Tag: religion

  • April 2025 Poetry Madness April 13 to April 18 Poems

    April 2025 Poetry Madness April 13 to April 18 Poems

    April 2025 Poetry Madness April 13 to April 18 Poems

    audio clip

    You can find my prior April Poems here:

    April Poetry Madness 2024 April 26 to April 30, 2024 Poems
    April Poetry Madness April 21 to APril 25 Poems
    April 2024 Poetry Madness April 15 to 20 Poems
    April Poetry Madness 2024 April 7 to April 14
    April 1 to April 6 Poems 2024 Poetry Madness

    PSH April 2023 Poems
    April 20-30 2023 Poems Do Drop In
    April 2023 Poetry Dew Drop In April 11-15
    Writers Digest April 2023 Poems

    April 2023 Dew Drop In Poems
    April 30th, 2022 Poems
    April 29th Poems
    April 26th and April 27th, 2022 Poems
    April 23rd, April 24th and April 25th, 2022 Poems
    April 22, 2022 Poems
    April 23rd, April 24th and April 25th, 2022 Poems

    April 22, 2022 Poems
    April 18 to April 20, 2022 Poems</a >

    April 18 to April 20, 2022 Poems
    April 16 and 17, 2022 Poems

    Enjoy and stay safe, everyone

    Begin Poems 

    April 13 to April 12 poems

     

    April 13  Day Thirteen

      

    NaPoWrMo

     

    World in turmoil

     

    World in turmoil

    Stock market crashing.

    Tariff war heats up.

    World markets crashing.

    This will not end well.

    Recession coming, not end well.

     

    DOGE rampage.

    Slashing government spending.

    Unemployment rising .

    Slashing government spending.

    Govbots fired

    Govbots fired.

     

    Happy Sunday, all – I hope you have an enjoyable thirteenth day of Na/GloPoWriMo.

    Our featured participant today is Chronicles of Miss Miseria, where the response to Day Twelve’s symphonic, Stevens-inspired prompt fires on all cylinders.

    Our daily resource is the online collection of the Museu de Arte de São Paulo, founded in 1947 by Brazilian businessman Assis Chateaubriand. Here, you’ll find everything from old masters to mysterious photographs.

    Finally, here’s our prompt for the day (optional, as always). Donald Justice’s poem, “There is a gold light in certain old paintings,” plays with both art and music, and uses an interesting and (as far as I know) self-invented form. His six-line stanzas use lines of twelve syllables, and while they don’t use rhyme, they repeat end words. Specifically, the second and fourth line of each stanza repeat an end-word or syllable; he fifth and sixth lines also repeat their end-word or syllable. Today, we challenge you to write a poem that uses Justice’s invented form.

     

    Donald Justice’s poem, “There is a gold light in certain old paintings,”

    “There is a gold light in certain old paintings”

    By Donald Justice

    1

     

    There is a gold light in certain old paintings

    That represents a diffusion of sunlight.

    It is like happiness, when we are happy.

    It comes from everywhere and from nowhere at once, this light,

    And the poor soldiers sprawled at the foot of the cross

    Share in its charity equally with the cross.

     

    2

     

    Orpheus hesitated beside the black river.

    With so much to look  forward to he looked back.

    We think he sang then, but the song is lost.

    At  least he had seen once more the  beloved back.

    I say the song went this way: O prolong

    Now the sorrow if that is all there is to prolong.

     

    3

     

    The world is very dusty, uncle. Let us work.

    One day the sickness shall pass from the earth for good.

    The orchard will bloom; someone will play the guitar.

    Our work will be seen as strong and clean and good.

    And all that we suffered through having existed

    Shall be forgotten as though it had never existed.

    “govbot” is a perjorative term for government workers popular on the right, dating back to the Clinton era.

    Writer’s Digest Prompt

    Full Moon Madness

     

    Sam Adams

    Was drinking

    In his favorite watering hole

    The Cosmos Bar

    In Soi Cowboy, Bangkok.

     

    Twenty drinks too sober

    He contemplated life.

     

    It was the evening

    Of the pink full moon

    The lunatic light

    Of the moon.

     

    Shown on the street

    Outside the bar

     

    Sam was soon transformed

    Into a demented werewolf

    Ran outside

     

    Howling like an escaped banshee

    At the lunatic light of the full moon

    Shining down on his lost soul.

     

    The Cosmos Bar is a fictional expat bar located in Soi Cowboy, Bangkok.  Soi Cowboy dates back to the Vietnam war era when it was a popular drinking district or expats in Bangkok. Sam Adams is a fictional character that pops up in many of my stories and poems, a distant descendant of the famous Sam Adams, and beer brewer, from the revolutionary war period of US history.

    For today’s prompt, take the phrase “Full (blank),” replace the blank with a word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem. Possible titles might include: “Full Moon,” “Full Throttle,” “Full Tank of Gas,” “Full Monty,” and/or “Full Tank of Gas.”

    Here’s my attempt at a Full (blank) Poem:

    “Full Throated,” by Robert Lee Brewer

    I sound my long barbaric yawp
    from every available hilltop
    on my way to the barbershop
    fearing I may never stop
    while sucking on a lollipop
    as the neighbors channel-hop
    and the horses clippity clop
    beside another bumblecop
    which could be a malaprop
    for the use of bumpercrop
    as I find I flip and flop
    like a price at a car swap
    or the head of a wet mop
    stuck inside a karate chop
    falling like a sad raindrop
    into a pond–a frog–kerplop!

    Bonus Full Moon Poem

    Pink Moon Lunar Madness Overcomes Old Man

     

    Pink Moon

    The lunatic light of the pink full moon
    Shinned on a lonely man in the Cosmos Bar
    Who was a lost film star
    Drinking from afar
    The lunatic light of the pink full moon.

    The man was a star
    The light in the bar was bizarre
    They sat there playing the guitar
    The lunatic light of the full moon.

    He thought to himself so far
    Went outside, saw a squad car
    Howling at the moon, looking at a sports car.
    The lunatic light of the pink full moon.

    Poetry Form: DANSA

    Here are the guidelines for writing the dansa:

    Opening quintain (or 5-line stanza) followed by quatrains (or 4-line stanzas)
    The opening line of the first stanza is the final line of every stanza, including the first
    Rhyme scheme in the opening stanza: AbbaA (capital A represents the refrain)
    Rhyme scheme in all other stanzas: bbaA
    No other rules for subject, length, or meter.

    One additional PPC rule for this one: a minimum of 13 lines (3 stanzas per the above rules)

    Poetry Superhighway Prompt

     

    Driving, Walking or Travel Poem

    Walking Along the Fake Venice Canal

    Gimpo Grand Canal
    Gimpo Grand Canal

    I take a walk

    Every day

     

    Along the fake Venice canal

    Near my home

    In Gimpo, Korea.

     

    It is lined with restaurants

    And shops.

     

    And this time of year

    Flowering trees.

     

    There are boats

    For rent as well.

     

    Someday I am going

    To Venice

    As part of a Mediterranean cruise.

     

    And I will walk

    Along a real Venice canal

    And have dinner.

     

    And think about

    The fake canal

    And the real canal.

    Drive (or walk) down a familiar street or block. Pay attention to everything: the condition of the street, the signs, people, cars or other vehicles, and the trees, flowers and grass or lack thereof. Where are you walking? Maybe on a sidewalk or in the grass? Where are you driving? Maybe on a paved road or maybe a dirt or gravel road? Write a poem about traveling down this street.

    Next, do the very same thing but this time go down an unfamiliar street or block. What do you see that’s different? What do you see that’s the same? How does it make you feel to be in an unfamiliar setting vs a familiar one? Write a poem about going down this street you’ve never traveled on before.

    Then take both poems and intersperse the lines from the poem of a street of familiarity to the poem of the street of unfamiliarity to create an overall picture in a poem of traveling the known vs the unknown

    If you write a poem from this prompt, post it as a comment underneath the prompt in the Poetry Super Highway Facebook Group.

    Dew Drop Inn

    April 13—Greenery

     

    Green Trees Don’t Make It

     

    70 lines


    Everyday
    I look out and see

    The ugly green trees
    Standing guard
    in front of my house.

    And I think to myself
    Who owns the trees?
    And what do they think of us?

    Are we their friends?
    Are we their enemies?
    What do the trees think of us?

    Do they silently watch us,
    Spies to the celestial emperor?

    I have pondered this question
    Many a morning,

    Who is the owner of these trees?
    And why do they silently watch us?

    I wonder if the trees don’t hate us
    And why they don’t protest.

    Every day as we drive back and forth
    Emitting poison gases from our mechanical asses
    Right into their unprotected faces.

    And every night we eat our dinner
    And then give the trees
    Our polluted leftovers

    And laugh as they silently die
    From our acidic fallout
    Constantly floating down on their skin.

    Yes, I wonder about the trees
    And the birds and the bees
    And everyone else.

    What are they thinking?
    Are they plotting revenge?
    Or are they merely there

    Silently, watching, plotting,
    Designing fiendish plots of revenge
    Dreams of vast nuclear destruction.

    Cosmic diseases wiping out everyone in the ass
    Oh Yes, I wonder and dream and ponder
    What is the meaning of those silent green trees?

    Standing on the corner
    Quietly condemning us
    With their quiet tears, and falling leaves.

    In the winter they stand
    Naked and alone
    Covered with ice-cold snow
    As we drive by nice and warm.

    And we don’t care
    As they stand out in the cold
    Shivering, plotting
    warm plans of cosmic revenge.

    Is it too late for us
    To become friends

    with the trees?

    Or will the day come
    When the trees will wake up
    And gather together
    All the other slaves of humanity.

    I have a vision
    One morning I will open the door
    And see an army of wild things
    Coming to arrest me
    For crimes against nature.

    And I will plead, I did not know
    And they will laugh
    and turn me all of my kind
    Into silent tombs,

    And we will stand out in the cold
    Like the green trees
    Plotting dreams of revenge
    For ever and ever.

    Until our day finally comes
    And we can go out
    and kill all the wild things
    Perhaps we already have.

    revised poem I wrote on Earth Day 1976!

    Day Fourteen

    NaPoWriMo

    Florida Criters that can kill you

    Florida is a state

    Of mind

    With many creatures

    Big and small

    That can kill you.

     

    Starting with bears

    gators

    Giant snakes

    And cougars.

     

    Not to mention

    Mosquitos

    That carry malaria

    Dengue and zenke fever.

     

    And other monsters

    Lurking in the swamps

    Of Florida.

     

    Today we are two full weeks into National/Global Poetry Writing Month. Hopefully you’ll all have fourteen poems under your belts by the end of the day and, if not – no worries! You can always catch up (or just cut yourself some slack).

    Today’s featured participant is Glenn Mitchell, who really hit it out of the park with his take on Day Thirteen’s Donald Justic-inspired prompt!

