Shawn L. Bird

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

She’s gone October 17, 2010

Filed under: Poetry,Pondering — Shawn L. Bird @ 6:33 pm
Tags: , ,

Today I’m thinking about all those times when we don’t hear what someone is saying to us very clearly, because we have our own agenda. Hearing the full truth may open a door we don’t want to open, but glorious things may be inside if we have courage to accept difficult changes.

.

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

I know you can’t

See past your pain

And you wish all

Could be the same

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

.

You’ve tried before

To re-arrange

A month or two

You make a change.

But if it’s about

Getting her back

You’re never changing

The greatest lack.

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

.

Quit loving her

And love yourself

Take your fragility

Off the shelf.

See who you are

And learn to be

The best you can

So you can see

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

.

You’re better when

You’re not with her

With all the anger

In the air.

She wants to be a

Better self

And that’s why

She repeatedly tells

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

.

It’s time for you

To push, to grow

It will be hard

Change is, we know

You’re worth the pain

You will endure

You’ll transform for you

And not for her.

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

Because it’s good.

.

When you can smile and

See your strengths

And understand you’re worth

All the lengths

that others take

to make you see

You’re worth who you

Are bound to be.

When freed from all

Toxicity

That brings you down

And poisons you

And blinds you to

What’s really true

She’s gone this time

And it’s for good.

Don’t beg.  Don’t cry.

It’s truly good

For both of you.

.

.

Here’s another blog post that reflects this theme beautifully.  When will the message get through?  http://deadpoet88.wordpress.com/2010/10/21/the-art-of-longing

Oh wow.  We got a blog poetry award from the Thursday Poetry Rally!  How cool is that?

 And although this was posted in October, somehow we received an Honourable Mention for September…

 

 

Auntie Bright would love this!

Filed under: Grace Awakening — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:08 am
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I just saw Ralph Lauren’s Fall 2010 line. Oh, this is stuff that Auntie Bright would not be able to resist! The floral prints, ruffles and Victorian styles would cause a shopping spree. Check it out here.  Auntie Bright (unlike me) loves a totally Bohemian look.  She would also wear some of the more colourful items available from Arwen’s Apparel in 100 Mile House.  Bright also has the figure to carry it off (unlike me).  ;-P 

I wonder what that peridontist in Kelowna meant when he said I had a Bohemian look going?  ‘Cause I didn’t at all.  I was just wearing a lot of purple.  Purple doesn’t necessarily mean Bohemian.  Really.

 

echo voices October 16, 2010

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:33 am

So there she is,

tears pouring down the face, 

having a conversation with an imaginary you. 

There you are, 

Still making observations that

…touch the core of things. 

… Melt with their poignancy.

…Challenge with their truth. 

…Encourage with their tenderness. 

The voices of memory

still real

guiding and teaching.

I think we might as well

give up on waiting for them

to disappear.

The paper strengthens them,

and love echoes through them.

Despite…

well,

you know.

 

First love October 15, 2010

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 1:05 am

Keeping up the theme of the last day or two, here are the lyrics to a song that a lot of you will apparently be able to relate to. I heard this the first time when it was sent to me as a radio dedication at about 3 a.m. one Sunday morning in 1981…

FIRST LOVE
(lyrics and music by James Seals and Eddie Brown, 1980)
From the album THE LONGEST ROAD (1980).

Carlos Vega – Drums; Bob Glaub – Bass; Louie Shelton – Electric and Acoustic Guitars; Greg Matheisen – Acoustic Piano and Rhodes; Don Heffington – Percussion; String Arrangement – Jimmie Haskell.

Everybody has a first love, they have left in yesterday.
Feelings they have left behind, it’s just a place in time but not so far away.
Everybody has a first love, when the dream they shared was new.
I remember that special someone, so I wrote this song just for you.

First love in my life. Where are you tonight? I wonder about you.
First love in my life. Did things turned out alright? I worry about you.
‘Cause I’ve got everything, everything in life that I wanted.
It would kill me now and make me sad to know you are lonely.
First love never dies.

