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#harbors
# Poetry is both lighthouse and harbor. It does not force the journey, nor does it fill the void of what is unresolved It stands in its own gravity, unmoving;       Offering only a silent invitation:       Will you Unfold? There is a craving that walks the shorelines of poetry, a widow’s walk of those who have not yet learned how to participate in what they long for. They circle the docks, watching the ships come and go, watching the light shift across the waves, watching for something that will draw them back home. Some mistake the lighthouse for the flame and rush toward it as if to be consumed, as if breaking open is the same as being made whole. But the call is not to burn. The call is to move toward what moves toward you,    *to become ready for  the return    rather than wither within the waiting.* A moth drawn only to light will die before it ever understands what it was meant to become. But a moth that finds its way to the cocoon will emerge with wings strong enough to meet the wind. This is the choice-- to remain circling, craving, watching or to disappear into the transformation that will allow you to stand whole when the vessel returns. For he is both the lighthouse and the emerging vessel, both the safe harbor and the dock, where the journey finally ends. And she, in waiting, is not idle.. She does not chase passing figures, nor fill the silence with lesser pursuits. She does not betray the longing with distraction. She deepens. She prepares to meet the one who braved the waves to return. *And when at last the ship appears, bathed in the light of its own voyage, she will not meet him as she was;    .. but as she has Become.* #
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Mar 20, 2025
Mar 20, 2025 at 4:51 PM UTC
Glouchester Harbor Shore
# Poetry is both lighthouse and harbor. It does not force the journey, nor does it fill the void of what is unresolved It stands in its own gravity, unmoving;       Offering only a silent invitation:       Will you Unfold? There is a craving that walks the shorelines of poetry, a widow’s walk of those who have not yet learned how to participate in what they long for. They circle the docks, watching the ships come and go, watching the light shift across the waves, watching for something that will draw them back home. Some mistake the lighthouse for the flame and rush toward it as if to be consumed, as if breaking open is the same as being made whole. But the call is not to burn. The call is to move toward what moves toward you,    *to become ready for  the return    rather than wither within the waiting.* A moth drawn only to light will die before it ever understands what it was meant to become. But a moth that finds its way to the cocoon will emerge with wings strong enough to meet the wind. This is the choice-- to remain circling, craving, watching or to disappear into the transformation that will allow you to stand whole when the vessel returns. For he is both the lighthouse and the emerging vessel, both the safe harbor and the dock, where the journey finally ends. And she, in waiting, is not idle.. She does not chase passing figures, nor fill the silence with lesser pursuits. She does not betray the longing with distraction. She deepens. She prepares to meet the one who braved the waves to return. *And when at last the ship appears, bathed in the light of its own voyage, she will not meet him as she was;    .. but as she has Become.* #
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My boyfriend (Peter) and I went down to New Haven Harbor today. Let’s face it, we’re surrounded by oceans, and most of them are downright inhospitable. I live near the ocean, (pointing) it’s right over there. I love the ocean, tripping over whenever I’ve time to spare. The way I’m fawning over it, you’d think I know it well. But I really only love its edges and undulating swells. It’s like a book that I’ve judged by its cover, a beautiful stranger taken as a lover, or a pie when I’ve only tasted the crust. I love something, I suppose, I’ve barely even touched. Peter says that black, inky “outer-space” is a low-viscosity liquid, another, even vaster ocean that’s more dangerous and rarely visited. The air that we breathe is an ocean - our own, vast, atmosphere - in it swim creatures too small to see, but to the naked eye it looks clear. It flows, eddies and swells - birds swoop in it so you can tell. Of course, the ocean has issues - it's hardly news - corrosion, erosion, sharks and drowning - and the way the ocean lets the moon and air push it around. What I love most is its motion, and how it reflects the sun and the moon. Did I mention that hanging-out by the ocean makes for a pleasant afternoon?
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Mar 22, 2023
Mar 22, 2023 at 10:35 AM UTC
oceans