Poem: Who?
I am not
What you think
I am
You are not
What you think
You are
You are
What you think
I am not
I am not
What I think
I am either
You are
I am too
But who then are we? 😊
Liam Sept 2018
Poem: Who?
I am not
What you think
I am
You are not
What you think
You are
You are
What you think
I am not
I am not
What I think
I am either
You are
I am too
But who then are we? 😊
Liam Sept 2018
Poem: What is Love?
Loves joy is the wild laughter we together found.
Loves magic is the glue holds together when unbound.
Loves being is the silent power within all life.
Loves integrity is the truth which holds beyond the strife.
Loves presence is the quiet whisper when alone.
Loves secret is the truth we share to build a home.
Loves home is the heartbeat which creates the ground.
Loves ground a fertile place these seeds are found.
Loves seeds we share throughout the day.
With everyone in every way.
Liam. October 2018
Poem: a Death
Should death us part.
For but a fragment of time.
Let still this fragment shine.
A shard, nothing but a shattered piece of
Me remains to see,
Reflect a life gone by.
I might cry, not understand the why.
The meaning of no good-by…
Yet the light of good shines on,
Shines strong, shines long…
Enough to wake me from this pain.
Gone lame my mind
Help to find
The day anew,
To share & to review
What we still have to share
What we still have to bare.
What we still have to do.
Liam 2016
On Writing Poetry.
Writing poetry is like chewing bubble gum. You rip the packaging off an idea and it’s initially all sweet and tough.
Then I chew into it, my thoughts warm up making the core idea soften. I move & mould it constantly around in my mind. Like the squeeze and squish of gum in your mouth, it oozes flavor inspiring more action.
Words are pretty plastic if you chew on them long enough too.
Now it’s not so much a thinking thing, it’s more mastication. Trying out the different flavors words make with one another.
Like alliteration, onomatopoeia, some times even disambiguation finds its authenticity in a poem. Meditation in the mouth of my mind enabling an idea to be rewrapped in the colorful packaging of words.
A moment of inspiration as I focus on blowing the bubble.
The pointe like a pink bubble inflates on my mental lips .
Intension, Momentum , inclusion, exhalation, expansion and finally expulsion….yes!
POP
A happy smile it’s been done again.
A poem plastered across my page, splats of ink sometimes smeared and illegible but it’s done, the bubble blown and I can get back to doing my life.
Liam
UP OCTAVE LIFE
This today is a melody,
To whistle and sing.
The music I hear like laughter it rings.
In the morning when waking,
To sparkle my eye.
Reach over and touch you,
With wonder and why.
With happy and smile
With music and song.
It’s the new days beginning
To share to belong .
To together
To this moment
To here now at one
Let’s up octave our living.
Let’s lift up our song.
Let’s fill it with sharing
Let’s do right not the wrong.
The music flows in the beat of my heart.
Melody harmony rhythm they start
Accompany song as it soars to the sky
For all to hear
For all to try
Join in this chorus
Live the life
Love the deed
Plant the seed
Share the smile
Give and help
Hold a hand
Be aware the day is here and now.
Tomorrow for some sad will be gone.
Forever.
Liam October 18
Wisdom: Life
In its longing, let life find the self you came here to discover.
Liam
Blog 9: Varanasi Part 1
When translated from ancient Sanskrit, Varanasi could also be called the City of Light. It is here on the banks of the great Ganga River that Budda rolled out his first teaching, The Setting in Motion of the Wheel of Dharma, there by initiating a new religion called Buddhism.
Author Mark Twain wrote in 1897 of Varanasi, “Varanasi is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old as all of them put together.”
My western style of clothing had by this time on my journey, melted away, being replaced by brightly colored balloon trousers . Held at the waist by a cord and tied at the ankles, my shirts all two of them, were white light embroidered cotton . Around my neck hung a beaded leather pouch containing my passport and travelers checks. Other than this, I owned nothing of value. My hair had grown into an awesome Afro of curls and for the first time a recognizable beard augmented my visage.
It was culture that I came for in this holy place. In Bombay I had heard about the great festival of classical Indian music and dance and I was here to experience it first hand.
Ravi Shankar became quite famous around the time of the Beatles and he was a star player amongst many others.
Varanasi has been this cultural centre of Northern India for a thousand years and is closely associated with the Ganges.
Hindus believe that death in the city will bring salvation, making it a major centre for a death pilgrimage. The city is also known worldwide for its many ghats, embankments made in steps from stone slabs along the river bank where pilgrims perform the ritual ablutions of washing , cleansing and cleaning themselves in the sluggish flowing waters. These ghats are also where Hindus cremate their dead.
The whole amazing spectrum of life till death , being played out along the banks of this great and Holy river, I now had become part of it too.