     

    Our featured resource for the day is the online gallery of the Rijksmuseum, where you may particularly enjoy their series on 100 masterpieces within the museum’ s collection. And here’s a little anecdote about how browsing an online collection of this kind can lead you to new and startling discoveries. While taking a peek at the museum’s exhibit regarding Meissen porcelain, I came across this slide show about a particular porcelain macaw, which in turn led me down the rabbit hole of learning about saxon elector and Polish king Augustus the Strong, who “died at the honorable age of sixty-two, his kingdom a financial ruin, with nine children from six different women, and a collection of thirty-five thousand seven hundred and ninety-eight pieces of porcelain.” I feel much less sheepish about my comparatively modest trove of knick-knacks and doo-dads after reading that.

    And with that silliness out of the way, today’s (optional) prompt is inspired by a poem that’s an old favorite of mine, by Kay Ryan.

     Crustacean Island

     

    There could be an island paradise
    where crustaceans prevail.
    Click, click, go the lobsters
    with their china mitts and
    articulated tails.
    It would not be sad like whales
    with their immense and patient sieving
    and the sobering modesty
    of their general way of living.
    It would be an island blessed
    with only cold-blooded residents
    and no human angle.
    It would echo with a thousand castanets
    and no flamencos.

    Ryan’s poem invites us to imagine the “music” of a place without people in it. So today, try writing a poem that describes a place, particularly in terms of the animals, plants or other natural phenomena there. Sink into the sound of your location, and use a conversational tone. Incorporate slant rhymes (near or off-rhymes, like “angle” and “flamenco”) into your poem. And for an extra challenge – don’t reference birds or birdsong!

     

    Writer Digest April 14

     

    How to Lose Weight

     

    They say

    Inside every fat man

    Is a thin man

    Trying to break free.

     

    Since, Janaury 2024

    I have lost

    Almost 15 pounds (7 K).

     

    Dropping from a high

    Of 195 pounds (88 K)

    To a low of 170 pounds  (77 K)

    In about a year or so.

     

    How did I lose

    so much weight

    And most importantly

    Not gain it back?

     

    First I came down

    With a mysterious COVID

    Like illness.

     

    And lost 15 pounds

    In one month

    The doctors could

    Not figure it out.

     

    But ruled out bronchitis

    Cancer, pneumonia

    And TB.

     

    Then I started

    Daily workouts

     

    Including

    Walking up 16 flights

    Of stairs six times

    A day

     

    That

    Along with a strict diet

    And no more daily

    Glass of wine

    Or whisky!

     

    And hitting the gym

    Led me to keep

    the weight off

     

    In any event

    I feel great

    And look great.

     

    Not bad

    For a 69- old man

    I say.

    no set form for this one, sort of a loose narative free verse poem

     

    Whew! We’re two weeks in on this month and this challenge already. Go, us!

    For today’s prompt, write a losing poem. Losing often comes with negative connotations, like losing a game or a family pet or socks (seriously, where do they all disappear to?). However, a person could also lose some weight, bad habits, and/or negativity. Of course, it could be argued these are still negatives (positives via double negatives), but I find I’m starting to lose my train of thought, so it’s probably best to get poeming.

    Here’s my attempt at a Losing Poem:

    “What I’ve Gained,” by Robert Lee Brewer

    There’s nothing I’ve gained
    that I won’t eventually lose;
    not that I know how, but I
    can decipher the clues;
    so I don’t care much about
    all the items I can gain
    when I’ll eventually lose
    and then lose them again:
    better I think is to share
    all the ups and the downs
    with every loser who’ll
    happily keep me around,
    because everything I gain
    I will eventually lose,
    so abide if you can
    to skip having the blues.

     

     

     

    PSH April 14, 2025: Poetry Writing Prompt from Eric Nicholson

     

    May the Force be with You

     

    In the Star Wars universe

    The rebels led by Luke Skywalker

    And Princess Lea

    Are behind the curve.

     

    The imperial storm troopers

    Too powerful

    A force.

     

    All seems lost

    To the rebels.

     

    But the rebels

    Still maintain

    Hope.

     

    That with the force

    With them

    They can overcome.

     

    And defeat

    The dark side

    Of the force.

     

    Represented by Darth Vadar

    Luke Skywalker’s father.

     

    This poetry writing prompt submitted by Eric Nicholson:

     

    Use a series of sequences from a well known film and splice with more nature-based lines. Or political!

    The idea is to either parallel each or contrast. The effect could be sereal, philosophical or lyrical.

    free verse form

     

    Dew Drop Inn April 14—Sky

    Living under a Martian sky

     

    Joe Lewis

    Was one of the first

    Martians.

     

    He immigrated to Mars

    In 2045.

     

    Along with thousands

    Of other refugees.

     

    From an Earth

    That was becoming

    Unihabitable.

     

    Everyone was moving

    Into domed cities

    On earth, the moon

    Or Mars.

     

    Live under the Martian sky

    Was difficult

    But the sunsets

    Were out-of-this-world.

     

    free verse poem

    April 15 Day Fifteen

    NaPoWrMo  Are you ready America?

     

    Are you ready America?

    To combat the rise

    Of Christian fascism?

    That seems to be everywhere

    Are you ready to overcome

    Ready to save country?

     

    Today is the halfway point of National/Global Poetry Writing Month! Hooray for poems!

    Our featured participant today is The Cynical Optimist, where the place-sounds poem for Day Fourteen lets each creature in a particular park have its own solo.

     

    Today’s resource is the online gallery of the National Museum of New Zealand. It’s pretty fun to just search for random words in their search bar, and see what kind of objects and art pop up. For example, I searched the word “butter,” and was presented with this photograph of a bracelet made up of butter and cheese exhibition medals, this stamp celebrating the wonders of butter production,  and a teeny saucepan made for a dollhouse.

     

    And now for our (optional) daily prompt. The MC5 was a 1960s rock band. If you’ve heard anything by them–and you likely have–it’s their 1969 song Kick Out the Jams.

     

    Jesse Crawford, otherwise known as Brother J.C. Crawford, was the band’s stage MC and warm-up man. Below are the words with which he opened a concert in Japan in 1969 (you can find the recording on Spotify/Apple Music as part of the Kick Out the James [Live] [Japan Remastered] album, on the track titled Intro/Ramblin’ Rose).

    Brothers and sisters
    I wanna see a sea of hands out there
    Let me see a sea of hands
    I want everybody to kick up some noise
    I wanna hear some revolution out there, brothers
    I wanna hear a little revolution

    [big pause]

    Brothers and sisters
    The time has come for each and everyone of you to decide
    Whether you are gonna be the problem
    Or whether you are gonna be the solution (that’s right)
    You must choose, brothers, you must choose

    It takes five seconds, five seconds of decision
    Five seconds to realize your purpose here on the planet
    It takes five seconds to realize that it’s time to move
    It’s time to get down with it

    Brothers, it’s time to testify and I want to know
    Are you ready to testify?!
    Are you ready?!
    I give you a testimonial
    The MC5

     

    And now here’s a short little poem by Jane Kenyon:

    The Shirt

    The shirt touches his neck
    and smooths over his back.
    It slides down his sides.
    It even goes down below his belt—
    down into his pants.
    Lucky shirt.

     

    And now for your prompt! While Brother J.C.’s warm-up and Kenyon’s poem might seem very different at first, they’re both informed by repetition, simple language, and they express enthusiasm. They have a sermon/prayer-like quality, and then end with a bang.

    Your challenge is to write a six-line poem that has these same qualities.

    All appreciation to Dawn Potter for this prompt!

    six line poem per prompt

     

    Writers Digest   What Fresh Hell is this Nonet Poem

     

    I start my days, drinking hot black coffee

    Watching morning headlines unfold

    Thinking—what fresh hell is this?”

    What’s wrong with these people

    People disappear

    snatched off the street

    being sent

    straight to

    Hell?

     

    Here we go: Halfway through the month and time for another Two-for-Tuesday prompt.

    For the third Two-for-Tuesday prompt:

    • Write a poetic form poem and/or…
    • Write an anti-form poem.

     

    Criteria

    The nonet poetic form is simple. It’s a 9-line poem that has 9 syllables in the first line, 8 syllables in the second line, 7 syllables in the third line, and continues to count down to one syllable in the final (ninth) line.

    I couldn’t find an origin, but I did learn that the word nonet is used for a group of 9 performers or instruments. So I’m assuming this is one of those poetic forms inspired by music.

     

    April 15, 2025: Poetry Writing Prompt from John Dorroh

    Ode to My Piano Savior of My Soul

     

    For the last few years

    I have been playing

    The piano.

     

    Everyday from 5 to 6 Pm

    I sit down at the piano

    And play a piece of music

     

    I have been working through

    The classics

    And have finally gotten

     

    To where I can play

    A Mozart Sonata

    And nail it!

     

    This poetry writing prompt submitted by John Dorroh:

    Look around the room and select an object that speaks to you. If one doesn’t speak to you, pick an object that starts with the letters D, M, C, or P. Write a letter to the object addressing its value to your life. Next, write a letter from the object, expressing its connections, appreciation and/or dissatisfaction with things you have done.

    If you write a poem from this prompt, post it as a comment underneath the prompt in the Poetry Super Highway Facebook Group.

    #napowrimo #poetry

    no particular form -just four sets of tercets

     

    April 15—Death and taxes

     Benjamin Franklin once wrote,

     

    “There are only two things

    certain In life,

    Death and Taxes!

     

    Someday we all

    May become cyborgs

    becoming immortal.

     

    but sadly,

    I think we will never

    Be able to escape

    The tax man!

     

    April 16, 2025

    NaPoWrM0

    Day Sixteen

    On April 16, 2025

    What is Hip? Tower Of Power Wants to Know!!!!

    The Tower of Power

    Erupted out of the East Bay

    In Northern California

     

    In the late 60s

    And have been playing

    Funk music ever since

     

    They were the sound

    Of the East Bay funk movement

    That predated disco

    Hiphop and rap music

    And Go Go music

    In DC as well

     

    The great funk bands

    Always had a hip as hell

    Attitude

     

    Anchored by a great horn section

    With saxophones on top

     

    And a pounding bass beneath

    Killer keyboards

    And guitars as well

     

    And the rhythm section

    Keep it all going

    To the funky beat

     

    All backup to the soulful ballads

    Of the lead singers

     

    The band

    Was multi-cultural

    Way before that was a thing

     

    Asians, Black, Hispanic

    White players

    Straight, gay and trans folks

    As well.

     

    Playing that funky music

    White boy

    Until the day they die!

     

    Yeah

     

    They had two great hits

    “What is hip”

    Asks the question

    That has no real  answer

     

    “What is hip!”

