Listening to the silence of a tree is quiet work. It takes patience to hear the silence clearly. Sometimes, you even have to put your ear right up against the trunk, but when you do hear it, it's like music.
I grew up in Christian fundamentalism, went to hell, came back, became a Presbyterian then a Buddhist Presbyterian, and now I'm a profane Presbyterian Zen Taoist -- not that I'm into labels or anything. Here's what I've learned so far: The more you know, the more you know you don't know.
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Sundays
Somewhere, a dog’s barking.
It echoes across back yards.
Is it an animal’s call for help?
Barking at shadows of people
Charred in burning buildings,
Or robbers scrambling over
Chain-link fences, or moles
Popping up from craters
Of the moon to burrow in earth,
Or just a dog, mashing for attention?
In this impenetrable loneliness of suburbia,
With its widowers and pensioners,
Newly separated from their families,
There’s a dog barking late at night
And all at once a sense of abandonment
Envelops what was most sacred, that
There’s someone to turn to, someone
Who still worships football and God.
[DISPOSABLE POEM OCTOBER 17, 2010]
Dr. Mike
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