The Nature of Things
Night of a snow day--
If someone called to say they're stopping by,
I'd be horrified.
What would they say
if they saw this house?
Mounds of clothes,
once white with snow,
now soaked--
piled in puddles.
What would they say?
Just the thought makes me want to break free and run.
Surrender.
Concede.
Finally, it's gotten the best of me.
Instead, I take a photograph.
Through the lens--
a chrome filter,
past the mess on the railing and floor,
into the doorway of the playroom
I cleaned yesterday,
an ocean of stuff.
50 feet deep, it seems.
An ocean of stuff.
And, somehow I'm softened.
Maybe it's the filter.
It makes what's thrown me for a loop,
this noose around my neck
loosen up.
All this stuff--
the disarray,
through the lens, has composition.
Like a painter chose to paint those colors there.
Splattered every which way,
absolutely everywhere.
And I see how it can be beautiful.
Those clothes that clothed my children in the snow,
kept them safe and warm so they could play--
there with my husband.
Their father.
Fully alive.
Star flakes on their faces.
Smiling eyes glistening in the reflection of the day.
Those clothes they peeled from their fleece pajamas.
Rosy cheeks,
squeaky clean.
Eager for piping hot cocoa
and soup.
Straws and spoons.
Strewn across the floor.
Hijacking the railing.
And them--
all of them there
through the doorway,
winter,
and they're swimming in an ocean of stuff,
splashing and laughing,
there in my photograph.
'Cause in the end,
all it is
is a snapshot.
It's that image stored deep
in their memories.
One they'll call upon
many winters
from now--
many winters
and messes made.
Colorful composition.
Messes made and straightened up.
Made again.
The nature of things.
Nature--
like seasons,
best when inhaled and embraced.
Exhaled and released.
Best when seen through a lens.
A work of art.
Each one,
a masterpiece.
-Jayme
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Friday, December 6, 2013
This morning my husband and I had a disagreement. Definitely not one of our most intense disagreements, but a disagreement nontheless. As I sit here binging on blue chips and hummus because I am feeling so uncomfortable (ok it could be fruit, but come on at least it is not doughnuts!), I am thinking about the last thing that was said last night at my conscious parenting meeting. . .my friend Jayme who is leading the course said, "The next time you are triggered, try to think about it from a fresh new perspective, like you have never seen it before in your life."
Of course, that is a total invitation for discomfort to come knocking, right? And it did. But here I sit, an attempt to erase memories and emotion from the past and look at the situation from fresh eyes. Here goes. . .
We were sitting around the breakfast table before school, the whole family. I was feeling so grateful that we get to do this often, and that we would all be heading to school as a family to an event that my son's class was having to display and present their dwelling projects that they created last week. We had so much fun as a family learning and making this project together that I was thrilled at the opportunity to experience Brady and his other classmates talking about their proud creations. Mostly, it was wonderful to see how excited Brady was that Brian would be able to join us in this exciting event.
We were giving Brady $5.00 for lunch and had decided to give him $10.00 to bring to a Christmas event afterschool he was attending with a friend. Brian was explaining this to him and what I heard him say was, "You have $5.00 for lunch and $5.00 for the christmas festival."
I didn't give him a chance to finish when I said, "You mean $10.00 for the festival." I wanted to make sure that Brady knew the correct amount of money that would be in his backpack since I wouldn't see him later.
Brian immediately said, seemingly annoyed (at least that's what I thought), "That's what I said."
"No," I responded. "You said $5.00. . .", questioning myself as I always do when I meet disagreement, but sure of what I had heard.
"That's twice in the last few days!" he responded, his voice growing, clearly upset. It felt like a switch had flipped inside of him. Up went my protection. My chest tightened. My breath grew short. I didn't want to move. I didn't know what he meant. He went on to explain how the other day I pointed out that he had misspoken about something that he thought he didn't.
At this point, my son got involved. "Mommy, he did say $10.00, you're wrong." This boiled my blood even more. First, because my past story about how a couple is not supposed to let their children see them fight let alone be involved in them was on high alert. The other reason that triggered me was now I had two people telling me I was wrong and I wasn't being heard. I wasn't sure of what to say or do. But I was mad. Really mad. I felt my temper flare.
"Why is it so impossible that you might be wrong?" I asked my husband, nervous, but angry as well.
