Archive for January 2007 – Page 3

Last Words

If you knew you were going to shortly die, what would you like your last words to be?

As the basic premise behind the title of this past weeks sermon, this question seriously caught me attention. What would I like my last words to be? Who would I like to say them to?
As I thought about these questions these responses came to my mind:

  • To tell my parents, who adopted me, you were better to me than any natural birth parent could have been.
  • To tell my ex-wife that I forgive her.
  • To tell my friends, they were the brothers I never had.
  • To tell my daughter, I never stopped loving you.
  • To tell my son, you have become the man of God I have prayed for.
  • To tell my wife, you were a gift from God, that I never deserved.

What would you like your last words to be?

Too Fat to Enjoy Life

An ode to KGP:
Dinty Moore

In the simpler days of my youth I went on a 2 week canoing trip down the Shenandoah River.
2 weeks of idyllic weather and an unhurried existence where every little moment is cherished for what it is without the cacophony of this world barging in.
2 weeks of campfires, camp cooking and camp food.
2 weeks of my taste buds slowly loosing their comprehension between good and… passable.

12 days in, 2 to go and there was a ravenous desire for new fare.
A mountain convenience store beckoned up the side of a steep hill.
Tempting us with its unspoken possibilities.
Having obtained entrance the cool dark shelves laughingly displayed their wares,
knowing that we were young and weak and… hungry.

Sweets and sodas were grappled for in fiendish abandon.
Wild grinning faces stuffed brimming with delights.
Cool nectar of the bottling plant washing our throats.
In the midst of our revelry the number 10 cans stood,
and sang a siren songs of hearty man sized… meat.

Arms full of Dinty Moore Beef Stew
we recklessly made our way back down to the river.
That night, faces lit by the flickering fire light
we each ate our fill and nothing had ever tasted finer.

After the trip I begged my Mother to buy Dinty Moore.
Sitting at the dinner table, taste buds dancing with anticipation.
I questioned if the can had become tainted.

I’m not a poet, at least not like Robert Bruce. His recent poem Everything Was Beautiful, like most of his poems struck a chord in my soul – not sure it’s the same chord that Robert experienced – but to my way of thinking that’s the beauty of a poem. There is an amount of interpretation that we spin on to a poem as we try to personalize it. So here is my analogous wanderings.

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The Coat of Sin

Salguod has a simple yet poignant post on the burden of sin.

What a refreshing thought. I know that at the end of the shift, when I took that coat off it was liberating.

As I commented on Salguod’s site. After 20 years you’d think I’d get it, but I still need (almost daily) reminders like this.