Divine Play

Delightful surprises await us when we surrender our own notions of creativity and allow our creative spirit to play with us and through us. This poem reflects one such spontaneous experiment …

Divine Play

This perfect place
This golden jungle
Of laughing waters
Of raucous parrots,
Of extravagant blooms
This place of perfect freedom
To be
To create.

I relax in Your laughing arms
Your tender love
Your giggling tummy
Releasing all fears of failure
All perfectionism
All need to capture thought perfectly.

Instead, I paint with words
And allow them to tell their own stories.
Each one holds a world
And beyond that more worlds.
Then, laughing, You blow them all away,
Like so much dandelion fluff,
My carefully constructed worlds.

“Live them!” You say,
“Sense them, taste them, smell them
And as you do that
New worlds will form to the dance of your pen.
Let your pen dance you instead of the other way round.
It really is quite easy,” You smile.

Captivated, I try again.
“No,” You say, “Don’t try.
Simply be it.
Allow it to form
And allow it to dissolve, too, when I blow on it.
For it is all just Divine play.
And the blowing of dandelion fluff is just as sacred
As the construction of the perfect dandelion globe.

“Remember, each piece of fluff carries a seed
Allow those seeds to take flight
And see where they land.”

© Copyright 2003 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

I Yelled at God Today!

Today, I yelled at God. I had gone out for a brisk walk to try to reconnect with myself. As walked, all sorts of emotions began to arise. Frustration and anger came up big time and I found myself raging at God along the lines of…

  • “I’m doing great work – I’m successfully helping others to transform their lives. So, why can’t I make a living?!! What is it I have to do???!
  • “Give me a clear plan of action, dammit! I’m fed up with guessing and then scrabbling to make a measly living! And I’m not even doing that successfully – Money is pouring out and none is coming in, even though you promised me that by giving I would be rewarded. Yes I am rewarded: emotionally and spiritually, but godammit, I need some fricking income too!!! I have to have income now. This is ridiculous – I’m giving to everyone, but myself.
  • “Surely, that’s not the Divine Plan! And I can’t keep this up. If I don’t get some money – and enough money – before the end of the month, why should I continue helping everyone else? I refuse to do any more until I get appropriate compensation. Where’s my 10-fold return??? Show me the MONEY!!
  • “You said You love me. Well, prove it! Give me what I need here. Give me some help. I’m struggling to make ends meet – I have to have income, I can’t just keep throttling my expenses to nothing – food costs money, shelter costs money. I can’t stop eating or live on the streets and still follow my purpose helping others. That’s ridiculous. It means I join those who are drowning. How does that help anyone??? Surely, that can’t be Your Will!
  • “I want to finally have money – yes, in huge amounts for a change! I want to be able to waste it outrageously on stupid things, just because I can! Not that I will waste it, I probably wouldn’t, but I want to at least have the option to waste it!!”

I ranted and raved out loud, punctuating my speech with choice four-letter words and gesticulating wildly in the air. As I fumed and sputtered in rage, I slowly became aware that some part of my consciousness was chuckling.

“What’s so damn funny? How can you laugh at this?” I demanded.

You have to admit it is pretty hilarious,” said the Voice in my head, barely containing its mirth.

As I listened, I began to laugh, too. First, because I must look like a raving lunatic! And secondly, because a part of me realized I had forgotten my creative power.

“God has already given you Everything. What MORE can He give you?

“What do you mean everything? How can that be when I can’t even make a decent living??? He must hate me.”

“God loves you! He wants you to have Everything your little heart desires!”

“Oh yeah, sure. He’s got a funny way of showing it.” I snorted!

I sensed more gentle chuckling. Then the Voice continued…

“He’s given you the Law of Attraction, so you CAN have everything you want. Absolutely anything and everything.  No judgements. All you have to do is use it! God can’t do it for you. He’s created the law, and it DOES work.