Now, my husband and I could not be more in love with one another. I am so fulfilled in the relationship we have created and am so incredibly grateful for the abundance of opportunities that have come into our lives to allow us to create the marriage we have always wanted. That said, it is definitely not easy. Consciousness in our relationship is a choice we make over and over again, sometimes moment by moment. At times it can feel like so confronting and difficult. And by no means are we perfect at it.
As Brian is working more on letting go of his need to control everything, and simultaneously, I am working on being courageous because I want to be seen and heard, a dynamic is changing in our relationship. Often in the past I would agree with him more than I wanted to about things. At the time I thought it was because I really didn't care about the topic. But as I delve more into my own personal stories, I realize it is because I have such a need for human connection. I was never willing to risk going against his need to control. So if it meant I had to keep quiet about my own opinions and agree with him about things like this to keep our connection going, then so be it.
But things are different now. I have so much faith in our relationship and what it can withstand. I have learned so much more about who I am and give myself permission to unmask the authentic me and be more self-expressed, even if there is a potential of him or anyone else getting angry. I find myself able to let go of what people think more than evern now. However, in those moments when I know that it is time to be seen and heard, it is still very uncomfortable. My biggest fear continues to loom, "What if he gets mad and I end up alone?"
So at this point in our discussion, so many emotions were coming up for me that I couldn't really see. . . was I having to be right? No, I thought! I know better! I kept going. "Why do you really need to hang on to being right that much?" Typical coach in me, right? A fine strategy to avoid stopping and looking at myself. Manipulate with the new age lingo.
"No, he said. That's not it. I don't have to be right, Brian said. "But Brady heard you too. So that must mean that you heard me wrong." In my mind, all I could think about was how inauthentic he was being. That thought should have been a big old neon light red flag to me. .Hello??? What about YOUR inauthenticity Amy?
I looked at Brian with a look on my face like, "Come on. You know Brady idolizes you. And he is 8 so any opportunity to prove his mother wrong is going to be golden to him." Thank goodness I didn't say that. Although, as I sit here and write it, I know that it doesn't matter that I didn't say it. Brady is intuitive and I know that he could sense the ickiness even though the words were absent. Kids just know. At this point, I was far from the authentic me. Very far.
"You two are unbelieveable!" was the last thing that I was going to say. Nope, of course it wasn't the last thing I said. "Listen it doesn't matter what was said. But the point is that you are teaching your children that there has to be a "right" and a "wrong" which doesn't allow them to listen to any other perspective. Now who was right? It was just ickiness iced with more ickiness.
"You're right, you're right." he conceded. At this point though it was too late. My passive aggressive temper was driving.
"Don't patronize me!" I boomed. I was officially completely unconscious. And pissed. And all that was going to feel good at this moment was to prove him wrong. Irony is a cruel thing sometimes. . .
"I'm not patronizing, you are right." Brian said. I was so foggy in my head at that point, I didn't know whether I could believe him or not. My trust was gone in him and he had ruined my morning, damnit!
Quietly I said to Brady, "It doesn't really matter what was said, Brady, just know that you have $5.00 for pizza and $10.00 for the fair."
I tried to go on with my morning, but it was difficult. I had such an uncomfortable feeling in my chest and felt kind of numb all over. Brian stopped talking as did I. There was a lot of tension in the air.
After busying myself with getting the kids into the car, we all just sat quietly. Brian grabbed my hand in the car, which I held, hesitantly. He asked me if I was ok and I lied and said yes. He said he doesn't like when there is a disconnect between us. "How could he expect me to hold his hand?", I thought. He is the ENEMY right now! I can't just get past being treated like that, it is not ok that he talked to me like that! He made me look and feel so stupid! Especially in front of the kids!" Oh my mind was wandering far. . .the stories so creative and good.
I, of course, needed to have the last word. "I just wish that you could possibly entertain the idea that sometimes there is just a miscommunication and it can be left at that."
He smiled and said, "but there wasn't. We both heard the same thing."
"Exactly", I said, but you are still doing it. You can't even fathom a world in which you are not right and I am not sure why you are holding on to that so tightly." Seriously, why did I care? It really was not my business what was going on with him. Boy do I wish I could have seen that in the moment, but I didn't.
He stopped. "Could it be possible that you misheard me?"
"Of course! I completely think that is possible. We will never know and that is fine with me." I said the right words, and truly believe them. However, my being at that point, was in the crapper.
