this ring I wear
for fifty odd years
is all that’s left
of a man
apart from a tie pin
an ashtray
some pictures
to chronicle
he passed by
this way
and imprinted
my life
this ring I wear
for fifty odd years
is all that’s left
of a man
apart from a tie pin
an ashtray
some pictures
to chronicle
he passed by
this way
and imprinted
my life
Being Present for the Moment
Website storys
Illustration, Concept Art & Comics/Manga
Singer, Songwriter and Author from Kyoto, Japan.
Singer, Songwriter and Author from Kyoto, Japan.
An online activist from Bosnia and Herzegovina, based in Sarajevo, standing on the right side of the history - for free Palestine.
A place where I post unscripted, unedited, soulless rants of a insomniac madman
Dennis Mantin is a Toronto-based writer, artist, and filmmaker.
Finding Inspiration
Off the wall, under the freeway, over the rainbow, nothin' but net.
Erm, what am I doing with my life?
Artist by choice, photographer by default, poet by accident.
At Least Trying Too
A Journey of Spiritual Significance
Life in islamic point of view
Through the view point of camera...
L'essenziale è invisibile e agli occhi e al cuore. Beccarlo è pura questione di culo
In Kate's World
These lines are spare and succinct but you speak for many of us. In my case it was a watch (which I too took as the heart of a poem).
Thank you, John.
Always strange how we leave ourselves in the things around us. As if the world needed us more than we need it. As if it were absorbing us, our memories, our lives in its own delirium, its long dream. And, then when we come upon them again they seem to offer us the only power that counts, the power of memory and imagination to disturb us into beauty.
Beautifully said.
So glad you have the ring…and memories. Never forget the good things.
One never should.
Lately, I’ve taken to wearing my mom’s charm bracelet, which hasn’t had a new charm added since the mid-1970s. The weight on my wrist and the sounds of charms tinkling together brings me comfort, comfort I really didn’t know I needed.
Thanks for your poem.
And thanks for sharing your feelings about your mom’s charm bracelet. I understand completely.