Wednesday, May 27, 2015

First Contact

Untitled


When the tower appeared in the midst of the city, it was the homeless who made first contact. The evacuations had begun almost immediately, but those who lived on the streets had their own favorite places to tuck themselves away for protection. These were magical places created of a necessity by paranoid imaginings. These unfortunates were abandoned and left to their own devices, hiding under bridges and in dumpsters.

A handful of days passed under a hard gray sky, but nothing happened. The tower sat overlooking the empty city, impassive and brooding, like it had been there for a thousand years thinking its lofty thoughts.

Hunger and boredom eventually brought out the city's forgotten. Resources had become available in the form of abandoned stores and buildings. It was a windfall of sorts, a close encounter of the scavenging kind. They had been rejected by society and felt they had nothing to lose by approaching and even entering the alien structure. Some of them heard voices bidding them to do so. The first to attempt it was Solar Sam and it is his story that I wish to tell.

***

Full story can be found *Here*

Saturday, May 23, 2015

The New Canadians

The New Canadians


When the world ends
families from the first nations
will be gathered
into the Toronto Tower
whose concrete skin
will fall away in
spectacular fashion
revealing an immense
rocket-powered ark
pointed at the nearest
inhabitable planet.
Their children will grow
into adults on the journey,
they will appreciate
the opportunity they have
been given, they will be
fruitful and multiply, and,
most important of all,
they will get along.
They are the New Canadians.  

***

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Somewhere in Southern Indiana

Somewhere in Southern Indiana


Somewhere in Southern Indiana
a basketball floats on a rain puddle
at the bottom of a rusty wheelbarrow.

High grass swallows it up on a long
fence line separating house from
farm fields rolling into the distance.

Patches of forest can be seen just
past the fields where deer roam and
small mammals live out short lives.

These are the scenes that formed
my childhood and put the firm stamp
of melancholy on my personhood.

But also provided a buffer from
things that can wither the soul and
may compromise the man to be.


***

Friday, May 01, 2015

The Passing of Fr. Roman Braga

Fr. Roman Braga


What can one say of the passing of Fr. Roman?  He suffered terribly in a notorious prison camp during the time that Romania was ruled by the Communists.  This camp was known for its experiments in stripping people of there identity, their personality, even their humanity, and trying to rebuild them as the new Communist man.  What it inadvertently did was strip him of his false self and facilitated the development of a new life in Christ.  He was grateful to his tormentors for this help.  His suffering was transfigured in imitation of Christ and brought forth a love for all things, creation and creatures without exception, in union with the Creator.  He once told us that "monks love everyone and everything, even the demons."

When I first met him I was a confused college student being pulled in many contradictory directions.  I went on a retreat to the monastery where he was the spiritual father.  There was an opportunity for having confession with him.  He welcomed me into the small room beside the chapel and said, "Before I hear your confession, let's just have a little talk."  He asked a few basic questions and then told me of something to watch out for, how to handle this thing, how to understand it so as to not be deceived.  He then heard my confession.  Several weeks later I went through this very thing and I did not handle it as I had been lovingly instructed to do so.  It did not turn out well and only too late did I remember the words of fatherly love that he had spoken to me.      

May his memory be eternal.