InvasiveThoughts.com

January 2008

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Brooke's Letter #18

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Hope for Healing Monument

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Men Speak of Child Abuse1

Men Speak of Child Abuse2

Men Speak of Child Abuse3

Subjective

The Scars Remain

Never Too Late to Leave

What You Lose

Minute of Decay

Self Reflection: Portrait

Poetry and Art Corner

Lay Still

Art for Healing: Sharen

Butterfly Flees

HATE

Poetry by Joyce Collins

Presence in Absence

Images by Albert Alvarez

Images by Lady Fuschia

Scarred Woman by Bob Ross

Scarred Woman Prolog

Book 1

Book 2

Book 3

Book 4

Book 5

Book 6

Book 6.5

Book 7

Book 8

Book 9

Book 10

Book 11

Book 12

Book 13

Book 14

Book 15

Book 16

Book 17

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Poetry by Joyce Collins

 

Sharing Tree

 

The Giving Tree I thought was good.

Now I see unhealthy wood.

It gave of self in rarest form,

yet reaped no love in return.

It gave and gave ‘til none was left,

save a stump – its one last gift.

And still the boy does not see

the value of the Giving Tree.

So when comes the very last page,

The boy is tired and worn with age.

Despite the tree’s steadfast will,

the boy is old and unhappy still.

I wonder would things different be

If it had been a sharing tree.


Painting by N. Marie
 
Painting by N. Marie

Reckoning

 

Reptiles drop their tales in fright and live to grow another.

Humans split the limb alike, but bind it with a tether

so long and thin as time goes by we think of it as other.

But memory grows its tendrils out from wounded limb to well,

and bides its time 'til boundary thins and tendrils' touch is felt.

 

Then all hell breaks loose – or that's the way it seems

as tendrils hook, then pull apart the self I know as me.

A foulness spills out my bowels and takes my life-force with it.

Where food once fed is nauseous dread. My stomach yields its content.

My head is wracked with migraine pain and fear is strong for madness.

All these confuse and mis'ry bring, but none compare the sadness.

 

Illness say doctors - Nay!  I know the past is beckoning.

I am not sick from bug or germ.  It is the way of reckoning –

to tell the tale and tell it whole, each unto the other,

until they realize they are we and we are the survivor.


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