     

    And the other song

    Was their immortal love song

     

    The greatest make out song

    Of all time

    “You’re Still a Young Man”

     

    The first slow dance

    I ever danced to

    Back in the day

     

    I often wondered

    How many babies

     

    Were conceived

    After listening to

    And dancing

    To that song?

    ode poem to my favorite band growing up.  this inspired me to put together the rest of my Tower of Power tribute poems as a bonus set

    Enjoy

     

    Tower of Power Palindrome

    Tower of Power

    Music
    Soul music
    Funky music
    The Tower of Power
    Fill the air
    The Tower of Power
    Funky music
    Soul music
    Music.

    New Prompt: Write a Palindrome. You can read an example here: “Palindrome”

     

    Our Musical Street


    30 lines

    I grew up
    In a very creative time
    a very musical time.

    The 60’s had the best music
    Mot ruled the Bay Area
    As well as Great rock music

    Acid jazz
    Acid Rock
    Fusion Jazz
    The Grateful Dead
    Mamas and the Papas
    Jefferson Airplane
    Jimmy Hendrix
    last high school
    was Berkeley High School
    Santana

    And so many others

    The best funk band
    Of them all

    Tower of Power
    Beloved by all
    High school students.

    For their immortal classic
    Make out song
    “You’re Still a Young Man.”

    Tower of Power rocked
    Every party in town
    On every street.

    Music flowed.
    On every musical street
    In the city.

    That was Berkeley
    In the 60’s and 70’s.

    Please use the following as the Title of your story or poem:

    “Our Musical Street”

    Please select “Music” as one of your genres.

    Tower of Power is an American R&B and funk-based band and horn section, originating in Oakland, California, that has been performing since 19681. The band has had several lead vocalists, the best known being Lenny Williams, who fronted the band between early 1973 and late 1974, the period of their greatest commercial success1. They have had eight songs on the Billboard Hot 100; their highest-charting songs include “You’re Still a Young Man”, “So Very Hard to Go”, “What Is Hip?”, and “Don’t Change Horses (in the Middle of a Stream)”1.

    The band was formed by tenor saxophonist/vocalist Emilio Castillo and baritone saxophonist Stephen “Doc” Kupka in 19681. The band’s soul sound appealed to both minority and counterculture listeners1. The band’s name was changed to Tower of Power after they agreed that their original name, The Mots, would not help them play at Bill Graham’s Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco1.
    Tower of Power has released 31 albums, including 15 studio albums, 5 live albums, and 11 compilations1. Their most recent album, “Step Up”, was released in 20202.

    Here is a list of some of their most popular songs:

    “You’re Still a Young Man”
    “So Very Hard to Go”
    “What Is Hip?”
    “Don’t Change Horses (in the Middle of a Stream)”
    “Soul Vaccination”
    “This Time It’s Real”
    “Time Will Tell”
    “Only So Much Oil in the Ground”

    If you’re interested in listening to their music, you can check out their official website2.


    “Song at Sunrise”

    In 1974
    When I graduated
    From Berkeley High School
    We went out to party
    All night long.

    We listened to our favorite band
    The Tower of Power
    The greatest funk band
    Of them all.

    Then at sunrise
    Everyone went to Tilden Park
    Inspiration point
    A rare sunny dawn

    The music blaring
    On our radios

    The song at Sunrise
    Was “What is hip”

    And ‘You’re Still a Young Man
    the greatest “make out the song”
    of all time.

    No doubt babies
    Were conceived
    That night
    To that song track.

    For those who don’t know the TOP started in the late 60’s and is still going strong almost 5o years later. They are the best funk band ever, and they are the soul of the San Francisco East Bay area (Berkeley, Freemont, Oakland, Richmond, and towns in between). They were multicultural before that was a thing. They have the best horn section of any funk band, great guitar players, keyboard players, drummers, and of course great singers. Their best songs were the iconic “What is Hip”, and “You’re Still a Young Man,” one of the best make-out songs of all time. No doubt many babies were conceived to that song! The first song I ever slowly danced to, and a song I played to seduce my wife when we met.

    Based loosely on the classic Tower of Power Song, “What is hip?”

    What Is Hip Lyrics

    [Verse 1]

    So ya wanna dump out yo’ trick bag
    Ease on in a hip thang
    But you ain’t exactly sure what is hip
    So you started to let your hair grow
    Spent big bucks on your wardrobe
    Somehow, ya know there’s much more to the trip

    [Chorus]
    What is hip?
    Tell me, tell me, if you think you know
    What is hip?
    If you’re hip
    The question, “Will it show?”
    You’re into a hip trip
    Maybe hipper than hip
    What is hip?
    [Verse 2]
    You became a part of a new breed
    Been smoking’ only the best weed
    Hangin’ out with the so-called “Hippie set.”
    Seen in all the right places
    Seen with just the right faces
    You should be satisfied, but it ain’t quite right

    [Chorus]
    What is hip?
    Tell me, tell me, if you think you know
    What is hip?
    If you’re hip
    The question, “Will it show?”
    You’re into a hip trip
    Maybe hipper than hip
    What is hip?

    [Break]
    Come on

    [Refrain]
    Hipness is. What it is
    Hipness is. What it is
    Hipness is. What it is
    Sometimes hipness is, what it ain’t

    You’re Still a Young Man

    Baby, Oo oo, don’t waste your time
    You’re still a young man
    Baby, Oo oo, don’t waste your time

    Down on my knees
    Oh, heart in hand
    I was accused of being too young

     

    But I’m not so young
    I could make you happy
    I’m not a bad man

    You’re too young to love (If you and I could be together)
    You’re too young to love (I’ll never leave you alone baby)
    You’re too young Ooo Ooo (No I won’t sweet lady)
    Don’t waste your time

    The damage is done
    You see that you were wrong
    You wake up wondering just
    How well I’ve done

    Well I’ve done alright
    Yes there are some girls but you know
    I dropped them on sight

    Just for you
    Because I love you

    You’re still a young man
    Baby, Oo oo, don’t waste your time

    (Someday you’ll understand just what it means when a man
    Comes to you with his little heart in his hands
    Just to love you)

    Don’t waste your time

    You better listen to me

    Sayin that I’m loving you yeah hey now baby tryin to tell
    You that it’s you you you you you you you you talkin to you
    Baby, I’ll never never never never I’ll do you
    No wrong no no lady if you would check my stuff out one time haha

    Just to hold you, to squeeze you and all I wanna do is to
    Get next to you and please please please you baby
    See where I’m coming from!

    Written by legendary sax players Emilio Castillo and Stephen Kupka, the song portrays a young man at the wrong end of a breakup. The situation is bleak because his lover pins the break-up on an age difference. In an interview with Songfacts Castillo said:

    It’s based on a true story. I had a girlfriend that was six years older than me. I was 18, she was 24 and that’s actually what happened. She had kind of cut me loose because of the age difference thing and the whole plea in the story is the young guy’s saying, ‘I’m not too young, I’m not wasting my time and I do love you as a man can truly love a woman.’”

    The song would go on to be the band’s first major hit defining their sound with a prominent horn section inspired by Curtis Mayfield:

    “On that album, there’s a song called “A Woman’s Love” that starts with beautiful trumpets high. When we heard that we wanted to write a song with a great trumpet intro like that. – TowerofPower.com

    “Street Party”

    Many years ago
    In the Berkeley and Oakland
    In the East bay, back in the day
    In the fabled 60s, early 70s.

    There were often legendary pop-up
    Flash mob type impromptu street parties
    Where everyone gathered around
    Digging the scene and each other.

    Drinking, smoking weed
    Jiving, flirting, dancing
    Getting down to the sweet sound
    Of Tower of Power and Motown.

    Whites, blacks, Asians, Hispanics
    Men, women, and those in-between
    Gays, straight
    Young, old, middle age

    It did not matter
    Everything was everything
    Everything was cool.
    It was all good.

    It was all cool back in the day
    An interracial gathering
    Of shared humanity,
    Just celebrating life.

    But this was before
    Guns became so common
    Before things got so violent
    And evil s… became the norm

    Back in the day
    It was a peaceful happening
    A true love fest
    Those days are so yesterday.

    Nowadays, people are afraid
    A street party festival
    Will end up guns blazing wild west style
    The festival will end up with many people
    Going to an early grave.

     

    Happy Wednesday, all. We hope you’re having a fine beginning to the second half of April.

    Our featured participant today is A Rhyme a Day, where the MC5/Jane Kenyon-inspired poem for Day Fifteen packs a lot of punch into six short lines.

    Today’s resource is the Museum of Photographic Art, which is part of the San Diego Museum of Art. Through the museum’s online collection, you can explore a number of current and past exhibitions, including a series of portraits by Bern Schwartz (I rather like the one of Ralph Ellison) and a group of very painterly compositions by Lynn G. Fayman.

    And now for our optional prompt! The Kay-Ryan-inspired prompt for Day Fourteen asked you to take inspiration from the sounds of the natural world. Today’s prompt twists that idea around a bit. Start by taking a look at this poem by James Schuyler.

     

     FAURÉ’S SECOND PIANO QUARTET

    On a day like this the rain comes
    down in fat and random drops among
    the ailanthus leaves—“the tree
    of Heaven”—the leaves that on moon-
    lit nights shimmer black and blade-
    shaped at this third-floor window.
    And there are bunches of small green
    knobs, buds, crowded together. The
    rapid music fills in the spaces of
    the leaves. And the piano comes in,
    like an extra heartbeat, dangerous
    and lovely. Slower now, less like
    the leaves, more like the rain which
    almost isn’t rain, more like thawed-
    out hail. All this beauty in the
    mess of this small apartment on
    West Twentieth in Chelsea, New York.
    Slowly the notes pour out, slowly,
    more slowly still, fat rain falls.

    Like Kay Ryan’s poem, this one invites us to imagine music in the context of a place, but more along the lines of a soundtrack laid on top of the location, rather than just natural sounds.  Today, try writing a poem that similarly imposes a particular song on a place. Describe the interaction between the place and the music using references to a plant and, if possible, incorporate a quotation – bonus points for using a piece of everyday, overheard language.

    Happy writing!

    Writer’s Digest April 16 Something Fantastic

     Narnia Beckons Me Haiku Sonnet

     

    Narnia beckons

    it is real, lives in our dreams

    where we can see it.

     

    Old CS Lewis

    wrote a true fairy tale

    ripped from his dream.s.

     

    so visit Narnia

    battle the evil white witch

    and meet Aslan

     

    Narnia waiting

    Go and be their King.

     

    Wow! So many forms for poems yesterday. That was fun! And yay to Gary Crane for being the first to guess the inspiration for the acrostic in my sestina yesterday (click here to hear Chris Bell’s “I Am the Cosmos” on YouTube). Forms are completely optional today.