I wish you love, I wish you happiness. And may the years be kind to you.
You’ll always be a part of me, share this thought with me. I’ll carry you always.

First love, first love never dies. Remember
First love, first love never dies. I tell you
First love, first love never dies. Remember
First love, first love never dies. Whoa.

Interesting to see the lyrics written out.  I always thought this line “You’ll always be a part of me, share this thought with me. I’ll carry you always.” was “You’ll always be a part of me: you shared the start with me. I’ll carry you always.”  I like my version better!  Listen for yourself.  This version shows lyrics that ‘share the start’ so I didn’t imagine that option.  Ah.  See if it makes you cry too. ;-P

 

Starry night of music October 13, 2010

Whenever someone finishes Grace Awakening and comes to me gushing with kind words, I always ask the reader what her favourite part was.  Just last week I asked and, as usual, the response was, “the concert scene.”  When I ask what readers like about this scene, they often can’t narrow it down.  Some say they love the description of the music.  Some identify that they most strongly sense the connection, love, and longing between Grace and Ben.  Occasionally they wonder about the origins of the scene.  I generally smile cryptically and make some remark about my vivid imagination.  I don’t think they believe me.

All fiction comes from a germ of truth.  It’s manipulated, twisted, mangled and broken apart, but it starts from somewhere real.  So while the concert scene does come from my imagination, it also comes from a very vivid reality.  So here’s a ‘truth behind the fiction’ moment for you.

Once upon a time, when I was Grace’s age, I was head over heels for a boy who was going to be a composer.  While other boys were out playing sports, hanging out finding trouble, or avoiding homework, he was filling his world with music.  Consequently, he was filling my world with music as well, because he shared liberally with all his friends: his comfortable friends from school as well as the obsessed friend of his little sister (a.k.a. me).  We spoke of the day when his music would be played in a concert hall by a full orchestra.  He told me that he had had a dream where I was at his concert sitting the front row cheering.  I was completely sincere as I promised that when that day came I would be there to share the experience.  I could imagine no greater joy. Drifting off to sleep, I would close my eyes and live the moment.  I saw all the details.  I could hear the music yet to be composed and my heart was full of the dream.

As often happens, youthful fantasies remain unfulfilled.  I have never had the pleasure of sitting in a concert hall listening to a live orchestra play his music.  That privilege has gone to others.  However, one day I was visiting  in Vancouver and looking in a tourist brochure for something to do  when my eye was grabbed by a familiar name. I was astonished to see that my old friend’s music was being used as the score for a presentation at the H. R. MacMillan Planetarium.  I walked from the hotel over a bridge and along the shore to the Planetarium to buy my tickets several hours before the performance.  I didn’t want to risk a sell-out.  The lady behind the counter smiled knowingly when I gushed that I was there because the composer was my old friend.   I walked and shopped to kill time, and then returned at the appointed hour, flush with memories that had filled my head as I’d wandered.  I think my eyes were sparkling with the adolescent adoration that marked many of my summers, because the lady seemed amused as she took my ticket and chuckled, “Enjoy the show!”

I settled into my seat  and stared into the artificial heavens with the dozen or so other people in the auditorium while the adventure of space travel unfolded above our heads.  I knew the score well, but in the blackened planetarium, with the surround sound echoing all around, it reached inside me and awoke memories and emotions that had been safely dormant for several years. Melodies and harmonies danced and stretched through my consciousness  and into the distant reaches of space.

When the show was over, I blinked back to an unfamiliar reality.  I waited until the room was almost empty before I stumbled, still lost in the music, to the elevator to join the ticket lady and an older couple .  The wife remarked to her husband, “I didn’t think much of that music, did you?”  The ticket lady grinned at me and said, “I’m guessing you didn’t have any complaints?”  I gave her a wan smile as I shook my head and floated out of the building on the memories and melodies.

