Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Music & Poetry Mash Up

"I Won't Let Go"
Rascal Flatts

It's like a storm
That cuts a path
It breaks your will
It feels like that

You think you're lost
But you're not lost on your own
you're not alone

I will stand by you
I will help you through
When you've done all you can do
If you can't cope
I will dry your eyes
I will fight your fight
I will hold you tight
And I won't let go

It hurts my heart
To see you cry
I know it's dark
This part of life
Oh it finds us all
And we're too small
To stop the rain
Oh but when it rains

I will stand by you
I will help you through
When you've done all you can do
And you can't cope
I will dry your eyes
I will fight your fight
I will hold you tight

And I won't let you fall
Don't be afraid to fall
I'm right here to catch you
I won't let you down
It won't get you down
you're gonna make it
Yeah I know you can make it

Cause I will stand by you
I will help you through
When you've done all you can do
And you can't cope
And I will dry your eyes
I will fight your fight
I will hold you tight
And I won't let go
Oh I'm gonna hold you
And I won't let go
Won't let you go
No I won't


Stormy Days
Madison McConkie
Stormy days
Nothing seems right.
Rain drops streaming down the window
Like trails of tears.
Feeling alone.
Needing someone to be there.
To dry your eyes,
Hold you up,
Keep you strong.
Time slows down.
Seconds drag out.
It will never end.
There is no light at the end of the tunnel.
But then a hand is there
Supporting through the darkness,
Sharing some of the load,
And somehow you’ve made it through.




Monday, May 21, 2012

Dixie, My Dog

Like a cat she sleeps on the back of the couch,
Watching the 7 year old warily out of the corner of her eye.
In a very doggie way she greets people coming through the door
 Balancing on her hind legs
Front paws on their knees
Trying desperately to lick their hand.
When I take her on a walk,
She is sure to attract small children.
Little boys and girls pulling their mothers behind them for added courage
“Can I pet your dog?” they ask shyly.
Dixie wiggles happily as they pull her ears
Or step on her foot,
Or scratch her nose.
They go stumbling away surprised when they get
A wet lick on their chocolate covered faces.

Like most dogs she loves a good game of fetch,
But no matter what we try she will not play outside.
There are too many distractions; she couldn’t care less about a squeaky toy,
But inside it is a very different ball game.
Jumping off beds, bursting through doorways,
Nails scraping for traction on the hardwood as she slides around a corner.

She doesn’t seem that smart as we watch her run off
Down the middle of the street chasing a man jogging by,
Cars slamming on brakes to avoid
Our dumb little dog.
But somewhere inside that blond senseless head,
She knows. Oh, she knows.
She knows that my dad will come through the back door at six,
That Lizzy will lie limply and love being licked when she first wakes up,
That when I walk in I’m good for a thorough rub up and down her ribs.
She knows better than to lick my mom
So she settles for sniffing her pant legs vigorously.
She knows what it means when my dad looks for the brush
So she scrambles head first to lodge herself deep under the couch.  

Dixie-dog has her quirks,
But she’s still my best friend.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Harsh Voice

Someday will never be tomorrow.
Your promises are an empty cloud
Destined to leave before bearing any rain,
Deceptive hope disappearing cruelly on the horizon.

Hope is like a spark of life-saving fire,
Flickering in the the charcoal of truth.
Better to die in the darkness of ignorance,
Than to watch every glint of change surely die out.

Oooh how to forget? Oooh how to move on?
Oooh time to learn, oooh time to let go

Experience has a harsh voice
And with it comes pain.
Experience has a harsh voice
But with it comes joy.

Friday, March 23, 2012

O.H.C.

I absentmindedly watched a man playing on the beach with some of the small native children as I received my assignment. “You will be supervised by Adam Miller”, the instructor concluded “he has a PhD in sociology from Arizona State University and he is the founder of Operation: Human Compassion. You are very lucky to be working with him. Here, I’ll have him come over and meet you.” I was still watching the man on the beach, and smiled as I watched him throw a joyously screaming little girl into the waves. “Oy! Adam!” the instructor shouted. I was surprised when I saw the man on the beach look up and start running over. This was Adam Miller? The guy looked like a hobo! As he reached us he ran his hand through long, tangled, reddish-brown hair, then rubbed sand out of his thick unkempt beard before smiling and reaching out to shake my hand.
“Hey! Welcome to paradise! I’m Adam!” he boomed out as he nearly crushed my hand in an iron grip. I noticed him wink at Derek my instructor, when he said the paradise part. “Um..Hi I’m Katie” I stammered in response. Despite the fact that I was slightly overwhelmed by this incredibly friendly stranger, I couldn’t resist returning his broad smile.
When I had signed up for this project I had been looking for something that would look good on my application to graduate school. I was planning on working with a team in an air-conditioned office, crunching numbers and looking for solutions to some of the economic troubles on the island. I had heard about Adam Miller. He was known back in the states as a philanthropic genius, although the details of his projects and his personal life were admittedly something of a mystery. When I arrived at O.H.C. headquarters in Auckland, New Zealand I was shocked to learn that instead of being added to a team in an area where O.H.C. was well established, I was going to be shipped off to a unpronounceable pacific island where Mr. Miller was trying to start a new branch.

Friday, March 16, 2012

Unspeakable Fate

Things were starting to get strange. There were moments when Sean didn't know what was real. Moments when the fear nearly paralyzed him. Is this what his father went through? He thought back to his childhood. His mother raising him and his sister almost as a single parent because his father was always "sick". He had some fond memories of playing in the yard with his father, but for months at a time his father would be hospitalized, and any memories of visiting were of a heavily medicated shell of a man.
Is this how it had started for him? With confusion about reality, persistent destructive voices, and seeing horrible delusions like waking nightmares? Sean had grown up knowing that there was a 70% chance that he would inherit schizophrenia from his father. He had grown up with the dread hanging over him but with each birthday closer to 30 his hope of beating the odds increased. He knew that the disease usually presented itself in the late teens or twenties. He was 34 and had dared to hope. Could this really be happening now? The sweet taste of hope turned bitter in his mouth as it mixed with the unspeakable dispair.
It had been almost three months since he started to notice the symptoms. Three months of suspicion turning to fear then to denial and back to fear.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Love

Love is simple right? An emotion you feel toward "the one". The perfect person for you. Nope! Think again! Love is complicated! Love is being hurt and frustrated and disappointed! Love is confusion and disillusion and pain! Love is forgiving that 101st time when you swore that 100 times were as many as anyone could possibly deserve! Love is trusting that it is ok to be misunderstood sometimes. Loving someone is knowing that their well-being is now more important to you than your own and being alright with that.