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Open Poetry #47
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Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere

0 posted 2011-02-21 09:09 AM



Time changes little
The things that must remain the same
Things we choose to ignore
Or dress incognito
Facts of life we elaborate
To distortion
Confusion we carefully pass on
In our infinite ignorance

We strive to educate
To somehow eradicate
The evil unknown
Too hell bent blind
To see the hypocrisy
In the answers contradictions
Too anxious to find solutions
We jump to revolutions
Executions
Discord becomes the point
Of a narrowed vision
The sole basis of decision

Like gods almighty
We judge from atop
Our slave labor pinnacles
On the righteousness
Of humanity

We awe ourselves
With our powerful nations
Accomplishments and creations
Disregarding the debris
Of catastrophe
As if to say
Mankind has no debt
To pay
For this destruction
His superior mind
Can create acceptable excuses
To justify the abuses


We even try to sanctify
Our derision
With God’s permission
To sweep it under the rug
Always assuming there will be
Someone else to do
The undoing
Of what we’ve done

When instincts ruled the garden
And all needs were met
The balance was set
Till high minded humanity
Shifted the weight
And tipped the scales

Always blinded to the truth
That the world
Would be better off
Without us

With guilt admitted too late
We struggle to survive
With a counter balance Christ
We immortalize
To make truth from our lies

Blind men cry
Over the mortal pain of separation
Weep in vain
From their pinnacles
Filling the sea with tears
For a holy moat
Around their guilt castle walls
And play king of the beasts
On self righteous thrones
Till time passes away
To let the blind man see
The worth of his weight
On the scale
Without grace


© Copyright 2011 Lori Grosser Rhoden - All Rights Reserved
ethome
Member Patricius
since 2000-05-14
Posts 11858
New Brunswick Canada
1 posted 2011-02-21 11:26 AM


Very well expressed Lori.
You're right on in your expression of man's short sighted accomplishments.
One thing leads to another etc.
This piece is very honest and powerful and I'm glad you wrote it.

My biggest fear in all of this are claims that the next wars will be fought over water.
Hard to imagine. When will mankind shelve the greed?

A man can live about a month without food, but he will die in about a week without water. Hence, experts claim that declining supplies of fresh water will be a source of increasing tension in coming years. According to a 2002 Time magazine report, worldwide more than a billion people do not have easy access to clean drinking water.
Water shortages occur for a variety of reasons. In France, pollution plays a role and is a growing source of concern. “French rivers are in a very poor state of health,” says Le Figaro. Scientists have traced the problem to nitrate-rich runoff, which comes primarily from fertilizers used for farming. “French rivers discharged 375,000 tons of nitrates into the Atlantic in 1999, almost twice as much as in 1985,” states the paper.
The situation is similar in Japan. In order to provide a steady supply of food in that country, “farmers had no choice but to rely on chemical fertilizers and pesticides to meet society’s demand,” says Yutaka Une, head of a nonprofit farm safety organization. This has led to underground water pollution—which Tokyo’s IHT Asahi Shimbun calls “a major problem across Japan.”
In Mexico, 35 percent of illnesses “have their origin in environmental factors,” reports the newspaper Reforma. Furthermore, a study by the secretary of health revealed that “1 out of every 4 inhabitants does not have a sewer; over 8 million get their water from wells, rivers, lakes, or streams; and over one million obtain water from tanker trucks.” Little wonder that 90 percent of Mexico’s diarrhea cases are attributed to contaminated water!
“Rio’s beaches offer more than hot sun, white sand, and blue sea,” states Brazil’s Veja magazine. “They also harbor high levels of fecal coliforms and occasional oil spills.” That is because more than 50 percent of Brazil’s sewage flows directly into rivers, lakes, and the ocean without being treated. The result is a chronic shortage of clean water. The rivers around Brazil’s largest city, São Paulo, are so heavily polluted that drinking water is now brought in from some 60 miles away.
On the other side of the globe, much of Australia’s water shortage stems from a process called salinization. For decades landowners were encouraged to clear their land in order to plant crops. With fewer trees and shrubs to soak up the groundwater, water tables began to rise, bringing with them thousands of tons of subterranean salt. “Some 2.5 million hectares [6.2 million acres] of land are already affected by salinity,” says Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). “Much of this is Australia’s most productive agricultural land.”
Some believe that if the Australian legislators had not chosen profit over public interest, the salinity problem might have been avoided. “Governments were told from as early as 1917 that Wheatbelt soils were especially prone to salinity,” says Hugo Bekle of Edith Cowan University in Perth, Australia. “The impact of clearing on stream salinity was publicised by the 1920’s, and its effect on a rising water table was accepted in the Agricultural Department by the 1930’s. A major report was undertaken for the [Australian] Government by the CSIRO in 1950, . . . yet governments persistently ignored these warnings, dismissing scientists as prejudiced.”
Survival Threatened
Without doubt, many of man’s actions have been well intended. But as is so often the case, we simply do not know enough about the environment to predict the consequences of our actions accurately. The results have been devastating. “We’ve so upset the balance of life here that we threaten the very land that supports us and, through that, our own survival,” says Tim Flannery, South Australian Museum director.


