locked our doors.
: I left my bike on the front porch for years.
: The milkman and breadman left food outside the front door,        sometimes for hours, and no-one ever touched it.

               These Things Were Integral To American Life

Just like in school, the neighborhood had its own method of self-protection.  It stemmed from a principle, all held dear, that no-one would ever even think about entering anyone else’s home uninvited.  Cars sat in driveways unlocked with packages in the back seat and glove boxes full.  The same applied here. This was someone’s private property, and you afforded the object the same respect as the person who owned it. It’s just the way things were done.

Things were done this way because we all shared the belief that any other way would have been wrong.

              It Really Did Come Down To … Right Or Wrong!

In the lower grades at school, we all wore coverings over our pants and skirts in the winter called leggings, Leggings kept you warm while offering a layer of protection from the hard asphalt that served as our playground during recess and lunch.  It was one students job every day to help everyone else get their leggings off.  If you ever wore them, you know what a chore this could be, especially if you were doing it by yourself.  Luckily, in my school, you were never by yourself, and you actually looked forward to the day when it was your responsibility to help everyone else.  In the sharing of oneself, we learned of the deeper meaning that life can bring.  

We also had shared turns at cleaning the blackboard, emptying the trash, and once a week, in the months during spring and fall, we all got to work in Sister Clara’s Garden.  Sister Clara was almost blind, and no-one knew how old she really was.  What we did know is that she had taught our parents, and in some cases our grandparents too, and we couldn’t wait for the stories that she would tell us about them when they were our age.  Sister Clara may have had failing eyesight, but she had total recall when it involved one of her students no matter how many years had passed.

It didn’t matter how long ago the event happened, she could make it seem like it was happening again today. She never pulled any punches, and it was through her stories that I first learned that my mother was not always perfect, she just got that way through hard work and practice.  I know this is true because that’s what she told me (LOL).

The things we shared at school came with responsibility and a pride in what they represented.  The words me or I seemed rarely used back then.  The pride we felt was in our school, or in our neighborhood, and of course in our country. If I hit a home run on the ball field, it was our team who won, and my efforts were part of that greater whole.

We learned early that we were only as good as the slowest or weakest player on our team, and we rallied around this person to sure up his strengths making us all better in the process.  By being willing to share, we could turn slower guys like me into blockers on the line, while our fastest guys would be the running backs carrying the ball down the field to score. No matter how fast those guys were, they always knew that without the right block, at the right time, they would never have been able to get through the line and into the end zone.  It was in the end zone that we shared together the joy of the touchdown.  Isn’t that the way it really should be, people of like mind, banding together for a common goal, and sharing in its reward?

Back then, being visible and being valuable were not necessarily the same thing.  Today, every kid wants to pitch or be quarterback on his team.  Under this scenario the team itself disappears.  Ask any great quarterback how he got to where he is, and he will invariably thank his offensive line for allowing him to make the plays that resulted in the wins. By believing in the concept that what’s good for all trumps’any individual goal, we were able to not only win games but to experience the joy that only teamwork can create.

         A Team Is About The Vision And The Mission They Share

When we shared these moments, we shared them in the only language that brought us together … English! We would never have expected, nor wanted, to celebrate in any other.  Just because you were Italian, and I was Irish, had nothing to do with it.  That was yesterday and in the past.  Today, our common bond was that we were all American kids conversing in the language that our Founding Fathers had used.  One of the marvelous things about the English language is its ability to assimilate different words and idioms from other cultures and make them its own.  

We often times found ourselves interjecting words from the foreign languages we learned from our friend’s parents into our daily speech.  I might be a Meshugana and you a Dummkopf, but it was all in good fun, and it spiced up our native language with a zest and flavor. The parents and grandparents from the ‘Old Country’ didn’t want their children to speak anything but English and would correct us with the proper English word when we borrowed one of theirs.  They wanted their children to be American, and only American, and to speak its chosen language without the accents they still carried on their tongues.

With Our Common Language, We Footnoted Ourselves In The Stories That We Told

We learned in school that one of the greatest tragedies of America’s past had been the Civil War. It was a bitter conflict fought by two sides who shared so much in common — almost destroying each other in the clash of a few differences.  Luckily, we had the great unifier Abraham Lincoln in office to guide us back to nationhood.  Lincoln, more than anyone, realized that “A house divided against itself, cannot stand.”

                                        And So Did We!

We learned that Northern and Southern States were divided along an imaginary line named Mason—Dixon. This line would often pit previous friends, and in some cases brothers, against each other in a tragic struggle to win the day.  One fundamental difference, slavery,  almost destroyed an entire country leaving deep wounds — the scars of which are still visible even today.

We first learned in school that all men were created equal. Our Founding Fathers had assured us of that. In their shared understanding of the basic rights of man, they forged documents (The Declaration of Independence & The Bill of Rights), to insure that in this country men would always be free …free to share in the benefits that only liberty can provide.

