The Need for Poetry

Yesterday in the New York Times, I read M. Gessen’s opinion piece, “They Invented a New Language for War”. Gessen reported from Odesa, Ukraine where the poets of Odesa are writing a chronicle of life in wartime, and changing the language they use.

I am reminded of two poetry books by Ilya Kaminsky.  He was born in Odessa, former Soviet Union in 1977. In 1993, his family was granted asylum by the American government and came to the United States. Dancing in Odessa was published in 2004 in Canada.  The book is a marvel.  I see how much we need poetry. I offer excerpts from the poem “Praise”.

We were leaving Odessa in such a hurry that we forgot the suitcase filled with English dictionaries outside our apartment building. I came to America without a dictionary but a few words did remain: 

And he lists his own definitions for words we know: Forgetting, past, sanity …

The poem goes on and comes to this:

On the page’s soiled corners

my teacher walks, composing a voice;

he rubs each word in his palms;

“hands learn from the soil and broken glass,

you cannot think a poem,” he says,

“watch the light hardening into words.

His book Deaf Republic was published in 2019.  The book begins with the poem We Lived Happily during the War.  It’s about living in the “great country of money”, America, and ignoring destruction in other countries.

The last poem in the book is “In a Time of Peace” and shows how we go about our daily lives even as the horror of what is happening is seen on our phones.

I contrast his amazing writing and insight with the news that, as of 1921, Yosemite’s annual budget is around $30 million.  Trump’s trips to the Daytona 500 and Superbowl cost about $25 million.  Accounting, anyone?  Accountability?  Sanity?

Who and what defines, and what language do they use?

Egret observes the world above my dentist’s office
Preservation
Vision!

Coming Together

My son made a film on The Singularity.  I keep seeing the images, the rapid movement to the change.  It ends with a brother and sister together again, watching, not knowing, as AI takes over.  The image of Musk with a chainsaw at a gathering of conservatives is hard to shake and then I come to Robert Hubbell and Rebecca Solnit and I rise in an inner knowing that we come together for good.

You can read Rebecca Solnit’s essays at the link below but this is a taste of inspiration to keep us all going, gathered, and together.

Rebecca Solnit: Everywhere I went it felt like people were trying harder than usual to show up, to connect, to be their best selves. This is emergency behavior. This is how people behave when their city is bombed or flooded or burning down, this extra care, this extra presentness, this best self connecting with other best selves. Then, online, an actual pastor I knew reminded me that the word comfort means to fortify (com- as in with; fort as in fortress, fortitude, and fortify), maybe to fortify with kindness.  We were fortifying each other with what we had to offer, which was ourselves, by really being with each other.  

https://www.meditationsinanemergency.com/this-is-really-hard-but-we-are-not-quitting-reflections-on-kindness-and-resoluteness/

Spring!

Soft Power

I was just on a Zoom call with Russell Delman, founder of The Embodied Life.  There were people from Spain, France, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Ireland, and Switzerland on the call.

Russell emphasized the soft power of an Open Heart.  The theme was on how we can be moved by the power of a poem. A poem can build our immunity and give us strength to pull out of the rabbit hole of fear that a few are creating to disempower us.  In this, we connect.

The heart is about courage, and we good human beings will not be trapped in this web of fear they’re spinning. Kindness wins, and begins with us being kind to ourselves, and ripples out like rings from a rung bell.  

Read the Thich Nhat Hanh poem “The Good News” which begins:

The good news

they do not print.

The good news

we do print.

The poem concludes with:

Leave behind the world of sorrow,

of preoccupation,

and get free.

The latest good news

is that you can do it.

Children’s playground at the Presidio which Trump wants to destroy.
Nourishing the heart with vision and care

The Presidio

Each day I struggle with the news of Trump’s cruel actions. Yesterday was horrific enough – well each day – but now I see he not only wants to destroy the world but anything that brings joy, so attacking National Parks, and now this.

From SF Gate: The Presidio Trust, one of the agencies tasked with overseeing the 1,500-acre San Francisco park, has become the latest target of the Trump administration in its quest to reduce “the scope of the federal bureaucracy.”

State Sen. Scott Wiener, who represents San Francisco and is a former member of the Board of Supervisors, reacted to the news of the executive order on X: 

“Trump is now trying to kill off the Presidio Trust in SF — a national treasure that’s transformed the Presidio into a self-sustaining, world-class park,” Wiener wrote. “Trump is so vile that he can’t tolerate success if it doesn’t benefit him personally.

“This move is illegal. We won’t go quietly.”

View from The Presidio in San Francisco
Ranger giving a talk outside the Visitor Center
One of a multitude of views from The Presidio
Another view
And another

February 28

Plan ahead and this will be easy to do and make a statement that we who are “woke” spend money until we choose not to do so.

Posted by Jon Stewart:

“The 24 hour Economic Blackout”

As our first initial act, we turn it off. 

For one day we show them who really holds the power.

WHEN:

Friday February 28th from 12:00 A.M. to 11:59 P.M.

WHAT NOT TO DO:

Do not make any purchases

Do not shop online, or in-store

No Amazon, No Walmart, No Best Buy

Nowhere!

