Surviving the Storm – A Meditative Poem on Words and Presence

I found my heart again. Loving awareness hiding in the shelter..

I had been away, weathering the storm

Great gusts of words shaking trees, scattering leaves, blowing roofs of houses

Menacing, threatening words of hate – words pulled up from their roots in honest soil

To be whipped around in a frenzy – the chaos of roads closed, houses on hillsides sinking down into the sea – people running this way and that.

Some of the words that pound like rain on the roof are from those who want so hard to be good. They offer up their words to the altar of validation – without looking, seeing or listening. They pound long enough and the roof starts leaking, the holes growing bigger until our houses collapse.

And some of the words scream and  screech in the night cracking trees in two, falling on roads and buildings. These are the words who want to put our people down, the words that want the storm to wash the Jews away – to get rid of the smog that some imagine hangs in the air.

I’ve been torn by how to weather this storm. 

Do I use words to try to shore up houses, put sandbags on hillsides, clear the roads of obstacles?

 Do I try to re-plant the words in the soil of truth – reconnect them their meaning, reconnect words like Zionism to its life giving hopes and dreams to contribute to a better world? 

To reconnect words like “genocide” to the evil that believes that part of humanity does not have a right to exist because they are not fully human?

Will people notice the trees I’m trying to plant? Will they acknowledge the decay of a word that has been torn from its root?

But on this glorious morning – the sun peeking through the clouds illuminating the tiniest silver pearls on the tree branches – ten different birds singing the song of creation – on this glorious morning  – a few hour respite from the  rain that will pound again this afternoon, I found my heart.

I found the loving awareness that says Yes to this creation

To the diversity of all this earth’s creatures and to the entire plethora of human experience, stories, lives. 

I found my heart, soft and pulpy, infinitely tender, that bleeds and breaks with the suffering of my brother, my sister, the heart that doesn’t qualify, that doesn’t check ID, doesn’t determine if it’s safe to cross the border. 

It’s the heart that smiles as it cries and bleeds because it knows it is made of the Holy One, the Only One.

It’s this heart who knows that no words, no labels, can approach the grief and loss, the beauty and exultation, the depth and sacred quality of your experience and mine.

It’s this heart who trusts that I can sit in silence before you, and let your words pour out, like rain, like rivers and streams, like waterfalls until you feel seen and heard and known.

It’s this heart that knows that only when you feel that you are not alone in your pain and your fear, your hope and your dream, that you know that I am with you, is the deeper truth affirmed. 

Deeper than the words is the silence of our presence together.

Deeper than words is the silence of a caring heart who radiates like the sun peeking through the clouds bathing us in a warmth that sings a new song and heralds a new day.

We still have so much work to do, so much to be witnessed, so much to be understood, so many tears, so much laughter, so  many bold new worlds to be brought into being. 

But if we can take each other’s hands, splash through puddles with the sun on our backs and catch a glimpse of our reflections together in the water, we increase the chance that you may also receive me, and we may remarkably create surprising new words.

Words that weave worlds of home and hearth, words that build community centers of multigenerational play and conversation, words that lift up diverse voices, words that create safety and security for all, words that encourage a humble human place in our earthly ecosystem, words that reflect the Holy One, the Only One.

1 thought on “Surviving the Storm – A Meditative Poem on Words and Presence”

  1. thank you for your tender and vulnerable spirit, Kvod.
    your words move me:
    But on this glorious morning – the sun peeking through the clouds illuminating the tiniest silver pearls on the tree branches – ten different birds singing the song of creation – on this glorious morning – a few hour respite from the rain that will pound again this afternoon, I found my heart.

    with love always
    Tirzah

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