“People escape into other things; you don’t escape into poetry. You confront yourself when you are reading poems…” ~Mark Strand
I’m overwhelmed. Everyone I talk to is overwhelmed. There are so many crises happening simultaneously that it’s hard to keep paddling the little rowboats of our own lives through the ongoing cataclysms.
Anyone who has studied history surely wondered what it would be like to be alive during the fall of the Roman Empire or what they’d have done during the Nazi reign of terror. We may be finding out.
We live in a society that upholds profit as a de facto god. Bombs are dropped to enrich military contractors, schools are twisted to serve corporate test-makers, and the Supreme Court has given corporations the right to secret political spending–offering them vast influence over elections, laws, and federal policy. The average person is squeezed on all sides as billionaires grow every more wealthy while our (billionaire-owned) media fosters divisions between us.
Infuriating is not a strong enough word. I don’t think there is a term yet coined that sufficiently expresses how we feel let alone helps make sense of our anger. That’s where poetry comes in in all its beautiful, inspiring rage. Here are a few examples, with gratitude to the poets.
AGAINST PEACEFUL PROTEST
I want to run through every street in the country
with my blouse on fire.
Bang pots and plans. Wake up the criminals
and scream like a barn door breaking. I want to break
all the windows and steal all the money
out of the embankment of billionaire arms dealers.
I want to throw my own body, my precious
bones and fingernails in front of every bomber
that threatens a runway. I want to disrupt
a nightly broadcast and ask the viewers
Do you know how many babies have turned
to ghosts since yesterday? I don’t want
to sit quiet, meditating on a good example,
Getting old by being played like some puppeteer’s pet
mouthpiece. I want to run through the suburbs
lighting the night on fire, frantic and unstoppable,
until everyone steps out of their well-mannered houses,
their feet touching frost, touching
sand, sea water, gravel, asphalt, grass, starring
at one another, shaking in their nightgowns, asking,
Oh my god, what do we do now?
What do we do?
~
BULLET POINTS
I will not shoot myself
In the head, and I will not shoot myself
In the back, and I will not hang myself
With a trashbag, and if I do,
I promise you, I will not do it
In a police car while handcuffed
Or in the jail cell of a town
I only know the name of
Because I have to drive through it
To get home. Yes, I may be at risk,
But I promise you, I trust the maggots
Who live beneath the floorboards
Of my house to do what they must
To any carcass more than I trust
An officer of the law of the land
To shut my eyes like a man
Of God might, or to cover me with a sheet
So clean my mother could have used it
To tuck me in. When I kill me, I will
Do it the same way most Americans do,
I promise you: cigarette smoke
Or a piece of meat on which I choke
Or so broke I freeze
In one of these winters we keep
Calling worst. I promise if you hear
Of me dead anywhere near
A cop, then that cop killed me. He took
Me from us and left my body, which is,
No matter what we’ve been taught,
Greater than the settlement
A city can pay a mother to stop crying,
And more beautiful than the new bullet
Fished from the folds of my brain.
~
QUESTIONNAIRE
How much poison are you willing
to eat for the success of the free
market and global trade? Please
name your preferred poisons.
For the sake of goodness, how much
evil are you willing to do?
Fill in the following blanks
with the names of your favorite
evils and acts of hatred.
What sacrifices are you prepared
to make for culture and civilization?
Please list the monuments, shrines,
and works of art you would
most willingly destroy
In the name of patriotism and
the flag, how much of our beloved
land are you willing to desecrate?
List in the following spaces
the mountains, rivers, towns, farms
you could most readily do without.
State briefly the ideas, ideals, or hopes,
the energy sources, the kinds of security;
for which you would kill a child.
Name, please, the children whom
you would be willing to kill.
~
COLLECTIVE NOUNS FOR HUMANS IN THE WILD
A group of grandmothers is a tapestry. A group of toddlers, a jubilance (see also: abewailing). A group of librarians is an enlightenment. A group of visual artists is a bioluminescence. A group of short story writers is a Flannery. A group of musicians is — a band.
A resplendence of poets.
A beacon of scientists.
A raft of social workers.
A group of first responders is a valiance. A group of peaceful protestors is a dream. A group of special education teachers is a transcendence. A group of neonatal ICU nurses is a divinity. A group of hospice workers, a grace.
