Poetic
Voice (and the Breath of Good Intention)
The most beautiful thing we can
experience is the mysterious.
It is the source of all true art and science.
--Albert Einstein
In the beginning was the word and it was borne on the breath of Spirit. Just how
that spark of spirit is born within us, how it is nurtured by our impressions,
sculpted into phrases, how it is shaped-- its rhythm and language-- remains
unknown. At what moment does it slip
from our lips, does it flow as a river from our hearts, ink from our minds. How
exactly does it unfold on that brilliant horizon, that full moon of revelation.
Like any good messenger, the word falls away once it
has delivered the meaning. It is the beauty of the meaning that resonates
and endures. And, while all writing is a testimony of the human condition,
poetry has the potential to awaken in us that dream which is most deep and
profound. Who among us does not wish to
realize a dream. Are we not all dreams realized—the dust of memory, the
stuff that dreams are made of, the same DNA that we share with the stars?
Are not all words born of imagination, illumination. Yet, poetry, unlike prose
whose light is more direct, doesn’t spell everything out. It’s light, also
reflective, is more indirect. We seem to glean meaning from it on an intuitive
plane As in a condensation not unlike the conversion of a liquid to a vapor, it
is a distilled wisdom.
Poetry is, after all,
translation. It translates the same
language to a new language… offers another way of saying the same thing, keys
into associations and remembrances using metaphor, imagery, rhyme and rhythm.
Like music, it evokes and is both familiar and strange. It is a key that opens
a portal to the unconscious and helps us to understand on some scale without
fully comprehending. Each of us holds remembrances, emotions, feelings hidden
in darkness; developed and created as in a photographer’s darkroom destined to
be born into light. Eager to be given a name. Some of the most obscure phrases
can unlock the unconscious mind offering us a glimpse of light that might
otherwise remain veiled. And, thus, poetry reigns in the world of the visibly
Invisible. I am reminded that stars still shine even when we cannot see them.
Paradox is like that--neither
this nor that—it both enlightens and obscures… remains in some way a
mystery. Its strength is its vulnerability. The most powerful of words are
airborne on the fragile breath of spirit. There is something so magical about
language, especially in that moment when we connect with word's
meaning --when everything is in alignment--the meaning of the word, the
breath of good intention, the willingness to be open. There is a kind of holy
synchronicity that occurs. It' s very much like being in a sacred space
and receiving communion. This feeling which unites all people, no matter what
our belief. Vibration—that which we, like meteors, fall short of putting into
words.
As we invent through the vehicle of the word, we
ourselves are reinvented by the word . In the beginning was the
word... and with it came the SOUND! The sound of creation. Every time
we utter a word-- be it spoken or written--we are recreating the world ,
our world--inspiring change and transformation. We have only to find our voice.
Sometimes, I like to think… now the
eyes of my ears awake, now the ears of my eyes are opened. What would it
be like to be that mindful?! To have that much empathy! One of the things
poetry does for you is to put yourself in someone else s place. It nurtures
empathy and compassion. This is badly needed in the world and no small thing.
Everyone has a voice that needs to be heard.
Word is an extension of thought and
expression—a good part of what makes us very human . Trying to connect to
people, to meaning effects healing and change. Even when we are standing still
we are still moving and wishing to be moved... to get somewhere. And, if you don't image (imagine) a place for
yourself somewhere on the Large Screen of life, in the Larger Picture, you get
left behind. That's why they call it Moving
Pictures. For life is not a dead noun but a living verb. Love not just love, but loving. Loving is Everything. You may go a thousand miles and get
nowhere… or never leave your room and yet traverse an entire Universe. The more
significant home we carry is within our hearts-- love, kindness, a sense f
humor. The humility to accept the challenge of darkness, to transform and be
transformed. Perhaps, we are not so
unlike word, itself ---the
light we are buried in?
We are kept in the dark about so
many things, whether for political reasons, personal or other unknown . Dark
knows we are afraid of it. Wants only to be loved. Why not consider Dark
our darkroom and give birth to ourselves? Turn negatives into positives by
developing our perceptions. Be more
capable of change and experience ourselves as being moved from fear to love.
There is something about the duty of caring for the soul and realizing its
potential. Humanity. It is one of the reasons I write, one of the reasons I go
to listen to others. To you. I can't
wait to hear your voice--what you have to say, to sing, next from your minds
and hearts. Baring one's soul takes courage, but it is one of the most
transformative experiences one can have. Be it written or spoken, whether from near or far, no matter who you
are, we may all take comfort in the knowledge that we go our separate ways together.
May we do it mindfully... and with grace.
Antonia Alexandra Klimenko was first introduced on the BBC and to the literary world by
the legendary James Meary Tambimuttu of Poetry London–-publisher of T.S. Eliot,
Dylan Thomas, Henry Miller and Bob Dylan, to name a few. his death, it
was his friend, the late great Kathleen Raine, who took an interest
in her writing and encouraged her to publish. A nominee for the Pushcart
Prize, The Best of the Net, and a former San Francisco Poetry Slam
Champion, she is widely published. Her work has appeared in (among others) XXI
Century World Literature (which she represents France) and Maintenant
: Journal of Contemporary Dada Writing and Art archived at the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. and New York’s Museum of Modern
Art. She is the recipient of two grants: one from Poets in Need, of which
Michael (100 Thousand Poets for Change) Rothenberg is a co-founder; the
second—the 2018 Generosity Award bestowed on her by Kathleen Spivack and Joseph
Murray for her outstanding service to international writers through SpokenWord
Paris where she is Writer/ Poet in Residence. Her selected poems On
the Way to Invisible is forthcoming in 2024.
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