Do not spend money on:

Fast Food

Gas

Major Retailers

Do not use Credit or Debit Cards for non essential spending

WHAT YOU CAN DO:

Only buy essentials of absolutely necessary 

(Food, Medicine, Emergency Supplies)

If you must spend, ONLY support small, local businesses.

SPREAD THE MESSAGE

Talk about it, post about it, and document your actions that day!

WHY THIS MATTERS!

~ Corporations and banks only care about their bottom line.

~ If we disrupt the economy for just ONE day, it sends a powerful message.

~ If they don’t listen (they won’t) we make the next blackout longer (We will)

This is our first action.

This is how we make history. 

February 28th

The 24 Hour Economic Black Out Begins.

Please Share

From one day to the next. Yesterday the branches were bare and now today, flowers
Strutting our stuff
Doubling the impact when we form an arrow of intention with our refection!

Contemplation

The coup continues, seemingly unstoppable.  Sobering.

I’m comforted by these words of bell hooks, “Agent of Change”

There is no change without contemplation. The whole image of Buddha under the Bodhi tree says here is an action taking place that may not appear to be a meaningful action.

Yesterday I was watching a duck couple happily enjoying the day when an egret flew in and disrupted the scene.  That’s how the political situation feels though egrets are beautiful, and this team of evil is not.

On Tuesday, my grandson and I were in the Headlands and received a private tour of the Marine Mammal Center.  It’s a gift to see how volunteers and donations fund what helps save our marine life. What a contrast to the destruction of our prestige in the world as USAID is denied and children die.  

View of the bay and San Francisco
View from the Marine Mammal Center
Egret disturbing the ducks
Egret stands alone

Morning

Day comes to light as birds awaken the air inviting plants to respond to the coming of Spring.

Yesterday the neighbors below us celebrated their five year olds birthday with a pirate party.  In October, our grandson did the same.  I could hear parents discussing how we grew up to view pirates as evil, but today youngsters celebrate with  “Ho, Ho, Ho, I am a Pirate.”  Is it the character of Johnny Depp in the movie Pirates of the Caribbean that is so enchanting?

Anyway, there was lots of shrieking and running about and the sound of a pinata breaking.  

Music, like birds singing.

This morning I’m with the words of Lily Tomlin: The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, you’re still a rat.

I read that we shouldn’t mention this president by name, but hold the whole party accountable, so instead of saying his name, each time say the Republican party, and we’ll see what the midterms bring.

And live the words of Thich Nhat Hanh:

“People usually consider walking on water or in thin air a miracle. But I think the real miracle is not to walk either on water or in thin air, but to walk on earth. Every day we are engaged in a miracle which we don’t even recognize: a blue sky, white clouds, green leaves, the black, curious eyes of a child—our own two eyes. All is a miracle.”

Morning Today

Joy

In my meditation today I found myself feeling sorry for Trump, Musk, and cronies.

I read Nicholas Kristof writing about the world’s richest men taking on the poorest children, and doing it with lies.  “The actual amount of U.S. assistance spent on condoms for Gaza in recent years appears to have been not $100 million but $0.”

“Musk lambasted U.S.A.I.D. as “a criminal organization.” In fact, many of its employees have risked their lives in the best tradition of public service. The U.S.A.I.D. Memorial Wall honors 99 people killed while working for the agency in places such as Sudan, Haiti, Afghanistan and Ethiopia.”

Kristof continues: “By my calculations, Elon Musk probably has a net worth greater than that of the poorest billion people on Earth. Just since Donald Trump’s election, Musk’s personal net worth has grown by far more than the entire annual budget of U.S.A.I.D., which in any case accounts for less than 1 percent of the federal budget. It’s callous for gleeful billionaires like Musk and President Trump to cut children off from medicine, but, as President John F. Kennedy pointed out when he proposed the creation of the agency in 1961, it’s also myopic.”

We all benefit from this aid.  Again, how can we not feel sorry for people who live without empathy or heart.  It’s one thing to look at how money is allocated, and another to lie and destroy.

I read about the peaceful protests yesterday and exult in the words: Joy is another form of resistance.

On Monday, we had 70 mph winds, and I watched the redwood stand steady as its branches swirled about.  There may be lots of inane and cruel swirling these days but we stand centered and strong in the cultivation of connection, joy, and the ground beneath our feet, and the air we breathe and share. 

First blossoming of Spring
Nature bends to rise
Egret navigating by the side of the road next to the marsh

Restoration

Today the African proverb comes to me.  “If you think you are too small to make a difference you haven’t spent a night with a mosquito.”

Looking for ways to deal with the political news, I offer a photo visit to Bedwell Bayfront Park in Menlo Park. There are beautiful views, and as one man I passed said to me, “It’s hard to believe it’s built on a former landfill site. 

The park offers a Great Spirit Path with sculptures of stone that illustrate words in a poem. Birds have offered their in-flight contribution to the signs.

Entry
Represented in stone –
I walk with the wind behind me
Welcoming Support
with glad heart
and grateful heart
Making Peace: May it be so!
One View
And another
First daffodils of Spring