Poetry For Now

REVEALING A TRUTH

March 08, 2021 Martin Strasmore Season 1 Episode 34
Poetry For Now
REVEALING A TRUTH
Show Notes Transcript

This episode started being about finding the truth, the reason for being in this human body, but as life evolved and our water heater leaked, a new story sprang up - so this episode recognizes that physical bodies and the things we collect will all be unimportant in the end.
You will also find out a little about "stamp collecting" and more!

Support the show

Episode 34 -  Revealing A Truth

SIT BACK

I could simply sit back,

laze around, listen to the whistling wind,

watch the day appear and disappear,

see the moon and stars sparkling

as the frogs sing

the owls swoop.


In the morning, the doves coo

the black birds sing

as the sun rises again.


But would I see the inner light,

hear the inner music,

become one with the beauty of nature

feel love for all people and animals

join the transcendental poets,

Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman

or those saints and sages of the East

who wrote the Vedas, Upanishads and more.


Is it time to stop 

searching for the  truth outside,

and simply sit back

listening to the silence.



UNDER THE STAIRS 1 - 4 X 6


The water heater started leaking

revealing years of memories seeking

to be seen again, not forgotten

4x6 boxes hidden in the bottom

Plastic storage boxes piled high

we moved them out with a sigh

discovering

there we were young and hairy

how we have changed, rather scary

then we realize that seeds were sown

and on the inside we have grown

and our love becomes stronger

as we live together longer and longer

And our physical appearance 

will not matter in our disappearance

transitioning out of these bodies

onto the next big adventure.


UNDER THE STAIRS 2 -  Stamps

2 suitcases full of the stamp collection

started by father in London in 1945.

I continued faithfully to Russell square,

with my pocket money, of shillings and pence

to all those philatelist stores.

Searching for those perfect Victorian

penny blacks and tupenny blues.

Checking my thick orange Stanley Gibbons Catalogues,

the stamp collectors’ bibles.

I would send myself “First Day Covers”

and fill in everything in between.


I learned History and geography,

Saw the changing British empire,

Borders coming and going

across Europe and Africa

Countries appearing and disappearing.


Pieces of colored paper telling stories

faces of powerful people dead and alive

the changing technology of trains and planes

Animals and plants, fauna and flora.


All carefully organized in green and brown leather albums

or stuffed in large labeled envelopes.

I thought I had a treasure trove

to be passed on to our daughter.

But the world has speeded up

and stamp collecting is slow.


Finally the decision:

rather than bringing them along,

it is time to move on.

I thought my carefully saved pennies, shillings and pounds

had become valuable historical artifacts.

In CT the dealer looked through, smiling gently

saying” this won’t change your lifestyle!


So the suitcases came to FL

and here, years later, I tried again.

This dealer wanted nothing at all.


The collection is like my other boxes ,

old cameras, old phones, iPods and computers.

All worthless artifacts of the short history

of our lives.

All that is worthwhile  now are the 4x6 memories,

watching our daughter grow up,

The new party themes each birthday,

Costumes for all her little friends,

her grandmother laughing

seeing friends and pets who have passed on.

Cats buried under the weeping cherry and Japanese Maple.


The water heater did its work.

The truth is revealed.


©MartinStrasmore2021



Thanks for listening:  Just a few words about stamp collecting.

In England when I was a teenager in the early 1960’s Russel Square where the British Museum is was full of small shops selling stamps to philatelists like me.  Stanley Gibbon’s was the Tiffany’s of Stamp collecting and their 3 catalogues covered every stamp ever issued across the Globe and priced them by condition. I tried to buy stamps to complete my collections below the catalogue value.  What a game it turned out to be - even as I learned a lot, enjoyed it and felt a sense of accomplishment.