http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
Poet on the mend here, slowly but surely, while Muse insisting I keep looking on the bright(er) side of Christmas 2020. Muse, though, is not averse to a little cheating, hence an old poem revised only today.
Now, Christmas - like all religious festivals – is a time for coming together. Sadly, it can also be a time when divisions become more clearly marked than ever.
Where family and friends do come together, those who are and/or made to feel excluded can feel terribly alone and isolated. Birthdays, anniversaries, special moments we long to share with family and friends, these are times when not being able to share them, for whatever reason, can make us feel physically sick with the intensity of exclusion.
Anyone made to feel excluded because they don’t meet the expectations of others, but made their own way in life, deserves better than pity. Indeed, it is high time some people realised that, much as we may want the best for family and friends, we have no right to tell them how to live their lives; we should respect the decisions they make instead of harping on about how they could and should have done things differently. Nor is turning to socio-cultural-religious traditions any excuse for making people feel guilty about how they choose to live their lives...or rejecting them for it. [Multicultural societies will never work well until more of its leading lights get real and bring their followers into the 21st century.]
Let those of us who fare better, wish all those who are alone and unhappy a peaceful time over a particularly tough Christmas this year, and always.
Peace of mind may well play hard to get, but it is there if we look hard enough; it involves keeping faith with ourselves as well as, if not more than, with each other. Gay, or straight, male or female, we all need to believe in ourselves and can but trust others will come to believe in us too, albeit it may take time for some to accept us for who and what we are.
At the end of the day, there are always loved ones to keep us company, whether or not they can be with us in person.
For those who are lonely or unhappy, for whatever reason, there is always much comfort to be found among our kinder ghosts and the felt presence of loved ones and friends whenever unavailable in person.
ALONE AT CHRISTMAS or FLOWERS OF PEACE REVISITED
Never (quite) alone at Christmas
for memories kept close to the heart
among flowers of peace full grown
For errors made, we can but atone
(join a common humanity for a start)
never (quite) alone at Christmas
Let the world see past a tombstone
in whose memory beats many a heart
among flowers of peace full grown
Recalling wise words writ n stone
(keeps us close, though made to part)
never (quite) alone at Christmas
But revisit past kindnesses shown
and rejoice with all mind-body-spirit
among flowers of peace full grown
Summon doves of time long flown,
taking comfort and joy in their return;
never (quite) alone at Christmas,.
among flowers of a peace full grown
Copyright R. N. Taber 2009; 2020
[Note: this post-poem also appears on my general poetry blog today.]RNT
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