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Illustration of a bird flying.
  • When The Real Money Is Counted. . . .

    20150628_123339(1)The Teacher Continues. . . .

    When it comes to memory,  how do we separate what is currently ours?  Yet the question should be, what is not ours when we are part of humankind?  What can we separate from since we do not know what it is we have participated in since time began?

    Have we lived before?  What is called reincarnation can also be memory banks filled to overflowing.  Yet are there not new souls on this planet who do not have practiced ways of behaving that can only be the result of centuries of living?

    Can we say we have lived before when we fumble much in elemental situations? If we are asking these questions, it means the footwork has already been done to bring us to this place.  And since talk shows and self help books have people eager to speak,  what can be brought forth? 

    Can this incarnation be one of many?  Can we not be walking in many worlds relying only on custom for this one?  For some, one answer is sufficient.  And for others, if thoroughly understood,  would have worlds spinning into oblivion. 

    There are those who have been open to such a degree that worlds have impinged uncalled for.  Understanding can only come when there is a frame of reference to assimilate the information.  There is no mind that can understand everything.  All expressions are needed in every world to begin to uncover the Essence of the Spirit that rules and loves.

    In the frame of reference that use the word God in its religious life or spiritual life,  everyone and everything is allowed to express the many faces of God.  There is no mind that completely understands nor completely accepts  all the expressions of Being.  Whether in this world we inhabit or in worlds we give space to in thought.

    The Why Of Mine

    In me are my mother’s memories.
    She still lives with all
    of the memories in her and many in me.
    Her anguish for rights violated
    is felt in me . . . .gut feeling overriding
    injustices in my life.

    Her family, long dead, live in her
    and in me, commingling.
    I do not know their faces,
    but one day I will wander into
    a Memory Bank and withdraw my assets
    to settle debits and I will know
    for whom I do this.

    In me, my father nods his head
    and studies grasses neatly clipped
    to a measured stance.
    His dragging feet refuse to note
    the hands on my clock as they did on his.
    In me, his glance becomes
    a studied look ferreting out a truth
    in a lie,  only to be numbed by indecision.

    And my eyes hold others’ eyes,
    when they meet mine so I can
    uncover their treasures.
    In me, the textures of my brothers
    are bolts of fabric laid straight
    and bias to life.

    I note the patterns and the places
    that fit me me and those that cannot.
    The places we meet are enough for now.
    In me my sister’s wrath
    lays bare my own.
    Altogether we meet in several times
    but in her  our father roams,

    looking for himself in her labor
    and in her, our mother stirs derision
    concerning old memories kept alive
    by today’s unresolves.
    I have children who have children,
    strengthened by others’ memories
    and shaken by habits long thought
    to be dead.

    Wondrous to see the Refiner’s fire
    culling the wooden nickels
    crowding the silver and gold
    in the Memory Bank.

    One day the real money will be counted.

     

     

    Painting by
    Claudia Hallissey

     

     

     

    January 16, 2016
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • Memories With No Putting Place. . .

    Barn Scene - Detail

    The Teacher Speaks. . . .what exactly is memory?  Except long things outstanding, which in the course of living, become shorthand of a sort.  It would appear that memories should not encroach on one,  especially when they are not part of the current life.  But since we take on the body of choice, then we also take on the long list of grievances as well as victories of the heredity.  And since we talk of heredity as the line of choice, then we must also be prepared for those untoward things that crop up within every family line.

    (I will be doing a series of posts on memory.  The above was the beginning of this scribe’s dictation on Memory and I am beginning with the poem Circa. . . 1840  to show how my poetry over the years proved  to be the example of how much of life is remembering or learning for the first time but all  are ways of obtaining information.  I hope to insert questions in my readers’ thinking and do feel free to comment.  Life is a Process. )

    Circa:  1840

    She could say in reverent tone, I love you.
    I polished the hearth
    and set the bread to rise.
    While her heart cried silently,
    do you love me?

    The children came, one by one.
    She loved them, each and everyone.
    They were good.  She said,  I love you.
    I’ve borne you sons and
    taught them how to pray.
    I’ve polished the hearth
    and set the bread to rise.
    While her heart cried silently,
    do you love me?

