Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

Invocation poem: THANKS April 30, 2011

Today we are thankful for all we’ve received
However we live, we firmly believe
All is a blessing that we must pass on.
No matter our status or where we have gone.
Kindness and generosity are what we impart
Showing the world what’s in Rotary’s heart

© Shawn Bird 2011
Available for free use within Rotary; however, please indicate in the comment section below that you have used it at your club (date and name).
 

Tsunami haiku April 29, 2011

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 9:17 pm
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The wall of water

 descends thundering through screams

All turns to silence.

 

i choose April 28, 2011

Filed under: Commentary,Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 9:40 pm
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I choose

to believe.

.

I choose to believe

that my one vote

can make a difference

like a single pebble

rippling

to the edges of a still pond

 .

I choose to believe

that my choice

provides the fuel for the future,

that in exercising my franchise

my small voice resonates.

I do not have to stand

in the street and shout

to make my opinion heard.

I walk into my polling place

unmolested

and cast my vote fearlessly.

.

I choose to believe

that my vote matters.

I choose to believe

that leaders want to govern

responsibly,

that they care about the people

they represent,

that they want to make a difference.

I choose to believe

in the hope of a better tomorrow.

.

I choose to make a difference.

to be a pebble in the pond

of democracy,

and so

I vote.

 

 

young voices April 27, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:52 am
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I’m feeling hopeful that things are changing.

The Powers That Be don’t try to attract the youth vote, because they say youth don’t vote. I’m a little confused about that, because I voted when I was a youth, as did my friends.  My students all seem very excited about the possibility of voting as they leave high school. So what happens? What makes them drop out of the voting process?
On Facebook right now there is a status floating around that goes, “Out of 23.6 million electors in the last election, only 5.2 million voted for Harper’s Conservatives. That’s 22% of eligible voters, and 16.2% of the total population. There are 5.65 million Canadians aged 18-29. In the past, this age group has voted so little that politicians don’t bother with them. If all of Canada’s youth voted, they would rock the whole political system!”
I didn’t check the facts before I reposted it, but I like the message. The youth have power, if they choose to use it.

Somewhere else I heard, “You wouldn’t let your grandparents choose your music, why do you let them choose your government?”  😉  I like that one, too.  It appeals to that rebellious streak in me.

I decided to conduct a little poll on Facebook. Most of my Facebook friends are former or current students, so I asked,  “Are you voting in the federal election?” Over 84% of respondants said either yes or that they would if they could.  That’s a positive situation that doesn’t seem to echo what the government believes.  Of course, my highly scientific poll was a rather small sample (13 total) so perhaps it is meaningless.  I choose to believe it shows that within my circle of influence, at least, young people want to have a voice.

We all need to contribute to the exercise of democracy.

Over the years I think I have voted for every party from Reform to Green. I tend to study the candidates and choose the one that seems most intelligent and well spoken, as opposed to the one who is most likely to have his/her party form the government. My husband doesn’t think this is very strategic, but I try to believe in the power of my one vote.

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Voting is an exercise in hope. We trust that we will have a government that listens to us and makes wise decisions. Most of the time, we’re pretty lucky, compared to most places in the world. I like to think that’s because we’re watchful. Young people on the other side of the world are dying these days to get the right to have the government of their choice.  I hope our young people take advantage of their franchise, and don’t let their grandparents make the decisions without their contribution.

 

laughing in Heaven April 26, 2011

Filed under: Pondering,Rotary — Shawn L. Bird @ 10:57 am
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If you listen on the wind, you will hear chuckling from Heaven. God is welcoming one of his favourite jokesters today.

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It was about 1980 or 1981 when the very colourful Rev. Albert Baldeo arrived in Kelowna to pastor St. Paul’s United Church and fill its rafters with his booming laugh and his joyful Trinadadian accent. His humour was famous for diffusing the tension of serious moments at church, in conversation, or in community groups. I particularly remember at a wedding when the bridal couple stood before him, shaking in nervousness. He explained their names’ meanings and with a twinkle in his eye, made a booming comment dripping with sexual innuendo that had the whole sanctuary echoing with laughter. The couple visibly relaxed amid their embarrassed giggles.

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After 30 years of serving the community, Baldeo passed away this last weekend after a battle with Parkinson’s.   Last week in his last column for the Kelowna Capital News he wrote, “My new destination is heaven, where there is no sickness, there is no Parkinson’s Disease, there are no hospitals…and there is no HST.”   A jester to the last.

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People in Kelowna and members of Rotary District 5060 will remember him fondly. My condolences to his family, particularly daughter Kim who was the Okanagan Mission Rotary Club’s outbound exchange student the year after me.

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Cinderella power April 25, 2011

In 2009 an Oprah Show audience member stood up after the taping and related the story of being  bullied because he was undeniably gay, even as a little boy. The kids called him sissy. He said, “Here’s how gay I was,  I carried a pink Cinderella lunch box in grade four!” Listen to his story to get the details of how that lunch box delivered his emancipation from bullying.  Click the link to Oprah’s site: http://www.oprah.com/oprahshow/Audience-Member-Tommys-Lesson-on-Bullying-Video/topic/oprahshow

As I watched, it occured to me that he had amazing parents. How many fathers would tolerate having their little boys go to school carting pink Cinderella lunch boxes? I think it is quite wonderful how they allowed him to have the lunch box he wanted. They had to know that he was going to get teased for having it, but they allowed him to have it.

