Mythos & Marginalia

2015 – 2025: a decade of days


  • thereafter

                            

                               The Father they speak of accepts
                                    the scent, custom or tradition,
                                                         of burnt offerings

                        incense                                   incensed

                                   God shall know
                                     thou shall not

                                       confuse disclosures

                 ‘Father, I have sinned’
                 common confession
                           for those who

                                    do not understand

                                        a candle lit
                                        provides protection from the flame

                                       Evil ways

              cast no doubt
              on disbelievers

                          The silent thereafter hangs
                           as smoke above an alter
                           I know so little about

    © 2023 j.g. lewis

     

  • In Camera

    This battered face prefers
    the other side of the camera,
    watching, waiting, silently
    from the side. An observer,
    looking on. Looking out.
    These impaired eyes have
    witnessed so much, perhaps
    too much. Injustice, imbalance,
    all in plain view. Images
    flow through me, captured
    for posterity. An honesty easier
    recorded than memorized.
    Focused on what is before me
    more convenient than looking
    within, where I know, and will
    not be surprised at, what goes on
    behind the camera. Damning
    view of humanity, insincerity,
    imbalanced injustice remains
    with me. The unknowns,
    knowingly stowed away,
    referenced only occasionally,
    when in disbelief at what
    I have experienced. Privately.
    Honestly. Silently. Memory.
    Without the light. In camera.

    © 2017 j.g. lewis

    April is Poetry Month
    something to believe

     

  • The Chaos and the Chorus

    For almost a decade I have partaken in Twitter; at one-time a generally innocent way of share bits and bytes of what was happening in the moment.
       At times, daily (or even more often), I would Tweet and re-Tweet my photography, poetry, and sample snippets of my opinions, essays and fortune cookie philosophies from my Mythos & Marginalia website.
       I engaged and interacted with human beings across this wonderful planet and enjoyed the contact and connection for the longest time.
       I’ve not been as regular these past couple of months.
       I am no longer sure about Twitter. I don’t like the direction it is going or, more so, where it was taking me.
       When I originally got involved in 2013 with the somewhat limited social forum (at that time a 140-character maximum), I would share positive thoughts on the context of the human condition and involve myself with day-to-day inspiration by passing something along.
       As my Twitter handle suggested, I intended to @sayit4word.
       At that time I was thinking positively, and for the most part I was.
       But, I guess, it was last year during the Ontario provincial election when I noticed I was not behaving properly, or rationally, and certainly not respectfully.
       I now know, or realized then, the forum itself was getting ignorant and obnoxious (even cruel). I noticed it mostly last February when the protesters involved with Freedom Convoy Rally began to take over our nation’s capital.
       Twitter got really nasty.
       And yes, I got nasty too.
       Throughout 2022, much of my anger was directed towards the fully-fledged idiot who managed to get himself elected as Premier of this province in 2018 and was being propelled towards re-election by a party and its anything-but-progressive pundits.
       I can see now and see how angry it made me. And, yes, I contributed to the mess Twitter is in.
       I’m no longer sure about Twitter. I haven’t tweeted for a couple of months. I don’t even check the forum regularly, certainly not as frequently as I used to; many weeks, not at all.
       I was even tempted, last month, to weigh in on the disturbing tale of Toronto’s mayor (or mascot) resigning after admitting an affair with a woman in his office half his age. I was thinking of all kinds of Twitter-appropriate comments, but after reflection, I managed to keep them to myself. I guess I was realizing that I would only be adding to the chaos and the chorus of idiots who were simply shouting into the ether without considering facts and feelings.
       I realized my Tweets and comments would be going against all I had imagined when I originally logged onto the social media platform.
       There was that lesson, a quote by Thumper from the movie Bambi, we learned as kids: “If you can’t say nothing nice, don’t say nothing at all.”
       So I have been silent for a while, but won’t be for much longer.
       April is poetry month, a period of the year I always cherish; so next month I think will step back into Twitter. I will start Tweeting again, but become more conscious of my intentions and try to pass on the more positive outlook I have been trying to nourish.
       I intend on saying it forward.

    © 2023 j.g. lewis

  • Something Meaningful

    I am not one for prayer.
    I am not sure about hope, several past decisions, or
    the trajectory of my path, but
    I am fairly confident
    we shared something meaningful once.
    That may be enough
    to pull me through this day,
    to help me remember
    we can all get through anything
    when friendship offers what it does, as it is meant to.
    It is greater than a prayer.
    It is the basis for hope.

    @ 2019 j.g. lewis

  • too much too easy

    – to let slight pain seep into your psyche.
    – to let symptoms become problems.
    – to let that last mistake haunt you.
    – to expect too much of yourself.
    – to become disappointed.
    – to overlook your worth.
    – to settle.
    – to stop.

    © 2023 j.g. lewis