It took a Civil War to make sure the promise of those documents was finally extended to all Americans.

    

Chapter 8:  Every Story Paints A Picture

With every story the good Sisters told us, during our 8 years in parochial school, a picture got painted inside our minds.  These pictures became part of our spiritual DNA and the backbone of the moral code we developed and learned to live by.  The Nuns had told these stories over many years, and to thousands of students, but somehow through the intensity in their voices it seemed as though they were telling them again for the first time, and only to us.

Stories that involved important messages like … “Birds of a feather, flock together,” and … ‘Show me your friends, and I’ll tell you who you are” still resonate inside me today. Their truth has only strengthened with the years.  These stories, with their timeless phrases, were as important to us as any Bill of Rights or Ten Commandments.

                    “The *** Should Never Call The Kettle Black”

We also heard these sayings at home as our parents had learned them when they were young too.  It was something they shared with us, and it made the bond between student, teacher, and home, all the stronger.  We were all on the same page and we knew it.  It felt natural and right, and we supported each other in living out what it meant.  There was a twinkle in our mother’s and father’s eyes as they retold the story of what their nuns had taught them.  We knew the lessons were true because they had stood the test of time.

In 1942, my father had gone off to war as a U.S. Marine when he was 16.  He said on many days when the outcome looked bleak, he took special comfort in thinking back to his grade school days in the Kensington section of North Philadelphia, remembering that his 7th grade Nun had told him he was destined for great things … and he was!

The Public Schools taught the same lessons, with the same intent, just minus the religious overtones.  The fundamental principles of honesty, loyalty, fair play, and respect for the individual were constantly reinforced.  

If I heard it in school once, I heard it a thousand times … “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.”  The part that stands alone is what divides, but in coming together we unify into something greater than we could ever be on our own.  This turns what is impossible for one into what’s possible, and even likely, when we act together.

When we heard those immortal words from President John. F Kennedy, “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country,” we knew exactly what he meant.  The you he was referring to was us as individuals, and in acting together for the good of our country, we could make America great — even greater than she already was.  We knew firsthand that people had suffered and died for its meaning. Most of us were the children of G.I.’s who had not long ago returned home from a long and devastating World War. It had been fought on three different continents to keep the world free.

Every year, we would have one or two, or maybe even three, new students transfer in from other parts of the country.  Some had come from as far away as Texas, or Illinois, and in 8th grade we even had one girl transfer in from Holland.  It didn’t matter where they were from because they thought and valued the same things as us.  They may have been taught in a different language, but the meaning was always the same. Their tastes in food may have been different, but their table manners and concern for those around them were identical to ours.  

Terry Heinsohn had transferred in from Amarillo Texas to our school in the 6th grade.  Terry sure had a real twang to his voice, but it never covered up the respect he showed for Sister Natalie or any of the adults who worked at our School.  Like us, Terry had been taught the Texas difference between right and wrong, and his lessons were easily and readily shared with us for those last 3 years.  He was also a really good athlete.

We learned from these transferees and their stories that the surface differences we noticed on the outside were just that … superficial.  When you got right down to it, they were just like us in the things that really mattered, and it was the things that really mattered, the core values that we shared, that bonded us together as a class.  

                Sadly, I Don’t Believe Today We Can Say The Same!
131 · Dec 2021
Breaking Free
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2021
I’m not asking for approval,
that belongs to time
The spoken words I cherish most,
to you seem out of rhyme
I’m not asking for acceptance,
my muse rejects your praise
In darker moments light is found
—your comments weakly phrased

(The New Room: December, 2021)
131 · Mar 2021
To Saint Jude
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2021
The square root of an Epiphany
—is hope

(Villanova Sacristy: March, 2021)
131 · Mar 2022
Killing My First Russian
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2022
Deep in the fountain
of life’s betrayal
My knife drank freely,
a last denial
With screams unanswered,
he tried to run
The first of many
—from Odessa’s son

(Warsaw: March, 2022)
131 · Sep 2023
Just One
Kurt Philip Behm Sep 2023
Trying to write a lyric
my words reduce to verse
The euphony escaping me
adrift as I converse

Though joy is sorely tempered
these letters soldier on
In hope of just one melody
—in hope of just one song

(Bryn Mawr College: September, 2023)
131 · Apr 2019
'Father To The Man'
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2019
“You can’t play with something you don’t own," said
the father.  “But father, that is the truest definition
of play,” said the Russian boy.  “What is not owned is
not worried about, and what is not worried about sets
you free.”

