When I read this poem I take on another perspective. It is a small world that we focus on here. Never aware that there is another world to the left and one to the right and beneath . Vast. . . I see me holding tight to the frame of thought simply to get through. Still conscious of too many things. I feel like a stick figure when taking on this perspective. And yet my head feels ‘out there.’
I wish we were in class so I could hear your thinking.
We Trod The Path . . .
We trod the path, hunched
and pull our faces in.
We bend our heads. The wind
is strong when you walk into it.
But I take your hand
and we struggle against
the icy rain pelting our faces.
We’ve walked this route
in centuries past, guarding ourselves
from saying too much.
We were different then.
Simple, direct and not fashionable.
We were honest in our appraisal.
We’ve become alien to our prior selves.
And I can’t say it improves us much.
What do you think?
October, 2012
photo by Joe Hallissey Sr.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
We have all heard go back to where you came from in the past weeks and have been hurt and scarred and taken umbrage with the phrase. For me, being where I am in life, I say, Sir, we all go back to where we came from eventually.
Today being Sunday, a large portion of the world will be in different houses of worship. And in our minds is the final appointment we all keep and it will be a similar place we meet. In what condition we arrive will depend on the route we travel.
Some of us today will meet in cathedrals, some in abandoned stores, some in plain houses and some in a corner where we hope for quiet to think. We kneel, we stand, but we all lift our faces to our Source from where we come. Our Source is cosmic, Sir.
I, at the end of my life hope that I have been a conduit for good. Uppermost in my life I have tried to fulfill what I saw to do and hope that I have. I have been conscious of commitments of obligation and love. My Teachers have stressed their lessons of do what is directly in front of you with the adage of what good to save the world when your own house is falling apart.
That does not give awards to hang on your walls but they do hang on your heart. And one also has the gratitude of the hospitals, the police, the civic halls of justice, the remedial teachers and social workers and all those who play hammock to catch the fallout when we neglect what is our responsibility.
Besides the gratitude of our children who need the presence of a parent or grandparent or someone waiting for them to come home. Welcoming arms are a blessed gift to coming home.
This conduit for good doesn’t buy exotic trips, 5 star hotels, red carpet treatment in countries with laundered monies to buy decadent favors, but we teach values such as respect for family and neighbors and life in various forms. We teach how to be careful of rituals where cultures have strived for centuries to survive, but mostly we have loved one another and held life sacred.
Because what comes out the front door of homes (not houses) where children are raised and taught in love will determine what happens on world stages. It is a small world after all. And the devices have become deadly.
It is a simple thing to be a conduit for good. It starts with thought to do the kind and decent thing now. We all can do that. You find loving the hard thing to do? Fake it till you make it was the phrase when I was growing up. It works. But conduit for good? Starts right now.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
In the quiet of this night,
come to me and we will hold hands
and talk, and I will show you
from how high up you jumped.
The night will love you and
envelop you and you will find that
in the cold moon there is a heat
that sustains to show you where your home is.
Within the skirts of who you are, you will
gather the children around you
and we will love each other.
The heart knows its own Amen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Artwork by Claudia Hallissey
From the Psalms of Love for sale on Amazon
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
The Teacher says do not worry about what others think. They just think differently. And this difference lends a diversity to life that will peal our heart and make us wish to be among humans living time and again.
We will wish to work within the limitations, knowing that the things we have learned are tied to the heart and not to the outward conformations. That what we have learned has been written into the fabric of who we are, that no matter who we are, we will not forget ever.
For a time things are lost but they are found time and again. And at some time peace is made with who and what we are. What we’ve learned we’ve worn like a second skin.
The application of a philosophy is hard work. And the hard work must begin with the stripping of who we are and what we do. When we send crossed signals and the emotional response is too extreme, we are not getting our story across.
When our mouths are saying one thing and our actions another, the disparity will be seen especially by our children. When the dichotomy is healed within because the philosophy has been worked on, the memories will help us survive during our last times to make life of better quality.
Medications keep our hearts going but not in the manner where the operation of the brain would be intact. Our brains need our footwork.
A good place to start is with the word ‘why?’. Always a good place. Open a book and start running.
In These Sweet Hours. . .
In these sweet hours of the morning,
I sit in my chair, borrowed
from another room, where old bones
had not yet broken it in;
missing the familiar one,
much loved but grown musty.
Like me, I think old and
with thoughts well worn but
suitable for the mind
inhabiting them.
They’ve stood the test of years
that proved their mettle.
They’ve worn their courage
to the extreme and now will go
into the pages and take their place
as reference to a time long gone
but stable. They worked.
They upheld customs and behaviors
and civilizations. And families
when they could have crumbled
never to be restored.
But when hand crafted was
a work of pride, so was the work
of the mind. . . .
stored now like vintage wine.. . .
