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 Feb 2013 Makana Queja
Maddie
I remember being little.
Innocence.
When I was gentle with my words
And with the things my hand would hold
The way my cheeks would rose up from the cold.
Little fingers.
Little feet.
Sweet smiles snuck a treat.
Laughter and play.
Feeling safe in every way.
Seeing only the best in everybody.
Trusting everyone who came by.
Being held and needing a cuddle.
Splashing in a rain puddle.
Hearing, everything will be alright.
Bob Marley's motto tucked me in at night.
Being a princess is an actual occupation.
Thinking your parents aren’t scared of anything.
Believing in things that cannot be believed.
Having an imagination completely unperceived.
Finger painting.
Dancing.
Footy PJ's
Encouragement.
Laughter
Through all of my days.
Always feeling loved.
Never any doubts.
Bedtime stories.
Button noses.
I scream for ice cream shouts.
Soft whispers.
Tender touches.
Quiet kisses.
These are the things an adult misses.
Our paths may never cross.
But for an infinity,
grow side by side
As passive parallel lines
You were my morning coffee
What woke me up every day.
You were my watched sunset
The underlying beauty in a giant ball of fire.
You were my front door
Hard to break into, but easy to find
The one that led me home.
You were my pair of gloves
The only ones that ever fit my hands.
You were my favorite song
Memorized down to the final chord.
You were my morning coffee.
But I don't touch the stuff anymore.
 Jan 2013 Makana Queja
Pandora dO
It feeds,
it heals,
it sustains,
it grows,
it thrives.

It is everything
and everyone.
It never dies,
it's always around.

Without it,
there would be nothing.
Not you, not me,
no life at all.
Let's treasure it.
© 2013
A light left on in the dark of night,
A fight that rages on only deepening our plight,
Blind in the dark we find ourselves lost,
A war is fought but at what cost.
Simple things that keep us alive,
A shallow grave, our time arrives,
Bodies that never saw the light of day,
A debt not ours but it's we who pay.
It wasn’t many weeks ago,

When you asked what God meant to me.

You looked down from your throne,

And told me I knew nothing,

Before I even answered.

You tally your Sundays and pin them on your chest.

“Humble yourself” under a God that knows you best?

Please.

It’s easy to say you know God, and to preach, when you’re standing on an altar of

mahogany. Gingerly stepping so not to scuff, but

I can’t hear you from that altar.

I can’t hear you behind those beige walls, dripping with the shame and regret, of children

raised to believe a checklist determines their everlasting life.

They can’t hear you.

I can’t hear you.

Let me feel you.

Actions speak louder than words, and honey, you’re gonna need to speak up.

Stand on an altar of the pain we feel, of our faults and all the ways we’re not good enough.

Where is God? Is he in that golden cross hanging from your neck?

What about the crosses ropes make, tied around necks? In sunsets?

It’s a big jump to make, saying that your words come from the maker’s throat.

I hear his voice in other ways. I lay down at an altar much different than yours.

I learned more from my grandmother. Her hands, knotted like the trunk of an oak tree.

Humbly, she asked. “Please bring me home.“ She smelled of flowers, and folded her hands

in prayer, even when the knots on her knuckles grew too sore for her to sew quilts.

The preacher man on Sunday, he’s got nothing on her.

I guess this is a running list of things I should have said,

When you asked what God meant to me.

I’ve seen him from my praying knees.

Felt him in the embrace of crying lovers in hospital halls.

In life. In death.

In tear stained prayer rugs, weaved with much more than just yarn.

When you see the reflection of your Sunday’s best on that shiny mahogany stained altar,

don’t mistake that for God.
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