Love Poems for Fools

“I must learn to love the fool in me–the one who feels too much, talks too much, takes too many chances, wins sometimes and loses often, lacks self-control, loves and hates, hurts and gets hurt, promises and breaks promises, laughs and cries. It alone protects me against that utterly self-controlled, masterful tyrant whom I also harbor and who would rob me of my human aliveness, humility, and dignity but for my Fool.”

― Theodore Isaac Rubin


Love Poem I

I love your big heart
your gentleness
your imagination and resourcefulness
your earth-loving awe
your perennial hope
I love you as you are

I love your anxiety
your inertia
your subtle and wily self-sabotage
your repetitive, neurotic thoughts
your helpless rage
I love you as you are

I love you when you’re laughing
when you’re moved to tears
when you can’t let go
I love you when you ache
for the sunset
for the forest
for the perfection of moonlight
sliding across the ocean all the way
to the foot of the mountains
across the strait

I love you when you’re crying
so hard you can’t breathe
when you’re screaming silently to yourself
you can’t take it anymore
and you wonder if you’ll feel good
ever again
I love you in the stillness of candlelight
when you’re curled up in the quilts
breathing softly
watching the world in the hush of the wee hours
in the incredible calm after the storm
when for a moment
your mind is still

I love you when you just can’t wait
late night surges of energy
baking cake at midnight
I love you when you crash
when you wipe flour off counters
in a daze
waiting for your ill-timed project
to bake

I love you when your heart fills up
like bright green moss after a summer rain
so warm and full
that you know
everything will be all right
and always was

I love you when  your heart breaks
when it shrinks in fear and pain
dreading that you have been forgotten
abandoned
fearing nothing will be all right
and maybe never was

I love the way you fall
I love the way you get up again
I love your soaring highs
and plummeting depths
I love your light and I love your darkness
because I am love

I am love
I am not subject to your rules
you may play small
but I never do
and I love
I love you
I love you
Just as you are


Love Poem II

Your heart loves so much
Even you cannot doubt it
With no bounds trust it


Love Poem III

Sunshine melts the snow atop the balcony table
Imperfections in the window pane shimmer in the light
The glass is melting too
Over a million years

Change flows like a river
A stone stuck in the middle thinks it’s going nowhere
As the water shaves shards of rock off
Every moment of every day
Until a smooth hole in the centre
Lets the water flow through
Until the stone has travelled
A million miles
As a million grains of sand

A hot stream of water
Steams up the bathroom mirror
Turns my skin pink
Makes me feel safe
As my skin cells shed and regenerate
As blood pumps vigourously to the tips of my fingers and toes
As water molecules change state
Float up to the ceiling
Run down the drain

One day we go back to the sea
We’re puddles and lakes
Streams and rivers
Trillions of water molecules walking around
Our home rocks us all up and down
On the waves
Never forgetting us
Never losing us
Only changing shape

I’m the foam atop the winter waves
I’m the dancing feet of the old man on his birthday
I’m the fog hugging the city and the forest alike
I’m the soggy cardboard soaked in the recent rain
I’m the sparrow stamping fresh tracks in the snow
I’m the smile catching the salty teardrop in the corner of my mouth

I am life
I am love
With no bounds
Trust me

Moving Through

This blog post—if it ever gets written—has been one of the tougher pieces I have come up with for this website. To be honest, it often feels tough to put something together that I feel comfortable allowing eyes other than mine to see, but these sentences mark my fourth attempt at this writing this post. Having discarded the first three, once again the glaring question raises its head as I stare at a mostly blank Word document: what now?

I do not know where I am going with this. I know, however, that I missed putting anything up last week because everything I wrote just didn’t work. Something was missing.

I have read in several books on writing that if a piece lacks heart it shows immediately. There needs to be some real human emotion behind the words to give it a pulse. Even in fiction, something has to be at stake for the author, that allows him or her to breathe life into the characters, that drives events into being in just the right moment, and makes the story that which it is. In other words, if the writer is avoiding something it will show, even in pieces that do not resemble his or her life whatsoever. Furthermore, you must have genuine interest. You cannot expect readers to be interested in what you have written if you are not.

I do not claim to always interest my readers or to consistently infuse what I write with pulse and passion, but I do aim to write authentically. Sometimes that is more challenging than others. The closer we get to deep fears, the more resistance builds. The closer I get to revealing dark and tender places inside me that still wince when touched, the more I suddenly find I don’t know what to write about. Writer’s block: an infuriating hurdle but also a very effective protection mechanism. There is no risk of revealing myself—and facing the fear of disapproval, rejection or indifference—if I don’t know what to write about.

But the truth is, this week I do know what I want to write about; I just don’t know how.

I don’t know how to write about death. Some of my earliest memories include death, although one may be an image I created upon hearing the story so many times, that has come to represent something that I feel more than remember. The effect of those early losses—of my great grandmother, from a stroke while she was dancing with me, and then my Gram, from cancer, a few months later—must lie at the root of my at-times frantic fear of losing loved ones. I remember times as a child running to my room to sob my heart out when either of my parents was late coming home, imagining all sorts of terrible accidents that could have taken them away from me. It has required patience, trust, conversation, therapy, awareness and simply time to come to the point where I can speak about this fear of loss calmly, without going to pieces.

