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Through Corridors of Light: Poems of Consolation during Illness

Posted by on March 27, 2012 in Blog, Healing Books, Healing Corridor, Healing Poetry, Resources

Through Corridors of Light: Poems of Consolation during Illness

I have just become aware of a new poetry anthology published in the UK for people who are dealing with illness.  The anthology is edited by John Andrew Denny, who writes, at his website: I was ill for more than twenty years with ME/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. For most of that time I was bedbound, in pain and at times deeply depressed, and I was  helped to an extraordinary degree by reading and meditating on poetry that addressed my own thoughts and feelings about my illness. In an email conversation, he also writes about a connection between reading poetry and writing, something I find of particular interest: The initial reason I compiled Through Corridors of Light was that when I was first ill (in 1991) I was so weak that anything longer than a short(ish) poem was beyond my concentration. Now that I am quite a lot stronger, I still find writing very slow, and creative writing is unsatisfying for me unless I can find some relevant model to stimulate my mind  – so both of these impulses were what inspired my anthology. What makes it so therapeutic is that in giving voice to one’s hopes, fears, worries, or desires, the poems not only trigger other thoughts and feelings but also show how poems on such themes can be successfully constructed. What makes it so therapeutic is that in giving voice to one’s hopes, fears, worries, or desires, the poems not only trigger other thoughts and feelings but also show how poems on such themes can be successfully constructed. I love this idea–the connection between reading a poem and beginning to write.  I think this speaks to what is possible. We read and then we write, and in doing so a healing conversation extends and continues and spreads like a network of healing corridors. I’m waiting for my copy to arrive in the mail.  Meanwhile, I can direct you to his beautiful website which contains a detailed table of contents, a visitor page, and ordering information.  He’s donating all profits from his book to ME Research UK, a charity in the UK doing research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. __________________________________________ See: Through Corridors of Light I Must Go, I Will Go, another piece on John Andrew Denny’s...

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“The Promise” by Marie Howe

Posted by on March 19, 2012 in Blog, Healing Poetry

“The Promise” by Marie Howe

  The book, What the Living Do, was written by Marie Howe in the wake of her brother’s death from AIDS. It’s a book that, perhaps better than any other book I know, walks that delicate balance between making memorial—remembering who and what has been lost—and choosing life in the wake of such loss—figuring out, day by day, what it is that the living do (after). The following is excerpted from her poem, “The Promise.” In the dream I had when he came back not sick but whole, and wearing his winter coat,   he looked at me as though he couldn’t speak. . .   And I told him: I’m reading all this Buddhist stuff,   and listen, we don’t die when we die. Death is an event, a threshold we pass through. We go on and on   and into light forever. And he looked down, and then back up at me. It was the look we’d pass   across the kitchen table when Dad was drunk again and dangerous, the level look that wants to tell you something,   in a crowded room, something important, and can’t. ____________________________________________________________________  ...

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Indra’s Net

Posted by on March 14, 2012 in Blog, Healing Poetry

Indra’s Net

  From The Open Road by Pico Iyer Chapter Four, The Philosopher   When the Dalai Lama speaks of interdependence all he is really saying is that we are all a part of a single body.   Perhaps it’s not surprising he is famous for his laughter, the sudden eruption of helpless giggles traveling to the point where everything is connected, our fascination with division hilarious.   Quarreling over money is like taking a ten-dollar-bill out of your right-hand pocket and then, after a great deal of fanfare and contention, putting it in your left. ____________________________ See also: The Open Road by Pico Iyer, Part One Indra’s net at Wikipedia, the source of the above photo Also the source of this quote by Alan Watts: Imagine a multidimensional spider’s web in the early morning covered with dew drops. And every dew drop contains the reflection of all the other dew drops. And, in each reflected dew drop, the reflections of all the other dew drops in that reflection. And so ad infinitum. That is the Buddhist conception of the universe in an...

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The Open Road by Pico Iyer

Posted by on March 7, 2012 in Blog, Healing Books, Healing Poetry

The Open Road by Pico Iyer

  I am rereading The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.  Pico Iyer, a journalist and novelist, has known the Dalai Lama for decades, first meeting him with his father when he was an adolescent.  In this impressionistic biography he peels back layers of the Dalai Lama to present him in nine different facets.  The first chapter—the first facet—is The Conundrum. In it I found this, a kind of poem: We are not talking about God We are not talking about Nirvana We are only talking about how to become a more compassionate human being.   At times he pulls out a piece of tissue and polishes his glasses A metaphor   He has taken off his watch with its sturdy stainless-steel band. Know exactly how much time you have he might be saying and use that time for some good. ______________________________ More about The Open Road: A book review at the New York Times The book at...

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