Humans in the wild, gathered and feeling good, previously an exhilaration, now: a target.
A target of concert-goers.
A target of movie-goers.
A target of dancers.
A group of schoolchildren is a target.
~
THE BLADES
In the new world, as the goddess dictated,
each time a man touched a woman against
her will, each time he exposed himself,
each time he whistled, dropped something
in her drink, photographed her in secret
she sprouted a wing from her spine. Not feathered,
like birds or angels, not cellular, translucent,
veined like dragonflies, but a wing
like a blade, like a sword hammered flat,
thin as paper. One wing per wrong.
At first, the women lamented. All their dresses
needed altering, their blankets shredded,
their own hair sliced off like a whisper
if it grew down their backs. And those
misused by fathers, bosses, drunken strangers
evening after evening were blade-ridden,
their statures curved downward like sorrow
under such weight. But this was not the old world
of red letters or mouthfuls of unspoken names,
not the old world of women folded
around their secrets like envelopes, of stark
rooms where men asked what they’d done
to deserve this. And the goddess whispered
to the women in their dreams, and they awakened,
startled, and knew the truth.
They pinned up their hair, walked out into the morning,
their blades glittering in the sun, sistering
them to each other. They searched for the woman
with the most blades, found her unable to stand,
left for dead, nearly crushed beneath the blades’ weight.
They called her queen. They lifted her with hands
gentle as questions, flung her into the air,
saw her snap straight, beat the wings at last,
and they followed her, a swarm of them, terrible
and thrumming, to put the blades to use.
~
CAUSE OF DEATH: FOX NEWS
Toward the end he sat on the back porch,
sweeping his binoculars back and forth
over the dry scrub-brush and arroyos,
certain he saw Mexicans
moving through the creosote and sage
while the TV commentators in the living room,
turned up loud enough for a deaf person to hear,
kept pouring gasoline on his anxiety and rage.
In the end he preferred to think about illegal aliens,
about welfare moms and healthcare socialists,
than about the uncomfortable sensation of the disease
crawling through his tunnels in the night,
crossing the river between his liver and his spleen.
It was just his luck
to be born in the historical period
that would eventually be known
as the twilight of the white male dinosaur,
feeling weaker and more swollen every day,
with the earth gradually looking more like hell
and a strange smell rising from the kitchen sink.
In the background those big male voices
went on and on, turning the old crank
about hard work and god, waving the flag
and whipping the dread into a froth.
Then one day my father had finished
his surveillance, or it had finished him,
and the cable-TV guy
showed up at the house apologetically
to take back the company equipment:
the complicated black box with the dangling cord,
and the gray rectangular remote control,
like a little coffin.
~
PRAYER
God of tulips,
God of lost children,
God of prisoners and patients,
God of Zaatar.
God of Dar and homeland,
God of viruses and vaccines,
God of the first hour before they all wake up,
God of the last hour before we sleep.
When the sky is on fire. Hold us.
When the house is demolished. Hold us.
When the hospital is hit. Hold us.
When the lynch mob is on the streets. Hold us.
When the boot is on the neck. Hold us.
When the headlines forget. Hold us.
Name us.
~
If you’re still reading, I simply want to say that fury helps us stand up to injustice together. But we also need respair. This archaic word is derived from the Latin respirare (“to breathe again”). It means “fresh hope” or “recovery from despair.” Singing helps. So does hiking, dancing, hugging, sharing, laughing, and of course, poetry on the hopeful side of things.

Dear Laura,
I have fond memories of being in class with you many years ago.
Sincerely,
Phyllis Benjamin
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I do as well Phyllis.
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Brava for sharing these powerful poems! The anger, the pain expressed is so much more powerful that the grief that accompanies helplessness and hopelessness.
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It’s interesting, isn’t it, that art expressing our most painful emotions somehow reinvigorates us.
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Still reading, Laura, and thank you
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Thank you for hanging in there to the end.
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Powerful. It seems that each day I need to bleed my pipes, remove the air that is stuck inside me because of the unrelenting troubling news. These poems awaken the flow inside of me. I can face it for another day. I thank you.
