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Monday, August 21, 2006

HUNGRY

We’ve fed these hungry mouths
Every morning, every evening
And there is so many more to feed
With words of a lightening flash

Once hear and now gone
I often wonder what it is like
To be fed only to be hungry again
For more

These hungry mouths give me life
Through their smiles and words
They feed my soul

And all therein

Thursday, August 10, 2006

I can't do this
the best way
So let me
do it the worst

I've got a lot of love
to give
to take
I am worried for the world

So I'm throwing my heart out
down this dirty drain
To feed you
for my sake

Loving without a heart
may be not the best way
It is the worst
so I'll keep loving you badly

For my sake

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

At two twenty on Saturday the 5th of August my good friends Scotty and Gab had their second child, a little baby girl. CONGRATULATIONS!!! This is my poem from me to her:

A baby is born
in the likeness
of none before

A life is here
I can feel it
from there to here

A life to love
and be loved
To be, to be

Go now
go into the world
Go with love and peace
from me to you!

Friday, August 04, 2006


VEGAN?

The term philosophy is often used to mean a set of basic values and attitudes toward life, nature and society. In this sense, Veganism is a "Philosophy of Life," guided by an essential core of values and principles:

Vegans see life as a phenomenon to be treasured, revered and respected. We do not see animals as either "The Enemy" to be subdued, or the Materials for Food, Fabric or Fun that were put on Earth for human use.

Vegans see themselves as a part of the natural world, rather than its owners or its masters.

Veganism recognizes no expendable or superfluous species that humans are free to hurt or destroy. Species of life-forms need not justify their existence, nor plead for protection from extinction on the grounds of their potential usefulness as food or medicine for humans. We continue to be burdened and misguided by adages such as "A weed is a plant we have not yet found a use for."

Veganism acknowledges the intrinsic legitimacy of all life. It rejects any hierarchy of acceptable suffering among sentient creatures. It is no more acceptable to torment or kill creatures with "primitive nervous systems" than those with "highly developed nervous systems." The value of life to its possessor is the same, whether it be the life of a clam, a crayfish, a carp, a cow, a chicken, or a child.

Veganism understands that gentleness cannot be a product of violence, harmony cannot be a product of strife, and peace cannot be a product of contention and conflict.

Vegan ideals encompass much more than advocacy of a diet free of animal products, or a fervent defense of animal rights. Veganism excludes no sentient being–animal or human– from its commitment to compassionate, gentle benevolence. To show tender regard for the suffering of animals, yet treat humans with callous contempt, is a disheartening contradiction of Vegan principles.

John Muir, talking about the natural environment, once observed "Every time I bend down to pick something up, I find it is connected to something else." There is an equivalent "ecology" to our behavior. Everything we do connects to something else; every action touches on the world around us, either close at hand and noticeable, or far away and unperceived, immediate in its effect or distant in time.

If Veganism has a prime value, it is simply that life-respecting compassion overrides individual issues of custom, convenience, comfort or cuisine.

If there is a single article of faith, it is that commitment to Vegan values will bring us closer to a world in which the fate and fortune of a planet and all its life forms do not hang on the judgment or the generosity of one species.

If there is one single concept that both generates and sustains the meaning and the power of the Vegan world-view, it is found in the word mindfulness. As Vegans, we strive to be thoughtful, aware and concerned about the impact of our choices, our actions and our decisions. The fruit of this awareness is inner peace, the quiet strength of ethical confidence, and an uplifting sense of fulfillment

Thursday, August 03, 2006

SURVIVAL

If I took all this pain
Inside me
And gave it to you
What would happen?

Would time stand still?
Would your head spin?
And fall to the floor
Like all the prisoners here before?

Caged and enslaved
To the mere thought
Cement and bars around my heart
To be free or die trying

Is better than giving all this pain
To you

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

DESTINY

I may be a some kind of a freak
but I am human just like you
Flesh and blood, bones and hair
windows for eyes so I can see you

Our words may be different
but what I mean to tell you
I've got many feelings
like nerve endings, all of them new

Yes I am some kind of a freak
but through my windows I see you
Playing and laughing in my garden
picking flowers and petals

One for each day I am without you