(Villanova Pennsylvania: July, 2016)
131 · Jan 2019
Our Essence To Bear
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2019
What if the Universe has always been here,
  defeating the concept of time

Never beginning and never to end,
  whose story you cannot define

What if the future, present, and past,
  are just crutches for the weakness we share

What if the answers lie beyond logic,
   inside us—our essence to bear

(Villanova Pennsylvania: January, 2019)
131 · Jan 2022
Copper Wire
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2022
Does your writing lack power,
is it merely verbose,
as you labor line to line

Is the message red meat
or a vegan’s delight,
its essence so defined

Each word as an arrow
that strikes for the heart,
its tip to preordain

The strength of the meaning
abandoning all
—when destined to explain

(Dreamsleep: January, 2022)
131 · Jun 2017
Too Late
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2017
Once the wolf is through the door
—it’s too late to turn the lock

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2017)
131 · Jun 2017
The Truth Bleeds
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2017
No matter how much
  you bandage a lie

The truth
—bleeds through and through

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2017)
131 · Mar 2024
Box Canyon
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2024
You can’t close the door
that opens inside
Or bottle the morrow
today seeks to hide
You can’t erase feelings
like words on a page
Or trap a new lover
— with yesterday’s cage

(Dreamsleep: March, 2024)
131 · Oct 2019
In Conflict
Kurt Philip Behm Oct 2019
Intellectual emotion,
emotional logic

Distinct, or one and the same

The mind seeks control,
the spirit rebels

In conflict—prescience regained

(Dreamsleep: October, 2019)
131 · Mar 2021
Blurring The Lines
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2021
If being and the world
are one and the same
Then thinking and thoughts
are together to name
With freedom and consciousness
semantically fused
All judgment and will
—symbiotically cued

(Baldwin School: March, 2021)
131 · Mar 2021
The Coming Wind
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2021
Organizing each word unpenned,  
I gave myself to rhyme

And offered up my humble skills
in thankfulness sublime

Each one a treasure unto me,
with silence on the run

Verses promised and drifting near
—of memories to come

(The New Room: March, 2021)
131 · May 2019
Flashpoint
Kurt Philip Behm May 2019
Thoughts ignite,
  and words burn

As everything considered
  —turns to ash

(Villanova Pennsylvania: August, 2016)
131 · Apr 1
What A Fool Believes
Strutting
in place
Message
defaced
Words left
to spew
Bombast
in view
Worshipping
mirrors
Begging
for fame
Image
debasing
Vanity’s
— claim

(The New Room: March, 2025)
131 · Mar 2023
Inconsequence
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2023
Lies and the truth
both fade into memory
Time caring not
whether credence or farce

Married together
they drift into silence
Passing forgotten
—through legend and curse

(Dreamsleep: February, 2023)
131 · Jun 2023
The Road
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2023
24 hours
alone with myself
the road goes on and on

24 hours
in my own space
exemption rides along

24 hours
eternity breached
its imagery returns

24 hours
tomorrow today
whose light forever burns

24 hours
becoming undone
the parts fall back in place

24 hours
the wind at my back
withdrawing from the race

24 hours
a voice calls my name
in birth year reverie

24 hours
my soul to reclaim
in what was meant to be

24 hours
Kerouac ******
a false reflection shown

24 hours
each road sign that calls
direction out on loan

24 hours
the moment reframed
once lost but now refound

24 hours
24 lifetimes
—inward outward bound

(Dreamsleep: June, 2023)
131 · Jul 2017
The Devil Called Roll
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2017
An unknown voice cried out
  from the abyss
As the nameless got in line
  with the rest

Promises offered
  lies to reclaim
As the devil called out roll
  from his list

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2014)
131 · May 2017
Juice In The Bottle
Kurt Philip Behm May 2017
All magic—today,
  past future astray

This moment—alive,
  all others contrived

“Juice in the bottle,
  cup in your hand

Pour out the goodness,
  live while you can”

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2017)
131 · Apr 11
Storm Ports
Safe place for the meaning — in couplets of rhyme
the words taking shelter in moments sublime

Their message unfurling — new harbor in sight
the tempest becalming in lines of delight


(Dreamsleep: April, 2025)
131 · Dec 2016
Time And Again
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Poetry is more than words,
  some is written—some is heard

Often long—yet sometimes short,
  its power shared in strong retort

Questions cry—demanding verse,
with feelings new, still unrehearsed

Its focus like a laser aims,
  at souls that search—time and again

(Villanova Pennsylvania: December, 2016)
131 · Sep 2023
Last Shot
Kurt Philip Behm Sep 2023
Stalking a dream
trailing a memory
A scent came in focus
  wafting desire

Seized by the moment
alluding a time warp
Tracking its shadow
ambush on fire

Covered in greasepaint
fear is approaching
Hearing its footsteps
the jungle embarked

Crosshair detention
target redemption
Locked and reloaded
—one shot in the dark

(Dreamsleep: September, 2023)
131 · Jul 2019
Without The Fire
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2019
Is morality an end point,
or a journey to begin

                Are right and wrong just bookends placed,
   or what then lies within

All Ethical persuasion,
to attain or just desire

Whose end result will never come
—enflamed without the fire

(Haverford Pennsylvania: July, 2019)
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