“Now it’s up to you to use it correctly by focusing on what you WANT, rather than what’s not working in your life. That’s how it operates. It’s operating even now – you are attracting financial problems because you are so focused on money flowing out, rather than in.

“He has given you everything you need to change your Reality. But you have to use your free will to decide what you want to create. Where’s the fun in living, if God does it all for you? How can you ever learn to create, when you abdicate your creative power to God?

“No, in His Infinite Wisdom and Love, He wants you to learn by experimenting. It’s the only way you will truly own it. Do you remember setting the intention that you wanted to master the Law of Attraction?”

“Yes,” I replied, feeling a tad sheepish.

“Well, all true learning comes from direct experience. Don’t give up. Keep experimenting. Have you been spending five minutes a day visualizing what you actually want?”

“Er, no.”

“Have you been acknowledging your successes and the income you DO receive with gratitude?”

“Uh…no, again.”

“Well, God has already done His part. Now it’s time for you to do yours. You can’t abdicate your free will and responsibility for creating the life you want. It doesn’t work like that.

“To create a specific result, the Law of Attraction requires your conscious involvement. Otherwise, all you get is the default result of your and everyone else’s miscellaneous thoughts and emotions. And you can imagine the results – they aren’t pretty.”

“OMG! You are right! One look at our unconscious world shows what a mess we are making of things by refusing to own our collective creative responsibility.”

“Yes, and in the microcosm of your own life, too. But take heart. The Law of Attraction is completely impersonal and works whether you use it consciously or not…”

“So, how is that supposed to encourage me?”

“It means that all you need to do is grasp the reins of your mind and start steering it in the direction you want and the Law of Attraction will do the rest. Isn’t that exciting?”

“Yes, it is! Wow! The possibilities are starting to filter through to me. So here I was holding the Magic Aladdin’s Lamp with no 3-wish limit and raving at God (who gave us this marvellous gift) just because He wasn’t doing it all for me. Duh!”

“And it takes so little to steer the course of your life in a completely new direction. Five minutes a day focussing on what you want and pretending to actually have it – just five minutes. Is that so hard?”

“No, actually, I guess not. So it’s up to me then, is it?”

“Of course. That’s what makes it so much more meaningful and rewarding when you succeed. PLEASE, do yourself a huge favour and do the 5 minutes a day. Don’t just talk about it or theorize. Actually do it. Make time for it. It’s the most important item on your To-Do list. Put it at the top and follow through. Even if you do nothing else all day, do that.”

“But I have to earn a living,” I whined.

“Yes, so visualize having a living, a glorious one, I might add. And if you feel resistance to doing the 5 minutes a day, visualize being able to do that exercise easily and so enjoying the process that it becomes the best part of your day. Start now to create a new habit that will serve you for the rest of your life!”

So, after this message, my heart opened. I felt inspired and empowered. It felt do-able. I felt I have the full creative freedom to earn money any way I want, or even just to receive it in the form of gifts or grants. It doesn’t matter. My choice. Or even better, let go of the how’s and just imagine enjoying the fruits of having money. Focus on what I want it for. That will bring it faster.

How about you? Are you doing your 5 minutes a day? How is that working for you? Please comment – I’d love to hear your experiences.

Caring for the Creative Self

I awaken naturally with the dawn, or unnaturally with the alarm, or to the warm, rough tongue of my cat, Jeda, licking my face, punctuated with little nibbles. This is her way of reminding me that she is a hungry little carnivore and that if I am not snappy about it, she might just revert to the habits of her saber-toothed ancestors, starting with my nose. Of course, I know she wouldn’t really, but sometimes I wonder if something happened to me and I didn’t wake up, whether a few days later the cops would find just a pile of well-gnawed bones in my place. That’s a gruesome thought!

So how does this fit into caring for the Creative Self? Well, for one, I am allowing my imagination to play with “what-if’s”. So what if they are silly? You never know where silliness might lead. A true Creative understands this and indulges in the need to imagine.

