Buddha Minds On Fire

Surrounded by the Buddha’s bounty,

a calming serenity hushes the crowd

as a docent provides a brief biography . . .

 

The bump of knowledge crowns his head with

Tightly bundled curls of second-growth hair,

Framed by long lobes stretched by gold earrings.

 

“Only real Buddhas have these three things!”

I hear her, but I wonder if it’s truly those that

make Buddhas something more than . . . men.

 

It is this “something more” in which to bask,

a golden warmth of subtle majesty renounced,

to shoulder the suffering of the world at large.

 

A larger world was what he sought,

the world of intense introspection,

in order to understand . . . himself.

 

With minds on fire and pillars of intellect,

exposed, crucified, pinned as for dissection,

performing mundane exercises, shoveling shit;

 

Bodhisattvas exchanging thoughts for actions,

expiring moment to moment in Phoenix flames,

waiting to be reborn . . . endlessly.    

 

by Richard Hartwell

 

Rick Hartwell is a retired middle school English teacher living in Moreno Valley, California. He believes in the succinct, that the small becomes large; and, like the Transcendentalists and William Blake, that the instant contains eternity. Given his “druthers,” if he’s not writing poetry, Rick would rather still be tailing plywood in a mill in Oregon

Music

Have you ever felt music?

have you ever felt a sound?

have you felt it swirl through the air

until in penetrates you

stirs up the past and present

show’s you the future.

 

And you’re no longer numb

you’re alive, you woke up

the sounds come from within now

you’re the player

and the instrument

you’re the audience

every note is powerful and strong

every note has meaning.

 

Don’t listen – feel,

let it penetrate

let the sounds fill you

music is magic, it’s sublime

and listening’s too rational

feeling is the key of every piece.

by Jonas Cimermanas

A Room

This was not just a room – it was

A milestone- a first communion,

A crisp suit, a new car, a fresh haircut-

A blank set of blueprints on how to be human.

It was a field where shoes aren’t needed-

Where you break curfew and don’t care about

Time or memory, where everything stands

Still because your mouth can’t keep up with

Smiling it wants to do. Eyes speak more

Than hands because they meet others and know

That there’s no need to hide and blow lines

Off of picture frames holding the dead eyed stares

Of mistakes and regrets. This was a room,

Where a beautiful girl and I first met. 

 

by Michael Murray

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