    For today’s prompt, write a “something fantastic” poem. As with all the prompts, you can come at this from any direction you’d like, but what inspired me to create this prompt are the fantastic works of magical realists and poems like Donald Hall’s “On Reaching the Age of Two Hundred.” So if you feel compelled to do the same, great; however, it is no small accomplishment to write any fantastic poem, even if it’s about finding an extra piece of pie in the refrigerator.

     

    The basic premise of the haiku sonnet is simple: 4 3-liner haiku plus a couplet of either 5 or 7 syllables adds up to 14 lines, the same number of lines found in a sonnet. The only mention of this form that I’ve been able to find is a poet named David Marshall.

     Note:  I am a big fan of the CS Lewis Narnia Stories. Re-read the Lion, the Witch and Wardrobe in Spanish and have a Korean langauge version to read one of these days on my Kindle Wish list.

      

    April 16, 2025: Poetry Writing Prompt from Mike Dailey

    A Thug Cinquain Poem

    A thug

    International

    Started in Colombia

    Murdering those he worked for

    Really

     

    This poetry writing prompt submitted by Mike Dailey:

    Pick up the book nearest to you. Turn to page 77, 3rd paragraph and use one of those sentences as your opening or closing line.

    If you write a poem from this prompt, post it as a comment underneath the prompt in the Poetry Super Highway Facebook Group.

    Cinquain. Popular five-liner.

    So I’m happy to share the cinquain, which is a nifty five-line poetic form from Adelaide Crapsey. Inspired by tanka, the cinquain is comprised of 2 syllables in the first line, 4 in the second line, 6 in the third, 8 in the fourth, and 2 in the fifth. Plus, poets have the freedom to add or subtract one syllable from each line.

    “an international thug who got his start in Colombia”

    Source: Janet Evanovich and Lee Goldberg The Job Page 77 3rd paragraph

    Dew Drop Inn April 16—Friends

    Zoom Buddies

     

    We have been having

    A weekly zoom gab fest

    For a number of years now

     

    Everyone is someone

    I have know for more

    That 50 years

     

    Re-united through zoom

    Our weekly chats

    Keep me sane

    Alive and fills

    Me with joy

     

     

    Best Friend for 65 years    

     

    I have known Robert S.

    Since the first grade

     

    over 60 years

    Sharing life’s journeys

     

    Introduced me.

    To demon rum

    and weed.

     

    Was there when.

    I dreamt of my wife

    .

    and there during

    my 14 operations

    and will be

    until the end.

     

    My Memory Bank

     

    Matt and I met

    in Latin class

    in the 9th grade.

     

    He managed.

    In my first election,

    as BHS president.

     

    He knows most of my secrets.

    and reminds me of my past misdeeds,

    Keeping me humble and alive.

     

    Robert C

     

     

    Robert C

    And I have been friends

    Since high school days

     

    Lost touch for a while

    Glad to reconnect

    We still find each other

    Amusing as hell

     

    Mark K

     

    Another high school classmate

    Lost touch for a while

    Reconnecting feels great

     

    He is a tech guy

    And I have learned

    A lot from him

     

    Wish I was in touch

    with him

    When I was doing

    a tech support jog

    at the State Department

     

    We share the same birthday

    But I am one year older

    That does not matter

    In the grand scheme

    Of things

     

    Tony R

     

    Another high school friend

    Went separate ways

    Reconnecting on zoom

     

    I find his wry sense

    Of humor

    Refreshing

     

    Keeps me humble

    And down to earth

     

    Day Seventeen

    NaPoWrMo Prompt

    The Aliens Reveal their Secret Plans

    Sam Adams retired in Berkeley
    And opened a UFO theme bar near campus.

    Where he put up a sign on the door
    Space aliens drink for free provided they can prove it.

    Because every night some joker tried
    They would walk in, demanding a free drink or two.

    One night his former bosses walked in
    Maria Lee and mysterious Smith

    Shadow warriors hush hush past
    They lived in the shadow world, they were ghosts, spooks, spies.

    They had retired from the government
    To open the Cosmos Institute X-files.

    Both of them had a pan-ethnic look
    Both could pass for almost any ethnic group or race.

    Maria Lee was vaguely Asian
    Smith looked like he was an Eastern European man.

    Both had a vaguely non-human look
    And both spoke with a strange unusual accent.

    Smith was only known by last name
    No one knew his real name or his past history.

    They refused to talk about their past life
    Saying it was all classified top-secret need-to-know stuff.

    But someday perhaps Sam would need to know it
    Sam also worked with them before in their prior life

    They said they were there for the free drink
    And it was time for Sam to know the truth about them and the world

    Sam told them well you have to prove it
    That you are in fact space aliens can you show me that

    Maria morphed into Donald Trump
    And Smith morphed into Elon Musk and then men in black

    Before shifting back to their real selves
    Reptilian creatures from the planet Sirius

    Maria was green color and Smith was red
    And then back to Maria and Mr. Smith again

    Sam smiled and gave them their free drinks
    And they told him everything about their real past lives

    They revealed many secrets that night
    The end of the beginning the beginning of the end

    Backstory

    The fictional Cosmos Institute appears in a lot of my stories and poems. It was founded in Berkeley by Maria Lee and Mr. Smith, who were high-level former intel operatives. The mission of the institute was to investigate paranormal phenomena, usually to debunk the claims. They considered themselves the real X-files. They recruited Sam Adams to join them because they knew he was an expert on UFOs, having worked on the Majestic project and Area 51 – spoiler alert, there were no real aliens! Sam opened the fictional UFO bar with the famous sign “Aliens drink for free,” hoping that someday real aliens would reveal themselves to him. Then one day his former bosses, the mysterious Maria Lee and Mr. Smith, passed his challenge and told him the real deal over their free drinks.

    For the challenge of the prompt, I picked a painting by Carrington, showing space aliens, and a painting by Varo, showing a shapeshifter.

    The belief that there are secret shape-shifting reptilians living among us up to no good is a common theme in science fiction, and 10 percent of Americans believe it to be true. I have written a number of stories and poems about this theme. My aliens are descendants of the colonizers of Atlantis, who destroyed Atlantis and Lemuria in a world war over the question of what to do with humans. The red team wanted to continue to enslave them; the green team wanted to free them and civilize them, eventually granting them full rights. Their descendants continued to fight this battle in the shadow world.

    Criteria

     

    Landay. Poem comprised of self-contained couplets.Landay Poems

    The landay is a variable length form based off a couplet, which means the poem could be as concise as two lines or run on for several pages. The form most likely originated with nomads in the area of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India (read an article on Afghan landays here).

    Here are the basic rules of the landay:

    • Poem comprised of self-contained couplets–as few as one couplet will do
    • 9 syllables in the first line; 13 syllables in the second line
    • Landays tend to reveal harsh truths using wit
    • Themes include love, grief, homeland, war, and separation

     Note: There is not a specific rhyme pattern for this form, though lines tend to end on the sounds of “na” and “ma” in the original Pashto. However, this is difficult to replicate in English. Keep in mind that landays are often sung.

    Welcome back, everyone, for the seventeenth day of Na/GloPoWriMo.

    Today’s featured participant is Words with Ruth, where the soundtrack-inspired poem for Day Sixteen uses repetition, along with simple and conversational language, to convincingly recreate a moment in space and time.

     

    Chopin’s Prelude no 4 in E Minor

    Posted byrubarbcoughApril 16, 2025Posted inPoems

    You had a futon on your floor
    A double futon on your floor
    We lay a lot on that futon on the floor
    Choosing sex over food
    Like you do when you first discover sex
    And you had a piano in your room
    You’d play and look round out me
    Sticking your tongue out a little, through your teeth
    As if to say, “I want you,
    And later, I’ll have you.”
    And you did
    We had a lot of sex on that futon on the floor
    Then we’d go and chill with your mum and her boyfriend
    And sometimes the dog would come in to see us too
    Funny, I can’t remember much of your room
    Other than the futon
    The double futon on the floor
    You taught me Chopin’s prelude in e minor
    It took me months to nearly learn it
    Not like you
    Playing the piano like honey
    Turning round to kiss me
    And still playing
    You showed me how to have sex
    Not that I’d never had sex before
    But I’d never enjoyed it
    You showed me how to enjoy it
    And it was good
    Oh my God, it was good!
    Being with you was so good
    Orgasm after orgasm
    Rolling through me
    Rolling through us
    I didn’t know that was possible
    You said you could see them in me
    They had different colours
    That’s why it was so good with you
    You could see everything
    Too much maybe
    Yeah, maybe that was it
    You saw things that weren’t there
    Like affairs I wasn’t having
    With friends, colleagues, anyone really
    And then it would go on and on and on
    Me pleading with you
    You calling me a liar
    Hitting our heads against a brick wall
    On and on
    Until I couldn’t do it anymore
    And then it got a bit scary really
    But we don’t need to go into that
    It’s ok
    It was ok.
    A therapist once said to me,
    ‘It’s not possible to have good sex
    In a bad relationship’
    But she’s wrong

    Our resource today is Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum, where you can find a smug ceramic pelican, a samurai’s ceremonial suit of armor, and a photograph of the French impressionist painter Camille Pissarro dressed as a Venezuelan herdsman.

    And now for our daily optional prompt. The surrealist painters Remedios Varo and Leonora Carrington moved to Mexico during the height of World War II, where they began a life-long friendship. Today, we’d like to challenge you to write a poem themed around friendship, with imagery or other ideas taken from a painting by Carrington, and a painting by Varo.

     

    Robert Brewer The Cities Light Up Beneath Our Plane Landlay

    the cities light up beneath our plane
    on the left as the sun retreats from us on the right

    the moon appears in rivers below
    & then disappears like our fragile first encounters

    we both flinched at our first touch but then
    crashed back together as if that’s what held us aloft

    i’m not sure why some cities still burn
    while others dissolve quietly into the darkness

    Writer’s Digest – Seoul New Queen City of Asia

    Seoul New Queen City of Asia

    Now one of the hip go to places

    Top tourist spot in all of Eurasia

    Seoul New Queen City of Asia

    A place for any occasion

    A city with many faces

    Seoul New Queen City of Asia

    Now one of the hip go to places

     

     

     

    Here’s a diagram of the triolet:

     

    A (first line)
    B (second line)
    a (rhymes with first line)
    A (repeat first line)
    a (rhymes with first line)
    b (rhymes with second line)
    A (repeat first line)
    B (repeat second line)

    For today’s prompt, write a city poem. The poem can take place in a big city, medium-sized city, smaller city. Heck, towns, villages, hamlets, etc., all work as well. Ghost towns? Why not! I’m not going to break out a census on your poeming. Just write!

     

    Poetry Superhighway  April 17, 2025: Poetry Writing Prompt from Robert Wynne

     

    The Door Opens

     

    In Tilden Park high in the Berkeley Hills

    a Door

    ancient redwood with a sign above it

    opens

    The sign reads for Madmen Ony

    East Bay

    Sam Adams wondered where it went

    portal

    only one way to find out

    Jumped through

    This poetry writing prompt submitted by Robert Wynne:

     

    Describe a specific door, real or imaginary. Be detailed enough that the reader will have an inclination why you chose this door, but don’t say why directly. Let them find their way.