So if I were to truly care for my creative life, I would make time for imaginative ramblings, instead of having to sneak them in when I should be doing something else. When I book my day so solid with To Do’s that there is nothing left for daydreaming, it has to go underground. But the creative force simply will not be kept in–it sneaks out at the slightest break in my concentration, distracting me from my chores. So why fight it? Why not make it a legitimate part of my day?

That’s the problem–it doesn’t feel legitimate, my creativity. It feels like a self-indulgence, something to be done guiltily and hurriedly, when no one is looking. How do I explain to my boss that I was late for the meeting because my morning pages suddenly blossomed into a short story or poem.

Why does business judge pleasure so harshly, limiting it to the pleasure of getting the sale, coming in under budget or on schedule? Things that reflect on the holy bottom line. Business asks: what good is something that does not bring in money? I may argue that it isn’t paying for the time I spend creatively, but business would counter that I could have used that time to work. Hence it must be theft!

So what has all this to do with caring for my creative life? Well I suspect that it is not really about them at all. I am the one who feels guilty when I take time for creativity. See, I even said, “take time” for creativity. From whom??? Obviously, I must have some deeply rooted beliefs about who owns my time. So, it seems to me that the first step to reclaiming the time to care for my creative life, is to heal those beliefs. Because if I don’t own my life and my time, why bother living? So someone else can make a profit? Hardly a compelling reason to exist!

So let us propose another “what-if”. What if I claimed my life, my energies and my time as my own, with all the rights and responsibilities conferred by ownership. What would that look like? I would start each day with a board meeting with my Creative Self. I would spend 30-40 minutes going over my day, work meetings, creative projects, household chores etc., and writing them out in calligraphy of different colors, with cartoons and sketches– as sort of illustrated treasure map of my day. And then, I would hand it over to my Creative Self to mark a big X on the spot where I should start digging for buried gold!

I would ask my Creative Self to become involved in all areas of my life, including work and see how it felt like approaching them. Who know what worthwhile changes might happen? And who says creativity cannot positively affect the bottom line? Of course it can, and does, many, many times. And if it doesn’t, then it can positively affect my attitudes and moods, which will positively affect my colleagues and thereby positively affect our productivity, or at least our enjoyment of our work.

I would take frequent breaks, time-outs, every couple of hours or even more often. I would agree on a secret code that my Creative Self would use when it wanted my attention. When called, I would step out of my office and into Sacred Space — like being summoned into the boss’s office for a private and confidential meeting. Hmmm. Why not? If I include my Creative Self as my business partner, who says that I would starve? Maybe not. All I know is I would have a lot more fun and purpose in my life. And when it is over, I will look back fondly on all my creative moments, before stepping forth into the final creative adventure. Yes, I see now that caring for my creative life is caring for my Self at the deepest, most meaningful level. Definitely worth giving it a try!

© Copyright 2011 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

Hummingbird

In preparation for a client session, I was setting up my healing room (a glassed-in porch with a glorious view over water and mountains), when suddenly I had an unexpected encounter with a tiny winged visitor. This poem evokes my experience…

Hummingbird

A hummingbird flutters into the open window
And enters my healing room
Buzzing and beating against the glass ceiling
Looking for a way out.

Who is this tiny messenger
Who dares to enter this sacred precinct?
Risking its life in the unknown
Eyed by three hungry cats.

It only seems to understand “up”
And beats uncomprehendingly upon the glass roof,
While inches below lies the open window and freedom,
Ignored in its instinctive flight.

I gently cup it in my hands.
It stops fluttering for a moment
And rests as I transport it
Down the short distance to its release.

Holding my hands outside
I barely open them and it is off,
Zooming southwards towards the trees.
And I am blessed by the memory of its lightness.

© Copyright 2002 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

In Defense of Blondes

After hearing one too many blonde jokes, the urge rose up in me to speak out. This poem is the result…

In Defense of Blondes

My hair, it is fair
And I’m happy to share
That it comes from my Nordic parentage.
I’m a woman, it’s true,
My eyes, they are blue,
And my IQ within normal percentage.