Thanks for gathering the courage to write this Lori. More people need to pay attention.
Not much of an inheritance to leave for future generations.

Eric

oxymoron....Rap Music

Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
2 posted 2011-02-21 11:47 AM


Hey Eric! I wrote this poem several years ago and as you can see, it still speaks to today, maybe even better than it did when I wrote it.  I really appreciate your in depth reply. Thanks for being here.
Lori

faithmairee
Senior Member
since 2011-01-05
Posts 1441
Poe Haven, USA
3 posted 2011-02-21 12:51 PM


very powerful indeed...Lori, there is so much truth to this wonderfully written poem of yours...very nice work!

There must be a poem in here somewhere.

Honeybunch
Member Rara Avis
since 2001-12-29
Posts 7115
South Africa
4 posted 2011-02-21 01:04 PM


Lori - It's a sad fact that your poem depicts the world as it was, is, and perhaps always will be.  There are some who believe that whatever is happening now has already happened and will happen again but let's hope more and more people change enough to change the world.  

Will have to go back to read Eric's response and then I think I'll just revert to happy thoughts for fear of adding my energy to the state of the world and mankind generally.

Well done, Lori.

Helen

Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
5 posted 2011-02-21 01:20 PM


Faith, I'm glad you enjoyed this poem
___________________________________________
Helen, I appreciate your statement on not wanting to add unhappy energy.  I hear where you are comming from and that is a cool place.
Lori

Sunshine
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354
Listening to every heart
6 posted 2011-02-21 02:33 PM


You're right. GOOD stuff like this takes its place in history, and can always be revived.

And appreciated.

Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
7 posted 2011-02-21 02:41 PM


Thanks Sweetie
OwlSA
Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347
Durban, South Africa
8 posted 2011-02-21 03:15 PM


Lori, this masterpiece is an outstanding piece of work – in truth, concept, content and art.  

In my humble opinion, this extremely complex situation is theoretically very simple to fix (we need to get back to basic values of humanity such as love, kindness, compassion, service to the community and a thirst for wisdom), and in practice, the simple fix is very complex and possibly impossible to fix (because of, as Robbie Burns so succinctly put it, “man’s inhumanity to man”, and by implication, to Nature and to God ).  

Your poem has inspired me to post a poem, that (because of how many poems I wrote on 18 February, and I have been posting them chronologically), I wasn't planning to post yet, Marula Ubuntu.  It is not the fix, but just a tiny bit of it.

If I was still teaching, whether English or any other subject, I would ask your permission to let me use your masterpiece in my classes.  I am not, but please may I use it in the Poetry Club I run at a children’s home?

Owl

Lori Grosser Rhoden
Member Patricius
since 2009-10-10
Posts 10202
Fair to middlin' of nowhere
9 posted 2011-02-21 03:35 PM


Owl by all means use the poem.  I am very honored it can be used for a higher purpose.  Thank you so much for your very very generous complements.
Lori  

OwlSA
Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347
Durban, South Africa
10 posted 2011-02-21 03:50 PM


Thank you, Lori.  I am very grateful and am looking forward to using it.  It was my delight to tell you what I thought of your poem.

Owl

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