“The Plot”

I’m honored to have my poem featured today on “One Sentence Poems” from Right Hand Pointing/White Knuckle Press. The website is a terrific collection of poems, all one sentence long. Check it out!

http://www.onesentencepoems.com/osp/

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Your Monday Blessing: Live Long and Prosper

Two children of Jewish immigrants. A factory worker’s daughter.
A preacher’s kid. A D-Day vet. A boy from the internment camps.
They put their shirts on, walked into the studio, and explored the galaxy together.
The Captain of their crew
Had directed bombing missions in the Pacific theatre, in a Flying Fortress.
Had been a cop. Believed in a better world.
So they put on their shirts, the ship’s insignia on their left breast,
And blasted off, to new planets
Of balsa wood and polystyrene. And the world marvelled.
Not at the aliens, with their foam heads and babbling tongues –
We’ve known aliens since the caves. We have always looked out at the rocks
And seen something fearsome ambling along.
No, we marvelled at the humanity.
Oh, the humanity.
All the people, in a room together – in space – and they find a way
To get along.
All the people, in a room together – in space – arguing and joking,
Compassionate and logical, finding strange new worlds
Of human potential. On the move, and in peace.
A humanity so civilized
It didn’t ride in on another’s backs.
And one of them had pointy ears. And served well. And carried a blessing.
And even the Klingons
Have a past, even the Klingons
Have possibility.

Then the working day ended and the actors
Took off their shirts, with the insignia on their left breast.
Walked out of the studio.
But their old home was not there. The world had moved.

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Your Monday Blessing: The Fix

The Fix

I’m on my second glass of New Year’s Eve,
and not as young as I used to be,
but old enough for old friends.

The nymphs course through the living room,
shrieking the wordless songs of ecstasy,
while we, the newly ancient ones,
fixed stars from the last century,
wonder aloud if ten o’ clock is a suitably indecent hour
to call it a night.

I grow old, I grow old:
probably older than Ryan Seacrest by now,
and old enough to imagine being
Dick Clark.
And yet my friends are older, too.

Been a hard year, in places.
A diagnosis here and there,
dragons penned in the charts of loved ones’ journeys.
Glimpses of the world beyond glimpses.
And the children, the sweet little joys casting long shadows
over the bow.
A good year to end with whisky.

It is there, drifting merry on the river
of forgetfulness (daughter of pain),
that the universe rasps her dirty little secret into my ear:

Not a one of us wins.

Not the rock star waiting on his heroin,
offering his liver to the mountain birds
who feast on those who love too recklessly.
Not the oncologist whose life gets a little larger,
moves into the suburbs, and is done.

Nobody wins. Not a one.

Confederated by failure,
we have only the dreaming tide to pull us wayward,
and cast us each to the island of our reckoning.
What a slapdash old steamer,
what a flimflam manifest!
Evolution’s petty hustlers,
we fell from the trees and began at once
to make up stories above our heads.
How the captains in the drawing room
much shake with laughter,
when we put on airs!

An hematic warmth rises in me –
life, surely, or its reaction,
playing its jig in these dull bones.
It is New Year’s Eve. A new day, a new year,
will break upon all certainties,
absolving the murky depths.
The dragons will be dispatched,
the sirens put away,
as the whole earth gets plastered
with a warm and bubbly fizz.
And so I pray, oh damn-defying mystery,
let the day roll on
over kin and ken,
protect my friends in the hold of love,
and make of this leaky vessel
a cup of kindness.

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Wisdom Speaks to the Poet

Know that I have carved into perfection
To make the holy wanting of your mouth.
Proclaim your jagged blessing to the skies,
And let the silence work to round it out.

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On the Fifth Snow Day of the Season

Perhaps the mystery is preparing us
For the day everything is cancelled forever,
And assuring us that,
Though it is certain
To be a massive inconvenience,
It can, in its simple way, be quite
Beautiful. Peace surrounds us.

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You Monday blessing: Valentine’s

The miracle is not that God
(or whatever eternal forces
conspire to take the form
of your granddaughter Sophie)
sent you a Valentine’s card.

The miracle is that God,
even now,
trembles on tenterhooks,
awaiting your response.

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When the Equations Found God

Physicists were floored last week
when, working through the mathematics of a few kinks
in quantum irregularity,
the equations, all of a sudden, proved the existence of God.

God, it turned out, is five-foot-seven,
and female, though he wears a goatee.
He created the heavens and the earth, and also, apparently,
three more things – the equations don’t yet say what.
God is not “human” as we commonly understand it:
he walks with a limp, for one thing, and speaks Malay.
He is madly in love with us, unless it’s gout.

With nothing left to do, the physicists
ate their bologna sandwiches in the cafeteria
and went out for a little walk,
because it was, now that you mention it,
a fine day.

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Sermon: “A Few Practical Suggestions for Falling in Love with the Mystery”

“A Few Practical Suggestions for Falling in Love with the Mystery”
Rev. Bob Janis-Dillon, delivered at the
Unitarian Universalist Church at Washington’s Crossing
2/8/2015

“There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all of time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and it will be lost. The world will not have it. It is not your business to determine how good it is nor how valuable nor how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open. You do not even have to believe in yourself or your work. You have to keep yourself open and aware to the urges that motivate you. Keep the channel open.”

– Martha Graham, quoted in The Life and Work of Martha Graham (1991), by Agnes de Mille

 
This month, your theme at Washington Crossing has been “what does it mean to be a people of faith?” As a part of that, I’d like to preach about how we might fall in love with the mystery. Which is far too mysterious and grand to possibly talk about sensibly – so I’d like to begin with an oil leak on a 1984 Chevy Chevette. Continue reading

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Your Monday blessing: The Salt of the Earth

You are the salt of the earth,
Keeper of life,
Carrier of the earth’s wisdom.
You add the flavor of earth, your mother,
And of sky, your father,
To all the proceedings.

Merely by being present,
You extend the life of mortal things.
Your greatest virtue
Is the ability to be absorbed.
The earth and sky, together!
And yet, with deliberation, or with its lack,
You can be used
To make the field barren.
Caustic devourer of spirit.

Earth-born, sky-born, good news!
This doubtful-seeming compound, your home base,
Is as dependable and sure as the stable.
Be who you are:
This cannot be taken from you,
Any more than the earth and sky be split in two.
Even if you were to be cast out,
Spilled across the ground,
Someone upon the wintry path
Might still praise the good to be found in you.

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Sayings of Jesus #11,472

You have heard it said, love your enemies.
But I say unto you,
Until you revere the mosquito bite
As the summer mountain upon which you climb to God,
the gates to the kingdom of heaven will remain closed.

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