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What an analogy, especially when many of us are facing severe winter storms that may indeed freeze the functions that make our homes comfortable.
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Imagine me bowing to you for this post, these poems, your words & wisdom. Thank you for speaking when so many of us are shocked and speechless.
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I’m grateful for writers whose words get through to us in a time when we are, as you say so well, shocked and speechless.
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Thank you for these poems in this moment. Minnesota is on strike today, small businesses, restaurants and bars, independent bookstores, art museums all shut down. People are not shopping, not working if possible, not going to school. The below-zero weather helped with the not going to school piece. We are standing in solidarity with those ICE has hurt, which are in the thousands. I woke with so much grief today, cried a good part of the morning. My beloved Minnesota is occupied and we are fighting, but it is absolutely overwhelming. So much of the truth of this moment is being suppressed. Wendell Berry’s poem struck me in particular, as our children are suffering greatly. Ah, here I go again with tears.
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Holding you and everyone in Minnesota close to my heart. My spirits are lifted to see, day after day, people rally around their neighbors in the Minneapolis area. This morning a friend sent pictures from her week — people standing guard over daycares and schools during drop off and pick up times, people bringing groceries to those afraid to venture out, people marching and singing and drumming. What’s happening in our country is beyond bizarre. Although I’m in Ohio, Minneapolis is dear to me. My Swedish grandmother’s family settled there, my grandfather was born and raised on Nicollet Island. They are both buried there.
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I did not know you had such a close connection. Once we get to the other side of this – and I have to believe we will – you always have a place to stay with us if you would like to come pay your respects to those grandparents.
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What a lovely offer. Thank you Kathleen.
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Yes, an infusion of respair is needed. The poems, ‘Prayer’, ‘Collective Nouns for Human is the Wild’, and ‘Questionnaire’ especially speak to me…
Stay warm & safe.
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You too. May we all be warm and safe.
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Hoo boy these words are powerful. Yet what can our words do in the face of such violence and hatred? Yes there are those who say, who believe, that mere words can effect change. I used to be one of them. I no longer am. I despair for the children and young people who must endure for years. I am only glad that my time on this earth will soon come to an end.
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I am so sorry for your grief over all that’s going on. Your caring heart leads you to this despair but I have to believe that caring hearts make a difference through whatever is happening and can’t help but influence whatever might happen.
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We are so angry over here in the UK, but I cannot even begin to believe how furious you must be over there.
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I am accustomed to infuriating politics, as I’m sure you are, but now (and in Trump’s first term) it’s not only everything all at once but somehow gets worse every single day. And frankly, if it weren’t so dangerous, it’s all ridiculous as well.
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It’s particularly worrying because it’s unknown territory. We haven’t been here before. There’s really no precedent in US history, as far as I know.
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Definitely precedents in history. None of them promising.
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Oh dear.
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On the upside, there’s the Minnesota “miracle.” Over the last decade this includes universal school luncheons, paid family and medical leave, 100% clean energy by 2040, free college for families making less than 80K a year, big investments in transportation/childcare/healthcare/education, funds earmarked to replace every lead pipe in the state, labor rights, regenerative environmental initiatives, banned predatory lending, and much more. Here’s how this happened— an ecosystem of people and organizations united around shared values thanks to conversation, concern, and a widely expanded core of people in power. No surprise, their success is likely why Trump has literally invaded its largest city. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxSedLUR5KU
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Is that an outlier or are there other towns or states going the same way?
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Wow… just wow. You shared unfamiliar and familiar poets today… poetic perfection, one and all. I have reached for Jericho Brown many times this month, but I had not read the poem you shared here today, so thank you! I have also been reading Clint Smith and Rilke (lots of Rilke) and so many others… I have no idea how a person could survive this madness without the balm of poetry. Because even the sharply worded poems that cut through the chaos and deliver a damning verdict… are still the sweetest balm. I drew great comfort in the respair of seeing thousands and thousands of people taking to the streets across our nation yesterday. The community in protest is growing… and I am vibrantly reminded that there are so many more of us.
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You put this so well, Kat, “even the sharply worded poems cut through the chaos…” And yes yes yes, the upswell of community coming together for the most vulnerable among us is indeed respair.
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