He thought about this for a moment. "I see what you are saying." Something seemed to change in him. A few minutes later when I asked him if he was ok, he said I am just trying to take a few cleansing breaths to bring consciousness to my frontal lobe."
Can you tell that he is an engineer and relies heavily on science? Can you see why I go crazy sometimes? Just kidding. . .
At this point, I knew something had shifted in him, but I still didn't feel better. I didn't want to talk to anyone, I was mad that this took as much time as it did, and the whole thing seemed ridiculous. I know that there was a part of me that I couldn't let go of being right either. . .ugh the exact thing that I was all over him for. And on top of it, what if now I would be wrong and his anger would cause me to alone too? How hopeless is that?
After my son's event, we drove home in much silence. He tried to talk, but my mind was still foggy. He asked me what I was thinking about and I lied again. "Doing gingerbread houses with the kids," I said. How random is that? I just didn't know what to say I was so uncomfortable.
"How are you?" I asked, being polite.
"Just thinking about work stufff." he said. I thought about how fake this conversation was and withdrew even more. Ridiculous.
We arrived home and he got ready to go. I of course, busied myself with the dishes. We acted like strangers for the remainder of his time home. Until a few minutes before he left for work.
Maggie, my 1 year old, and I were playing on the floor. She kept climbing on me and laughing, while I was trying to get a picture of her first ponytail. I couldn't help but laugh. . .for she has a dynamite and infectious smile. She started giving me kisses and Brian began taking some pictures of us. Then he held her and she began kissing him and I took some pictures of them. For the moments before he left, she gave us the gift of forgetting our past and becoming present to our love for her and for each other.
As I sit here and think about this situation, still quite uncomfortable, and realizing that I have some cleaning up to do later with Brian and Brady both, it really is a gift to look at things freshly. I got wrapped up in something that could have ended abruptly if I would have recognized in the moment what stories were being conjured up from my past. If I could have given myself a little space to say, "Oh yeah, I know that story. It is familiar, it has happened before. And it is not real. Our love is real. What we have is real. Although it seems like who is right and wrong is so important, none of this matters. I get to choose love in this moment."
However, I am human and I am imperfect. I have great qualities in me and I also have qualilties in me that are not so great, but I embrace and love them all. That is who I am and how God made me. I make mistakes. I have compassion for myself when I mess up and can admit that I want to try to do better next time, realizing the gift in the imperfect moment. I am grateful for an opportunity to learn how to more freely express the authentic me. Because when the authentic me is leading, maybe I don't get to be right, but what I do get is to feel is love, connection, fulfillment and joy. For me, the choice is clear.
-Amy
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Where Flowers Bloom
You bought lilies at the
market
on a Sunday
for me.
Closed lilies.
Brought them home, pleased.
I felt the intention of your
gesture
to please.
As there, by the sink,
I measured the length of
their stems
against that crystal vase
from Tiffany
for our wedding.
Cut them to size,
arranged as I liked.
In spite of their sparseness,
saw their promise.
All that Sunday, I waited and
waited.
When I remembered,
I’d take a breath, long and
deep
in hopes of that sweet
perfume
of our wedding day...
the Newport room.
All I got was the food the
kids left
from lunch—
something lewd from the
garbage,
nothing at best.
The days progressed.
Each held the hope...
perhaps those lilies you
brought me,
to satisfy my sentimental
longing
would have opened up
and shown themselves.
Blessed me with their wealth
of sensory beauty.
Caressed me with the scent
that ties me to you.
Too bad.
A week passed through.
A busy room
passed through
a staggering number of times.
And those stubborn lilies
in that radiant vase
just wouldn’t oblige to open
up.
All I’d hoped was that they’d
open up.
Hope—
was not enough.
As I made my way over
to pluck those lilies
closed tight as clams—
I glanced
out into the yard.
Yes, that yard I remark needs
to be tended to—
and tend you do,
upon request.
And right there,
to my surprise,
pure white in the daylight,
beautiful lilies
open wide.
Those bulbs you planted the
year before—
in fertile soil,
far richer than what they
sold in the store where you bought the flowers
the Sunday before,
now breathtaking lilies.
Right there in our vase,
they fill this room,
this home,
with your love for me.
Not store bought love…
love placed so well in the
ground
it grows roots…
sprouts up and blooms all on
its own.
The kind of love one can’t hold
like a store bought trinket
though, somehow,
it grows old
as we do.
It’s a perennial love.
The kind to be relied upon.
It blossoms and withers,
blossoms again.
