Poetry Friday is here! Link up below to share your poetry fare…
The world seems a crazy place these days, with each day bringing new tidings of mayhem and turmoil. I’ve mostly stopped watching the news, and I’ve left FaceBook entirely because the current political news caught me in a vortex of panic, rage, and helplessness: what is to be done? can anything be done? I still email and call my Congressmen and Senators every day, hoping that they will live up to the hopes I had when I cast my votes for them. But I have my doubts…
This poem speaks to the mood I’m in…
Somewhere in the World
Somewhere in the world
something is happening
which will make its slow way here.
A cold front will come to destroy
the camellias, or perhaps it will be
a heat wave to scorch them.
A virus will move without passport
or papers to find me as I shake
a hand or kiss a cheek.
Somewhere a small quarrel
has begun, a few overheated words
ignite a conflagration,
and the smell of smoke
is on its way;
the smell of war.
Wherever I go I knock on wood—
on tabletops or tree trunks.
I rinse my hands over and over again;
I scan the newspapers
and invent alarm codes which are not
my husband’s birthdate or my own.
But somewhere something is happening
against which there is no planning, only
those two aging conspirators, Hope and Luck.
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Tara, I share a Linda Pastan poem as well this week. I adore her simple and thoughtful poetry. She is one of my favorites. Thank you for sharing Somewhere in the World. I love it. In fact, one of Pastan’s poems was a mentor text for me this week. The poem I wrote and shared for Poetry Friday is modeled after her ‘On a Daughter Leaving Home’. Thank you so much for hosting. Enjoy all the lovely new words.
LikeLike
This poem is perfect for a time such as this. I haven’t left facebook, but I’ve had to unfollow so many people. It’s just self-preservation. Thank you for sharingand for hosting this week.
LikeLike
HA! I decided to share Pastan, too!
Thanks for hosting the roundup, and happy birthday! The writing in your birthday post was gorgeous! You gave the gift to us, instead of vice versa!
LikeLiked by 2 people
I really enjoyed the Linda Pastan poem you shared Tara. An evocative reminder that somewhere in the world (at all times) things are constantly happening, beginning, arising- things ranging from life changing, to barely imperceptible.Change is a constant. The poem serves as a reminder of this phenomenon and that often all we bring is hope and luck. Thought provoking words that assist me to pay closer attention to the things around me… Thank you for hosting this week and may your efforts for change result in meaningful responses from those elected to serve. I share your frustration at the inaction of far too many in high office.
LikeLike
Your words inspire me – in the face what seems to be such futility, you continue to email and call your elected leaders daily. Bravo! Let’s keep knocking on wood, calling, and hoping.
LikeLike
Marvelous poem choice, Tara. It speaks to my mood, too. Thanks for hosting!
LikeLike
Tara, from the first minute I stepped into your post, I was thrilled: a winter photo in the background, a concerned citizen statement, and a worthy poem. Thank you for being such a wonderful host this week.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for hosting this week, Tara. Such a thoughtful post, and yet while I can sense your frustration, I really appreciate the poem you shared, bringing hope and other things to consider. How is retirement? 🙂
LikeLike
Perfect poem for these times. Totally understand why you left FB. Hope and Luck — yes! And Happy Birthday (loved your birthday post too)!
Thanks for hosting this week.
LikeLike
So reflective of our current situation. Hope and Luck-words to live by! I appreciate you sharing this poem with us and for hosting this week!
LikeLike
Tara…this poem is almost too sad. There are too many holes in the dikes of our world and not enough thumbs to stop the flood. But then those “two aging conspirators” (hooray for the wisdom of those–us–who are aging!) march in a lift me up. Thank you.
LikeLike
Echoing others here, and nodding my head. Let’s hang onto Hope and Luck! We need them.
Thanks for hosting this week. I’m sharing a poem that Tabatha wrote for me last summer for the poem swap. It speaks to our times as well, and spoke to my heart.
LikeLike
Thanks for hosting Tara, your post here and your Birthday post. Living in the city I can see the attraction one has to the gorgeous spot your farm nestles in–it paints a changing picture in front of your eyes. “To want” and “to desire” those are qualities I hope I’ll never loose. Happy Birthday, and thanks for the hope and perhaps a bit of luck here too!
LikeLike
What a cleverly crafted poem. Thank-you for sharing. I don’t have FB, but I’m spending less and less time on Twitter and seek out good news stories. (But don’t follow other news!) Enjoy the tranquility of your surrounds. Thanks for hosting. 🙂
LikeLike
Somewhere in the world…we need more people like her! A timely poem, to say the least. Thanks for hosting, Tara!
LikeLike
It’s hard to live with fear, and this poem does a good job of conveying how much fear the politics of today generate for us sensitive folk. I stopped watching after the Kavanaugh hearings. Our culture has deep problems.
