Ash Wednesday,
marking the beginning of Lent, occurred just a couple of weeks ago. Having
been raised in a household where the beginning of Lent meant the family saying
the rosary together each night and visiting the church to follow the Stations of
the Cross, the onset of Lent use to be a real time of reflection for me, and
that reflection would often culminate in the writing of a poem.
In recent
years, I have been so caught up in the day-to-day busy-ness of life that I
often skim past the beginning of Lent
without it even registering that we are into the Easter season. Fortunately, Ed is much more attuned than I
am. Yesterday, he sent me a poem he
had written that I think does a remarkable job of being on both an observation
on the transmutation of language and a reflection on what the season means.
Lengthening
Lent
Means
To lengthen
To unpack
The soul
Which is
Condensed
Confined
So tightly
It remains
Small
Undeveloped
It’s perilous
Unsettling
To loose control
To have paradigms
Upheaved
Like tectonic plates
An opportunity
If embraced
To nourish
Gather light
Permit oneself
To stretch
Elongate
Lengthen
Like a shadow
In the late afternoon
Of a rescinding winter
1 comment:
This is wonderful! A very good reflection of lent, and what I think it's about at it's core.
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