“The Paradoxical Commandments” by Kent M. Keith

The Paradoxical Commandments

People are illogical, unreasonable, and self-centered.
Love them anyway.

If you do good, people will accuse you of selfish ulterior motives.
Do good anyway.

If you are successful, you will win false friends and true enemies.
Succeed anyway.

The good you do today will be forgotten tomorrow.
Do good anyway.

Honesty and frankness make you vulnerable.
Be honest and frank anyway.

The biggest men and women with the biggest ideas can be shot down by the smallest men and women with the smallest minds.
Think big anyway.

People favor underdogs but follow only top dogs.
Fight for a few underdogs anyway.

What you spend years building may be destroyed overnight.
Build anyway.

People really need help but may attack you if you do help them.
Help people anyway.

Give the world the best you have and you’ll get kicked in the teeth.
Give the world the best you have anyway.

― Kent M. KeithThe Silent Revolution: Dynamic Leadership in the Student Council

“this kind of fire” ~Bukowski

sometimes I think the gods
deliberately keep pushing me
into the fire
just to hear me
yelp
a few good
lines.

they just aren’t going to
let me retire
silk scarf about neck
giving lectures at
Yale.

the gods need me to
entertain them.

they must be terribly
bored with all
the others

and I am too.

and now my cigarette lighter
has gone dry.
I sit here
hopelessly
flicking it.

this kind of fire
they can’t give
me.

~Charles Bukowski

“Love at First Sight” by Wislawa Szymborska

They’re both convinced
that a sudden passion joined them.
Such certainty is beautiful,
but uncertainty is more beautiful still.

Since they’d never met before, they’re sure
that there’d been nothing between them.
But what’s the word from the streets, staircases, hallways –
perhaps they’ve passed by each other a million times?

I want to ask them
if they don’t remember –
a moment face to face
in some revolving door?
perhaps a “sorry” muttered in a crowd?
a curt “wrong number” caught in the receiver?
but I know the answer.
No, they don’t remember.

They’d be amazed to hear
that Chance has been toying with them
now for years.

Not quite ready yet
to become their Destiny,
it pushed them close, drove them apart,
it barred their path,
stifling a laugh,
and then leaped aside.

There were signs and signals,
even if they couldn’t read them yet.
Perhaps three years ago
or just last Tuesday
a certain leaf fluttered
from one shoulder to another?
Something was dropped and then picked up.
Who knows, maybe the ball that vanished
into childhood’s thicket?

There were doorknobs and doorbells
where one touch had covered another
beforehand.
Suitcases checked and standing side by side.
One night, perhaps, the same dream,
grown hazy by morning.

Every beginning
is only a sequel, after all,
and the book of events
is always open halfway through.

“Love at First Sight” by Wislawa Szymborska, featured in 10 Poems to Open Your HeartRoger Housden.

