
A lot of people will tell you to journal in order to process your feelings. It’s a worthwhile pursuit. I believe in the power of the written word, no matter who is doing the writing. But journaling, for me, was never really the way I wanted to express the things that I was feeling. So I turned instead to writing poems.
Sometimes the poems are exactly what I want to say on the first draft. Sometimes they require revision. Sometimes they are so bland and ordinary that there is nothing worth revising. Sometimes they say nothing of consequence. Sometimes they say everything in just a few words. Sometimes they ramble.
I haven’t written many poems over the past ten years, but occasionally, poetry feels like the best way to process what I’m feeling. I find that when the dark parts of life come to roost, a poem can say what I need to say better than any other media. In a poem, I can be honest and authentic in ways that I can’t in an essay, an open letter, a short story or a journal entry. I can draw the reader (and myself) further into my pain through a poem. I can show my true self. I can use it to heal.
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God Who Sees
3 So she named the Lord who spoke to her, “You are El-roi,”[b] for she said, “Have I really seen God and remained alive after seeing him?”[c] Genesis 16:13 NRSVUE Here in the waste, the wilderness of doubt Where thorns and dust and brambles choke the ground I sit beside the well and pray aloud My call a cry, a…
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Poignantly Short Poems
I don’t know how to be sorry For something I didn’t do But I do know how to hurt Because you think I did. When the dust eventually settles And you can look me in the face I will still want to ask you Aren’t we better than this? There’s always hope for repair But…
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Major Change
I once read “A loss is a loss” And now those words Ring true and pure When I think about What I have lost. It was not just A place to go A thing to do. I have not lost A calendar item An hour from my day An appointment On an endless agenda. I…
