Arise Dear Child

Sunlight sparkles on morning dew

Robins sing sweet chords so true

Gentle breezes seem to say

Arise, Dear Child, it’s your wedding day.

Clouds are whispering-dancing free

This wonderous day is just for thee

Old hurts are gone, all is new

So, Arise Dear Child, this song’s for you.

Roses and orchids, their sweet smell send

Lilacs waving like a welcomed friend

Joined this day by a golden braid

Arise, Dear Child, be not afraid.

Glory sings in angelic praise

Your hearts as one to the Father you’ll raise

With holy hands from Heaven above

He will bless this union with eternal love.

So, Arise, Dear Child, take your place

With love and mercy, goodness and grace

Side by side you will step before His throne

Never again to walk alone.

 

We Will See

Will everything be all right?

Silence cries into the night

Weeping for what used to be

Now no more than a memory

Will everything be all right?

We will see says the night.

Ode to a Rebel

He talks I believe

Through his muse’s pain

Putting words together

Like dropplets of rain

Not quite sure sometimes

What he really means

I think that -just maybe

He likes this bequiling mystery

He is wild-completely free

Creating words of art for us to see!

 

 

 

Smiles

wrinkles folded

gleaming eyes

sweet smells

memories

smiles

loving hands

praying

mama’s love

 

To my followers

To everyone who follows my blog-Thank you so much for following my blog and liking my post-fivereflections I tried to comment on your haikus and Ice fishing but there were so many that I thought this might be a better way- I not only like them I am amazed by them-such beauty in the simplist of words-The first time I wrote a haiku was when I started back to college in 1999 at the ripe old age of 50. I thought I was too cool when I was 18 so my punishment for my arrogance was having to take college algebra at 50 when it wasn’t a required credit in 1967. I have since graduated with a 4.0 but I still need to finish this class for my double AA in art and General studies. Alas time has caught up with me and after a few mini-strokes the memory is a little wobbly-but if it is God’s will I will finish it someday in the future. Anyway back to the haiku-It was liberating to do this kind of poetry- I am a traditional old foggey and thought everything should be rhymes and etc. My first collage in art was a freeing experience also! Sorry I am talking to much just wanted to say I think your writing is fabulous as are all the other writers and photgraphers following my blog. I try to read all of the posts but this computer has a mind of its own and I have to individually go to each blog separate from the emails or I get about 5 blank pages and my computer locks up on me-so bear with me. I really enjoy everyones blogs and do so appreciate your likes and comments. Thank you everyone-you are all so good at this! My husband has one also his is cfreeheart@wordpress.com.  He has already self-published a book of poems called Freedom of Expression-check him out he is awesome! Again thank you!

Where’s the Chicken?

When I was about ten years old I noticed my older sister wasn’t having to do the dishes after supper. I asked my mama, “Why isn’t Mary helping with the dishes?” (Sounds like Martha in the Bible when Mary wasn’t helpng prepare the meal for Jesus.) Mama said, “Because she cooked supper.” I said, “You mean if you cook the meal you don’t have to do the dishes?” ‘Yes.” my mama said. Well the only thing I hated worse than chopping weeds was doing the dishes so I immediately said, “Well teach me to cook!” This began a very slow process of teaching a tomboy how to do things that meant she had to be a girl thus preparing her for the day she would be a wife and mama, I think. The first thing I had to learn was to make biscuts. We were fairly poor I guess because we got commodities which included flour. My first experience was scary because I wasn’t supposed to do something or the biscuts wouldn’t raise or maybe that was the cornbread I had to make another day. Well anyways my first batch of biscuts turned out kind of okay but had little pieces of baking powder in them which hadn’t mixed into the batter right. I guess that was my fault but don’t really remember.  The gravy was thick enough though that we could use it for biscuts if we wanted too. I made a pound cake along about this time also which weighed about 20 pounds. I think I invented a new kind of brick.  Well back to the biscuts. The second batch proved to be deadly. They were like hockey pucks. No amount of gravy could save them. After everyone had a good laugh at my expense we were going to just give them to the hogs. We lived on a farm so garbage was very appreciated by the animals. About three of us kids (there were nine of us) went outside and spotted some of mama’s fruit jars sitting next to the old smokehouse where we cured our hams. I don’t remember which one threw the first biscut at a jar but it exploded like a hand grenade had hit it. It made the most amazing sound too. Oh wow! This was going to be fun. All of us started throwing them and shattering the jars. We had a bountiful supply of biscuts because there were about 15 people in our family and generally there were enough to each have two plus if company showed up, which we had a few relatives that did this just about every mealtime, and Daddy usually took a few in his lunch pail. After the initial firing of the biggest biscuts, mama’s old red rooster came gawking out across the yard. To this day I don’t know what possessed me but I pulled back on that old rooster with the last biscut I had in my hand and fired. That biscut hit that bird with the accuracy of some of the rockets they have today. I believe they call them smart bombs. Well what I did wasn’t so smart. I hit him square in the neck and he squawked real loud and went to flopping on the ground. Scared me so bad that I think I screamed. Then the humor hit us and we went to laughing until mama came out to see what was going on. I really thought I was about to meet my Maker and probably said a quick prayer. Mama was really cool about her rooster because she said she didn’t ever much care for him cause he flogged us sometimes. She even had a good laugh over the irony of it-then she saw her fruit jars and her face went ghost white. She could cook that bird which we did that night for supper but her jars were valued highly because we canned everything and these would have to be replaced with money she just didn’t have.  Needless to say I didn’t get a whipping for killing that old red rooster but for busting mama’s fruit jars. All that were involved in this crime went around with little red bottoms for a few days.  My chicken killing days are over and my cooking finally got raves from anyone who ate at my table but I will never forget the ‘old red rooster who not only paid the price for my cooking lessons but gave his life to improve them. Where’s the chicken? Forever etched in my memory!

