Guest guest Posted May 4, 2005 Report Share Posted May 4, 2005 E Wed, 4 May 2005 00:51:57 -0400 I see pain, I feel pain, I scream. 4 May 2005 I see pain, I feel pain, I scream. I've kept my mouth shut long enough. After reading this, you might decide I'm wrong - that it should still be shut. Fortunately, we still have a semi-free country, and the last time I looked, I still had the right to voice my opinions. Nobody has to like them. To tell the truth, sometimes I don't like them, either. Today, as I write, I don't really care what anybody else thinks. http://www.mytown.ca/denino/ 4 May 2005 I see pain, I feel pain, I scream. I've kept my mouth shut long enough. After reading this, you might decide I'm wrong - that it should still be shut. Fortunately, we still have a semi-free country, and the last time I looked, I still had the right to voice my opinions. Nobody has to like them. To tell the truth, sometimes I don't like them, either. Today, as I write, I don't really care what anybody else thinks. When I create a piece of art, it comes from deep within my own soul. It is a dialogue between my soul and God. The best compliment I ever receive for my art is when someone tells me it inspired them to deepen their own internal dialogue. That's what art is. Of course, some won't agree with that, either. Some will say art is what looks nice on the wall behind the sofa. Fine. Have your own opinions. But this is my column, and I get to voice mine here. Write your own damn column if you have something to say. Spend the time, start the day every day, writing, throwing away, writing again, throwing away again. Spend the time listening, watching, feeling. Take the chance. Write when the words get stuck in your throat. Write when you're afraid of what the words may show about your own soul. That's only the beginning. Next, share what you write. Submit to the editing process, where someone pores over every word, checking and challenging for accuracy and clarity. Then send it to someone who makes it public. And then stand there. Look at your visual art on the wall. Look at your verbal art on the monitor, exposed, naked, vulnerable, knowing that not only will the thoughtful judge your creation, but so will the ass-scratching thoughtless. Life's a bitch that way. All the while I'm writing about my own pain and anger, it's really nothing compared to the pain and anger out there that isn't being shared in a public forum. A friend tells me the poet/artist sees more intensely than all others the pain and suffering most flee from and try to ignore. The artist/poet experiences it and gives it a voice. Think about those words. We flee from and ignore pain. We know that's true, each one of us, in our daily lives. We prefer boredom and addictions to pain. But I'm going to cut to the quick here. This is not about our petty little pains. No, not the annoying pain voiced by those among us who plunk their asses down on the sofa at the end of the day and complain about the high cost of gas, the current teenage rude behaviors, or the fear of losing their investments. Petty pains. I'm screaming about something else. If the right wing is beating us over the head with it it's because we've allowed it. Here's my take on it. The t-shirt is " obscene. " The greater obscenity is the degradation of peoples' lives and spirits. When my child is left to die on a fence in Wyoming, or freezes to death as a homeless person in the winter, or dies the slow death of deep depression because his spirit is broken, then perhaps the best response to a society engineered to allow this obscenity is indeed F*** You! Shouted, stomped, marched, screamed, acted on with true righteous anger. Many of us may not be comfortable with saying the words. Fine. I'm cool with that. But we need to embrace the spirit of " F*** you " , the spirit of contempt, and direct it appropriately. With spirit, with anger, with resolve, with strength, with love for those who are already victimized and are waiting for us to do the walk. We cannot reason with terrorists, regardless of the country or politics they claim as their own. We can dialogue until the cows come home. When the dialogue runs out, they're gonna do what they're gonna do if they have the power. So must we. Somehow we need to grab the mirror and reflect it back at them, blinding them with our passion. Maybe we're only angry in our brains. Maybe we need to be angry in our hearts and feet. I'm frightened of the possibility of civil war. Maybe more frightened if there isn't one. Learning to scream " f*** you " at the right target steadies my heart. I am tired. I am scared. This is not the kind of growing old I had envisioned. My experience with bullies, on the school playgrounds and elsewhere, is this: they view us with contempt. They laugh at our appeals to reason. They want what they want, and if they can take it from us, they will. They are in contempt of the law. They are in contempt of weakness. Contempt is all around us. I wrote those words in response to some conversation about a girl wearing a t-shirt with " F*** you! " emblazoned across it. Someone said that accepting this kind of indecent mindset would be used by the Republican party to show how they're the party of decency. As the conversation continued, it seemed most folks just couldn't get past the F word. Or, in other words, they want art they can put on the wall behind their sofa. My friends, it's not about the F word. It's about the spirit and energy and resolve and anger behind it. Contempt? I see contempt all around me, much of it perpetrated by members of the " party of decency " . Contempt for the poor. Contempt for the environment. Contempt for GLBTs. Contempt for non-Christians. And that's just the beginning. Nobody sees the middle digit waving at us when jobs are sent to other countries, when health care isn't available, when dirty air is called clean air, when children bloat and die before their parents eyes in other countries. Sorry, but I DO see that finger. I was warned that I'd be getting into the mud with them if I maintain that F*** you! posture myself. Well…yeah! And your point is…what? I was a teacher. Playground duty is no fun, but somebody's gotta do it. When the local bully drags another kid into the mud and beats him up, what are we supposed to do? Stand at the sidelines and have a pretty conversation about ethics and long range goals in a moderated dialogue? You can have that kind of stuff both before and after, but at the point where a defenseless person is being injured, you gotta go rescue them. And your adrenalin has to be pumping to do that. In other words, you have to care about something a little more important than if your own new shoes might get dirty. One more thought. I hold no contempt for people - any people - even the perpetrators of the ongoing and growing pain and despair. My contempt is for the spirit of ignorance, fear and greed that first highjacks the powerful, then uses their power to destroy everybody else. The powerful, the self-righteous, the bigots, the greedy are the first victims. They're courting their own death and don't even know it because of the cloak of contempt they've put on to cover their own illness. Unfortunately, they've put themselves right in the line of fire when we have to attack the real enemy. A pity, but I'll not let that stop me from defending the helpless. So there it is. I haven't lost a loved one at the front of any of the wars being fought today, Yet many whose names I don't know have died, been permanently maimed, or have broken hearts. Here is my rage. Where is yours? And in the end, to ride the wild mustang named Rage and master it, empowers me to ride faster and harder than I could ever have done on only my own two feet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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