Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Clown Skeleton

author’s note:

What if every day was Halloween?


CLOWN SKELETON

While sneaking around backstage
after class one afternoon
I pulled a curtain in a dingy dusty storeroom
and found a skeleton standing at a blackboard.
No lower jaw, so no death grin.

To calm my sudden shock
I clapped a silly baseball cap on that bone head.

I would mock the specter that mocks us.

But then another idea came to me:
I should confront my fear.
I would confront the unknown
by peering into those dark eye sockets.

Maybe I’d sense the unseen
the great mystery—
the invisible realm.

But no—
though I stared into those empty pools
until my eyes burned
I felt only a dull negative:
the absence of life.

However
my neck hairs did rise
when I posed this question:

might I likewise end up
abandoned in a backroom?—
a clown set of bones—
just another blank line?

Stunned by the thought
I walked away from that encounter
with the clock ticking in my head again
but louder, louder this time—
stirring a sense of urgency in me.

I needed to fill that line
with something…something
that might last after my last breath.

Get the Message: a short guide for understanding dreams
dream steps blog
myth steps blog
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© 2024, Michael R. Patton

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Thursday, February 24, 2022

The Real Reason I Visited the Great Pyramid

author's note:

Full disclosure:

My “trip” to Egypt was the Great Courses lecture series “History of Ancient Egypt” presented by Dr. Bob Brier.


THE REAL REASON I VISITED THE GREAT PYRAMID

In the photograph I’m smiling
under my big floppy hat

while that massive monolith
looms in the background.
Darkened by afternoon shadow
the tomb puts a capital "D" on Death.

But though
the silly tourist appears oblivious
in the photo
I now realize I did indeed feel
that indomitable weight
behind me--
beneath my travel tour giddiness
I secretly experienced
a mix of fear and wonder.
The response, automatic.

Yes, a wise design--
those ancient Egyptians
built the pyramids
not just for the egos of their pharaohs
but to remind all
of the ever-present mystery.

Now, millennia later
they ask me to deepen
to what I try to ignore
as I frolic about
in my floppy tourist hat.

you tube channel
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33 1/3 New Fables & Myths: ebook
© 2022, Michael R. Patton

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Monday, July 05, 2021

Strange Beauty

author's note:

This poem wasn’t written to anyone in particular...

So maybe it was written to everyone in general.


STRANGE BEAUTY

That first long look
down into your eyes
told me
there was more there
than I could ever possibly see

but I keep trying
because
where there's more
than can ever be seen
there is mystery--

there is beauty.

l want to witness your mystery
so I can remember
how beautifully strange
this life is--
feel again
the deep strangeness
of my own life.

Once I saw the face
of a stunned alien
reflected in your dark pools

only to realize
those big hungry peepers
belonged to me.

We both seemed like aliens then.

How beautifully strange.

Dancing to Raven’s Song: a novel
© 2021, Michael R. Patton

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Wednesday, June 24, 2020

The Edge is a Good Place to Go Beyond

author’s note:

Today, I mark the birthday of a friend now gone…

Someone who, like the captain of this poem, refused to be controlled by fear.


THE EDGE IS A GOOD PLACE TO GO BEYOND

In the beginning
the world was indeed flat...

its roundness was discovered
millennia later
by a crusty dark-eyed captain
who’d gained riches and fame
through a lifetime of struggle

but in the dry dock of retirement
he festered, dissatisfied--
unaccustomed to living small.

Finally
our hero shouted to the walls:
“I’d rather fall off the edge of the Earth
 than die here in this parlor!”

That wail birthed a wild thought:
he could escape his malaise
by seeking that which
every mariner feared:
the edge of the Earth.

If the world did indeed
have an edge, as was said
he’d find it
then plunge over that border
to see what, if anything, lay beyond--
though the act
might likely mean his death.

Afraid that his reasonable concern
might begin to protest
the captain did not hesitate
but gathered a few essentials together
then shoved out from shore
in a little wooden boat.

He rowed with hardly a pause, day and night--
traveling past continents, reefs, and islands
until he finally arrived at
a vast expanse of ocean
uncharted and lying quietly ominous
all the way to a hazy blue horizon.

Afraid
the question mark in his thoughts
might pin his progress
the old explorer did not hesitate
but continued on.

As all signs of land disappeared
he lost awareness
of time and distance.
Body and mind became numb:
he ceased to think
he forgot himself
he moved by rote.