    Waltmarie. Candace Kubinec invention

    • 10 lines
    • Even lines are two syllables in length, odd lines are longer (but no specific syllable count)
    • Even lines make their own mini-poem if read separately

    Poetic Form Fridays are made to share various poetic forms. This week, we look at the Waltmarie poetic form invented by Candace Kubinec, along with two of her examples.

    This week, a Poetic Asides member shared a poetic form she created. While I don’t usually share nonce forms, I’ve tried this one myself, and I think it’s a lot of fun. So without further ado, I’m introducing Candace Kubinec’s form, the Waltmarie (which is itself a nod to PA members and Poetic Bloomings hosts, Marie Elena Good and Walter J. Wojtanik).

    Here are the guidelines for writing the Waltmarie:

    • 10 lines
    • Even lines are two syllables in length, odd lines are longer (but no specific syllable count)
    • Even lines make their own mini-poem if read separately

    No other rules for subject or rhymes.

     

    Here are two examples of the Waltmarie by Candace Kubinec:

    Building a Snowman, by Candace Kubinec

     

    They waited for the world to turn white –
    frozen
    Rolled balls of snow, bigger and bigger –
    child-size
    Broken twigs from the apple tree for arms, two hands –
    mittens
    He stood, smiling his pebble smile, until the warm sun appeared –
    dripping
    Then slowly disappeared, until only a memory remained –
    stories

    *****

     

    On the Bench at Night, by Candace Kubinec

     

    I sit as still as a human can –
    patient
    The sun has set and dusk has settled –
    quiet
    I try to match my breath to the gentle breeze –
    calmly
    Small creatures emerge from daylight hiding places –
    searching
    And my heart sends out a quiet message –
    for you

    .

    April 17—Teeth

     

    Dental Torture Blues

     

    Sitting in the dental chair

    Undergoing dental surgery

    While the dentist probes

    And tortures me

    With his instruments of pain

     

    The Frank Zappa song

    plays over and over in my head

    “The torture never stops

    The torture never stops”

     

    And I think of the mad dentist

    In Little House of Horrors

    The Jack Nicolson character

    Who screams Pain is good

     

    As he assaults his patients

    Doing root canals

    Without anesthesia

     

    And so I endure the torture

    Of the dentist

    In the vain hope

    I can save my teeth

     

    Until the next time

    I undergo dental torture

    The song faces away

    And I slowly recover

     

    Then as I leave

    I am confronted with the bill

    And the song roars back to life

     

    “The torture never stops

    the torture never stops”

     

     

    Day Eighteen

    NaPoWrMo April 18 Prompt

    Driving while Listening to  Tower of Power’s “What is Hip?”

     

    One day, while I was driving in Oakland

    I listened to the Tower of Power

    Funk Band

     

    The radio, playing the song “What is hip?”

    I sang along with the refrain, “What is hip?”

    Funk Band

     

    That night at a party in Berkeley

    Slow danced to “You’re Still a Young Man”

    Funk band

     

    Note: third Ode to my favorite band East Bay’s Own Tower of Power

    We’re three Fridays down, with just one left to go in this year’s National/Global Poetry Writing Month!

    Our featured participant for the day is Poems by Sidra, where the surrealist-inspired poem of friendship for Day Seventeen rocks some fantastic similes — it’s all about those teeth!

     

    And Then— And Then—

    And then we will sit at a table with floating fruit
    and share inside jokes so layered
    in innuendo and self-reference
    that they grow their own teeth.

    Yes, and then I will paint, and you can draw,
                   and we will feed our work the secret blood
    of our hearts and we will tell each other,
            “Make it weirder. Make it stranger.”

    And then I will become a ghost
    and you will become an owl
    and we will fly together in the dark night.

    Yes, and then I’ll be a lady of fire
                   and you can be a lady of stone,
    and we can frighten away the men who try to talk to us.

    Yes, exactly, and then together we will be
    animal-people on the prowl, red
    and dangerous and beautiful, never growing
    old, never growing tired.

    And we will protect each other?

    Yes, we will protect each other.

    Note: This poem is inspired by the works and friendship of Surrealist artists Leonora Carrington and Remedios Varo.

    Today’s resource is a virtual visit to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Gardner, who died in 1924, was a devoted and very wealthy art collector who built a Venetian-style palace (in Boston) to house her treasures. The museum building is beautiful and well known for its gorgeous courtyard. But the Gardner is also well known for having been the unfortunate site of one of the greatest – and still unsolved – art heists of all time. If you can figure out whodunnit, there might be $10 million in it for you.

    And now for today’s (optional) prompt. Like our villanelle prompt from a week ago, this prompt plays around with song lyrics, but in a very specific context – singing while riding in a car. Take a look at Ellen Bass’s poem, “You’re the Top.” Now, craft your own poem that recounts an experience of driving/riding and singing, incorporating a song lyric

    Ellen Bass

    Last night I get all the way to Ocean Street Extension, squinting through the windshield, wipers smearing the rain, lights of the oncoming cars half-blinding me. The baby’s in her seat in the back singing the first three words of You’re the Top. Not softly and sweetly the way she did when she woke in her crib, but belting it out like Ethel Merman. I don’t drive much at night anymore. And then the rain and the bad wipers. But I tell myself it’s too soon to give it up. Though the dark seems darker than I ever remember. And as I make the turn and head uphill, I can’t find the lines on the road. I start to panic. No! Yes—the lights! I flick them on and the world resolves. My god, I could have killed her. And I’ll think about that more later. But right now new galaxies are being birthed in my chest. There are no gods, but not everyone is cursed every moment. There are minutes, hours, sometimes even whole days when the earth is spinning 1.6 million miles around the sun and nothing tragic happens to you. I do not have to enter the land of everlasting sorrow. Every mistake I’ve made, every terrible decision—how I married the wrong man, hurt my child, didn’t go to Florence when she was dying—I take it all because the baby is commanding, “Sing, Nana.” And I sing, You’re the top. You’re the Coliseum, and the baby comes in right on cue.

    The Dixdeux appears to be one of many forms developed as an alternative to the Japanese Haiku. In this case, there are three lines with syllable counts of 10, 10, 2. When written in multiple stanzas, the third line becomes a refrain, as described and demonstrated in the following links:

    https://popularpoetryforms.blogspot.com/2013/11/dixdeux.html

     

    Writer’s Digest April 18 Gogyohka. 5-liner developed by Enta Kusakabe.

     

    Deportation Blues Gogyohka

     

    Every day, there is sad news about deportations

    People legally here are told to leave in seven days

    People deported to El Salvador based on having a tattoo

    Foreign students snatched off the streets

    Foreigners are afraid to visit the US – this will not end well.

     

    For today’s prompt, write a response poem. In many ways, every poem is a response poem as it’s a response to something, even if it’s that hard-to-explain sense of inspiration many poets feel. For the purposes of this prompt, your poem could respond to a story in the news (or just a fictional story, for that matter), a conversation you overheard in public (also called eavesdropping), or another poem (written by you or another poet).

    If only a poetic form existed that could be both concise and free. Oh wait a second, there’s gogyohka!

    Gogyohka was a form developed by Enta Kusakabe in Japan and translates literally to “five-line poem.” An off-shoot of the tanka form, the gogyohka has very simple rules: The poem is comprised of five lines with one phrase per line. That’s it.

    *****

     

    So it’s a little loose, which is kind of the theory behind gogyohka. It’s meant to be concise (five lines) but free (variable line length with each phrase). No special seasonal or cutting words. No subject matter constraints. Just five lines of poetic phrases.

    Robert Brewer “Halloween”

     

    Ghosts hang
    from the willow
    as the children run
    from one door
    to the next.

    PSH Prompt  April 18, 2025: Poetry Writing Prompt from Robert Lail

    When Lightning Strikes Ghosts Zappai

     

    When lightning strikes

    Ghosts, being dead, do not die

    Immortal spirits?

    This poetry writing prompt submitted by Robert Lail:

    Write a poem that answers the age-old question: What happens when a ghost is struck by lightning?

    If you write a poem from this prompt, post it as a comment underneath the prompt in the Poetry Super Highway Facebook Group.

    Zappai poems are like haiku, but not. Or maybe more appropriately, they’re like senryu, but not (or maybe they are). This poetic form definition may sound kind of wishy-washy, but zappai are poems that have a 5-7-5 syllable pattern that do not contain the seasonal reference expected of haiku.

    In other words, zappai are all those haiku people write that haiku poets recognize as not being haiku. Again, senryu could fit this definition as well, but senryu also can have a looseness with the syllables, much like haiku, so that 17 syllables are not mandatory.

    Zappai should still be poetic, but they’re 5-7-5 poems that don’t include the seasonal reference. Final answer. I think.

    April 18—Good Friday

     

    Trigger warning:   this could be considered offensive to some people.  That was not my attempt, and I apologize to anyone who does take offense. The point of the poem is to express why I am not a Christian, although there are elements of Christianity that I admire, I reject all the supernatural rigamarole associated with the faith, and I reject the idea that the Bible is the work of God.  Everyone is entitled to their opinion, this is mine.  It is important that we all remain open to dialogue with others of different faith traditions. Freedom of religion means that people are free to believe or not believe in religions as they see fit.

     

    Why I am Not A Christian

     

    On Easter Sunday, I often think about Christianity

    I don’t understand why anymore

    would believe such nonsense

     

    The essential story makes no sense

    An imaginary all-powerful deity

    that no one has ever seen or heard

     

    Except for psychotic patients

    Or drug users

    Comes down to earth

    and impregnates a married woman

     

    Who has never had sex for some reason

    And her husband is okay with that

    Believes her wild story

     

    And still does not have sex

    Until after the baby is born

     

    Then there is total silence

    Nothing about Jesus’s childhood

     

    30 years later, he emerges

    Preaching love, peace, and brotherhood

    And denouncing the corrupt temple leaders

    And the Jewish leaders as well

     

    The miracles also don’t make any sense

    In the real world, you can’t turn fish into bread

    Can’t walk on water

    Can raise the dead etc. etc.

