Saturday, April 30, 2016

Time and Change

They say time changes all things. It places that splash of gray in your hair, carves a few lines a little deeper into your face, and paints a whole new scene on the canvas of your life. So perhaps we move a little slower, pause a little longer, or just sigh a little more as we witness a younger generation pushing us forward towards a certain future. But there are some things time does not change. It cannot change the view of a sunrise or sunset. It does not make us less lovable or needy for companionship. It cannot change our attitude towards life unless we so choose, and it does not mean we are getting old. Time merely ticks off seconds and annotates a certain rhythm on our own special piece of sheet music.

Now that Spring has come and warmer weather is finally urging things to grow again, small town life is all about garage sales. What makes this year different from any other is the fact my boyhood home is up for sale and my folks are no longer able to care for themselves like they once did over the course of sixty odd years together. It pains me to see my mother struggle with her memory or watch my father stubbornly sort his assortment of multicolored, sized, and shaped medications on my sister's kitchen table. And I think to myself: “These are not the people I knew as a kid growing up along with five brothers and sisters under that roof down the street.”What a shame that the accumulation of things throughout a lifetime become a bargain hunters dream. But things themselves do not begin to define the meaning of what it means to change with the rolling tide of time.

One constant sound that keeps me focused tonight is that little cuckoo clock I bought for the folks years ago when I was stationed in Germany. It has come home to roost upon the wall of my apartment and provides a metronome pace to my typing that no digital alarm could ever do to rouse the memories I keep safe in the recesses of my soul. Yes, I mean soul, for no disease could ever steal away the lessons of senior year composition class, the sound of a drill instructor's cadence on an early autumn run in Missouri, or erase the love in a conversation over a long distance phone line. And now I recall the silence of my grandmother's clock as it sits waiting to hear what fate has in store for it. I don't think I want to see it go as an item haggled over between two people out in the driveway. Time, what a curious concept indeed.

And what of change? If time can change the course of mighty rivers and create snow covered peaks where once tropical breezes bred leviathans of mythic proportion millions of years ago, then why not my heart as it revels in a sentimental stupor over things like guilt and poor decisions I learned to hold on to as regret? Why is it that emotional attachments seem to play by a different set of rules? I guess I need to look back over my shoulder and realize that even cuckoo does not function the way it used to way back when as the little man in lederhosen does not peek out from behind the closed door and the music no longer plays by the hour. I guess emotions play a bigger role than mere passing of time when it comes to change.

God love you if you have managed to read down this far. Seems like the twenty four hour news cycle and twenty second sound byte have replaced good old conversation or a good book read for the pure enjoyment of it. It is my hope then that perhaps your tenacity has stirred in your heart a hope that change is not such a bad thing, but a necessary process. If it is hard to let go of the material things, then put them away in safe keeping in your soul for another time and place. Heaven knows we shall revisit the moments and people we once knew as children and recapture the youthful maturity that led us to this space of fond reminiscence that I share with you tonight. Good night little cuckoo and God go with you on your journey through life.

Witt

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Gone

I was reminded today how precious those little things in life are that make our loved ones stand out in our memories. Having a parent with dementia makes these intricacies all the more apparent. I want to thank my good friend and former classmate Bev for sharing a video on social media for inspiring this poem. For the love of family and the memories we share, God bless.
Witt


Gone

When they are gone,
who will remember the bad days
when we argued over petty things
because our feelings got in the way;
tempers flared and we got carried away?

When they are gone, who will be strong
and keep family traditions going
because they would have wished it so;
each one precious as a gem to hold
as if they had never left us?

When they are gone,
who will sit and laugh
and remember little things
that bring us to tears
because we no longer have them;
to see or hear them bring those unique qualities to us?

When they are gone,
who will be forgotten
because they were too stubborn
to forgive and forget how they were wronged?

D.A. Wittler 16'



Saturday, April 2, 2016

Room Full of Memories

Just another quiet night in front of a glowing screen that gets more out of date like me every day. I do enjoy technology, especially when a thought comes to mind and I need to get it down before it gets lost in my head. Tomorrow brings perhaps another chance or simply closure to an open wound still healing inside. Whatever the outcome, please pray for me. Thank you and God bless.
Witt


I sat beside a fire
Now only a candle burns
I slept beneath the stars
Now only time turns
When I truly lived my life
Now I reside
In a room full of memories
That only she can share
But I am all alone.

I longed to feel your embrace
On hard floors late at night
She told me not to fear
I felt her presence near
My Mother full of grace
But now I am here
Wondering a mystery
It was all meant to be
In a room full of memories.

God knows my struggles
Seems all I've had are troubles
But blessings come through prayer
And I am always there
In a room full of memories.

We loved and laughed
Watched the sun rise together
And life grew
Inside of you
Our purpose came to light
Now in hind sight
Holding on to love
Means more than selfish pride
In a room full of memories.

Pictures hang like distant figures
Crosses there among them too
Display a greater sacrifice
A much higher price
Than I could ever pay
My Lord who always knocks
Upon this door
A quiet solitary space
A room full of memories.


God knows my struggles
Seems all I've had are troubles
But blessings come through prayer
And I am always there
In a room full of memories.

I sit beside a candle
Hoping for a flame
And dream of distant stars
Where once we wished upon
But I know it's not up to me
That time has come and gone
But hearts can rekindle from ashes
If an ember remains beneath them
In a room of things yet to be.

D.A. Wittler 16'