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Tom Atkins Jul 2020
It tilts. It moves.
The floor falls out underneath you.
The rules change. The light shifts and flickers.
Somewhere, someone is laughing
maniacally.
Somewhere, too often, someone is crying.
Faces leap out at you,
implacable and unfeeling,
somehow worse than
the monsters we were taught to fear,
blind to blood.
There is music. Here and there a note rings
false, as if the music itself is a lie.
In the distance, where the light lives,
there is another song,
a weeping anthem of hope and revolution.
You were not prepared to be so unsettled,
so unsure which way your safety lies.
A scream fills the air. Not a shriek to scare,
but of pain. Somewhere in the dark.
There is no one to lead you. Each ghoul
beckons you in dark corners,
sinister in their suits. Blood on their cuffs.
In the end, you fall back on your faith.
John calls you in a faint whisper.
“Forward.”  Always forward.
Through the darkness, toward the light.
Leave the ghouls behind to whither
in their own darkness.
You will not allow it to be yours.
If I told you where this poem began, you would laugh. Poems are like that sometimes – they take strange and convoluted journeys.

An anthem for the time we are in.

I never understood why they called them funhouses. They were always a bit horrific.

In the poem “John” refers to the disciple John, who wrote what is sometimes called the gospel of light. ‘

Forward my friends. Always towards the light.

Tom
Tom Atkins Jul 2020
Some things you just sit on.
You let the anger flame high and bright,
but you wait, lest the fire consume you
as it has done so often in the past.

In the configuration you have learned the power of silence,
how it protects you from the worst of yourself,
how it prevents flammable words
that burn everyone they touch.
Deserved or not, you have lived as anger’s roadkill
too often.
You will forever bear the scars,
and the silence is your protection,

Silence is also the enemy. It isolates. It does nothing.
There is no healing in it. Left in place too often
it becomes a weapon.

Somewhere in between it the simmering.
A righteous anger of promises unkept,
lies more common than truth, faith
abandoned in the name of fear and someone to blame.

How is it we are still fighting these battles?
How is it that we, a nation capable of the impossible
cannot heal the rifts and illnesses of spirit
to live up to the promises we declare
on our holidays and sacred places?

I cannot quench this anger. No longer.
There is work to do and even unsure what it is and how,
the simmer burns. Even with the wet balm of time,
the simmer burns.

As you have aged, you have slowly lost your fear of fire.
It still lives but you have learned you will survive it,
that despite what your emotions tell you,
you will not be consumed.

So bring on the fire.
This can no longer be a thing that flashes
and is forgotten.
Let it burn, and I will burn with it,
light in the night, living with an aggressive love
that too many will hate.

Selah
I was accosted this morning in the diner where I eat now and then. I was speaking to one of the patrons about the state of race relations and the man at the next table took offense. It was a tense few moments. I ended up quoting scripture, something I almost never do except in my capacity as a part-time pastor. I find it often inflames people who are not steeped in the gospels and who feel the use of the bible is self-righteous, so I don’t use it in arguments. But this time, I did.

It shut him up and he stomped out.

It’s not the first time this has happened to me. Once, a few years ago, I caught hell in another diner for being “That gay-loving pastor.” It seems I was an abomination. Scared the pants off of me. But I survived.

What I learned from it this time around is that I am tired of the hate in this country. I am tired of having lived 65 years and seeing us fight the same battles over something as simple as caring for the people who surround us. From the handling of the pandemic to race relations, we seem to have abandoned the most simple premises of our faiths – all of which are built on care for each other. No exceptions.

It was a screaming anger a month ago, just after George FLoyd’s ******. Now it is simmering anger, close to the surface, and it seems as if it is not going away.

I don’t know what to do with this anger. But I will figure it out. Anger can be a good fuel and not sim
ply destructive. I learned that late in life and I am still learning. Let it simmer, I tell myself. Let it simmer.

Something will come of it.

Tom
Tom Atkins Jul 2020
The tide is low and you can see most of the boat’s ladder,
slimy and green below the high tide mark,
dry and growing brittle above,
subject to sun and salt each day, no matter the weather.

The ladder is the way up, the way out
from the fishing boats that populate this pier.
No matter the undertow below,
no matter the direction.

There are other materials that might last longer
than the locust wood used to make the rungs and stringers,
materials less susceptible to the slow death
of the seaside docks,

But the wood ladder remains. When it fails,
another one will take its place,
new wood gleaming for a week or two
before turning grey,
the persistence of weather taking its toll.

But the wood has a certain feel. A realness
that resonates to these men of the sea,
a trueness to who they are, and the all too real
world they live in.

It will remain their material of choice,
a thing you can run your hand over
and feel the truth of life, that it comes
and goes, that age takes its toll,

and maintenance is everything.
About ladders. About relationships. About faith.
Tom Atkins Jun 2020
Just on the other side, the path disintegrates.
The clear border fences stop
and you are forced to face the chaos
without the clarity of those who have gone before you,

forced to fall back on your ancient teaching
of sunfall and internal compasses,
trusting the lichen on trees and sharp shadows
to lead you, if not to your destination,

at least to safety
So much of where we are today is unexplored territory. Day to day choices that change with the unstable mix of virus, politics, and anger. We have no path through this. There are few rules that stand.

But we do have principles.  And if they are true, they will lead us through. This is when we fall on our faith.

Be well. Travel wisely,

Tom
Tom Atkins Jun 2020
It’s not very pretty, this old fishing boat.
Paint is peeled and the brass is pitted.
There is rust on the anchor
and the porthole glass is glazed with salt.

But each day it leaves the harbor
and finds its way to deep waters.
Nets are dropped and fish are caught.
And each night it returns.
Those of us who battle depression and anxiety get up each day and live our lives and do our work despite it all. At least most of us do. We’re the lucky ones.

Oh yeah, and it can be about fishing boats too.
Tom Atkins Jun 2020
There is always that chance
that you have forgotten;
that the week of neglect,
of pretending to be a vegetable,
and putting your spiritual disciplines aside
have rendered you mute.

It has happened before.

But then the tide comes in
and the tide goes out,
and a new miracle parades in front of you,
ripples in the sand, abstract art
from a playful creator,

and you remember.
again.
And begin
again,
knowing that no matter what is erased,
something is created.
This morning, after a week of vacation on Cape Cod, the woman I love said something about hoping she could remember how to do her job. I know the feeling. Whenever I am away from my writing or my art for any period of time, there is this brief moment of doubt when I begin again, this feeling that I won’t be able to do it.

That feeling has been part of my life for ages, and while I know it is balderdash, it still flickers until I start, and then it evaporates.

There was a period of my life when I did not write or create for years. Starting back up was frightful. But obviously, it worked out.

Newton’s Third Law of Motion states that when two bodies interact, they apply forces to one another that are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction. In other words, energy is never lost, simply balanced and equaled out. I believe the same is true of creativity.

I think of creativity as a spiritual discipline. The word “inspiration” comes from a root phrase that means “God-breathed”.

A weird mix for a poem’s inception. But there you are. My mind is like that sometimes.
Tom Atkins Jun 2020
Early in the morning, I breathe you in.
The energy of your skin fills me.
And I wake before I wake,
Every nerve awake,
my once dead heart beating,
wild and alive.
A love poem. What else?
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