Beloved Friends

When time takes us down

The trail of life

It does not ask

For directions

God chooses the path

We meet eternal blessings

And earthly hardships

Along the way

See many a beautiful thing

Encounter the saddness

Of broken hearts

As we travel on

Beholding the miracles

That only faith an bring

We see that within

The mountain’s height

And the valley’s depth

Are the precious wonders

That we call our

Beloved friends.

Slow-moving Storms

Never has there been

Such a time as this

With quarreling, strife,

And bickering

Fading light as evil calls

Darkness creeping in

Like slow-moving storms

Howling winds of turmoil

The blowing dust of change

Thunder and lightning crash

Within the soul of doubt

Haunting voices wooing

The internal choices

Choose wisely my friend

For eternity is the prize

What will it be lost soul?

Heaven with it’s glory

Or hell with it’s torment?

There is no in-between!

 

As Day Draws Nigh

A river goes roaring by

Rushing swiftly on

A tree reaches for the sky

Yearning for the sun

A cloud floats into horizon’s eye

Dancing and dodging

Having its fun

Birds soar on the wind’s whispered sigh

Drifting and gliding

Until they are done

A mountain looms over all so high

Guarding and watching

As day draws nigh.

 

A Kick in the Face

When I was a little girl around the age of four I walked up behind our old Jersey cow who had just had a calf. I guess I thought she needed to be milked. She didn’t agree. She immediately kick me in the face. To this day I can still see the hoof coming at me. When I came out of  the coma or unconsciousness I was in my mama’s arms. She was sitting on our old couch in the living room. She couldn’t take me to the doctor or hospital because we lived at the dead end road as far back in the woods as you could go. There was absolutely no way she could have gotten me any help. She couldn’t drive but that wouldn’t of been an option anyways because my Daddy had taken the car on one of his little forays but that is another story. As a mother I can know exactly what was going on in her mind and heart. She was crying out for me. Begging, praying, beseeching, hoping, yet fearing the worse. Then God answered her prayers, I woke up. I can only remember being in her arms and the light coming in the window of the old shack of a house we called home. I have no memory of the pain nor did I ever see my face. I still carry the scars on my chin and tongue where the hoof had almost cut it in half. For most of my life this was the reason I had to live with protruding teeth. Bucky beaver and Rebecca rabbit were the most popular of the taunts. I survived the kick from the cow with no memory of the pain, yet, I remember the cruelty of the people and their barb-wire tongues which cut my heart and self-esteem to pieces. Just like having no car to get help for me there wasn’t any way to ease the hurt caused by others.

Then healing came when I received Jesus as my Lord and Savior.  I had committed so many sins in my life that I didn’t deserve His forgiveness let alone His dieing for me. He kept on telling me just how much He loved me until finally I listened with my heart and not my head. I had always known there was someone with me, looking out for me, helping me. I especially knew this when I was in places I should not have been and doing things I should not have been doing. This is called conviction. God did not want me in these places and was warning me to get out! Sometimes I would obey but other times I would ignore Him and suffer the consequences of my choices. (that’s another story, also.)  He has plans for me for my good and if I had of listened sooner I could have avoided a lot of heartache and strife and regret. The Holy Spirit was watching out for me just like when the cow kicked me. When I received His forgiveness I let go of my unforgiveness towards the cruel people who had hurt me because of my teeth or other reasons to numerous to mention. Unforgiveness is the heaviest burden anyone can carry and sometimes when the hurt goes to deep we have to just turn it over to God for Him to handle. The Holy Spirit can then come in an heal the wounded spirit.  So when you get kicked in the face by life, look to Him. He is the only One Who stretched out His arms and died for us. He is Truth! The song that the choir was singing when I received Jesus as my Lord and Savior was ‘Just as I Am” and that is how I came! I love you Lord and I say “Thank You!” from a little girl’s grateful heart.

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