Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
There are losses that do not arrive with casseroles. No folded flags. No clean ending. There are deaths that don’t just take bodies - they steal futures. Stealing quiet walks with dog dads and mothers. Is this what we’ve become? They’ve stolen quiet Tuesday mornings with Morrie. Snuffed out coming birthday candles and replaced them with yahrzeits and descansos. Robbed us of the ordinary miracles of everyday life, and everyday people. Tonight we speak three names so the silence does not eat us, or forget them. Say their names. Renee. Keith. Alex. Say her name: Renee Good. She was not meant to be a headline. She was breath in cold Minnesota air. A transplant already contributing to her vibrant, diverse community. Her hands on a steering wheel - harmless. Turning away toward grocery lists, warm coffee cups, what dinner she might make for her family that night. Unaware of the mortal danger looming around the corner. And for what? And the violence - so fleeting. And the perpetrators, fleeing. Only after vandalizing the crime scene. Witnesses said they smelled the fear and frustration of federal agents tasked with our public safety. Grown men shoving helpless women onto concrete streets. They said they felt the ripe, lawless energy. Saw the putrid satisfaction, of those who crowned themselves judge and jury On these tragic days. No due process. No final goodbyes. No return Of that Honda Pilot home Just the gutter spit of ******* ***** History says this: Power always grows paranoid before it collapses. Mistaking motion and dissent for threat. From chariots to carriages to cars - the frightened empire always fires first and justifies later. So we speak for those Who were silenced, Memorialize the future They were building In the present. And we become the ritual. Continue the good fight. Remember. Witness. Carry their names forward. Build on their blood and sacrifice. Leave the world less cruel than we found it. Say his name: Keith Porter. Midnight fireworks blooming over California skies. A father’s laugh reverberating into a new year. Children waiting for morning pancakes. A life interrupted by suspicion disguised as authority. In old villages they rang bells when a father fell. They stopped work. They held the children close. They said: This matters. Today, the noise never ends. And the clocks don’t stop. The news keeps updating. The system shrugs. And we go home - Beaten down by the brutality of it all. But we rise again, Ring the bell Raise our voices, Let our instruments sing, Offer our gifts In sacred memoriam. Keith was not disposable. Joy is not criminal. Unless you go looking for trouble, For storms clouds in clear skies. Say his name: Alex Pretti. A healer. A nurse. Hands trained to stop bleeding - not cause it. Phone in one hand. Mercy in the other. Guarding another human being more vulnerable than himself. And in an instant the hyenas swarmed. A hero was tackled. Beaten. Shot. Silenced. And applause for the death of a man who applied gauze to veterans. In ancient wars, medics were protected by sacred agreements. You do not **** the one who carries bandages. You do not shoot the one who kneels to help. But modern uniforms have forgotten ancient rules - and human ones too. Alex stood between harm with hope. Between what is right, And what is easy to ignore. Between an open hand, And a closed fist. We must continue to stand and resist The hateful violence with the same grace and hope that they did. This is the grief of the unlived life. The futures they never got to meet. Grandchildren who will never be. Songs that will never reach their final movements. Every empire collapses under the weight of its buried truths. We are living in a bone graveyard Full of unwritten chapters - Frost over unfinished soil. Rome fell. Kings fall. Walls fall (just ask Berlin). Not by swords alone - but by people who refuse to forget. Who stand arm in arm, looking out for neighbors, for community, under a merciful God who loves everyone equally. The irony? They said it, first: “All lives matter.” It just doesn’t hit home until you bury your own. And some have had the privilege To turn the other cheek On the brutality they see. Any of us could have been Alex. Keith. Renee. On any given day. If that doesn’t haunt you, nothing ever will. Still, they are present with us - in every march. In every candle. Every prayer and vigil. In every voice that dares to speak about justice in an unjust world. We are tired. YES. But exhaustion is not surrender. It is proof we still care. We do not carry this rage or sadness alone. We also carry this responsibility together. To build a world, where uniforms again protect instead of terrorize. Where immigrants, strangers in a strange land, Are not strange fruit… But the backbone of our society. To be a nation again with a conscience And a moral compass, Who understands that none of us Lay sole claim to the land or the sea, Or who gets to be a “citizen” Of this country. Where joy is not suspicious. And where just mercy and protecting the meek Is celebrated, not fatal. There may be no official ritual. No government ceremony. No sanctioned mourning. But hear this: We are the ritual, now. We are the archive. We are the living memory. Renee walks with us. Keith walks with us. Alex walks with us. Not as ghosts - but as the fire that refuses to die. History is watching what we choose to become.