I have a degree.
Four long years, it took me
Of study and research profound.
So it irks me when taught
All that was for naught
To the jokesters, I’m just a dumb blonde.

It seems nothing I do
Will loosen the glue
With which this label sticks to me.
But I refuse to despair
Or to dye dark my hair
Cause I like the attention it brings to me!

© Copyright 1998,2011 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

Message from the Muse

This poem arose spontaneously in response to a creative writing class exercise — we were asked to imagine receiving a letter from our Creative Self…

Message from the Muse

Laughter is in the silence
Unheard, but felt inside
Like bubbles of champagne
Rising up through the sorrow,
The heaviness of rigid expectations,
And the broken promises to yourself.

Let go of it all!
Rise up and dance
To the moonlight orchestra
And the symphony of the stars.
Jig to the reel of Spirit,
Kicking and strutting in time
With the turmoil of Life,
Noisy and messy as it is.

Mind it not,
This noise and messiness,
For it is the rhythm
Of Life itself expressing
Through organisms
Made of blood and flesh.

Feel the laughter of your cells
As they dance the eternal dance,
The ebb and flow of the breath
Keeping time with their antics.
It is their breath, too.

Breath-less now,
In their swirling, ecstatic motion
Faster, and faster still,
Little whirling dervishes,
Forming the prayer of your Soul
To live fully, timelessly,
In the Now.

Relax and laugh, my dearest ones,
And let the music of that laughter
Carry you away
Until you, too, know who you really are
And what is really important.
Important enough
to laugh for,
to live for,
And to dream into existence.

For you are dreamers all
And this dream is your creation.
May your dream be worthy of you,
A true expression of your Being.

© Copyright 2002 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

Pet Talk

— A short story

Bart thought he was going crazy and who wouldn’t when you are forty-two and you think your dog is talking to you. Harley, his black and white border collie, was sitting in front of him, staring intently into his eyes and saying, “You never listen to me!”

Well, okay, the dog wasn’t actually moving his lips, but Bart could swear he heard a voice coming from him. Bart shook his head. “Nah! I just must have had too much scotch at the party last night,” he said and went off to the kitchen to fix himself some strong black coffee.

Harley followed him and then hit Bart’s leg with his paw.

“You are doing it again – ignoring me!” the dog said.

Bart turned around and there was that darned voice again. Harley’s eyes were blue, which was unusual for a dog and combined with that concentrated stare made him look almost, well, human, and a pissed off one, too. The dog was saying, “What’s the matter? Can’t you understand English?”

He’s not really talking. Dogs can’t talk. I’m imagining all this, thought Bart, wishing the coffee maker would hurry up.

“Who says we can’t talk? Humans! What do they know? Arrogant bastards!” said Harley.

You have to admit, thought Bart, I sure have a lively imagination. I wonder if I could make a living from it. Maybe write stories for children, produce a cartoon show. . . He started to whistle as he fantasized waving to pint-sized fans in the Santa Claus parade. 

Harley barked and Bart patted him absent-mindedly on the head. At last, the coffee was ready. Bart filled his mug, sat down at the kitchen table, and opened the morning paper to look for jobs. He had been unemployed for 6 months and his savings were getting low. Harley, forgotten and ignored, padded out of the room in disgust.

The dog flopped onto the rug by the fireplace and rested his nose on outstretched paws. He let out a big sigh. This is not going well, he thought, The guy is incredibly slow.

Just then, Minxy came in through the cat flap. She stopped to give her short, but silky black fur a few licks, before moving over towards Harley. Keeping her thoughts carefully shielded, she crept up behind him and suddenly swatted his tail with fully extended claws. Then she made a dash for cover under the coffee table. Harley did not react.

Hmmm, they must need sharpening, thought Minxy, and began working both sets of front claws on the nearby sofa.

“No, I felt that. I just chose to ignore it,” said Harley.

