Does shocked disbelief
stun us into a blind hope
that ways out exist?
Does tenacity
play a cruel joke on those
hope has abandoned?
Abject surrender,
is that my wiser choice?
I resist that thought.
stun us into a blind hope
that ways out exist?
Does tenacity
play a cruel joke on those
hope has abandoned?
Abject surrender,
is that my wiser choice?
I resist that thought.
5 comments:
surrender does not mean giving up or calling it quits~ abject or otherwise. For me surrender (when I finally understood it) means letting go of the resistance we create about our reality, whatever it may be. Giving up the struggle of being hooked to a situation or disease like a fish on a hook struggles. The disease is the hook. Whatever we are dealt with should not be given power over us -
Our personal demon is not our identity. Who we are, what we are, how we interact with ourselves and others - that is our identity that no demon should be given the power to diminish. Invite the demon to tea.
There may be no escape, but I think there are ways to work within the the framework of what we are dealing with, without surrender.
I feel as I surrender quite often, but I usually rally again and start all over. I've said before that I don't always have much hope -- in a cure, of getting better, or accepting my new normal. But I suppose when I do rally, there really is a little hope there also.
Peace,
Muff
I resist that thought too
Ms. Devi, Karen, Muff, and Kim,
Surrender and acceptance are both tied together in a sometimes comfortable, more often chafing relationship for me. I am a work in progress to be sure. And even when I feel I have achieved some kind of mastery or ease with this process, the predictably unstable nature of MS restarts the process. At the very least, my last two poems address the question of how we direct our reality.
Thank you all for your thoughtful answers which have made me, yes, think.
Judy
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