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Advent poem

My Lenten reflection includes a poem (no great surprise there – it is the comic relief) and a wish.

First, the wish:  I wish all of us peace.  Peace is such a big word.  It invokes, among other large things, the end of war.  It is for me, at least, a kind utter calm I imagine for myself and the world, some kind of tranquility that seems always on the horizon, but is somehow unattainable.  Even sleep sometimes won’t give me peace.  I wake in the middle of the night thinking about a problem and can’t find a way to get back to sleep.  I guess we all want to rest in peace – especially when we’re still alive.

I suppose that the Christ child is our emblem for peace.  For those of us who are parents, we’ve all had that moment, usually born of the exhaustion in the weeks after a birth, when we cradle a sleeping infant against our chest and rock back and forth in the middle of the night.  I can remember specific moments with each of our children when all was calm, all was bright.

It is too bad that in this season of peace, it seems more unattainable than at any other time.  We always have too much to do, too much to prepare for, too many things we didn’t get done.  I’m making this wish for myself as well as you—that each of us can, at least for a moment, find that calm, that slowly rocking back and forth, that intimacy of parent and child, that peace.  And please let it spread into other moments and bring a stillness, a center, a God into our lives.

Eating Santa’s Cookies

They’re usually cold and hard, the milk

warm by the time I get there, careful

to leave the crumbs, a few swallows

of milk.  I write a note, if the exhaustion

from wrapping hasn’t kicked in entirely.

Thanks, and the reindeer loved the carrots,

writes Santa, gnawing on the carrot,

then sipping his Christmas scotch.

Sometimes I want to weep at how

lousy we are at doing this – not

that we don’t get the presents

under the tree – the lists

checked, the naughty and nice

cared for within reason.  But

we’re always here in the last

minute.  It’s always three AM

or four and we’re too tired to argue

over how much we spent or how

we didn’t get one of the kids this

or that.  Sometimes one of us

just gives up and the other trudges

on with the tape and scissors,

and that ridiculous roll of ribbons

in red, green, and white that always

gets fouled up. One year I stood

in the cold of the Clark gas station

down the block seeing my own

shallow breath as I inflated a hippity-hop

with the quarter-operated compressor,

the gray snow around me, the stars

blinking in wonder at a man reduced

to this: an act of love or madness

connected through custom and culture

and history to the story

of a birth and wise men chasing

some dream of a king.

Peace,

Joe