     

    Just does not happen

    In the world we live in

    And has not happened

    since those ancient days

     

    Then the last supper

    makes some sense

    Jesus knows he is

    about to be betrayed

     

    But he does not

    confront Judas

     

    Does not run away

    Does not encourage

    his disciplines

    To run away with him

     

    The whole Jesus Mary M story

    Also, does not make sense

     

    Jesus must have been married

    Or he was gay

     

    There is no doubt

    Either way,

    the story makes no sense

     

    The crucifixion

    is the only part of the story I buy

    Jesus was put to death

    because he was a rebel leader

     

    And the Romans

    tolerated no dissent

    To the Roman’s right

    to conquer and rule

     

    The rising from

    the dead stories

    All contradict one another

     

    And Jesus was either walking

    as a normal human being

    Or was a ghost

     

    The door was rent open

    as if by lightening

    Or not

     

    Finally, we have been waiting

    over 2,000 years for his return

     

    You would think

    if the story is remotely true

     

    He would have

    turned up by now

    Except he has

    As many lunatics

    claim to be Jesus

    in the flesh

     

    including sadly

    My college roommate

    Who thought he was Jesus Christ

    returned to earth

     

    After he fried his brain

    on LSD

     

     

    all delusional of course

    and that is what

    I think of Christianity

     

    nothing but fairy tales

    and mass delusions

    surrounding a kernel of truth

     

    Love one again

    Treat each other right

    Don’t be consumed with greed

     

    But couldn’t that message

    Be made simpler

    Without all

    The associated nonsense?

     

    And the Bible

    Needs serious editing

    Way too long

     

    Too many begets

    Pages and pages of them

    Who cares?

     

    Too confusing,

    Too many contradictions

    sexist too

     

    Too violent

    Too unforgiving in spots

     

    And too many

    onerous rules

    That don’t make

    a lot of sense

     

    Who gives a flying f?

    Just saying

     

    So, on this day

    I say

    Open your minds

     

    And discard

    The nonsensical elements

    of Christian thought

     

    And follow the

    True teachings of Jesus

     

    Love one another

    Be kind to strangers

    Don’t be greedy

     

    Commit a random act

    Of kindness every day

     

    Even if you don’t believe

    in the imaginary man in the sky

     

    Commentary from Fan story writers

    Review For Poems for April 18 2025
    Chapter 19 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Jake, this is a fascinating mosaic of poetic entries-each with its own flavour, yet clearly coming from a consistent voice that blends scepticism, social observation, and playfulness.
    The Tower of Power piece is a groovy micro-memoir, succinct and grounded in musical nostalgia. The Seoul entry reads like a tourism jingle with a fun, rhythmic echo-clever in how it loops back on itself to reinforce the point.
    Your zappai is short and sharp, toeing the line between playful and philosophical-“Ghosts, being dead, do not die” is the kind of dry humour I enjoy in these forms.
    Then there’s Why I am Not A Christian, which shifts gears entirely. It’s long, raw, and provocative-structured more like a stream-of-thought monologue than a polished poem.
    It’s unflinching in its critiques, full of personal disbelief, and though it risks alienating some readers, there’s no denying the clarity of conviction. It could use some trimming for focus and flow, but the honesty hits hard.
    A bold, eclectic set.
    Tim


    ~Dovey

    13 hours ago

    Review For Poems for April 18 2025
    Chapter 19 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Hi Jake!

    I am glad to see that you are keeping on track with NaPoWriMo. I hope you are enjoying the poem a day as much as I am.

    Although, my belief is in Christianity, I appreciate your poem stating your stance.

    Kim

    Review For April 17 2025 Poems
    Chapter 18 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Jake, this was a joyride through conspiracy, comedy, and sci-fi noir, all told with a straight face and a wink.
    The Aliens Reveal their Secret Plans has the cadence of a beat poem mashed with pulp fiction and served in a UFO bar run by someone who’s absolutely seen things.
    The repeated use of line breaks and staccato sentences creates a rhythmic, almost spoken-word quality-fitting for a tale that reads like it’s being told over shots of something green and glowing.
    There’s brilliant absurdity here: Maria morphing into Trump, Smith into Musk, the reptilian reveal, and that perfect deadpan closing: “The end of the beginning the beginning of the end.”
    It’s self-aware without becoming cynical. And it’s surprisingly grounded by the image of Sam-a retired man running a theme bar-being the steady anchor in this cosmic unraveling.
    The accompanying pieces-your Narnia haiku sonnet, the redwood portal in The Door Opens, and the grim hilarity of Dental Torture Blues-form a surreal triptych around it.
    They’re all laced with that same blend of the mythic, the mundane, and the slightly unhinged.
    Outlandish, deadpan, and wildly original-Jake, your poems don’t just bend genres, they build bonfires out of them.
    Tim

    Kahlani
    Review For April 17 2025 Poems
    Chapter 18 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I was intrigued by the “Alien” story and was pleased when you clarified things in your notes. The synopsis for your books sounds very intriguing. Are you selling them on Amazon? Thank you for sharing.

    Michael Ludwinder
    Review For APril 16 2025 Poems
    Chapter 17 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Thanks for sharing so many poems at once. It was like flipping through a journal full of good music. I love your deep thoughts and how you shared old pals.

     
     Tim Margetts

     

    Review For APril 16 2025 Poems
    Chapter 17 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Jake, this is a full-on poetic mixtape-part musical history, part memory reel, part experiment station.
    The Tower of Power tribute sets the tone perfectly: pulsing, playful, and unapologetically funky.
    You don’t just describe the music-you celebrate it, and that joy comes through loud and clear. The jump from that into sharply political reflection (What fresh hell is this?) gives the whole set depth and range.
    I really liked the blunt edge of the thug cinquain-minimalist but brutal-and then the emotional turn in the Zoom and memory pieces hit nicely.
    There’s something quietly beautiful about lifelong friendships surviving into the digital age, and you honour them without sentimentality.
    The casual tone masks just how much ground you’re covering here-musical legacy, personal history, poetry forms, political unease-all in one go.
    If I had a 6 left, I’d be tempted, but I’m all out.
    Tim

    Tim Margetts

     

    Review For April 15 2025 Poems
    Chapter 16 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Good

    Jake, this collection of prompt responses has a candid, conversational tone that feels very you-there’s humour, honesty, and a kind of grounded directness that works well across the different pieces. Let’s break them down briefly:
    “Are you ready, America?”
    This one is raw and confrontational in a good way-topical and emotionally charged. It reads like the start of a larger political poem. My one suggestion: push for more specific imagery or language beyond the rhetorical questions. Right now, it’s a solid call, but grounding it in something visceral-an image, a moment, a symbol-would really elevate it.
    “Ode to My Piano Savior of My Soul”
    There’s real warmth and personal pride here. The pacing is steady and reflective, and the ending-“And nail it!”-is joyous and affirming. It’s casual in tone, but that suits the subject. If anything, consider expanding on the emotional impact a bit more. What does the piano save you from?
    “April 15 Death and Taxes”
    Witty and very much in the spirit of the prompt. The shift to cyborg immortality is unexpected and fun, and the punchline about taxes still finding us is classic. You might consider adding a stanza break or two to help the humour land more cleanly, but overall this one’s charming and memorable.
    In all three, your voice comes through clear as day-earnest, clever, and unafraid to mix reflection with lightness.
    A few tweaks for rhythm and depth, and these will sing.
    Tim

    View 1 Reply


    Michael Ludwinder

    3 days ago

    Review For April 15 2025 Poems
    Chapter 16 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really enjoyed your poems today! Your poem “Are you ready, America?”
    made me stop and think. Then your “Ode to My Piano Savior of My Soul” felt warm and personal. I loved the part about nailing that Mozart Sonata, that was awesome! The bit about death and taxes made me smile. Your poems were all different but enjoyable. Keep writing – you’re rocking this challenge!

    View 1 Reply


    Dolly’sPoems

    4 days ago

    Review For April 13, 2025 Poems
    Chapter 14 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Amid this madness, I hope we can see a little light at the end of the tunnel Jake as our ever changing world seems more complex than ever these days. As we age I think we grow out of the challenges and want things to stay the same, but they never do. The world seems to be only for the young at heart, a poignant post, love Dolly x

    View 1 Reply


    Michael Ludwinder

    4 days ago

    Review For April 13, 2025 Poems
    Chapter 14 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really enjoyed how your poem shares the relationship between humans and nature. The way you personify the trees is so well done. It’s clear you’ve put a lot of heart into this poem- great job!

    5 days ago

    Review For April 14 2025 Poems
    Chapter 15 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    These poems are all unique and enjoyable. Your poems all have such a thoughtful style. They really showcase your playful voice and imaginative thinking. Great job.

    View 1 Reply


    Tim Margetts

    5 days ago

    Review For April 14 2025 Poems
    Chapter 15 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Good

    There’s something delightfully unfiltered about your work, Jake.
    Each piece reads like it was written quickly and honestly, without too much polish, but with clear intent and curiosity.
    The Florida poem is the strongest of the three in terms of personality and structure. “Florida is a state / Of mind” is a cracking opening-both literal and figurative-and the escalating list of killers, from “giant snakes” to “mosquitos”, blends humour with fact in a fun, campy way.
    The Star Wars poem is more straightforward and reads like a personal retelling. It could benefit from tighter rhythm and fresher phrasing-“too powerful / a force” and “all seems lost / to the rebels” echo familiar lines without adding new perspective. A deeper emotional or stylistic slant could elevate it.
    The Martian poem has potential, especially the image of “sunsets / out-of-this-world”. The idea of Martian refugees and dome cities is compelling, but the delivery feels more like notes than a shaped poem. With a bit of trimming and stronger line control, it could become a vivid piece of speculative lyricism.
    A spirited, eclectic trio with charm, potential, and a voice that invites the reader to lean in-casual in tone, but laced with curiosity and wit.
    Tim

    View 1 Reply


    Dolly’sPoems

    5 days ago

    Review For 2025 APril 12 Poems
    Chapter 13 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    It sounds like you sometimes feel like a fish out of water and I hope you don’t feel vulnerable over there in Korea. Would you ever consider going back home? A poignant post full of mixed emotions here, love Dolly x

    View 1 Reply


    Dolly’sPoems

    5 days ago

    Review For 2025 APRIL 11 Poems
    Chapter 12 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    You finally got this post fixed Jake! I have never heard of that band before and it sounds like you appreciate your wife here. Supermarkets come up with some crazy ideas to keep dipping into our pockets, love Dolly x

    View 1 Reply


    Michael Ludwinder

    5 days ago

    Review For 2025 APRIL 11 Poems
    Chapter 12 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really enjoyed your writing. The formatting is terrible. Very hard to read. But your “Korean Springtime” was a standout! I also loved how you brought in a sense of hope about the future of the trees. Your creativity is really flowing through these. Keep it up!

    View 1 Reply


    Michael Ludwinder

    6 days ago

    Review For 2025 APril 12 Poems
    Chapter 13 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really enjoyed all your poems! Your poem about the leprechaun was so fun – loved the clever twist. The piece about life’s risks was powerful. Your climate change poem hit hard with its urgency. Each poem was unique and left an impression!

