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Paper Window
7/18/06
The compact gallery of color shots captures my eyes as I peel the blue plastic off The New York Times. I bear this light weekday sheaf across the porch toward the kitchen, where I sit, stare at paper, sip tea - there, two crying men, on sand beside the canal where bombs left children drifting. One man looks like my Uncle Herbie did years ago, before he died of Lou Gehrig's Disease. And that kid, crying in his mother's arms, face flecked with black and red, the marks and colors of attack - they've fled their blasted Beirut neighborhood - his dark flooded eyes could be my own first-born's when he was five, when he wailed as we pulled away from his favorite river, as if his life were over - I saw his torment in the rear-view mirror. But we were going home. The boy on the front page maybe just saw his house destroyed, or lost his father forever. And there, next to these are framed a few Israelis, in terror as rockets enter Haifa from the sky and shred their frail sense of safety - I see it in their eyes. One woman stares, like my Aunt Dorothy after she lost Herbie, when she couldn't cry. Familiar faces - these distant relatives could be sitting with me here in the kitchen, also looking at the paper over tea, but they are there, staring through the paper window, crying out to me.
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Jed A. Myers is a Seattle poet and musician whose writing has been published in various journals, posted on web sites, heard on radio, and performed, mostly by Jed, in an array of settings in the Pacific Northwest. He’s won several regional awards, and hosts a regular poetry gathering in his part of town. His loose network of collaborators, ArtsforHearts, puts on benefits in local spaces for a wide range of real life causes.
Visit Jed's Poetry Archive at Satya Center to read more of his poetry.
[Photo Credit: Reuters]
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