    The sons grew up and one by one
    they went away.  He never knew why.
    He never knew that they too, said,
    I’ve fed the chicks and bedded the calves
    and got a perfect score in sums.
    While their hearts fairly burst,
    do we please thee?

    He accepted the polished hearth,
    the risen bread, the handsome sons
    who tried so hard to please
    as that which was his due.

    One day the hearth no longer shone,
    no longer was the bread set to rise,
    no handsome sons to plead
    with eyes that tore her heart apart.

    ‘You do not love me!’ he angrily shouted.
    Wearily she turned away.
    Did you not see the polished hearth,
    the bread set to rise,
    the sons who tried so hard to please

    and love that died?’

    January 12, 2016
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • Some Thoughts. . . .

    When in doubt about what to do;  the human thing to do is one which will contribute to humanity’s growth.

    *****

    And without memory,  one has no idea of how the past deposits its residual in the present nor what the present can do to frame the future.

    *****

    The one requiring more learning, more education is the one who feels the pinch of the harness most.

    *****

    To hold two opposing views in mind and still function is a sign of a mature intelligence.

    *****

    The bottom line of all behavior is the preservation of one’s self.  When all holds are not barred, the one holding one’s own life is the behavior of choice.

    *****

    To delve into a psyche without being asked is to burglarize a house.

    *****

    We cling to old beliefs, regardless of the damage they have caused, regardless of change in the world,  often because we think we will bury our parents forever.  If we believe like they did,  we think we keep them alive.  And somehow think we fail them again as we have when we were children.

    *****

    The heart will determine what the eyes see.  And put into the head the meaning of it all.

    *****

    Some prayers seem to be answered and some are not.  The final question should be, why not mine?

    January 8, 2016
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • A Good Friend

    DSC_2920A Good Friend. . . .

    There is a dark side to everyone’s personality, especially the sensitive one.  This dark side often  rides the sensitive so heavily that others find them burdensome.  Yet needful because being sensitive,  they are often  also understanding and responsible.  When one needs a someone,  they are always there, to  make the poultices,  change the beds and do the laundry.  Not to wring their hands and whine that they do not know what to do.

    And that is the difference.  The dark side of the personality has learned how to make a situation better because they have had to learn through their own lives how to make themselves feel better.  They know what makes an other feel good.

    It is hard to live with such a person but harder still to live with one who wrings their hands and runs away.  There is nothing within such a one that makes the connection between their soul and the other who is hurting.

    A Good Friend

    You stayed the night
    while I lumbered my body
    through a partition closing me from life.

    While I fought
    through a sea of memories
    holding me hostage
    to long and lonely years.

    You saw me through
    eyes of tears reflecting  the hardness
    mine needed to smelt with coals
    being fired in a heart of no use.

    But you stayed, close as my skin
    and had you pulled away
    I would have understood.
    You stalk me yet and I stand.

    My eyes have shed their steel casings,
    now ground as dust beneath my heel.
    I look inward to softer places
    and find the world not so hard.

    You tell me you need to stay close
    because you wish to claim
    my strength if only by association,
    but I ask,

    of what heavenly use is a soft shell crab?

     

     

    art by Claudia Hallissey

     

    January 5, 2016
    Veronica Hallissey
    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 Sound Loaf

    20160102_101229

     

    The Sound Loaf

    Evolution or God
    (perhaps one and the same)
    finely grinds the meal
    ever so slowly
    while I cannot breathe
    with the dust in the air.

    But there will one day
    be understanding
    with the digestion of the bread. . . .
    The wholeness of the grain
    so nicely baked till the hollow sound
    is heard when tapped,
    gives credence to the sound loaf.

    I can no longer wait
    for it all to cool.
    It has taken far too long
    for this bread to be made
    and yet still to be digested.

    The bellies are still
    immature for whole grain.
    Pablum is the mushed up cereal
    of sort for feeding infants
    too long in the pram.
    I suffered the parents to grow up

    and now have no time to wait for the children.

    January 2, 2016
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • If School Is To Keep. . . .

     

    IMG_3285

    The Newborn. . .

    The infant balls her fists
    and pounds the transparent air
    as if her fists will give her strength enough
    to break the frustration binding
    her to an indifferent world.

    Where no one exalts
    the intelligence she came with
    nor the energy to make new and
    make a difference in this world.

