The World Is a Beautiful Place

slingshotheart:

The world is a beautiful place 
to be born into 
if you don’t mind happiness 
not always being 
so very much fun 
if you don’t mind a touch of hell 
now and then 
just when everything is fine 
because even in heaven 
they don’t sing 
all the time 

The world is a beautiful place 
to be born into 
if you don’t mind some people dying 
all the time 
or maybe only starving 
some of the time 
which isn’t half bad 
if it isn’t you 

Oh the world is a beautiful place 
to be born into 
if you don’t much mind 
a few dead minds 
in the higher places 
or a bomb or two 
now and then 
in your upturned faces 
or such other improprieties 
as our Name Brand society 
is prey to 
with its men of distinction 
and its men of extinction 
and its priests 
and other patrolmen 

and its various segregations 
and congressional investigations 
and other constipations 
that our fool flesh 
is heir to 

Yes the world is the best place of all 
for a lot of such things as 
making the fun scene 
and making the love scene 
and making the sad scene 
and singing low songs and having inspirations 
and walking around 
looking at everything 
and smelling flowers 
and goosing statues 
and even thinking 
and kissing people and 
making babies and wearing pants 
and waving hats and 
dancing 
and going swimming in rivers 
on picnics 
in the middle of the summer 
and just generally 
‘living it up’ 
Yes 
but then right in the middle of it 
comes the smiling 

mortician

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, The World Is a Beautiful Place

Reblogged from sic itur ad astra
Tags: poetry poem

Upstairs a baby cries

I don”t know the situation.

Yesterday, in front of me,

my uncle spanks his baby.

His baby wanted a toy,

he said no,

so she cried.

I hope I never spank my baby.

People say I will understand, later.

I hope I never spank my baby.

-

When I was younger,

I once told myself:

I hope I never smoke a cigarette.

I have since smoked more than a few cigarettes.

I am by no means a smoker,

yet I have smoked on occasion.

-

Our some of our actions inevitable?

Are we seduced by their rightiousness 

and commit for its merits?

Should we stick to our principles

from when we were young?

Which ones?

To never shoot a gun?

What about the context?

What if it is to save someone we love?

Is it right to take a life then?

What if the experts say it helps your child from being too needy?

What if you are alone and want to cry so you buy the cigarettes,

chocke and tears come down and you feel good, in that first time?

-

Y’all gotta read this poem.

ninasafiri:

Göttin der Dummheit: Two Women

arielnietzsche:

I am a woman.
I am a woman.

I am a woman born of a woman whose man owned a factory.
I am a woman born of a woman whose man labored in a factory.

I am a woman whose man wore silk suits, who constantly watched his weight.
I am a woman whose man wore tattered clothing, whose heart was constantly strangled by hunger.

I am a woman who watched two babies grow into beautiful children.
I am a woman who watched two babies die because there was no milk.

I am a woman who watched twins grow into popular college students with summers abroad.
I am a woman who watched three children grow, but with bellies stretched from no food.

But then there was a man;
But then there was a man;

And he talked about the peasants getting richer by my family getting poorer.
And he told me of days that would be better and he made the days better.

We had to eat rice.
We had rice.

We had to eat beans!
We had beans.

My children were no longer given summer visas to Europe.
My children no longer cried themselves to sleep.

And I felt like a peasant.
And I felt like a woman.

A peasant with a dull, hard, unexciting life.
Like a woman with a life that sometimes allowed a song.

And I saw a man.
And I saw a man.

And together we began to plot with the hope of the return to freedom.
I saw his heart begin to beat with hope of freedom, at last.

Someday, the return to freedom.
Someday freedom.

And then,
But then,

One day,
One day,

There were plans overhead and guns firing close by.
There were planes overhead and guns firing in the distance.

I gathered my children and went home.
I gathered my children and ran.

And the guns moved farther and farther away.
But the guns moved closer and closer.

And then, they announced that freedom had been restored!
And then they came, young boys really.

They came into my home along with my man.
They came and found my man.

Those men whose money was almost gone.
They found all of the men whose lives were almost their own.

And we all had drinks to celebrate.
And they shot them all.

The most wonderful martinis.
They shot my man.

And then they asked us to dance.
And they came for me.

Me.
For me, the woman.

And my sisters.
For my sisters.

And then they took us.
Then they took us.

They took us to dinner at a small private club.
They stripped from us the dignity we had gained.

And they treated us to beef.
And then they raped us.

It was one course after another.
One after another they came after us.

We nearly burst we were so full.
Lunging, plunging—sisters bleeding, sisters dying.

It was magnificent to be free again!
It was hardly a relief to have survived.

The beans have almost disappeared now.
The beans have disappeared.

The rice—I’ve replaced it with chicken or steak.
The rice, I cannot find it.

And the parties continue night after night to make up for all the time wasted.
And my silent tears are joined once more by the midnight cries of my children.

This poem was written by a working class Chilean woman in 1973, shortly after Chile’s socialist president, Salvador Allende, was overthrown. A U.S. missionary translated the work and brought it with her when she was forced to leave Chile. This is to be read by two people, one reading the bold-faced type and one reading the regular type.

The period of rice and beans for the poor woman in the poem occurs after the election of the socialist, Salvador Allende, as president of Chile. Allende was elected in 1970. He was overthrown in a military coup in September 1973 after a long period of destabilization launched by the wealthy classes and supported by the US government and US corporations such as International Telephone and Telegraph. Along with thousands of others, Allende was killed by the military. The coup, under the leadership of Gen. Augusto Pinochet, launched a period of severe hardship for the working and peasant classes. Although Chile currently has a civilian government, the military is still the country’s most powerful institution.