0
Apr 29
Apr 29, 2026 at 2:52 PM UTC
No Funeral for the Unlived
There are losses that do not arrive with casseroles. No folded flags. No clean ending. There are deaths that don’t just take bodies - they steal futures. Stealing quiet walks with dog dads and mothers. Is this what we’ve become? They’ve stolen quiet Tuesday mornings with Morrie. Snuffed out coming birthday candles and replaced them with yahrzeits and descansos. Robbed us of the ordinary miracles of everyday life, and everyday people. Tonight we speak three names so the silence does not eat us, or forget them. Say their names. Renee. Keith. Alex. Say her name: Renee Good. She was not meant to be a headline. She was breath in cold Minnesota air. A transplant already contributing to her vibrant, diverse community. Her hands on a steering wheel - harmless. Turning away toward grocery lists, warm coffee cups, what dinner she might make for her family that night. Unaware of the mortal danger looming around the corner. And for what? And the violence - so fleeting. And the perpetrators, fleeing. Only after vandalizing the crime scene. Witnesses said they smelled the fear and frustration of federal agents tasked with our public safety. Grown men shoving helpless women onto concrete streets. They said they felt the ripe, lawless energy. Saw the putrid satisfaction, of those who crowned themselves judge and jury On these tragic days. No due process. No final goodbyes. No return Of that Honda Pilot home Just the gutter spit of ******* ***** History says this: Power always grows paranoid before it collapses. Mistaking motion and dissent for threat. From chariots to carriages to cars - the frightened empire always fires first and justifies later. So we speak for those Who were silenced, Memorialize the future They were building In the present. And we become the ritual. Continue the good fight. Remember. Witness. Carry their names forward. Build on their blood and sacrifice. Leave the world less cruel than we found it. Say his name: Keith Porter. Midnight fireworks blooming over California skies. A father’s laugh reverberating into a new year. Children waiting for morning pancakes. A life interrupted by suspicion disguised as authority. In old villages they rang bells when a father fell. They stopped work. They held the children close. They said: This matters. Today, the noise never ends. And the clocks don’t stop. The news keeps updating. The system shrugs. And we go home - Beaten down by the brutality of it all. But we rise again, Ring the bell Raise our voices, Let our instruments sing, Offer our gifts In sacred memoriam. Keith was not disposable. Joy is not criminal. Unless you go looking for trouble, For storms clouds in clear skies. Say his name: Alex Pretti. A healer. A nurse. Hands trained to stop bleeding - not cause it. Phone in one hand. Mercy in the other. Guarding another human being more vulnerable than himself. And in an instant the hyenas swarmed. A hero was tackled. Beaten. Shot. Silenced. And applause for the death of a man who applied gauze to veterans. In ancient wars, medics were protected by sacred agreements. You do not **** the one who carries bandages. You do not shoot the one who kneels to help. But modern uniforms have forgotten ancient rules - and human ones too. Alex stood between harm with hope. Between what is right, And what is easy to ignore. Between an open hand, And a closed fist. We must continue to stand and resist The hateful violence with the same grace and hope that they did. This is the grief of the unlived life. The futures they never got to meet. Grandchildren who will never be. Songs that will never reach their final movements. Every empire collapses under the weight of its buried truths. We are living in a bone graveyard Full of unwritten chapters - Frost over unfinished soil. Rome fell. Kings fall. Walls fall (just ask Berlin). Not by swords alone - but by people who refuse to forget. Who stand arm in arm, looking out for neighbors, for community, under a merciful God who loves everyone equally. The irony? They said it, first: “All lives matter.” It just doesn’t hit home until you bury your own. And some have had the privilege To turn the other cheek On the brutality they see. Any of us could have been Alex. Keith. Renee. On any given day. If that doesn’t haunt you, nothing ever will. Still, they are present with us - in every march. In every candle. Every prayer and vigil. In every voice that dares to speak about justice in an unjust world. We are tired. YES. But exhaustion is not surrender. It is proof we still care. We do not carry this rage or sadness alone. We also carry this responsibility together. To build a world, where uniforms again protect instead of terrorize. Where immigrants, strangers in a strange land, Are not strange fruit… But the backbone of our society. To be a nation again with a conscience And a moral compass, Who understands that none of us Lay sole claim to the land or the sea, Or who gets to be a “citizen” Of this country. Where joy is not suspicious. And where just mercy and protecting the meek Is celebrated, not fatal. There may be no official ritual. No government ceremony. No sanctioned mourning. But hear this: We are the ritual, now. We are the archive. We are the living memory. Renee walks with us. Keith walks with us. Alex walks with us. Not as ghosts - but as the fire that refuses to die. History is watching what we choose to become.
ted-boughter-dornfeld
Written by
Apr 29
Apr 29, 2026 at 2:52 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem