"Let nothing be wasted"
“Nothing,
Lord?”
“Nothing.”
* * *
Not our weary years,
Not our
silent tears,
None of
the loneliness
Which
caused that deep, echoing silence
in which
we could hear you?
None of
our failures
Which
stilled the insistent voices
Of those
who might otherwise have found a use for us.
We were
nobody and nothing
And in
the vast silence which surrounded us,
We heard
your signature sound:
A
whisper.
The bad
days we planted which became bad weeks, bad years.
Days,
nights, wasted to bickering, quarrelling, fights?
Even
them?
“Let
nothing be wasted.”
* * *
The
smart learn wisdom from your Word,
The
stupid learn it from experience.
I was
stupid, Lord.
* * *
The
years I wasted in depression,
Ingratitude,
bitterness, jealousy, hatred...
Will I
still produce as much
As if I had
spent them in praise,
thankfulness
and love,
hidden
in the holy places of the Most High?
“I will let nothing be wasted.”
* * *
And when
I overworked so much that I burned out,
And
still tried to read, being too exhausted too read,
Those
wasted hours and years?
Nothing was wasted.
And I
got terrified and perfectionistic,
And
revised pieces of work a hundred times,
And have
not finished the final draft of my big book
NOTHING IS WASTED.
* * *
The
friendships, Lord, the friendships.
I
expected too much, held on too hard,
Was too
impatient, too possessive.
Nothing is wasted.
Oh and
how many people I could have loved,
How many
could I have got to know
But I--I
read and wrote and worried
That I
wasn’t reading and writing more.
Oh and I
and my sweet Roy.
We could
have been so happy.
Everything
was, is, given us.
But how
we have fought!
Nothing is wasted.
And
those sweet, adorable little girls
And me
adoring them, and wanting to write too
And
writing often won.
I was there. With them and with
you.
I was there.
Nothing was wasted.
And
worry, worry, anxiety.
That my
dominating in-laws would visit us for months on end,
Would
stay forever,
Would
run our lives, ruin them,
All the eventualities
you averted!
But how long
did fear rule me,
Instead
of trust!!
And why
did I not get it, Lord,
That
love is all that matters
That I
can trust you in everything
That you
mean good when men mean evil
Why did
I not learn to trust you instead of worrying?
Mess,
Lord!
I sweep it up,
I sweep it up,
Shards,
tesserae, beach glass,
Broken
vases, crystal, beads, jewels.
Take and
receive, oh Lord
The mess
I have made of the jewels
You have
lavished upon me, again and again.
* * *
Nothing is wasted, he says.
I take what you have to give me:
broken jewellery, broken crystal,
broken children’s crafts,
kid’s toys, never assembled,
parts missing
gifts never used, now rusting.
Broken pottery, broken dreams,
broken body,
And my hands work
instantly, busily,
They mould, they shape,
They join, they
paste,
And from what you
thought was a Psyche heap of broken baubles
They create
Such a form as
Grecian goldsmiths make
Of hammered gold
and gold enamelling
To keep a drowsy
Emperor awake,
Or set upon a
golden bough to sing
To lords and ladies
of Byzantium.
* * *
I am grateful to Dave Roberts for the phrase, "If you have a bad day, don't plant it. Bad days have a habit of turning into bad weeks, months and years."
* * *
I am grateful to Dave Roberts for the phrase, "If you have a bad day, don't plant it. Bad days have a habit of turning into bad weeks, months and years."
Thank you for this, Anita. So much.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sarah. I have just visited you, and your poems are beautiful. They are real poems. Mine is a sort of blogpoem. I had the idea today as I was reading John 6, and rapidly wrote and published it. Publishing a POEM the day you write it? Heresy. I guess I am aiming in these to write the kind of poem that speaks to people at the very first reading, and offers up its riches or poverty instantly and generously!
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Anita
This made me think of a certain blouse I started sewing with my daughter and never finished. It's still packed somewhere, pins in the pieces, probably too small now and out-of-date, the sewing machine long since gone. Good intentions started it, broken needles and distractions ended it. I didn't realize it was an aching regret. But as I read, God touched that place and healed me. Nothing wasted.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anita.
I think the spontaneous feeling in this poem is beautiful--I connect very deeply with this question about waste. God is so good to create out of the nothing much we so often bring Him. :)
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for your kind words about my poems...it means so much to have a reader call them "real"! I spend too much time stressing over whether they are that... :-/
Thanks Jennie and Sarah,
ReplyDeleteI guess as I was reading John 6, Jesus's statement,"Let nothing be wasted" jumped out. That is the desire of his heart, and what he desires, he can bring about.
I love how stained glass and mosaics are made out of broken things. I hope Christ will take all the loving intentions we have of things to do with or for our children, only a fraction of which are realized, and one day make something beautiful out of them--these shreds and shards of love and weakness!
Thank you Anita,
ReplyDeleteIt reminds me of how much I've wasted in the past. No more, now recycle everything, reuse as much as possible, or pass it on where it can be used.
Creation is to precious to waste. Thanks be to God.
Indeed, thanks much, Ernie!
ReplyDeleteI needed to read that today. Thank you for sharing it Anita.
ReplyDeleteHi Claudia,
ReplyDeleteI truly do believe that he can take our false starts, dead ends, and apparently wasted endeavours, even years, and make something beautiful out of them. I feel more motivated to just leave everything in his hands, successes, and more frequently, mess!! :-)
beautiful words, beautifully written. such hope. loved this.
ReplyDeletethank you.
steph
Thanks Steph. And welcome to my blog!
ReplyDelete