I can’t seem to get access to leave my link in the Inlinkz roundup, so I will leave my link here: https://friendlyfairytales.com/2019/01/24/fallen-stars/
Thanks for hosting!
LikeLike
Thanks for hosting, Tara! I so miss your teaching voice. I stay on Facebook to keep up with my granddaughter, and now with the looming teaching strike in my district. But I try not to spend too much time there because it really is draining. I love Linda Pastan!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Tara, your post really resonated with me today. All too often, I find myself focusing on the unease and growing shadows rather than on hope and luck. I admire your determined efforts to stand up and be heard, and you have me considering what else I can do to push back against those gathering “somewhere” forces. But for today, I’ll try to focus on hope.Thank you.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for sharing this poem, Tara. I was not familiar with hit. The foot soldiers are starting to fall. Another one went down this morning. Change is coming. Thanks for hosting!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for hosting today, Tara. That poem by Linda Pastan is perfect for these days. May hope and luck continue to persevere!
LikeLike
Starting with that beautiful frosted farm glass window, and then moving on to the Pastan poem, you’ve provided a deeply thoughtful place this morning. Hope and Luck are wonderful conspirators! Thank you for hosting.
LikeLike
Thank you for hosting! Here’s to the good sides of hope and good luck!
LikeLike
Dear Tara – there is always hope and luck! And knitting and sheep and a beautiful farm to call your home… love to you and thanks for hosting! xo
LikeLike
Great poem about the sad state of the world today. One has to walk and talk so carefully! In the end, we must all keep the optimism you speak of at the end. Love will also help conquer the evil, it always has. Thanks for hosting! Here is my submission for today: http://theapplesinmyorchard.com/2019/01/25/poetry-friday-student-poetry-submissions/
LikeLike
This is a new poet for me to investigate. I love it and will save this. I understand the need to leavr FB. I have friends and family who have. I try really hard to not look at the news on it. But I am on less and less.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for this oh! so thoughtful poem that expresses exactly the way I’ve been feeling the past couple of years. To your Hope and Luck, I would add Fervent Prayer. Daily.
LikeLike
Thank you for hosting, Tara. I, too, have left both Facebook and Instagram. But how grateful I am for friends here. Here is a poem for you. One I am loving this week…. xxxx
Adrift
by Mark Nepo
Everything is beautiful and I am so sad.
This is how the heart makes a duet of
wonder and grief. The light spraying
through the lace of the fern is as delicate
as the fibers of memory forming their web
around the knot in my throat. The breeze
makes the birds move from branch to branch
as this ache makes me look for those I’ve lost
in the next room, in the next song, in the laugh
of the next stranger. In the very center, under
it all, what we have that no one can take
away and all that we’ve lost face each other.
It is there that I’m adrift, feeling punctured
by a holiness that exists inside everything.
I am so sad and everything is beautiful.
LikeLiked by 1 person
What a beautiful poem. Thank you for this
LikeLike
This poem is stunning, and really hits home. Thanks so much for sharing.
LikeLike
My writing has been very sporadic, and I have been away for quite awhile. I did not realize you have a new space! And your new life sounds peacefully and simply beautiful! I will certainly by back!
LikeLike
Tara, Linda Pastan’s poem gives voice to the unease and sense of foreboding I (and many millions of others) have felt for the past two years. I do appreciate her reminder to hang on to “Hope and Luck,” and it seems like maybe there is a small glimmer on the horizon. Thank you for sharing this today, and for hosting the round up!
LikeLike
Hi Tara,
Thanks for sharing Linda Pastan’s poem. I wasn’t familiar with her, but I will seek out more of her poems after reading this lovely one about dis-ease. Hope and luck–thank goodness they come around from time to time!
Also, thanks for hosting this week and happy birthday!
LikeLike
Thanks for hosting, Tara, and for your post today – Pastan’s poetry is always thought-provoking. I’ve had moments where I wondered whether hope and luck were strong enough forces to stand up against whatever’s happening in this country lately (hope and luck both seem to look ahead, while the direction the country is headed is backwards….) Anyway…I also had trouble leaving my link at Inlinkz, so I’ll just say that I posted a poem by Mary Oliver (“A Summer Day”) over at the Drift Record – here’s the link: http://julielarios.blogspot.com/2019/01/poetry-friday-in-middle-of-winter.html
LikeLike
Linda Pastan’s oh-so-specific anxieties are painfully, almost comically real for me too right now. Hope and Luck seem to be flagging a little–what’s holding up is Love. Thanks so much for hosting, and I’m off to read your well-reviewed birthday post!
LikeLike
Hope and luck–I also feel the need for both. Thank you for the poem and for hosting!
LikeLike