Each time,
more plentiful,
more fragrant,
more beautiful.
-Jayme
-Jayme
Knee Deep
I have those days, ok?
Like today.
When all I wish,
all I want
is to get away from all of
it.
When all I am,
all it feels like I am
is a clown,
a circus act—
20 balls up in the air,
spinning in space,
screaming my name.
My eyes dart back and
forth,
up and down
hands flap at breakneck
speed.
My core, tight like an iron
rod,
So tight.
And, it really feels like
if I skip a beat,
lose sight of a single ball
and it falls to my feet,
I lose…
hand over all I’ve tried to
prove.
Admit that I’m not enough
to sail through.
------
It’s more than that, though…
It’s that feeling,
the need to prove that I’m
enough
that sends me reeling.
It makes this room fill up
with words and stuff—
calls to make and take.
The tick tock of the clock
stuffs this room up
and up
until it feels like it will
break me.
------
How do I live that way?
The ever present pain of
having to prove that I’m
worthy,
and then the burden
of keeping it restrained.
It’s that lid,
so tightly shut
while I’m bubbling over.
Especially on a day like
today.
------
So, once and for all,
I say, so what?
Rest my softened hands
upon my thighs,
shut my eyes and walk away.
On a day like today,
they’ll just have to take me
as I am…
‘Cause I know, nothing’s
gonna break me.
-Jayme
Friday, July 5, 2013
The Ultimate Question
What if I stand up to speak
and the crickets chirp...
and the floor creaks.
Or...
What if their eyes meet mine,
and they see me, deeply?
What if they take me in completely?
Will I be defeated
or freed?
What if I spread my arms,
bare my chest,
expose the best and worst of me--
let it all come gushing out like water from a cracked pipe,
steam from the spout of a pressure cooker?
What if I stand there,
pouring out on the street--
watch them come with their buckets,
scooping up all of me?
What if there's nothing left to keep
locked up,
held discreetly in my hand,
fist closed in my pocket?
What if I smash that lock?
Take that safe and drop it?
What if I no longer see saving myself
as saving my self,
and I just give my Self?
What if?
-Jayme
Friday, May 17, 2013
Up
While Everyone is Down
My husband, Brian, and I, in
the unique unfolding of our life’s events, have had several experiences when
our time of celebration and new beginnings came at a time when the world around
us was mourning or experiencing a very difficult time. Brian has often had the reputation of being a
contrarian, and has come from a long line of Irish contrarians. So, I guess it fits that our family pattern
has taken this path. For me, a true
“rule follower” in my childhood days, it was a whole new world. It has actually become kind of a twisted joke
between the two of us, the fact that we are always “up” while everyone is
“down.”
It started the minute we knew
we wanted to be a couple. . . him being the ex-boyfriend of a friend of mine (yes,
I broke the cardinal girlfriend rule!) created some heavy drama in the
beginning of our relationship. Although
in our own world we were in new couple bliss, this time was challenging for me
as a young woman, whose relationships were so very important to me. I had to ignore some hurtful words and close
friends’ initial thoughts that “I was a bad friend,” and trust my inner knowing
that this man was the beginning of a very passionate and fulfilling life. I was so right, and realized for the first
time that going against the grain can have huge rewards.
Then, when we got married in
August of 2001, Brian and I were in heaven.
The excitement of our two worlds becoming one, created energy between us
that was like nothing I had ever experienced. We had so many plans, dreams, and
visions for what we wanted in life. However,
one month later, on September 11, 2001, a new focus took root. We were living in Philadelphia at the time
when the Twin Towers fell on that sunny Tuesday morning, and as irony would
have it, we had plans to be sitting in Tower 1 that upcoming weekend to take a
motivational course together with a company called Landmark Education.
Suddenly, our honeymoon enthusiasm was tainted with panic, fear, and grief all
around us. As fate would have it, Landmark’s timely ILP course (located now at
a new site in New Jersey) provided us with amazing tools to keep the strength
and foundation of our marriage at the forefront of our lives. Although many around us were having a lot of
difficulty with the circumstances going on in the world, we continued to
challenge ourselves to breakdown barriers that we had in front of us in order
to create new dreams for our future.
