Let him wish his life
For the sorrows of a stone
Never knowing the first thread
Of these
Never knowing the pain of ice
As its crystals slowly grow
Needles Pressing in on the heart
To live forever
And never feel a thing
To wait a million lifetimes
Only to erode and become sand
Wish not for the stone
But for the fire
Last only moments
but change everything
Oh to be lightning
To exist for less than a moment
Yet in that moment
To expose the world to every open eye
Oh to be thunder
To clap and ring
To rumble into memories
Minds and spines
To chill the soul and shake the very ground
Pounding even the sand
Into smaller pieces
Or the mountain
Brooding, extinct
Yet gathering for one fatal moment
The power to blow the top clean off the world
Oh to last the blink of an eye and leave nothing
but nothing unmoved behind you
This poem is not simply about deciding whether or not change matters, but it is about asking yourself how much you would be willing to sacrifice to bring about change. To bring about a real change in the world, to dedicate your life to making change, chances are you will miss out on a million opportunities that others experience in life. When a scientist dedicates himself to finding a cure for cancer, he spends every waking moment in his lab conducting research. He misses his children's dance recitals and baseball championships. He misses the moments of joy and the moments of heart break. He sacrifices his personal life completely to give every fiber of his being to the cause. He surrenders his own selfish desires for the chance of saving the lives of complete strangers. He chooses to do so. When a reporter travels to a war zone to uncover the truth about a war or genocide, she risks her own life for the story. She puts herself in deadly situations to discover the details behind the war. She risks her safety and potentially risks her life for the chance to expose the true evil behind the war and find justice. These people risk everything for the complete strangers in the world around them. From reading this poem, I, along with the students in Ms. Gruwell's class, learned that it is worth the ultimate sacrifice to change the world. When you see injustice, you must do everything within your power to put an end to it otherwise the world will continue to turn into the corrupt, cruel world that it already become. If nobody is willing to put their own needs aside in order to dedicate the time and effort to making change, there really is nothing in this world worth living for. You could stay on this earth for eternity without seeing change, and then what would you be left with? Nothing but misery and pain and destruction. I would rather be on this planet for only the blink of an eye and solve one true horror in the world, like ending the use child soldiers, than stay on this planet for eternity and do nothing to change it into a better world.
What a beautiful poem and a beautiful sentiment throughout this whole post! (Would it be too much information if I said I was tearing up right now?) Throughout my discussions on eating animals, I wanted to focus on making choices. I think that, as individuals, we have so much power to influence others, if we only had the will to "put our own needs aside in order to dedicate the time and effort to making change" as you said. As humans we have an immense capacity for shaping the world around us, whether we shape it with pollution and construction or growth and renewal. I wonder if the option to change nothing at all even exists in these modern times. We leave footprints, whether they be our shoe-print s or our carbon footprint. But I love the idea of using my minutes for change. It's a hopeful, meaningful thought that I'll hang on to.
ReplyDeleteI am so glad that this poem had the same impact on you that it had on me. In your response, you mention our footprints in life as well as our carbon footprints. I actually thing that's another very interesting concept when it comes to making choices for better or for worse. The truth is that most of us choose to ignore the impact we have on the environment as well. It's too easy to throw flavorless gum out the window of your car or to throw an empty Coke bottle in the garbage because the recycling bin is too far. But every choice that an individual impacts a million other lives in some way or another. It brings me back to my original idea that every minute counts. Every minute of our lives if filled with the chance to damage another human being, another animal, or another part of this Earth. But each minute also brings the opportunity to show someone you care, to fight for justice, and to stand up for what you believe in.
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