    How else to register
    her complaints except to disturb
    the nights where her caregivers race
    to lay down their heads?

    How to make them note
    that this new human is
    one of anxiety pressed beyond belief?
    And intending that her presence
    will be taken seriously?

    We hail the newborn and
    wish them well.
    The journey is arduous and long.
    The bulrushes must be chopped and
    a new road must be hewn.

    It is a work
    not for the fainthearted.
    But a one to be done

    if school is to keep.

    Photo by Jody Simons

    December 30, 2015
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • To Use These Hands. . . .

    DSC_2915

    To Use These Hands. . . .

    As dawn breaks, my fingers of both hands curl about each other and I marvel at their slimness, their ability to elicit the feel of themselves, each digit wrapped around the other.

    And I think that nothing, no other world will ever make me feel such blessedness as my hands’ ability to do so many things over the course of this life.   To kneading bread,   to winding the yarn,  to smoothing the brow of my very sick child and have him tell me later that it helped him sleep. Everything I touch holds a lesson for me.

    The square inch of soil I spooned with young hands yielded secrets kept from generations. The eyes of a child as my hands embrace young shoulders tells me what went into their ancient heritage. And I grasp their hands in mine and convey my love by touch.

    I would use these hands to mold and make and set trends never before thought. I see the beauty of the great god in the blending of these human genes and  see  the   perfect Adam  and perfect Eve emerging  and   see  the virtue in the making and the doing of the homely tasks that will start the holy process once again.

    And I will open my arms and spread my hands  to grasp the youngest by my hip and be grateful for hands that show  how very much I  love on this planet called Earth.

    art by Claudia Hallissey

    December 27, 2015
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • Love Embraces All Worlds. . (without exception)

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    20151219_105151

    (this is my Christmas card for this year 2015 to my readers and loyal supporters in time and thought to my efforts in my blog.  May you have a meaningful holy day or holiday whatever your persuasion.  There is no misunderstanding when heart speaks  to the each heart.)

    December 24, 2015
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
  • To Embrace The Essence. . . .

    20150307_155340

     

     

    To Embrace The Essence

    He was a young man when he went up to the top of the mountain and a very old man when he came down.  What he saw we will always wonder but how close was he when he embraced the essence of God.

    It was no mean feat we thought he did when he no longer deigned to fight the Romans as he had  promised.  But now all he said was give to Caesar what was his and to God what belonged to Him.

    The essence  is not real one thinks, except as one embraces and is embraced.  It smacks too much of voodoo unless one tastes of the elixirs of worlds not even born and feasts on food nowhere yet on this world.

    To Be embraces as awe in primary form.  It is walking naked into the womb of the birth mother only to be embraced by love nowhere else a fact like this.  Awesome, awesome, I know I speak, awesome.  The heart stops and breathing is not necessary.

    The mundane seems a wasted time and my friend Judas will think all is lost since his friend deserted a cause to liberate minds held captive.  But note the harness now on the life of our friend and we who know the Essence of the Greatness that swells the bosom.

    How else love, how else to keep on living when desire to pray becomes the prime reason of breathing?  And all worlds become the altar for kneeling?  How you made the flight up the mountain to stand at the precipice of the world is of no import.

    But where you stand now is because you embrace with awe the expansion of a heart yielding to the embrace of inspiring and inspired love that you find you embrace in turn.  To walk into the womb of your birth mother evoked from memory for countless lifetimes and know ultimate love, the creation of the soul of you.

    It is no small thing to stand so and be revealed.  It is sufficient reason to lay one’s life down.  Instead one moves to work more lifetimes; the great love that spurred the mushroom to live in dampness forever and bring delight to the palate, the rabbit to multiply,  the daffodil to bring light after the dregs of winter now gives breath to lift man’s tortured soul and give reason for being.

    No matter the insignificant account given the primary being, the ultimate in service will not be curtailed.  The need to discover reasons to maintain will be reason for breathing.  Enough to be embraced by a perfect love.  In itself it silences all need for the search in all life, no matter the dimension.

    December 22, 2015
    Veronica Hallissey
    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 World Needs Christmas. . . . . .

    20151219_133243(1)

     

     

    Let us hold the candle. . . . . .

     

     

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    December 19, 2015
    Veronica Hallissey
    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.
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