Not until the light dimmed
did he break from this stupor.
Low storm clouds pressed down.
He soon saw where waves
pulled back upon themselves
as if afraid of falling off.

Yes--the edge of the world.

“Blessed be me,” that seaman shouted.
“Deliverance!”

So close--one big push
might send the boat over.
Our captain could feel the air sizzling
with the tension of unreleased energy
as he stood and stared into
the billowy mass of dense gray cloud
swirling just beyond those waters.

He could feel the thrumming
of a deep murmur issuing out
from that fog--
a resonance of cold mystery--
maybe a monolith without mercy--
maybe a beast.

Then, for the first time on his long voyage
our hero hesitated.
For the first time, he could not break the grip
of animal instinct.

So, as he had many times in the past
when the ego could not accept
shameful defeat
he summoned those magic words:
"I’d rather die!"

The deadlock broke then--
man and boat plunged ahead
into the wild mix.

But in an instant
his little boat stopped--
stuck
in the churning threshold--
held by an unseen force:
the stern hanging on the tip
of the last wave crest,
the bow immersed in twirls of fog.

What checked him there?
Well, you just don’t jump through barriers.
Somewhere, it is written:
true freedom must be earned
by work that swells the heart
until the bonds burst.

So even though our mariner
worked the oars
into two frenzied blurs
the boat did not budge.
The worn boards shook
as if ready to explode
from mounting tension.

This captain believed
he contained the inner strength
to break through any wall
but
he also had enough common sense
to doubt.

In fear of this doubt
he rowed and strove and cursed
until the cage of his body burned
with golden intensity.

But such honorable determination
doesn’t necessarily guarantee success
unless...

you're butting against an artificial barrier:

because false walls must eventually fall
if we refuse to relent.
That’s the law.

And so,
after a long short time
the tiny boat finally shot
beyond the edge--!

That invisible wall then ceased to exist
since barriers, once broken
are no longer barriers.

And what is a world without an edge?
A round world!

Here’s another natural fact:
a circle will return the traveler
to where he or she first began.

Thus, our navigator
(feeling both humbled and proud)
was able to find his way home
by following the curve
of the new Earth.

An old story, which I tell again because
I believee
at present we sense the presence
of another invisible barrier
blocking our progress:

an obstruction within
holds us at the threshold
between where we were
and where we need to be--

we’ve gone too far to go back
yet seem unable to go forward
though many strive and strain.

So we fester, dissatisfied
and act out our frustration
in myriad ways.

My hope is:
eventually we’ll fear the destruction
brought on by living small
more than we fear the unknown
that awaits beyond the edge

then work harder against our doubt--
our doubt about what we can be and do--

work until higher instinct
finally triumphs over lower.

But until that time
our grand adventure will remain
a bittersweet story filled with greatness and folly
in the wonder book
of this green planet.

© 2020, Michael R. Patton
40 New Fables: ebook

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Sunday, April 07, 2019

Inside & Out



author’s note:

Dedicated to all the worriers out there.

I know your pain.


INSIDE & OUT

Feeling defeated
at the end of another day
I fell back

and in the emptiness following a sigh
again heard that gentle whisper
of blended gender--
heard again those words inside my ear:
"Do not worry--
  I am with you always"

and as before, heard nothing more--
only silence when I asked
"who's there?"

yet I feel comforted by this occasional visitor:
I always imagine an angel behind my left shoulder
shielding me with the canopy
of its invisible wings

but maybe I'm actually hearing
a better stronger me
echoing from deep within--

shouldn't I rejoice at the thought
I hold such power of spirit?

Well, yes...nonetheless
I still want to believe:
I'm not alone--I am known.

So tonight
if the voice returns
whispering "Do not worry"
I'll again imagine a constant angel

but will also tell myself:
apparently, you have the strength you need
to triumph despite the defeat
of these heavy gray days.


© 2019, Michael R. Patton
searching for my best beliefs: poetry ebook

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Monday, June 18, 2018

Before a Step



author's note:

I may be a fraidy cat.  But I'm a fraidy cat with curiosity.


BEFORE A STEP

In the dream, a door swings open

as if daring me to step inside.

I want to accept
but because I see
only darkness beyond
I hesitate

even though I know
I'll eventually step--
just because I'm so
damn curious.

If I'd employed that guide
I wouldn't feel this fear

but without fear
how I can realize my strength?

Yes, when I finally step
at first, I'll feel lost

but whatever path I then find
will be my own.

© 2018, Michael R. Patton
what I learned while alone: poetry ebook

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