“The Sea of Unforget” by Gypsee Yo

***

The Sea of Unforget

She answered my advertisement on Craigslist.
My name the only one who didn’t sound
Like crackle dry magnolia or menopausal peach fuzz lips
Snoring like the echo of the sewing machine’s murmur.
She found me when I was two years foreigner. A social security card
screaming in carbon letters “do not hire under the penalty of law”.
I was sewing for rich women with closets
The size of my old country, and nothing to wear.
They liked my silence. The discretion of my hands.
The thousand yards stare I wore for a face.
They paid me in leftovers, gas money, and last season shoes.
They taught me for their kind, unlike mine,
Starvation was a necessary choice.
She has the name of old steel money and golden plaques
On library and hospital lobbies all over Birmingham.
She says she wants…. just in case…. .A white noise replica
of her mother’s wedding dress…. And only if… it doesn’t fit…
She doesn’t shrink…. fast enough….. in time…. for the wedding.
When I tell her
I believe in making clothes for the body
And not the other way around
She turns her back to me, an angry ship
The mast of her spine protruding under designer sails of silk.
I am blasphemy and untruth. To say she doesn’t have to mold
bones inside the cavern of that dress. to unholy the garment.
To shun it as a cathedral of trimmed women’s voices.
What would I know,
Coming from burning bush,
what it means to come from evergreen bristle.
Southern girl been raised on that religion.
Duty to be pretty. Worthy to be seen.
Believing only in the gospel according to mirrors.
They wait for her everywhere, all clean cut and white shirt smile
Like a pack of Latter Day Saints, always ready to recruit.
Southern girl been raised only
To fit into the wedding dress
The way
The truth
The life
She shall be saved
In child bearing.
Her cross hangs in her closet
The way it did in her mother’s
And her grandmother’s before her
Vanilla bean color, surrender size.
She tries it once a week, asks me to zip it up.
My throat is a hot tub full of dumb bridesmaids
When I ask her to suck in.
When the zipper’s teeth still refuse to kiss
Her fear crawls out of her bustle
a roaring engine tearing through White County
Whistle full of frat boy spit.
She becomes closed door and running water.
I stand in the middle of her lime porcelain bedroom, trapped.
I do not understand her. I am unfair. I tell her to come out.
I threaten to shred the dress with the fangs of my shears.
I want to tell her, shut up. Like she already hasn’t.
I want to tell her. Rape Camps. Mothers and daughters in the same room.
Same men breaking into them. with hammers. Wrenches. Fingers of thick trees.
molding their bones into shame they will wear
Seven generations of shattered blood.
I want to tell her, two years means nothing in the sea of unforget.
I am two years of unwords, unpoems, undone. I want to tell her
I do not want to ever finish her dress.
I have seen how wearing shrapnel changes a woman’s landscape.
I sew for her at night, when the radio plays static to kill the unbearable silence
Of a city which used to fight people with bursting water and unmuzzled dogs.
A city ran by her grandparents. Their steel furnaces. Their luncheons with the governor.
I rip her dress in the morning, when the humidity starts creeping
through the screen doors like the memory of the violence neither one of us can escape.
The sound of the seams splitting apart makes me weep.
I am a lost narrative thread.
I put it together again. I am stalling, hoping to buy her time
to find herself. I wish I knew what to say.
My sewing machine cannot stitch like a typewriter.
It cannot master the dialect of my longing.
Its jaws are tight with tension. They were not built for words.
Its foot stomps relentlessly through yards lost in translation.
The needle is an unreliable tongue,
piercing through my solitude.
The day I handed over the dress, my silhouette
slipped a murderous quiet through the back kitchen door,
once used by her family’s black maid.
The last time I ever handed a woman
a weapon against herself.

~Gypsee Yo

 

 

“Sympathy” by Edith Wyatt

As one within a moated tower,
I lived my life alone;
And dreamed not other granges’ dower,
Nor ways unlike mine own.
I thought I loved. But all alone
As one within a moated tower
I lived. Nor truly knew
One other mortal fortune’s hour.
As one within a moated tower,
One fate alone I knew.
Who hears afar the break of day
Before the silvered air
Reveals her hooded presence gray,
And she, herself, is there?
I know not how, but now I see
The road, the plain, the pluming tree,
The carter on the wain.
On my horizon wakes a star.
The distant hillsides wrinkled far
Fold many hearts’ domain.
On one the fire-worn forests sweep,
Above a purple mountain-keep
And soar to domes of snow.
One heart has swarded fountains deep
Where water-lilies blow:
And one, a cheerful house and yard,
With curtains at the pane,
Board-walks down lawns all clover-starred,
And full-fold fields of grain.
As one within a moated tower
I lived my life alone;
And dreamed not other granges’ dower
Nor ways unlike mine own.
But now the salt-chased seas uncurled
And mountains trooped with pine
Are mine. I look on all the world
And all the world is mine.

~Edith Franklin Wyatt