When I was in grade 11, a wonderful teacher of mine died suddenly and unexpectedly. He was an excellent and creative educator, and a seemingly healthy and active father, husband and musician. He collapsed one day while going for a run and never woke up again. It was a sad shock, and I remember writing messages along with hundreds of other students in memorial of him, on a huge piece of paper that was taped along the hallway. Then a few days later we had an assembly to honour him, which finished off with photographs and some of his favourite music. This last part struck some deep chord in me and I lost it. I cried and cried, and could not stop. His wife was there and came over to comfort me. I remember thinking, it should be the other way around! Get it together! But I couldn’t. I missed my bus home and one dear friend stayed with me the whole time, as other teachers came up to me, compassionate but somewhat perplexed. They didn’t know we were so close, some said. We weren’t. I admired him and loved his classes, but I didn’t know him much better than most other students. It’s just there is this river of grief inside me, and when it is tapped, it surges up and overwhelms me. I must simply wait as it runs its course, until it recedes at last and calm returns. But even then I sense that somewhere inside it continues flowing, ready to surge up from the depths in response to this world’s sadness.

Just last week I discovered that a young man from my hometown took his life. We went to school together, for a few years in elementary and then in high school. He was very close with some of my best friends, and known by nearly everyone in the community thanks to his talent as a musician and environmental activist. I never knew him near as well as I would have liked, and in hindsight I wish I had said hi more often. Death makes everything look different in hindsight. If only this, if only that. And the shock and sadness of losing someone to depression adds a whole other layer, a deeper shade to the regret that death often initially gives rise to. Imagining the suffering that leads a person to end it all is awful.

He was not the first person I have known to commit suicide; sadly both one of my Dad’s best friends and his close cousin had their lives claimed by depression in late middle-age. Though there is no comparison in loss, there does seem to be another layer of remorse when hearing of the death of someone very young. In this mysterious world, every minute of every moment new life surges into being, and every minute life leaves. But every life is so precious, and one of the most basic human reactions to death is a shocked and surreal disbelief. We cannot contemplate the end of consciousness. It just doesn’t make sense. Maybe that’s because death is not the end, at least not for our essence. I hope not.

Whatever the case may be, I send my love and compassion for the families and friends grieving the loss of a loved-one, and do my best to honour the river that swells up inside my chest upon hearing such news. I hope too, with all my heart, that whatever happens to us after our lives end, it is filled with love, peace and belonging.

Everyday new life
Everyday new death
but every life is precious
as is every breath
Every loss is gaping
a chasm we must cross
Salty river of sorrow
among the stones and moss

The grief for the old
Flows deep and strong
but there is peace in deep water
and in having lived long
The water runs wild
when someone dies young
We cannot accept that
their song has been sung

Perhaps inside all of us
the sea of every loss
is kept
Entrusted by the universe
to guard each tear
ever wept

Could it also be that in each heart
the joy of every being lives?
The universe’s roots of love
The endless love that always gives

My heart opens to yours
And your heart
to mine too
We are made of the same
Ancient stardust
it’s true.

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Beginnings and Endings

Sevilla is no less beautiful than promised. In fact, its streets and cathedrals, its ornate architecture twisting through alleyways and wrapped around parks, comes to life with an awing presence far more thrilling than what the few photos I saw on the internet DSCF3114evoked. At any rate, I looked at very few, and was coming mostly on trust – Robin did the research. He ruled out Barcelona (because of Catalan) and I ruled out Madrid (too big), and then it became a game of where the cheapest Spanish lessons were to afford him a visa, while offering us a quintessential Spanish experience. Sevilla, warm southern Spain with Moorish influence on these stunning edificios, suggested a place we both would enjoy. A few days in and it has wooed me well.

Despite the winding, gothic beauty of the narrow stony streets, and the relative warmth, this trip has not started out easy. The last week has been fraught with the rapid decline in health of my Morfar (mother’s father, granddad), and on the night I arrived in Spain, my dear Morfar passed away. My Mom sat by his side, having flown over from Canada just in time, and held his hand as he laboured to draw his last breath. The rest of the Canadian family could not get there, and we are left to mourn his passing from afar. It happened so fast. He learned he had lung cancer a few weeks ago, but no one guessed he would be gone this quickly. Perhaps saddest of all is that he just turned 80, and but half a year further we were to celebrate his birthday all together in Denmark. Almost my entire close family was to be there – the first time in over 20 years for my Dad, and half as long for others. But Morfar could not make it. It became too hard to breathe, his lungs filled with fluid, and my Mom flew in just in time – just 24 hours before he died. I am so grateful they got to see each other one more time before he went. But god, it is bloody sad and I am having a hard time wrapping my head around it, and my heart.

Arriving in Spain feels like the culmination of years’ dreaming. The last few months have been overwhelmed with preparation. Now that I am here—faced with unexpected loss, still jetlagged and shaky—I see clearly and painfully how wrapped up we become in our plans, in how things ought to be, in how this or that needs to happen to make us happy. I am trying to let go of that as best I can. Plans rarely work out exactly how we imagine them, and often life presents us with something entirely different. Often we do not really know what will make us happy anyways, but certainly being present and appreciating what we have is one of the surer recipes.

I do not know what this year will bring. Walking along the river, along the cobble-paved boardwalks, I am doing my best not to fall apart as my world shifts and I don’t feel up to it. Maybe a bit more sleep will help. I think of Morfar and tell him in my heart how grateful I am for the time we did spend together. I do not know what happens when we leave this life, but regardless I wish his soul peace and so much love.

May we live and love well with the time we are given.