“Why? You sick or something?

“Just depressed. I still can’t get Bart to communicate.”

“Hey, give it up! You’ve been at this for months. Face it; he’s a dud, even for a human.”

“I can’t understand why it’s taking so long. God knows I’ve left enough clues. I left books lying on the floor open, with the corners folded. Surely, he could figure out I can read. But no, he thinks I just want to play, or I’m hungry or some such thing.

“Then I try to get his attention by staring at him and transmitting thoughts, but he only seems to understand barks and whines and growls. It’s so pathetic! Here I am trying to raise the intellectual level of our communications and all he thinks about is my physical needs.”

“Harley, you are wasting your time. Even if he could communicate with you, who’s to say his thoughts are worth hearing. You’d probably wish he’d shut up once he gets going. No, take my advice and forget him. Just do your dog thing, get yourself fed and walked and leave the intellectual stimulation to the animal kingdom.”

“Well, there was a rather intelligent poodle I met on our walk yesterday. Had some interesting things to say on fluid dynamics and the forces at work on a urine stream projected at angle A with a velocity of B, or something like that. I didn’t catch the formula, ’cause his human hauled him away before he could finish his demonstration.”

“You see! What do humans know? Stupid clods. Last night, you know what happened?”

“What?”

“Well, it was around midnight, see? Bart was watching TV, some old movie. And I told him I was just going out for an hour and to leave the latch off. But the jerk went and locked me out all night!”

“No!”

“Just about froze my tail off.”

“Such as it is.”

“Hey! You making fun of my tail?”

“Well, it is short, don’t you think?”

“It’s meant to be. I’m a Manx cat. Why do you think the idiot called me Minx the Manx? The guy has no imagination at all.” Minxy licked the little puff of fur at her rump.

“Looks more like a rabbit’s tail, if you ask me!” snorted Harley.

“Ok, that’s it! You asked for it!” And with that, Minxy leapt onto the dog’s back and dug in all four sets of claws as deep as she could. Harley yelped and ran around the living room trying to dislodge her.

Bart heard the commotion and ran into the room, shouting, “Hey! No fighting. Minx, get off him now! Now, I said!”

The pair ignored him, putting on the greatest rodeo show the world had ever seen—Harley bucking to and fro crashing into furniture and Minxy hanging on for dear life.

Bart tried to get a grip on Minxy as they passed, thinking to pull her off, but he just got in the way. Harley slammed into his knees, bringing Bart to the ground. In true bronco fashion, Harley threw himself down and tried to roll on his rider, but Minxy was too fast for him. She sprang off just in time to avoid being squashed and then sped out through the cat flap, disappearing into the bushes beside the house.

Damn cat, thought Harley as he licked his wounds, She’s so vain. Can’t take a joke.”

“Hey bud, you okay?” said Bart, as he picked himself up. He went over to inspect Harley’s back. “Looks like she got you pretty good there. It’s bleeding. Let me put some ointment on it.”

“Ugh! Not that white stuff. It tastes terrible!” said Harley.

“You aren’t supposed to eat it, stupid,” said Bart.

“Hey! Did you just talk back to me?” said Harley, his heart leaping with hope, tail wagging wildly.

“Stop wriggling about. If you don’t let me treat it, I’ll have to take you to the vet.” Bart said.

Nah, must have imagined it, thought Harley, as he forced his body to calm down. “Why don’t you take that damned cat to the vet and get her declawed instead?”

“Hmmm. While I’m at it, maybe I should take Minxy to the vet and get her declawed,” said Bart, “She’s tearing the place apart. Just look at that sofa!”

Hey! It’s working! I’m slowly getting through to him! Harley’s tongue lolled out in a huge grin and his tail thumped enthusiastically on the rug.

“You’d like that, wouldn’t you, pal?”

Yes! thought Harley, Success!!! By George, I think he’s got it!