The fall of 2010 approached,
and following a recent move to New York City, Brian hit a point in his career when
he knew it would be a good time to begin his own business. Demands for anchor bolt engineering, Brian’s
expertise, were increasing in Manhattan and there weren’t many businesses that
existed that addressed that niche in construction. Our children were 2 and 5, and having grown up
in an entrepreneurial household, I knew that it would be easier on all of us to
begin this journey when they were very young as instead of when they were older
and more aware. So, at a time of deep financial crisis around the world, we
bore a new child in our lives, Clarke Engineering Services. As if starting our own business with very
little savings didn’t require a leap of faith on its own, our trust was even
more necessary when our son began his school career in a private, expensive
kindergarten. Not quite knowing where
the money was going to come from, we trusted that it would all work out as Brian
and Brady both began their new life adventures on the same day.
So there was our family… at
the same time when the world around us was losing jobs and cutting family
budgets to the bare bones, an artsy stay at home mom was teaching herself
bookkeeping and accounting to save on startup costs, the son of a blue collar
family beginning his entrepreneurial journey creating an engineering firm in
one of the largest construction industries in the world, and our son
introducing us to the amazing world of Waldorf Education. We must have been nuts! I have never felt so much paralyzing fear in
my life, yet somehow in the back of my mind, I had the same knowing that this
combination would eventually provide us with the life we had created when we
were twenty somethings, dreaming of our ideal future.
That brings us to final,
perhaps most dramatic oxymoron. It was now 2013, and our business had brought
us into a more comfortable place. Our children were 7 and 4, and the question
of a third child arose. We both wanted a third badly, but as usual with Brian
and I, the only thing that stood in our way were unknown fears and our string
of “what if” questions. He was working
constantly, and we had very little time on our hands. How would we adjust to a new change while the
stakes were so high? However, we were
pretty confident that with all of the challenges that we had already faced, a
new baby wouldn’t be anything that we couldn’t handle. So, we proceeded, and I became pregnant with
a due date of October 2012.
I had decided pretty early on
that I wanted to have a natural birth, even though I had two c-sections for my
prior children. I realized the journey
may be difficult being that few doctors would allow such a choice, but I
persevered and was on my way. After
having found the perfect doctor and hospital combination for this delivery, I
was ready for this experience. However,
what I wasn’t quite prepared for were the rumors of Hurricane Sandy that were
beginning to swarm around me when I was experiencing the first of my labor
pains.
As it turned out, the day that Sandy hit, I
was 3 cm dilated. Being that we lived on
the west side of the Hudson River, and my doctor and hospital were on the east
side of the river, we were told not go home because the storm was expected that
evening and everyone was pretty sure that the Tappan Zee bridge would
close. So yet again, we were preparing
for the most exciting experience of our lives while everything around us was
laced with fear, and our city was preparing for an unprecedented storm.
We toured around Westchester
County waiting for the contractions to get closer and more regular, watching
businesses close and prepare for the days ahead. We walked around a mom and pop bookstore, a
CVS, and finally ended up at O’Conner’s Public House, an Irish bar of all
places. I guess this is where we began
our dating life, in lots of Irish bars, so we certainly had come full circle.
Maggie’s name came to us at this bar, while we were relaxing and laughing about
these crazy circumstances. Being that up
to this point we had only been frustrated with each other about what her name
would be, this was a moment I will never forget. She had a name, and she was ready to come.
I continued to labor in a
nearby Holiday Inn that was being powered by generator, thinking we might
possibly need a place to sleep. There
were lots of stranded travelers occupying the hotel that night. The storm was in full swing at this point,
and Brian and I were keeping all of the media at bay in an effort to bring
Maggie into a relaxed environment.
Although we knew that the storm surge had occurred, mostly we were experiencing
the storm naturally between contractions, hearing the crazy winds and rain outside
our hotel window. At the point when it
was time to go to the hospital around 11:30pm, we were bundled and hooded in
our rain gear, facing whipping winds and heavy rains as we searched all of the
hospital entrances to finally find the only one that was open.
After being admitted, this is
where the true magic began. I was at 5
cm dilated at this point and cool as a cucumber. From inside the hospital, aside from having
to use a flashlight when inside the bathroom, it seemed like an ordinary middle
of the night labor. The nurses were
informing me of the direct effect of the storm’s pressure systems on laboring
moms. It was fascinating to feel one
with my body in such a powerful way, while at the same time being so connected
with what was happening in nature. It
was literally all happening at the same time.
The contractions progressed, and soon I was ready for the finale. At that point, I was using all of my mental
energy to help ease the pain of the intense contractions, so I lost total
awareness that there was even a hurricane at all!