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
Laying like whipped icing
on the wedding cake,
the drifts of snow
across the mind’s eye
left a clear path
to the heart’s memory
of the other winters
when love closed the doors
of the world and cherished me.
What were the winters like
when the snow stood high
and like lover’s swords
sliced a path
and found where I was?
Photo by
Joe Hallissey Sr.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
It was 1941 and I was ten and warned every time I went out that God was watching me. And seeing me pick up a nickel from the wooden church floor and go across the street to buy a coveted pack of Walnettos. Word followed me home of course and I was punished.
Why was I watched but not 6 million cries for help heard? I asked.
How can one man with one idea ruin a world and a whole world of praying men cannot save it? And I was punished for that too because we were Polish and Hitler had overrun Poland and our relatives turned in friends and family there to avoid being killed for concealing those who were Jews.
No one was asking out loud that question. Not the Polish priest of the church and not my mother and father gods. So I ask again what I asked when I was ten. How can one man with one idea ruin a world and a whole world of praying men cannot save it?
And the reason is that the one man had himself and his idea to work on all men who adopted his idea and worked the power in themselves and the praying men depended on an outside god to do their work and not themselves. Simple and as complicated as that.
Emmanuel! Emmanuel! Biblical. It essentially means ‘god within.’ We were told that and we knew it. We knew and yet we chose not to remember.
Jon Meacham on the Morning Joe program in March talked of man’s better angels and initial work of the church to keep primary man’s first job which was to journey back to where he came from, which is our heavenly home. Givethought world, give thought. It was the Augustinian journey talked of through the ages.
I do not say man holds the final sparklers because we as the All That Is, are becoming. I do say that Within Man is the Divine Spirit which waits for man to wake up and acknowledge that only he can bring justice and do good to this world. That only by realizing what he can become can the steps in evolution accelerate and Mankind, humanity’s condition, be enhanced.
As AA preaches, There No Spot Where God Is Not. . . .That includes the Divine Within the heart of man. We are the life force, the intelligence undergirding in various degrees these universes. And worlds throughout are watching this classroom. If anything is not done to correct the injustices or the inequities, it is not done because we do nothing.
Doing nothing because of fear or because we are benefiting from them. So we are the cause and the cure.
I asked at ten and cried and nearing a hundred, ask again.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
There is a connectedness I see and it weaves through everything. I am not certain where it leads nor if it ever had a beginning. But this I know. It is real and it is firm and it is gutsy. Not a word that is elegant, but true to its core. Gutsy. It has a vitality all of its own and the sweet thing about this, is that the connectedness is real, so real that I am not certain why it is not talked about as a normal, common thing.
It should be evident to everyone. Rubies are connected to stones and stones connected to moss if one thinks and can see that man and fish, donkey and gods are one of kind. It should be a part of our every day life because it is part of our everyday living.
I would start the talk with babies and show them how their belonging to us is a natural and provident thing. It and they are god sent. I hesitate using the word god because it has a grandfather Santa Claus image to it and the way most people think. But yet the feel of this god sent connectedness is cosmic as well as has a natural bent to it and there are no appropriate words in this language of ours.
It weaves through everything. The blood work of family puts all of us in such close connectedness that there is only breathing space. We are united and yet unique in our selves but the connectedness is vital.
This moves beyond family and puts all of us, one to the other, not so far but we know of the each. And we are known. There are no surprises and yet the exchanges are of palpable good. That what has happened before has the effects in our today and for the tomorrow our todays are already shaping the substance that will be a yesterday for someone.
One cannot see the connectedness unless the basis of each and their ultimate function depends on them being what and where they are. And the what could be anywhere and their where can be anywhere.
We must remember how we connect and why. Children have no problem with connections since their sources are similarly differential and have been accepted. They are blessedly blind to differences.
Our behavior is determined by conscience. Problematical prejudicial for some but especially for those elected to serve in positions of power lately, needing fusion of collapsed spines with steel. Wars only create more heartburn but who will redeem us when we trash our souls?
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
(When asked often lately, how to survive as a mystic in today’s secular world, sometimes the questions just need a repetition of previous work. I edit for space.)
Previous entry the Teacher speaks. . .
When your mentor, the Nazarene, thought man should be accountable, he did not wish for man to keep coming back and lamenting his ancestor’s anguish and never lift himself out of his mire. He wished for every lifetime to be accountable.
This is what making a difference is all about. Not to become responsible for our ancestor’s inability to fulfill dreams. Nothing can be done except by those who tied the knots. The ones who did not meet obligations are needing forgiveness by their progeny. There are enough worlds for this to happen in.
Let their gods work it out and take them as responsibility. It is not for the child to undo the parent’s tribulations. Let the children be free to make a difference and the whole planet will survive as well as the people in it. It will be a classroom of supreme order and not the hellish place it is today.
