
When I thought about what to blog about after today’s class, I looked back at the poetry and the discussion that took place in class and I realize that there is so much pain going on in our world today. In Professor Corrigan’s piece that he wrote he states, “…Where is God when the world is falling to pieces”. Though this is an important question for all of us to sit on, the more important question that I have to ask myself is, how am I going to change the fact that the world is falling to pieces? The fact that children are dying in other countries of starvation and disease breaks my heart. But what are WE DOING TO CHANGE THIS?
4 years ago my family embarked on a journey that changed our lives forever, the adoption of my baby sister from China. After many years of waiting, Sasha was finally brought home and I finally got to take this precious gem that I carried in my heart for almost 3 years into my arms and love her. Last Thanksgiving, our second Thanksgiving celebration with our precious Sasha, I wrote this poem about her:
I always wanted a sister
To play with and have fun
I never knew in 18 years
My dream would finally come
I knew that she would look like me
Blonde hair and blue eyes too
But the little one God sent to us
Was not what I thought I knew
This little ones eyes were not like mine
They weren't big, blue and round
But small, dark, and almond shaped
Are the little eyes I found
This little one that is my sister
She came from afar
She didn't come unhurt and clean
But rather with many scars
I did not wait only 9 short months
And shed just a few tears.
For I cried many days and nights
And waited almost 3 long years.
But once that baby was in my arms
I knew she was finally safe
She not only got a warm place to sleep
But more than that, a family we gave.
So as I sit here and think
Holding this angel of mine
I realize that 4 years ago
This was just a small dream, in the back of my mind.
And I realize more each and every day
These dreams are meant to be
Lived out in our everyday lives
For us and others to see
So the next time you lose a dream
And shove it to the back of your mind
Dig for that dream, look for it again
For it is something you must find
Maybe these dreams are not to be left
Forgotten, and set aside
Perhaps God gave us these dreams
As a very special guide
For my dream may have seemed small
Or impossible to meet
But because this little dream in my heart
Our family is finally complete.
-Mikelle Liette
November 29, 2008
You see, it is easy to get overwhelmed with all of the darkness in our world. We have the desire to make a difference, but often, because the darkness seems so impossible to fix, we merely sit back, and watch destruction happen before our very eyes, just like Allen Ginsberg demonstrated in his poem “Howl”.
So my question to you, is what does your heart break for, and what how are YOU going to begin to heal that pain in someone else’s life?
I completely agree with your article. Sometimes I think all the "bad" in the world gets confusing and very overwhelming. Trying to decide how to help, or where it even starts so we can prevent it. It seems as though even if we did make a difference it would only be a small one. But I think that is where people get the wrong impression, because if we don't help or even try, who will? No one. And I for one want to be known for not giving up the fight for my world ever.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing these pictures and your poem!
ReplyDeleteYou asked about the suffering of the world: "what are WE DOING TO CHANGE THIS?" That's an important question. We do need to work to change things.
However, in the end, we cannot fix everything--or even most of everything. In the end we are still left with the undeniable fact of darkness, with which we must sit as a question.
There is a short article that might be useful for you as you called "Spiritual Growth and the Option for the Poor." I don't agree with everything in it, but I think that it has some useful points. If you're interested, you could Google that title and find it.