Mutual invitations to later accommodations and meetings of holding: our breaths.

And at the same time, mutual reluctance, hesitation, and holding back.

-

now that I

hold you back

hold your back

lay awake staring at

your back

-

The line blinks on Microsoft word

The word to send is: amend.

Some more words: please

and maybe: come

and: back, to, me.

-

-

-

-

-

Tags: poem poetry

Looking at you, walking down the stairs

Each leg is a wave to me sitting on a beach

To bottle this moment, with this heat, and this empty noise, and these heart beats, everything as it is now; and will never be again.

Even on film, I will forever watch but not be in the scene. There isn’t a price for moments like these

When you have ascended and come to touch my shoulder as you kiss my face to say good-morning, the cassette tape is replayed, and the predictable part has passed. I can make a new take, a new record, or memory, with every stroke on the clock.

Like ripping a fresh loaf of baguette, I push off the couch’s seating to get up and rest my chest against your back as you face the sink.

The cup in your hand is not just a form of glass or ceramic, I can’t quite see it.

It is all of our collective memories, in it, outside of it, all around it. The times we drank in it, or washed it, or carried it to each other when we were sick in bed all day. When we bring it to the car to stay together as long as possible before we part for a day’s work and separate in miles and trees and office buildings; in roads, but not toads, there aren’t many in a city like this. Caressing your face with that cup, putting it away in the cupboard, or in the backseat of the car, where we know it shouldn’t be, I can’t forget anything because I still love you and I want to try again.

You say you don’t love me anymore but I don’t want to stop loving you or move to any ‘on’. I do feel ‘off’ because I’m not with you, but you don’t mind, and I do, so I lose, and I’ll stay in this limbo until who knows. I’m young but not for long, this hair will fall off day by day and like it, I will fall into the corners of your mind, mostly unseen and un-obtrusive, but hopefully, still there, no matter how small and insignificant.

The seeds we planted called ‘love’ are in a patch of earth my heart will continue to grow.

Tags: poem poetry

Lost Count: A Love Story

On a pristine Northern Lake, the only sound acknowledged is of the paddles moving in between its latches & the displacing of the water. The water redresses himself after a temporary shift in his saggy leaves. They are a reminder that all beauty the eye claims to see falls off with time. The robust tree trunk holds firm on her stances, yet is flexible enough to show her good side to her son, to her mother, to her distant lover, the sun. A palm tree may have more twist but she makes up for it with her broad mid-size. She is a mommy kangaroo, whose pouches may hold a forest’s youth, those kindred finger and hand size renters that are always grateful for her open door. The weeping willow is a drama queen, this Northern girl wears thicker garments of moss instead of raising her voice about the cold temperature. when you are bound to a place forever you are likely to plan ahead. With the watershed in a vulnerable state, it would be wise to comfort her issues, bring tissues and leave the high oxidizing fudge at home. The last thing she needs is a bad digestion during this era of fast motion. When you say goodbye wish her another 100 years of listening to the sounds of life you happened to miss as you rowed and kissed the lakes far reaching sores.

If the skin on you is a caramel dew than I am a diabetic, do not call a medic, I am a happy drunk on you, and your aroma lift’s my ponder from all the wonder as to where the nearest cafe may take by chatty lips to rest, I climbed your limbs to see over the wall of past tremors, you still hold your sword but for how long, living is a tiring adventure, you lead but still remember that we all bleed and need each other to get good sleep. I miss the summer when watermelon seeds, like rain, lead to sunny skies, and cotton candy rainbows, making our fingers sticky, you take my fingers for a candy cane sticks, is your garden ready for my lungs to breathe new songs between the tulips or the plums our trees giggle, I hear no distant fiddle but I know I can pat a drum, your tummy looks firm and strong, it’s good you know this song, it is the song that never ends, so I guess it plays on inside our heads, when the time changes do you hear the tick or the tock from some apocalypse which of the two will close the door, on a new day the old days are out of view but wait in line for your laces to loosen, running out of breath you don’t see sun you see soon and wherever you arrive, with your heart bringing the waves to shore you ask for the tide to simmer, the heat comes out of your skin, the water joins in, stand still and will the body to cool, some fool, the body has a mind of it’s own, you own only what you can fight for and even then it can always be taken away, we are so hopelessly insecure by our possessions, cut off all your hair and ties, lose everything, be invulnerable like that you will be strong? I would rather hold on and be weak because at least I will have a sense of where I can speak and be heard or at least listened to, would you? because I will plant your words along with the sweet tomatoes you point to, pull up a chair on my lawn of thought, I’ve got a movie to plot, I hope you’ll be around when it comes out, it’s got your glances written all over it.

Tags: poem poetry

Although the moon is here to stay

I can see your hair turn gray

The one way ticket is life’s journey

No one can buy a return, sorry

Earlier Days are kept in wallets

Beside the bills, not for our homes,

nor for our phones,

rather the ones with past presidents

They do not mention the unpaid rents

They do not smile because they knew

Or they were told, and they pursed their lips and flew

In the foreign country they spoke for all the people

They didn’t pierce their nose, they rented a private temble

That’s where our taxes should go, 

they would know

I haven’t seen you run but I bet you can

Especially with a military’s thunder reaching over your brand new tan