Continuing that entry I wrote. . . Like Machiavelli’s letter to Vettori, I put on my evening clothes (which in my case were flannel pajamas, ) and went to my table of books where I sat with my teachers of yore. I, too, was lovingly received by them, where I pestered with arguments the injustices done to my world. And answered by reason what their arguments were for the day.
I was revived in mind and attitude and went into sleep preparing again for the day’s events. Like Machiavelli, the starving mind of me was fed and feasted on thoughts designed for the credentialed. I was taught what no university could or was able to teach. And given information only the gods in their compassion were able to garner and assimilate.
With understanding of the behaviors of peoples never to be voiced and nor even easy to live with. It brings to mind the understanding of the word ‘expert’ the fledgling grandson in his growing knowledge of new words announced at dinner, ‘expert is a person who knows too much.’ And I followed with ‘and has nowhere to go.’
July 14, 2019. . .added notes today. . .for those who question how possible to live today like this. There were those who say my life was not normal and neither were my interests. All lives are different in ways peculiar to others. I came with an open head and one foot dragging in the world I came from before I was born.
Married young, we were of moderate means with no money for household help so I raised our children, and in the vernacular, I painted and papered and mowed lawns and did yard work and appeared in public; an average life with no appetite for frolicking.
One does not need to take to the woods, (I sorely wanted to) nor to the mountain top. Those are within. But heaven does heed the crash at the gates.
Often with a ‘well, look who’s here!’ So the journey begins.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
When I was in public grammar school and we were let out for weekly religious class to go to our places of worship, I sat on my hands in the basement of the old church and sweated. I was not answering the priest’s question and knew I would be punished but what he was asking was not my memory from where I came before I was born. So I knew what I said was so because I was closer to my Source than he was.
I could not convince the priest nor those I loved most. But I wrote this poem Where Can We Go in 1982. It was a Given, thoughts impressed to me as I wrote and I give it to you. We live in a quantum age and learn that all time is simultaneous; it was a yesterday. Just as true today as it was yesterday. Since life is everlasting, it will be just as true tomorrow.
Just as our arms release beloveds, other arms open in welcome to them on the other side.
Where Can We Go?
As the sparrow falls it is noted,
and the quality of life
is diminished by one.
Long ago the feathers were counted.
The color of the downy beast
was painted into the rainbow.
A child is born
in the forgotten regions
of a world too busy to take note.
The borning is observed, however,
by the cosmic populace.
Its growth watched and shepherded.
And when the child cries, the heavens lament.
There is no least in quality or number.
Each beating heart is calculated to keep
a world intact. Each blink of an eyelid,
reason enough for the sun to keep itself alive.
The coming together and the going apart
of each is through a door opening and closing
onto a portion of life, indissoluble.
Now it is here, now gone from here,
now it is here. Disappearing from this place,
it takes form in another.
The sparrow sings in another tree,
and his song is heard by one who left the here
and followed.
Where can we go and not be found?
photo by John Holmes
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.
It would never have occurred to my mother or my mother in law that there could be fun in the raising of children. It simply was not in the frame of thought in their lives. Children were work for my mother with eight and too much work for my mother in law with one.
That they could add something enriching the children’s lives that might serve them in life was as unreal as the idea that children were a special trust to enhance mankind’s progress. This thinking is beyond many people today when children are simply added burdens to lives already heavy with problems.
When families struggle to put food on the table, to pay overwhelming bills and too many days left before the next payday and cupboards almost bare, understandable are the priorities and yet as the maxims state, the unfed mind is as hungry as the unfed body.
We are familiar with hard times. Decisions were made at personal cost to wants to favor needs of the children. Children’s time for the insertion of good habits is brief as is the influence of the nurturer whose care they are before the door opens to outside pressures.
When I look at photos of our Emma E. and see how playgrounds evolved from what her family would consider dinosaur equipment and see the current pail and shovel still holding fascination, I think how things have changed and still remain the same.
We thrilled to the fact that the librarian knew the boys’ names as well as mine. And we were allowed to take 25-30 books home in a box at a time. Free! And we laughed with joy when we could afford a record player and each took their wands and conducted the orchestra to the Sound of Music and a teaspoon of sugar makes the medicine go down!
Times are such in places where the extended family needs to help the young to ensure that Spirit is nurtured along with the bodies. Wants of the still maturing parents can wait while the needs of their young cannot.
Vision declares what heart has always known. The awards of this world are temporary. The real are those which hang on our hearts.
Veronica Hallissey has been writing since the 1960s, with her poetry published in a variety of small press magazines. Born into a farm family in Lockport, NY, and educated at the University of Buffalo and other midwest institutions, she brings and unusual point-of-view to her poetry, combining strong natural images with a deep spiritual language. She lives in Ramona, CA.