The End

“Pet Talk” © Copyright 2004 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

Goldfish Hate Hockey

— A short story

When I was about 10 years old, I conceived an ingenious plan to get around my mother’s “no pets” policy. She hadn’t said anything about giving them as gifts, had she? So I decided to give my brother some goldfish for his birthday. How could she take away his birthday gift? I knew it was foolproof. The fact that my brother was not the slightest bit interested in goldfish, only worked in my favour, because I knew that then I could kindly volunteer to care for them.

The plan worked brilliantly and soon there was a fishbowl on the TV set, complete with two goldfish. My brother, after the statutory thanks, completely ignored them. After several days, the water turned yellow and murky. The fish did not appear to be thriving. My mother refused to have anything to do with them. In her opinion, they did not exist. Whenever anyone mentioned cleaning the fishbowl, my brother was nowhere to be found. So, of course, I generously offered my pet care services and it fell to my father to teach me how to clean the tank. He took pity on the two little fish in their simple bowl, all that I had been able to afford on my meager allowance, so we went off to the pet store to get a proper tank, complete with gravel, air pump and filter. We even got some plastic scenery for them. It would be more work to clean, with all the angel hair in the filter and such, but I was very excited–it was going to be a real little underwater world. While we were at the store, I saw a beautiful little black mollie, with bulging eyes and trailing fins. My father took a liking to another goldfish with red and white patches and even longer fins, drifting like white veils behind it.

The tank was quite small, maybe one gallon at the most, and the four goldfish were a bit much for the overburdened filter, so I got lots of practice cleaning the tank every week, assisted by my father who handled the net. He was better at catching the slippery little guys.

I first discovered about the goldfish aversion to hockey about a week after we got them. The new tank was perched on the TV cabinet, in front of the rabbit ears. It was Thursday night and my brother and father were watching “Hockey Night in Canada”. I hated hockey – I found it a boring, loud and rowdy game. The hysterical voice of the announcer, rising and falling in endless crescendos, “He shoots! He scores!” or “Oh! What a save!” irritated me no end. Not to mention the fact that for two whole hours I wouldn’t be able to watch anything else. I sat at the dining room table doing my homework instead.

The game had already been on for over an hour. My brother and father were on the edge of their seats enthralled in the game. I flipped the pages of my book, unwilling to do my homework, not really concentrating, but determined to look righteous, anyway. Suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I saw something shiny flopping around on the rug.

“Dad! Dad!” , I screamed, “Freddie’s jumped out of the tank! Help!”

I ran about in a panic trying to figure out what to do. There was no way I was going to pick the slimy thing up in my hands. My dad jumped up, grabbed the fishnet and got on his knees to look for the fish. Freddie had flip-flopped his way under the coffee table and was now lying there gasping. Dad dropped the little goldfish back in the tank. I prayed that Freddie would recover, but, unfortunately, an hour later, after the game had ended, I found him floating motionless upside-down, with his eyes staring vacantly ahead. Dad fished Freddie out and we gave him a burial at sea, via the toilet.

We cleaned the tank and put everything back. The three survivors swam about quickly exploring the extra space. I couldn’t tell if they missed Freddie. Goldfish expressions are hard to read.

A week later, again during “Hockey Night in Canada”, another goldfish jumped. This time we were faster with the net and it survived its ordeal.

The next week it happened again, at exactly the same time. I reasoned that if three goldfish had jumped, all during “Hockey Night in Canada”, it could prove only one thing – clearly they hated hockey. I completely sympathized with them, though I was not as ready commit suicide for my beliefs as they were. I pleaded with my dad and brother to change channels, but they remained unmoved. Instead, my father installed a plastic cover on the tank.

The next week, halfway through an exciting game, judging by the roar of the crowds and by the outbursts, cheers and groans coming from the living room, I hazarded a glance at the fish tank to see how my little friends were doing. I screamed! “Oh No!” Two of them were floating upside down in the tank. They had been unable to jump.