    View 1 Reply


    Dolly’sPoems

    7 days ago

    Review For 2025 April 10 Poem
    Chapter 11 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I’m not quite sure what to make of this post Jake as I read a list of your opinions and was rather confused, life is full of ups and downs it seems, love Dolly x x x


    Michael Ludwinder
    Review For 2025 April 10 Poem
    Chapter 11 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really like how your poem plays with big ideas. The mix of humor and deep thoughts makes this feel unique and interesting. The “God is Dog spelled backwards” line is clever. Your second piece about AI is also interesting. It’s fun and a little unsettling at the same time. Keep writing!

    View 1 Reply


    ~Dovey
    Review For 2025 April 9th Poems
    Chapter 10 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Hi Jake!

    It is fantastic to see you keeping up with the poem a day challenge and working with so many different prompts.

    Keep up the great work!

    Kim

    jacquelyn popp

    8 days ago

    Review For 2025 April 9th Poems
    Chapter 10 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Your poem flows well an is well written. It is an enjoyable bread from start to finish. Each piece captures a unique slice of life, from love at first sight, to baseball devotion, and midweek musings, with warmth and personality. A delightful blend of personal reflection and playful imagery.
    Whether reflecting on love, or the everyday, the poems resonate with genuine emotion and vivid snapshots of life. There’s an easy natural rhythm that makes the collection a pleasure to read from start to finish. Overall, it’s a heartfelt enjoyable experience that lingers after the final line. Well written. Great job with the writing.


    Michael Ludwinder
    Review For APril 2025 Poems
    Chapter 9 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I really enjoyed your poems – each one felt like its own little journey. Your ghazal for Angela Lee was so sweet. I could feel how special she is to you. The Alouette was full of heart. I liked the way you played with the rhyme. Your “Good and Evil” poem had a thoughtful message. And your blood type poem made me smile – that line about being both a fool and a genius was great!thanks for the commentary. can i include them in my blog posting?

    thanks a lot as always -thanks for the commentary. can i include them in my blog posting?​

    Dolly’sPoems
    Review For 2025 APril 7th Poems
    Chapter 8 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    I am the champion of living in the moment Jake, it is the only way to live as the past has gone and we don’t ever know if we have a future, I enjoyed this philosophical post, love Dolly x x x

    Dolly’sPoems
    Review For APril 2025 Poems
    Chapter 9 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness

    I am glad you met the girl of your dreams and you are still happy Jake. We have to accept that good and evil exist but we don’t have to tolerate evil and we should always promote the good, a poignant post, food for thought here, love Dolly x

    ~Dovey

    10 days ago

    Review For 2025 APril 7th Poems
    Chapter 8 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Hi Jake!

    It is lovely to see your selection of poems today. The so ata was my favorite of your pisted pieces.

    Keep writing! That’s what it is all about!! Creating poetry in our rash world today.

    Kim

    Tim Margetts
    Review For 2025 April 6 poems
    Chapter 7 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness

    You’ve put together a lively mix here, Jake.
    Each piece is distinct, but sharing that playful, slightly off-kilter tone that seems to be becoming your trademark.
    The snarling cup of coffee was my personal favourite-something about the wheeze and sneeze as the spices hit just cracked a grin.
    The “Trumpian Trade War” rispetto is a neat take on the form-solid structure with a bite of satire-and “Sam Adams” reads like it belongs on late-night comedy, in the best way.
    The Death Café poem closes the set with a flourish of surreal black humour, landing just the right blend of absurdity and irony.
    If I had a small suggestion, it would be to consider posting these kinds of poems separately-each one has a different rhythm and mood, and giving them space might help readers engage more deeply with each in turn.
    Still, taken together, this was a fun and varied showcase.
    Tim

    Michael Ludwinder

    11 days ago

    Review For 2025 April 6 poems
    Chapter 7 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Nicely done again. I loved the humor in your “snarling cup of coffee” – I could almost taste the spice! Your Trumpian Trade War poem was interesting- great how you packed so much in just a few lines. Sam Adams being the “worst poet ever” was hilarious – I laughed at the idea of him going viral for terrible poetry. And your Death Cafe story was wild – I really liked how it took a strange dream and turned it into something so unexpected. You really know how to keep things interesting!

    Michael Ludwinder
    Review For 2025 April 5th Poems
    Chapter 6 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness

    Nicely done. Your poems felt full of heart. The way you told us about your many roles – Peace Corps, teacher, diplomat, poet – was interesting. I especially liked how you said marrying the girl of your dreams is what made you who you are – that line gave me a big smile. I liked how you tied those Russian stories to today. Great job sharing both your life and your thoughts!

    Tim Margetts

    11 days ago

    Review For 2025 April 5th Poems
    Chapter 6 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    There’s something really endearing about the way you tackle these prompts, Jake.
    You’re not trying to impress with polish, you’re just writing, and there’s great value in that.
    Each section here carries its own flavour: the vampire break-up story is cheeky and creative, the shadorma is compact but timely, and the “I Am” poem has warmth and personality that shines through. You’re clearly someone with a life full of stories, and I appreciated the unpretentious way you shared that.
    The Dostoevsky reflection is brief but meaningful-it’s true, really, that the darkness he mapped out still pulses in the world today. That line “how little things have really changed” lingers.
    If you were ever to refine these, you might give each section a bit more space or formatting separation, and tighten some of the phrasing.
    But for NaPoWriMo spirit? This is bang on.
    Tim

    Tim Margetts
    Review For 2025 April 3rd Poems
    Chapter 4 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    There’s a likeable honesty running through this collection, Jake.
    “Why I am not a Musician” is the standout-casual, self-aware, and charmingly humble.
    The voice is conversational without being flat, and there’s something bittersweet in the way youthful ambition gives way to unexpected paths, with the quiet triumph of a life well-lived. “Oh well, I said / That ends my musical career.” It lands like a shrug-but also a turning point.
    The final stanza returns to the original dream, giving the piece a lovely circularity without sentimentality.
    The shorter pieces serve as satellite reflections, though they vary in tone and weight. “DOGE Cutbacks Loom” and “History Will Not Be Kind” move into darker, politically charged territory-particularly the latter, which imagines a future scarred by climate collapse.
    It’s stark, and though it leans on familiar dystopian tropes, the simplicity of the language sharpens the impact. Lines like “Dead oceans / And arid wastelands” evoke a dry horror that works well.
    “Good sleaze” is the most enigmatic-a cultural observation more than a poem, but interesting in its ambiguity. It’s not lyrical, but it opens the door to conversation about judgment, perception, and beauty in unlikely places.
    Overall, the entry succeeds not through polished craft, but through an earnest, unpretentious voice.
    There’s real value in that.
    Tim

    dragonpoet
    Review For APril Poetry 2025 Madness
    Chapter 1 of the book APril 2025 poetry madness
    Excellent

    Hi Jake
    This poem is so true. It seems to be getting worse by the day here.
    It is crazy. I wish it could stop so everyone could heave a sigh of relief.
    Good luck in this contest.
    Keep writing and stay healthy
    Have a great day’
    Joan

    The End

    Substack

    Medium

    watpad

    Spotify Podcast

     

  • Cosmos Faith Journey

    Cosmos Faith Journey

    Cosmos’s Faith Journey

    god
    god

    Encounters with God

    Cosmic Cat from Berkeley

    evil cat
    evil cat

    Meeting God In a  Lake

    Meeting God in Bombay

    Voice Message From God

    Conversation with God About Corona Virus

    God Does Not Talk to Idiots

    Agnostic Dog Wonders if there is a God

    God’s Message to Reverend Baaker

     

     

    In my 66 years on this earth, I have learned a few things, because I have seen a few things.  I grew up n a very secular town, in a very secular era.  The late 60s in Berkeley was a time when everything was being challenged, questioned, debated and the issue of God came up frequently.  Was God still relevant in this modern era?

    Most of my friends were agnostic at best, don’t recall having any Christian friends, Most were Jewish though and one was a Mormon.  Most were white, but I had a few black friends as well, a few of them were Christian.

    My mother was born a southern baptist, she was kicked out of church for asking the forbidden question, “If God created the universe, who created God?” the preacher was not amused and kicked her out for being a “free thinker” which to a Baptist was a very bad thing indeed, especially in Arkansas in the late 30s.

    My father was a devote athiest, grew up in Yakima in a Methodist family, but just did not see God anywhere. An economist believing in economic laws, he was materialistic and deterministic, God simply did not compute for him.

    They told us it was up to us to determine what to believe because they disagreed. But in the end, it came down to this, “Do the right thing”  but it was up to us to determine what that might be.

    I went to a few church services. but it just did not stick, did not get the whole shebang, did not believe in the Virgin Mary, the crucifixion, and other Christian dogma felt it was all just ancient irrelevant fairy tales.  I shared my father’s materialistic worldview and my mother’s skepticism regarding Church teachings. She was pleased though when I told her I had started reading the bible.

    For a while, I became a militant athiest, hung out at a, debating with Holly Hubert and the street preachers who were there. I shocked the Christian fanatics with my athiest stand-up comedy routines.

    One day Jehovah’s witness came to my house.  I told them I would love to talk with them but I was late for a Satanist meeting and invited them to join me. They fled in terror.

    Later in college, I had a roommate, who took too much acid and became convinced he was God.  We spend many nights smoking weed and debating the existence or non-existence of God.  He had grown up as a Jehovah witness.  His parents blamed us for their son’s descent into madness and promised to pray for us but said we would go to hell for the sin of questioning God’s will.

    In college, I took a course on modern religions. As a sociology student, I studied the Unification church’s recruitment practices and went to their recruitment dinner, but wisely did not go their weekend retreat, otherwise, perhaps I might have been converted and become a Moonie.

    I even went to a Scientology center took their free personality test and concluded it was all a scam.  Liked to hang out with Hari Krishna dudes joining them for public chanting.

    Started reading the bible in my world religion class, but took me almost 30 years before I finished reading the bible, and all the other spiritual texts, on the eve of my 50th year. Started with the Book of Mormon and ended with the Koran after reading the Buddhist writings, the Hindu scriptures, the Confucian classics, and the Tao De Ching.

    Had to finally skip over the entire genesis begat stories, saying to myself

    “What’s the point?”

    Concluding the bible was badly edited. Just a  collection of fairy tales, not fit for the modern world, but revelations fascinated me.

    When I went to Korea in the Peace Corps, I became fascinated by the subtle interplay between traditional Buddhism, shamanism, neo-Confucianism principles

    And the resurgence of aggressive Christianity, and the new religious fervor of Reverend Moon, the unification church, and other new religions.

    Spend some time at Buddhist temples, even spend a few nights hanging out with the monks decades before the formal temple stay programs became popular among foreign tourists.

    I had an encounter with shamanism when my uncle-in-law died, they did a shaman “kut” ritual. the shaman a female channeled his spirit. He came to the room berated us all, cursed us all from his perch in hell, That was such a freaky experience we had to flee the demented scene.

    I had a few mystical experiences, once in college I saw God in a lake,  But that was probably just the magic of the magic mushrooms, doing its mushroom thing.

