Mythos & Marginalia

life notes between the lines and along the edges


September 2021

  • Take the Time

    If we are
    going to heal,
    we have got
    to do it
    together.

    Truth
    and
    reconciliation.

    Respect.

    Accept.

    Take the time.

    National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

     

    09/30/2021                                     j.g.l.

  • Of Truth And Reconciliation

    Tomorrow is the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, a day to recognize the painful past of the relationship between Canada and its first nations people.

    A federal statutory holiday created in June under an act of parliament, it is a day to honour the lost children and survivors of residential schools and the unfair treatment experienced by indigenous people.

    It is a day for those of us non-native Canadians to acknowledge our part, and that of the generations that preceded us. It will be a day of reflection on the lives we have been living and the systemic racism we have lived with.

    It hurts to think about it.

    How can we deal with the guilt of decisions made before our time?

    How can we deal with the outright imbalance of issues that continue to strain this country?

    We need only think of the murdered and missing women across this country.

    We think of the large number of indigenous communities in this country without safe drinking water.

    This is Canada.

    We live on stolen land.

    And we continue to learn more, and learn of more and more bodies being discovered on the grounds of former government and church-run residential schools. For years the ghosts of these rumours haunted us.

    Now we know of the corpses.

    These are the lost generations we will think of tomorrow.

    How can we speak for those who are unable to speak for themselves?

    We need to seriously ask ourselves how we can become a part of the healing process, and how we can leave a better world for those to come.

    This is especially difficult since we have already imparted our biases and beliefs onto our own children — either directly or by implication — and society, historically, has enforced our sad shortcomings.

    We have not always been the best neighbours. More so, we have sinned or committed sins against those we have not known.

    Many of us have not taken the time to know the truths, or their stories.

    Some of us have listened to, or studied, the wrongful ways of the past.

    For too long, too many of us have viewed our nation’s first people as our country’s first problems, and successive governments have perpetuated this pattern.

    How can we become better ancestors?

    We can begin today. Tomorrow will not come soon enough.

    © 2021 j.g. lewis

  • Not Enough Facts

    Between the myths
    and misinformation,
    we attempt to eek out
    our truth.
    It gets confusing.
    There are simply
    too many details and
    not enough facts.
    Information keeps
    coming at us.
    It is not that we don’t
    understand, it’s more
    like we stop trying
    to understand.
    When will we get it?

    09/28/2021                                          j.g.l.

  • Mondays are just young Fridays

    Is it the same ‘ol thing
    day after day?
    Is it easier knowing?
    Is it always that way?
    The things that you do,
    the places that you go,
    why does it always seem
    to be so status quo?
    Today will be as ordinary
    as you make it.

    09/27/2021                                       j.g.l.

  • knowing and sharing

    It is always autumn,
    it is always early or
    late. It is always
    confusing in these
    equinox days.
    Year after year,
    we try to balance
    time between
    knowing and sharing
    what we know.
    It becomes quiet.
    Autumn days know
    the nights need silence.
    Autumn nights know
    daylight takes time.

    09/26/2021                                              j.g.l.