At commercial break, my dad fished out the two little corpses and we ceremoniously flushed them. Only Molly, the little black one, was left. I was worried for her, swimming all by herself in the tank, nudging the cover. Again I pleaded with my father and brother to change channels. No dice. But my father had a puzzled look on his face. Clearly he was thinking.

After the game, he got up and stared at the tank for a few moments. He slid back the plastic cover of the tank and put his finger into the water. Then he felt the top of the TV set with his hand. Finally, he nodded towards me, “I think I’ve found the problem,” he said, “the water’s too hot–probably from the TV – those tubes can get pretty heated up after a few hours.” He unplugged the little tank and moved it carefully over to a low bookshelf in the far corner of the room and plugged in the air pump again. “There, that should do the trick” he said, “Molly will be fine now.”

“But now she’ll have to look at the game as well as hear it! She’ll die!” I blurted out.

My dad chuckled, “Believe me, it’s not hockey that’s the problem, it’s hot water.”

Even as I admitted that logically his argument made sense, deep down I still wasn’t convinced. I was sure something dire was going to happen. I waited anxiously all the next week for the dreaded Thursday night to arrive, wondering if little Molly would survive the threat.

But when Thursday night came, Molly proved him right and swam around the tank for the whole game, completely unfazed, even seeming, dare I say it, quite happy!

As I sprinkled food flakes on the surface of the water and watched her gobbling them up eagerly, an awful realization began to filter through my mind. Out of four goldfish, she was the only one who hadn’t tried to jump. Out of a family so driven by their instinctual hatred of hockey that they would rather die that be exposed to it, she was the only one left and thriving. She was the black sheep, er, fish of the family. The conclusion was inescapable.

“Molly, you’re one of THEM, aren’t you!” I exclaimed, “You’re a hockey fan, you little turncoat! I can’t believe you did this to me!” But Molly just went on greedily gulping down food flakes, oblivious to my outrage. Disgusted, I turned back to the dining room table, which was overflowing with the pages of my homework, and knew that my Thursday nights were going to look like this for a long, long time.

The End

“Goldfish Hate Hockey” © Copyright 2003 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

Poet’s Lament (Circle of Words)

In a creative mood, I felt the urge to write in circles whatever wanted to come through me. The following poem is the result…

Circle of Words


The Word is the beginning of all things
The Seed at the center of the Spiral.
I laugh at the playful absurdity
Of trying to write in circles,
Hoping to articulate the Truth
I feel at the centre of my Being.
Ah, words—so useless and fragmentary.
Ah, Word—so Powerful and yet
So distant from my mind,
As I fumble with the day to day
Vocabulary of my brain,
All meaning seeping out in the translation
Of what cannot be spoken
Only Known.

© Copyright 1998 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved

How Vision Influences Perception

A few years ago I played around with natural means of improving my vision, using eye exercises etc. One of the things I explored was the psychological impact of vision – I noticed that wearing glasses tended to make me more logical and analytical, whereas fuzzy (unassisted) vision tended to put me in a more relaxed contemplative state. Here is a poem that emerged during these investigations. Has anyone else noticed this phenomenon? Why not comment below.  I’d love to hear about your experience!

My Fuzzy Eyes

My fuzzy eyes see a world still new,
Free of defect and gently hued.
They do not see the cracks and stains,
The dirt, the scuff marks or hairy drains.

An impressionist world opens up instead,
A needlepoint tapestry of delicate thread,
With subtle textures that when softly viewed
Create in me a kindly mood.

The scattered litter in the grass
And the gleaming shards of broken glass
Become but flowers growing in the light
And sparkling dew, like diamonds bright.

Now, I do have the latest in optical gear,
One pair for far, and another for near.
They show me a world that’s crisp and true
Not one single detail do they misconstrue.

So I can read tiny print in a magazine
And when driving, road hazards are easily seen,
But when all’s said and done, I realize
I much prefer my fuzzy eyes.

© Copyright 2002 by Gail Christel Behrend — All Rights Reserved