    Once while I was hanging out in Berkeley, I encountered a cosmic cat, I saw the divine spark In his eyes, as he followed me everywhere. I told my mother who was suffering from Alzheimer’s about the cosmic cat, she concurred he was indeed a cosmic cat.

    Later in Goa, I encountered a cosmic dog who followed me everywhere.  I asked the cosmic dog once,

    “Say, Cosmic dog, are you god? Bark once if yes, two if no.”

    He barked once.

    “Are you Allah?  Bark once if yes, two if no.”

    He barked once.

    “Are you Buddha?  Bark once if yes, two if no”

    He barked once.

    “Are you the great spirit of the American indians? Bark once if yes, two if no”

    He barked once.

    “Are you Satan?  Bark once if yes, two if no.”

    He growled at me and I knew I had gone too far.

    When I was in Thailand, I continued my exploration of Buddhism visiting most of the famous Buddhist sites there, later in Taiwan, Vietnam, and India as well.

    When I lived in India, I became immersed in the spiritual energy all around me
    I became a fan of the big Ganesh, he removed spiritual obstacles, allowing me to connect to the divine spirit all around me.  I felt that cosmic vibe, just flowing through the world.

    While in India, I attended a few Catholic services, other Christian services, went to Hindu temples, Jain temples, Sikh temples and even a few Muslim pilgrim sites.  I also fasted during Rammadam and went totally vegan to observe lent.

    Now that I am an old man, I think back on what I have learned from my spiritual journeys. I think I can sum it up as follows:

    I believe that the universe is alive, and I am part of the divine mind, the universe God if you would, flows through us all. If only we have the eyes, to see the divine all around us.

    The Christian faith, like all other faiths, is just an attempt to discover the God of the universe. It is all the same path we are on, trying to connect to the cosmic overmind of the universe.

    Whether you are an atheist, a Buddhist, a Christian, a Jain,  a Jew, a Harri Krishna, a humanist, a Hindu, a Moonie, a Mormon, a Muslim, a Pagan or a Wiccan devote, we are all cosmic fools, seekers of the truth.  The truth is out there for us to discover it for ourselves.

    But in the end, it comes down to this simple principle, we have to decide
    to always do the right thing, but that is a decision, only we can make deep in our soul.

    Whether heaven or hell is awaiting us I do not know. Whether Jesus is the son of God I do not know. Whether Mohammed was the last prophet of God I do not know. Whether Allah is waiting for me, I do not know. Whether the grim reaper will be coming for me I do not know.

    But I am ready for the final stage of my life. In the end, I also know this: I knew my wife in a prior life, and I will see her in my next life. That is the operation of fate, of karma, and reincarnation, which I do believe in. The adage, what goes around comes around is a simple basic fact of the universe.

    That is all that I know for sure.  That is what I believe.  In the end, always

    “Do the right thing,”

    and the rest will follow.

     

    comments

    Comments

     

    Jim Davidson

    I know there’s more to that Scientology personality test story because I was there. Those tests were top secret, and they never published them or allowed anyone to carry them outside of the Scientology Center. You and (I think) Robert and I went into the Center and started taking the test. Then you told the people administering the test that you wanted to go outside for a minute for a smoke. You surreptitiously slipped the test into your pocket and we walked out, not intending to return. About a block away, one of the Scientology people came running after us, demanding the test back, and you gave it to him. So we (you) were foiled in the attempt to steal the test.

     

    You’ve been on a fascinating journey, Jake! It all makes perfectly good sense.

     

     

    I  was raised a Catholic, but I respect all religions and non-believers. Reconciling science and the history of men with the biblical Adam and Eve, as well as noting that there are so many people with different beliefs, have made me question my beliefs. I agree that we need to do the right thing (as our conscience dictates). I’m not sure of reincarnation, but I watch Korean dramas and am fascinated by reincarnation stories. May I share your story with my friends?

     

     

    Thank you for sharing that, Cosmo! I have also sought to deconstruct what was given me and see what’s under the hood, so to speak. And that’s not just a Berkeley thing.  It might have to do with having parents of different beliefs. My father too was a fairly strict atheist, a scientist, and a researcher who had studied history and concluded religion was mainly a tool for control. Whereas my mother was always a seeker who came from a non-religious family and churched herself as a teenager, then turned to the church when her child died. She became something of a pantheist, utilizing Christianity, Scientology, and various forms of unity consciousness and Native American beliefs in her journey. Years later I concluded my impulse to bridge the scientific and faithful outlooks was an expression of the child wanting to bring his divorced parents back together, but now it’s just important to me to remain open to possibilities and alternative explanations. Via some of the people I’ve known, I’ve witnessed a few things my skeptical impulse can never entirely explain. Your conclusions and mine are the same.

    1

    John H Seabury

    Me too, pretty much. But I didn’t do all that studying. Witchy Tai To, everything is everything.

    Like

    Robert Sicular Ah yes, Bearism, a simple religion but encompassing great wisdom.

    https://wikiality.fandom.com/wiki/Bearism…

    WIKIALITY.FANDOM.COM

    Bears


    Hello uncle- I have always loved listening/reading about your travels and experiences. My Mom loved you and looked up to you as well. I relate as someone who’s Dad was excommunicated Catholic and whose mom said “choose for yourself”. I visited many churches/religious events, still do, and have read a lot. There are many things I do not know, but the things I feel I do know- are relatable. I remember being with Grandma when dementia set in and I was losing “my person” I remember reading your early college work and thinking “if he can do it, so can I” as I was struggling with adult ADHD & dyslexia recently discovered but had been there the entire time. I struggled in some areas but I persevered. Part of my love for other cultures came from you, and despite “and because of” living in a small racist county

    The End

  • Corona Virus is Not God’s Punishment

    Corona Virus is Not God’s Punishment

    Corona Virus is Not God’s Punishment

     

    so much nonsense on the right and left about the Corona virus.

    God is not sending the Corona  Virus  as a  Punishment,  Black Out Poem

    -Robert_Jeffress_(cropped)
    -Robert_Jeffress_(cropped)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Original text

    During a press briefing today to address the nation’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, President Trump was asked about certain Christian pastors who plan to defy state lockdown orders and hold Easter church services this Sunday.

    “I’ve had talks with the pastors, and most of the pastors agree … that they are better off doing what they are doing, which is, distancing,” Trump said, adding that the pastors want to “get back to church so badly.”

    Trump then referred to a notorious pastor who sits on his religious advisory council.

    “I’m going to be watching Pastor Robert Jeffress, who’s been a great guy,” Trump said. “He’s a great guy and I’m going to be watching on a laptop.”

    Jeffress is known for his litany of statements demonizing the LGBT community, abortion, and secular people. One of his most reviled comments came in 2015 when he said the 9/11 attacks were God’s punishment on America for abortion.

    “People ask me all the time,” Jeffress said during a speech at Liberty University. “‘Well, I just don’t understand why God wouldn’t protect our nation and he would allow these radical Muslims in 2001 to kill 3,000 of our citizens and why God doesn’t protect us. Surely, God doesn’t use pagans to bring judgment upon his own people, does he?’”

    “I’ve had talks with the pastors, and most of the pastors agree … that they are better off doing what they are doing, which is, distancing,” Trump said, adding that the pastors want to “get back to church so badly.”

    Trump then referred to a notorious pastor who sits on his religious advisory council.

    “I’m going to be watching Pastor Robert Jeffress, who’s been a great guy,” Trump said. “He’s a great guy and I’m going to be watching on a laptop.”

    Black out text

    the coronavirus pandemic, President Trump

    hold Easter church services this Sunday.

    “I’ve had talks with the pastors, get back to church so badly.”

    “He’s a great guy and I’m going to be watching on a laptop.”

    The 9/11 attacks were God’s punishment on America for abortion.

    “People ask me all the time,” ‘Well, I just don’t understand why God wouldn’t protect our nation and he would allow these radical Muslims in 2001 to kill 3,000 of our citizens and why God doesn’t protect us. Surely, God doesn’t use pagans to bring judgment upon his own people, does he?’”

    Poem

    Corona Pandemic is Not’s God’s Punishment

    Amid  the coronavirus pandemic,
    President Trump

    Attended virtual Easter church services
    I’ve had talks with the pastors,

    We need to get back
    to church so badly.”

    Rev Jeffries is  a great guy
    I’m going to be watching on a laptop.”

    Rev Jeffries said

    The 9/11 attacks were God’s punishment
    on America for abortion.

    “People ask me all the time,”
    ‘Well, I just don’t understand
    why God wouldn’t protect our nation

    and he would allow these
    radical Muslims in 2001
    to kill 3,000 of our citizens
    and why God doesn’t protect us
    .
    Surely, God doesn’t use pagans
    to bring judgment

    upon his own people,
    does he?’”

    Rev Jeffries
    I spoke to God
    This morning

    He confirmed
    He did not cause 9-11
    To bring judgement

    On the US
    For abortion

    He went on to say
    The corona virus
    Is beyond his control

    And he is not sending it
    To punish the US
    Or the world

    His final words
    Please tell Rev Jeffries
    To simply STFU

    poetry super highway black out poem

    Conversation with the Gods About Corona Virus

    buddha figure
    buddha figure

     

     

     

     

     

    jesusjesus

     

    shiva

    shiva

    god
    god

    Rev. Jake ’s on-line sermon on the Corona Virus

    I am reverend Jake and I have a message from God
    Last night I had a vision from God

    it was his message to the world
    about this pandemic we are facing

    I found myself in a large room
    Jehovah, God, was sitting in the middle
    surrounded by the other Gods
    they were all there

    Jesus on his right
    Allah on his left
    Buddha behind him
    Ganesh, Shiva, Kali
    Mohammed, Joseph Smith and other prophets
    Gabriel and other angels abound
    St Peter in front of his as his Chief of Staff
    Zeus, Jupiter, Minerva and ancient
    other gods all around him

    God spoke up
    He said

    I have a message for you
    to give to your people
    all of your people

    no matter what religion
    or no religion at all
    it is all one after all

    first the corona virus
    is a natural phenomenon
    we have no control
    over forces of nature

    and we did not send
    it to you
    to punish you
    for homosexuality
    or anything else at all

    Second obey the health directives
    stay at home
    do your services on line

    it is okay with us
    we are fine with that

    the blood of Jesus
    will not save you
    If you are in a crowded place
    like church or a mosque service

    the virus will spread
    and catch you in the end

    Prayers alone will not save you
    but please keep praying
    we do listen to your prayers
    but we can only do so much

    So please don’t allow the virus
    to spread
    because of your ignorance
    and fear

    realize that in the end
    the virus will do its thing
    and you will survive

    and we
    all the gods here
    love you humans

    and wish you well
    so stay at home
    practice self distancing

    It is God’s will
    all will survive