My life walks on with its normal considerations, and I grumble inwardly about the weather (windy, rainy, raw) and the time change, while in Japan everything has been turned upside down. What about the tsunami? What about that which stops everything? Attention turns from Libya to Japan, though the fierce dramas unfolding in Libya and Bahrain continue. As does the sniping in Afghanistan, and the myriad struggles in Africa. I guess I have no choice but to live my own life, where I am. And, as long as it’s not disturbed, proceed as normal. Homework, life aspirations, weddings in the family . . .
But here are two for Japan:
I.
Just a trifled shuffling of the earth
and all that seemed established came unmoored
swept and tossed and flowing, falling downward
in a moment wasted, mired and marred
plans and dreams, like cars and houses carried
creaking, from the hopes that held them fast
a stark today; tomorrow has been buried
left in the jumbled rubble of the past.
Of death and what it means – who can say
if they’re set free, or face horrendous trials
but the survivors – what they face – oh let us pray
for healing for their decimated isles
and let us pause in silence for their sorrow
what came to them may come to us tomorrow.
II.
Here and now, the only truth is goodness
whatever has been spewed and spilled and tumbled
Here and now, the quiet space of promise
of character that rises from the rubble
Here and now, hands reach out in compassion
People stop, rethink their frenzied paths
Hearts are inundated with emotion
and grasp the anchored love that holds them fast
“We will rebuild,” they say, “and stronger, better.”
“It’s what we’re here to do, and so we must.”
We see the triumph of determination
the solid impulse where they place their trust
We never wish such sharp calls to survive
but here and now, this people is alive.
©Wendy Mulhern
March 15, 2011