And that was the germ of the concert scene.  The power of  music can craft entire worlds, as it does for Grace.  One can’t help wondering where that power comes from, and the pondering of these “What if” scenarios is what leads a writer to construct an imaginary world to answer the question.  Memories are fuel for imagination.

(and here’s the main theme of the program, should you wish to hear it yourself)

 

Time October 12, 2010

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:24 am
Tags: ,

You can’t tell her anything
She doesn’t know
She sees through our masked words
To the heart’s glow.
She knows me better
Than anyone else
She knows me better
Than I know myself.
Though the strands have loosened
the bond is tight,
I still hear her voice call me
in the night
I feel her tears drenching
Her warm pillow
You can’t tell her anything
She doesn’t know.

.

persona: Umed speaking of Jalila

 

Miss you October 11, 2010

Filed under: Friendship,Grace Awakening — Shawn L. Bird @ 7:46 am

Today I’m remembering my friend Lloyd.  Lloyd and I met in Kelowna General Hospital where we were both youth volunteers.  Within a few minutes of meeting we discovered not only that we had both lived in Calgary, but that we had actually been in the same junior high in grade seven.  I even remembered him playing trumpet in the orchestra for the school musical.  This connection forged us into fast friends, and we never looked back.

Lloyd was funny.  He was quick witted and he was a master of puns.  We didn’t live near each other, and we didn’t attend the same school, but for a couple of years we routinely went out to movies together and giggled through our evenings.  At first I wondered whether we were brewing a romance, but he was pretty clear that we were ‘just friends,’ and that was okay with me.  I had romances brewing other places, and I was happy to enjoy my very entertaining friend.

Lloyd had his demons though, and sadly his demons overtook him while he was still a young man. He died more than a decade ago.  I miss him a lot and think of him often.  I wish he’d had the strength to carry on.  I wish he’d stayed around to find a love and a family of his own.  I wish he knew how valued he was.

I dedicated Grace Awakening to Lloyd and named a character after him.  They’re quite a lot alike, Grace’s Lloyd and mine.  In particular, they share a sense of humour that leaves everyone groaning as they chuckle.  I loved visiting Lloyd as I wrote elements of him into the pages of this book; it was like my friend was living again in the words.  When readers come up to me shaking their heads and saying, “I love Lloyd!” I smile and say, “Yeah, me too.”

Miss you, Lloyd.  Keep ’em groaning in heaven.

 

lub lub lub October 10, 2010

Filed under: Commentary,Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 1:26 am

>>cough<<

>>sniff<<

A sympathetic sigh

and a late night trip for Neo Citrin

That’s real love.

 

hope October 9, 2010

Filed under: Commentary — Shawn L. Bird @ 1:25 am

‎”The next time you face something that’s unexpected, unwanted, and uncertain, consider that it just may be a gift.” Stacey Kramer

Wow. How true is this? You have something thrown at you that puts your world into a tailspin; you believe that nothing will ever be good again. But when you recover and find your heart again, when you can breathe and see clearly, then you notice that not only is life all right again, in many ways it is actually better than it was.

Though it seem inconceivable when the horrible thing is first thrown at you, when you come out the other side you can see the blessing of it.  A death brings people closer.  Cancer encourages you to value every day.  A divorce opens your heart to a  healthier state of mind. 

Gifts mean the most when they are unexpected.  So while you despise the circumstance that has brought you this gift, embrace it with hope for your future.  There is something valuable here for you to unwrap.

 

daddy October 8, 2010

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 4:52 am
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For Friesens and Bhatias who are grieving the loss of their fathers this week.

.

I followed behind him on the beach.

He turned with a smile and opened his arms

for me to run into

and he swung me schrieking

high into the air,

catching my laughter on the way down.

I stood on his shoulders as he

launched me into the surf

squealing and splashing.

Then screaming and thrashing

as I gulped in salt water

and my feet desperately

saught security

until his hands reached down

and pulled me into the haven

of his embrace.