Who Are They

Who are these people?

Who are they who say they know better?

Who are the ones who say they have any right?

The ones who claim they are entitled?

The ones that say they deserve?

The ones that covet what another one has worked so hard to obtain?

Whilst they sit back and watch.

These are the dangerous,

These are the troublesome,

These are the ones who cause war.

These people are who spread the chaos.

If we only lived without those who sucked like leeches off the work of others.

If only we stood united and undaunted by the tricks of the others.

If only we could recognize those who sit in dark corners,

See the puppet master working the strings,

And not fall victim to the mesmerizing finger work,

Which evermore distracts from the truth.

The truth?

You have to ask “What truth?”

Don’t you?

The truth that these people are the malice,

The truth that these individuals are the source of our confusion.

The truth that even on the brightest of summer days,

There are still those patches of cold,

A winter dark sitting, waiting, manipulating,

PREYING on the unaware.

Like vultures waiting to get the scraps,

From what remains of other people’s turmoil.

If only we could see the light.

If only we could see,

Who they really are.

© Brian Harwood 2012 March

Carry On

DATE: November 28, 1993

Little one, you have arrived.
Your potential began
When two primordial genes unraveled,
Then fused with love into spiral chains.
Their infinite length holds your destiny.
Honor yourself and carry on.

Part of me is with you.
I pray my best will help you
Along the way.
Seek your quests with searching eyes.
Find them, take them to your soul,
And you will carry on.

You will find your path in life.
Oz’s yellow brick road spiraled outward.
So does yours from your birth point.
Enter life’s maze of choices.
Don’t worry, companions will guide you
So that you can carry on.

Who knows what lies ahead.
Joys or sorrows will be found
At the crossroads of life.
Seek the fire, find the Energy.
It will always sustain you
As you carry on.

My gift to you,
Simple and direct,
Know that Energy comes from within.
Your spiral chains tie the universe.
God’s connection too
Will carry you on.

 

 

 

Open Arms

December 7, 1991

My first remembrance of her —

Open arms, radiant face,

Lyrical laughter, drawn from the depths

Her greeting sung with joy.

Each time we met.

It was the same.

My first remembrance

Relived again.

Her nature? — to give.

Warmth, will and courage.

Like her laughter, it came unhesitantly,

From her heart and soul.

No favorites she.

Each child her offspring delivered

Was given exactly what I received:

Warm, lilting laughter and open arms.

Ask them.

They remember too.

The Garden Spider

Date: July 15, 1991

One misty morn, the first at the farm homestead.
On the way to the barn, past the seldom-used shed.
A gossamer spider web was spun there.
Its silk filaments, as fine as angel hair.
The threads held dewdrops, a wonderous sight,
Each strand sparkled in a sunbeam’s slanting light.
To a boy of eight, this was a heart’s delight.

That geometric orb web, so well designed.
Instinctly spun from an Arachnid’s mind.
Between twigs the web’s limits were first spun,
From a center focus, strong silk spokes were next done.
Holding line coils spiraled out, laced to each spoke.
So that neighboring pairs become a capturing yoke.
A zigzag signature band, the architect’s last touch stroke.

The web drew the youth forward, in a dreamy mystic trane
A horsefly was drawn in too, but it came quite by chance.
Its wings struck then stuck to a sticky duo yoke span,
Wings flexed, fluttered, buzzed like a miniature fan,
The filaments held, only quivering the trampoline bed.
The panic vibrations channeled to a trip line ahead.
A dinner signal for the spider at her nest bedspread.

Silent and sure, the orange garden spider darted to prey.
Her abdomen large and sound, she in a family way.
Her striped attire, orange, yellow, black, and white.
She a contender to web splendor, a beautiful sight.
To her task, the tangled fly was easily found.
A fang bite kiss, the fly was tied up, bound.
A tidy feast on this lacy table round.

Each image an action carefully stored,
Etched in the boy’s memory core.
To be occasionally remembered and compared
To life’s other experiences. Each should be shared.