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Spiritual Poems of the Known and the Unknown

Following are five spiritual poems dealing with both the known and the unknown.

Darkness and Light

How do you turn off the darkness?

How do you set it aside?

Where do you find that switch?

That only you can provide.

And as your light shines on me

As it touches my being

I begin to surmise

That it’s a change I’m foreseeing.

The Virtue of Light of Day

In the chasm of the unknown

there lingers a need

to be one with consciousness

to be one with being.

However…

thoughts interrupt this emanation

and the soul takes a back seat

to the eternal bliss

that one strives to find.

But stillness helps consciousness break through

escaping the encapsulating thought-created cocoon of the mind

diminishing the need of the ego to control and to be

allowing for true self to emerge and meet the virtue of light of day.

Grace

In a state of confusion…little patience…without clarity

Empty of tranquility.

There I was…

But there I did not seek to be.

The guiding path lost within my world.

I was perplexed…bewildered…defeated.

I needed amity of body, mind, and spirit.

I needed the breath of life

to infuse wholeness into my existence.

But that I felt helpless to achieve.

So I sat alone.

In silence…

I waited.

Consumed by my condition.

Unable to call upon decipherability

so as to understand the complexity of my despair

and find solutions for my state…

I surrendered

to the abyss of the unknown.

And then…

I felt it

the emergence of the unexplained

slowly…gently…mysteriously….

taking hold of my being.

for Grace now made her appearance…

and soothed

my sheered and shattered soul.

(This point was awarded fourth place in a poetrysoup.com contest in April of 2021)

I Want to Meditate

I want to meditate

To sit in that state of silence all alone

To bring tranquility to mind

And have meditation take me home.

On a Chain I Wear a Cross

On a chain, I wear a cross

Around my neck I do.

I don’t wear it to say, “I Am”

I don’t wear it for you.

For me it’s a symbol of compassion and humility

And the world’s need for love.

For me it is a cry for a peaceful existence

Just like the symbol of the dove.

When I was young I often went to church

It was a place my parents brought me to.

For I was baptized Greek Orthodox

Therefore, the expected thing to do.

There, many things made sense to me

Now some did not, and don’t.

But I learned to not be bothered

By inaccuracies and the unexplained – I said I won’t.

In my later years I searched, felt, and realized the mystical

In the one God I believe exists.

And in the plants, the animals, and of course humans too

I discovered a spirituality that subsists.

My beliefs might now be complex

Some might say they do not fit a norm.

As I read about religions and the spiritual world

I ultimately went through a reform.

Today I still go to my Orthodox Church

To pray in a place of refuge, where God they say resides.

To fulfill a never ending need to seek, learn, and understand

And to still my rather busy mind.

On a chain, I wear a cross

Around my neck I do.

I don’t wear it to say, “I am”

And I don’t wear it for you.

On a Chain I Wear a Cross

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Spiritual Poems of the Known and the Unknown

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