There’s an example of positive parenting- letting your kid be who he is, and letting him make his own decisions!

Okay, dad’s comment that he should fight his battle was rather harsh (see the video) but obviously it worked to give Tommy some self-respect.  There is some poetic justice in that pink lunchbox being the weapon of  choice.

Consider the symbolism of Cinderella. She is transformed from her dreary life to the magical world she longs for. So it was for Tommy. Cinderella helped him transform his world.

Talk about a Cinderella story!

 

Magic Fontaine April 24, 2011

Last year after my husband and I spent a couple of weeks touring Italy, people would ask us what place we enjoyed the most, and we were unable to answer. Venice was, well, Venice: beautiful, spectacular, sad, interesting. We’d go back to explore more of her rabbit warrens in an instant. Cinque Terre, the five Mediterranean Sea coast towns, were picturesque, delightful and soothing. Rome was amazing for a hundred different reasons, and special because my fourth Finnish host family joined us there. Pompeii answered a childhood wish. Geneva (okay- that was a side-trip to Switzerland) was lovely, organized, expensive, and fascinating. Each was so different that there was no way to choose between them. Each was completely special in its own way.

P1010097

The Petrarch Museum in the white building on the right is believed to be on the site of Petrarch’s house.

This year I found myself talking about one place whenever anyone asked us about our trip to France. Sure, Nice was nice. Yes, Avignon was intriguing. Paris was bustling and full of things to see. The star of our visit was a small village that most people have never heard of.

Somewhere around 1310 Francesco Petrarca, his father and his brother made a visit to the source of the Sorgue River. It had been known for centuries as a miracle of nature. There was a hole at the bottom of a limestone cliff, a still pool, and then a raging river. Greeks and Romans had come to marvel at it in their time.  Petrarca was a boy, but he declared that this was a place he wanted to live. Some twenty years later, he bought property and spent fifteen contented years off and on living in his house on the banks of the Sorgue, trying to forget Laure, writing, and tending his books and his gardens: one at his house and another by the still pool of the spring at Fontaine de Vaucluse.

There is a magic in this place. The incongruity of the stillness and the noise. The contrast of the white cliffs and greenery. The fortress on the top of the hill that was in ruins even in Petrarca’s time. The sound of the newly born river which seems to burrow into your head and erase all hurry. The meditative nature of the place.

I could never have described it from the photographs. This is one place that one has to visit to fully appreciate. I wish I’d had more time to just soak in the atmosphere of the place.

At the Petrarch Museum, located on the site of his house, I found a comment he’d made that in the past, people had come to Fontaine de Vaucluse to see the miracle of the spring, but in the future, they’d come because he had lived there. I pointed out to my husband the enormous conceit of a man to make such an assertion. He just smirked and said, “We’re here, aren’t we?”

And so we were. If Francesco Petrarca had not been writing about Fontaine de Vaucluse in the 14th century, I would never have known about it and I would never have sought the experience. I would never have found myself sitting by the river bank as the sound of the Sorgue carried me back seven centuries. He was pompous, but he was right.  His words are entwined in the magic of the place.

 

word power April 23, 2011

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:45 am
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 When you change the perspective, you change everything.  Words are powerful tools.  They can be the fuel to change the world.  Words begin revolutions.  A good word can bring success.  A bad word can destroy a reputation.  A kind word can inspire love.  A cruel one can unhinge love.

Choose your words most carefully.

Change the world.

 

I am an island April 22, 2011

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:53 pm
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I am an island.

Not like Simon’s

impenetrably tearless rock,

but one aimed at

by a ferry of tourists:

a welcome adventure,

a gathering of isolation

a mad mix of artists,

rolled into a village

surrounded by a sea

of civilization.

I am an island:

your escape,

our excuse.

I am.

 

ever considered? April 21, 2011

Filed under: Commentary,Writing — Shawn L. Bird @ 9:08 pm
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Topic #99: Have you ever considered writing a book? If so what would it be about? Make a list of the ideas you want to cover, or the themes it might have. If you’ve never considered writing a book, what other major work have you thought about (a movie? a symphony?).

Ah, yeah…  😀  Well….   Of course there’s Grace Awakening (click the link above).

Mostly, I think I’d like to stick to writing for teens and young adults.  I like themes of acceptance, love, and growth.  I like to teach something as well, so Grace Awakening is full of characters and references to Greek mythology, poetry forms, and history which gives a lot of extra dimension to the story if the reader chooses to pursue additional investigation.

I started writing a book when I was a teen.  I had the theme and some of the key characters figured out early, but it took many tries to get it into a form that worked properly.  In the six months that Grace Awakening was evolving on my keyboard, it was surprising how all the past writing wove itself into the narrative, expanding into something powerful and new. 

Everything that was becomes part of what will be.

I am presently working (or procrastinating) on two novels.  One is ‘just about finished’ (as i t has been for a year or so) and the other is the prequel to Grace Awakening.  Doing the research for that one last month in France makes me yearn for another trip.  There is so much to learn, and the words flew thick and fast while basking in all that atmosphere.  I have several other ideas floating around in my brain as well.  Once you start writing, the words bubble like a spring, and the chapters drift like a river toward a sea of story.