I began pushing at 4:00am and Miss Maggie Melina Clarke came surging
into this world at 6:17am on this extraordinary Tuesday morning. Another Tuesday morning New York City would
never forget.
So there we were, happily bonding
with our new baby girl, in pure amazement of what we had just experienced. We felt so grateful for the health, safety,
and happiness of our growing family.
While at the same time, New Yorkers around us were evacuating their
flooded homes, grieving this devastating interruption in their lives, losing
their ability to go to work every day, and fearing what would come in the difficult
days ahead, all too familiar with the feeling of destruction to their beloved city.
This experience, along with
all of the others, while difficult when they were happening, have all taught me
so much about my strength. Every single
one, particularly Maggie’s birth, have shown me that I am much more capable and
more independent that I usually give myself credit for on a day to day
basis. Each struggle has pushed me to
the limits of my being physically, emotionally, and spiritually, and shown me
how well God’s work within me truly guides the path of my life. These events have shown me that we are all worthy and deserving of receiving light and goodness, and that when we are aligned with God, they are strongly present within us. I have learned how quitting and doubting
yourself is just not an option when you are in the middle of making your
highest dreams become a reality. I am so
grateful that in all of these adventures, faith has shown me that with trust and
perseverance, anything is truly possible.
~ Amy
Saturday, May 11, 2013
Painted by Lauren RudolphAm I meek?
Or, am I tender?
Soft bends of skin,
porcelain,
rendered fragile...
Though, I know better.
Feather-light,
my gaze drops down
to distant lands.
Porcelain,
my strength runs deep,
and I surrender.
Tender?
Yes.
And I tend to myself.
I won't be placed upon a shelf,
held from afar to play the part.
Modesty will not forsake me.
Take me.
-Jayme
Monday, May 6, 2013
Illumination

There is Light in Life.
In Life, there is Light.
So trite, it sounds,
I know.
But, life is love,
love is true,
truth is joy,
and joy is light.
Even there,
in the black of night.
The traveler moves
by the light of a radiant moon,
and the infinite stars,
so very bright.
If ever you're on your way home
and the moon drifts out of sight, remember...
Life is love,
love is true,
truth is joy,
and joy is Light.
There is Light in Life.
In Life, there is Light.
-Jayme
There is Light in Life.
In Life, there is Light.
So trite, it sounds,
I know.
But, life is love,
love is true,
truth is joy,
and joy is light.
Even there,
in the black of night.
The traveler moves
by the light of a radiant moon,
and the infinite stars,
so very bright.
If ever you're on your way home
and the moon drifts out of sight, remember...
Life is love,
love is true,
truth is joy,
and joy is Light.
There is Light in Life.
In Life, there is Light.
-Jayme
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
In Judgement
Enslaved.
Slave to
contemplation
formulation
manipulation...
Itching to bring forth
information, as I see it.
All the wrongs I've seen--
been wronged.
Longing for a way to spin this flax
I've been given.
So, there's that drive,
the burning engine,
full throttle,
seething...
'cause in the end,
seeing is believing.
And, in seeing,
I issue my decree.
This is what is,
what should be,
as I see it.
But, I'm lost.
That sight in which I place my trust,
breeding always, thoughts of injustice--
must be right
and real,
right?
Right...
at least, until I steady myself enough to feel.
And then,
oh,
I see.
Only, not with eyes
or a mind conditioned to compare.
I see the dis-ease within.
The hell it is to sit
high up in this heavy robe
as I wield my gavel.
The pain that stays with each sentence given.
The back and forth.
The indecision.
It tears me in two.
Slave to watching.
Contemplation
Formulation
Manipulation....
a life lived in disdain.
Then the truth.
My holiness is my salvation.
-Jayme
Monday, April 29, 2013
Holy
Is that not the goal?
The old, raggedy shirt
worn
far too long.
skin that asked to be hidden
shows through.
Modesty...long ago, forsaken.
But truth,
where is it?
Sewn into disintegrating fibers,
kept alive by nothing
but
the tiniest thread,
weathered.
Still, I'll wear that shirt
'till there's nothing,
and every part of me is showing,
if I can just hide the truth.
Let it fall
into
microscopic specs--
hen-pecked by sun and wind--
down
to the ground.
I'll trade in every shred of dignity,
fight to the death
so the truth
can go unsaid.
Holy,
yes...
not in the way God meant.
-Jayme
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