Accommodation was simple, the rooms were spartanically furnished. A bed, a small table, a light and as everywhere a squat toilet. The food was abundant, delicious, vegetarian and diverse. Never a day went by without a new treat to my already inspired palate.
Breakfast could be chilly badgies, a fresh chilly dipped in chickpea batter and deep fried, washed down with the ever ready chai available almost on every corner.
The chai wallas, as they were called were the captains of huge copper cauldrons which simmered continually over a small coal burner. The regular addition of milk, cardamom , cinnamon, Black pepper, Darjeeling tea, honey and water results in a heavenly nectar to be enjoyed at any time of the day or night.
With that it’s “ Namaste 🙏“, I’m off to bed .
Continued Part 2.
Poem: Who?
I am not
What you think
I am
You are not
What you think
You are
You are
What you think
I am
I am
Not what I think
I am either
You are
I am too
But who are we really?
Liam 2018 Sept
Blog 8: The Train Journey to Varanasi in Utra Pradesh.
Bombays Victoria Terminus of the Great Indian Peninsular Railway, completed in 1888 was one of the finest stations in the world. 96 years later It was here that I booked my one way single ticket to Varanasi.
The journey of 1600Km took almost 2,5 days by steam rail. The engines great belching monoliths of iron & steel dragged an armada of passenger wagons, each compartment for six, equipped with 2 hard shiny wooden benches & 2 more which folds down from the ceiling as beds. Our only luxury a fan attached to the ceiling.
What a simple pleasure as it scooped thick moist air , pungent with body odor and impregnated with 39C of heat over me hour after hour.
It was an initiation as to how a herring must feel while it’s slowly being smoked in an oven.
Opposite me sat a fine Sikh gentleman with an enormous face of hair, his mustache twisted, waxed and immaculately tucked back behind his ears, his beard white as snow flowed down over his small round belly, giving him the unusual look of Father Christmas on holiday in the heat, wearing a turban as a disguise. I later learned that Siks Seldom if ever cut their hair, this belongs to their religion.
Beside me exquisite twins wrapped in saris & hung abundantly with copious amounts of gold jewelry.
Fine chains hung between the earlobes and dainty rings pierced to their noses. Each wrist carried it’s very own fortune in a mass of tinkling golden bracelets. Each finger bore its own treasure chest of ruby sapphire corundum and Emerald.
A few weeks later I would recognize one of the girls in an unforgettable moment which will be shared in the next blog post.
As the final whistle blew, the train gave an earth quake shattering jerk. Two steam engines belched volcanic masses of black hot soot Into Bombay’s already polluted atmosphere. Then a metallic scream as the wheels, metal on metal, were slowly shunted forward by gigantic stainless steel pistons lurching us into the journey and onto another adventure.
As the morning past, ones senses, acclimatized to the clickety-clack movement, the characteristic smell of coal smoke as it regularly wafted through the open and glassless window of the apartment.
A sharp rapping at the door awakened us all from the drowsy meditative repetition of the wheel clacking. “Tickets please, tickets please everybody.” Announced the conductor in at lest four Indian languages & lastly in english.
His progress through the train could be compared to the queen ant 🐜 as it squeezed and wiggled it’s way through this long packed and heaving colony. It was only until the next day that I realized that not only were the coaches a body on body squeeze of humanity but that clinging for dear to the outsides of the train and hanging precariously to the roofs of the coaches were equally as many individuals.
This gave the whole thing surreal look of a living hairy Catapillar of enormous proportion’s huffing and puffing its way across the vast countryside of India.
The days were long and hot, The monotony being broken by the occasional stops along the way. The engines needed to fill up with water and coal, more and more passengers piled board this already living organism of modern day technology. The stillness of the stop gave way too shrieks and laughter, chatter and bartering. Sweet steaming cups of chai came through the windows accompanied by delicious curried meals served on huge Banyan leaves 🍁 .
Cloth and cookies, livestock and jewelry traded swiftly in those few precious minutes of immobility, before again the conductors whistle initiated our further progress.
( to be continued) Liam
POEM: Königswinter Germany
Through this valley wide sweet & long.
Vine covered slopes the Rhine flows strong.
Thick the forest leaf tinged in gold.
The river grips the boat it holds.
Through the folds of my open shirt,
It’s warm, the sky of a blue summer burnt.
Wheels spin as bikes zip by.
A single cloud hooks the lash my eye.
Turning in, to my thoughts profound.
Solace meets the me I found,
I’d lost and searched for ages long.
Found last night in a dream sung song.
Here I sit with a new found me.
Pondering life along the Rhine Valley.
My glass frosted in pearls of dew.
Spätburgunder I toast the new.
Liam September 18