Posted in Personal Thoughts, Poetry, Religion

God’s Creation – My First Poem

When I first started sharing some of my poetry on this site, I swore to myself that I would never share this one. Because when I read it now I cringe and think about how awful it is. How it seems to be an example of everything a poem should not be from all my years of studying Literature and getting a degree in English. I recently changed my mind about sharing it and I’ll explain why below. But first, here is the very poorly written first poem of my life.

God's Creation

God created us all
Winter, Summer, Spring, and Fall.
He created the sun so bright,
That comes up in the morning and goes 
down at night.

He created trees with little green leaves.
He created voices to talk,
And legs to walk.

He created our sphere,
And divided it into hemispheres,
So we could live a good life,
Without any strife.

I’s okay if you cringed when you read it as well. I forgive you. It’s not great and it’s not full of beauty. Forced rhyme scheme. No imagery. Tells instead of shows. I could go on and on.

Except that I’ve come to realize that there is beauty in that poem. But to recognize that beauty you have to know that I wrote that poem in 1979 at the ripe old age of 9 years old. So now, the beauty to me is found in acknowledging, remembering, and respecting the fact that a 9 year old girl was trying her best to figure out who God was, what knowing who God was meant to her personally, and even what that meant to everyone else around her. That 9 year old girl was trying to find meaning and purpose in her life. Perhaps awkwardly, but at least she was trying. As an aside, this is about the same age of my life that I was trying to decide whether when I grew up if I wanted to be a bread truck driver or a missionary. I’ll share that story in a later post. It’s a great lead-in to the Call Story that I’ve had to share and present to others recently in my journey into ministry.

I often wonder what it would be like now, 44 years later, to go back in time and talk to that young girl. I wonder how she would feel if I told her that her search for answers, purpose, and meaning, and questions about God would still be ongoing. That even now that search is not complete. Would she find the news exciting and challenging, anticipating a life-long search of knowledge and learning? Or would she be discouraged and disappointed to discover that even that many years later she would still be struggling to know who she was and what she was suppose to be in relation to God? And even trying to figure out the mystery of this God in her life and others.

Perhaps, and most likely, it would be a little bit of both just as it is for me today. Sometimes the prospect of studying, thinking, struggling to discover new things is exciting and challenging. Other days I wake up and think, “This again? Life is too hard. I’m tired of trying to figure it all out.”

The one thing I do know is that I do still believe there is a God who created us all. And though the poem doesn’t possess the word “Love” in it, I do think that my 9 year old self was trying to say there is a God that loves us. And that is what my 53 year old self is still trying to say today. Both to others and to myself. Most days I still kind of do so in a very awkward manner. But beauty is found in the attempt and the earnestness and not necessarily always in the manner of conveyance. I pray that even the worst sermon I ever preach, whether in words or actions, still somehow conveys the love of God to someone. I’ve embraced (well mostly embraced) the fact that I’m always going to feel awkward in this world. But if God can use that awkwardness, I feel like all the worry, searching, and longing will be worth it in the end.

Posted in Poetry

Let There Be – A Poem

Let There Be
by Melissa Peeler

The Word Spoke.
Let There Be. . .
and There Was.
and There Is.
and There Ever Will Be.

The Word Dwelt.
Creator joined Creation.
Intimately and Incarnately.

The Word still Speaks and Dwells.
Let There Be Hope.
Let There Be Love.
Let There Be Joy.
Let There Be Peace.

There Was.
Is.
Ever Will Be.


Melissa Peeler
Composed: November 30, 2022

To Like or Comment, please click on title and open in a new tab.
Posted in Poetry

Just For A Day – A Poem

Just For A Day
by Melissa Peeler

Just for a day I want to step outside
of myself -
To see me as others do.

Just for a day I want to walk where
others have tread -
To see where else I could go.

Just for a day I want to cease
being who I am -
To see who else I could be.

Just for a day I want to silence
my inner thoughts -
To watch all the demons flee.

Yet there is no such day approaching.
My wishes shall remain unfilled.
I must remain just as I am. And,
On this foundation tear and rebuild.

Melissa Peeler
Composed:  2003

To Like or Comment, please click on title and open in a new tab.
Posted in Poetry

Echoes of Childhood – A Poem

Echoes of Childhood
by Melissa Peeler

Childhood echoes unceasingly within the caverns of Adulthood.
Words: Spoken by us. Spoken to us.
Actions: Taken by us. Done to us.
Thoughts: Bidden by us. Thrust upon us.

All continually reverberate through our Being.
Repeatedly rebounding among the multitude
 of life experiences and memories.
Stalagmitic experiences rising from below.
Stalactitic memories descending from above.
Often uniting and clinging together as one singular formation.

Echoes refusing to be silenced.
Vibrating, Vibrating, Vibrating. . . .
Rumbling, Rumbling, Rumbling. . . .
Resonating, Resonating, Resonating. . . .

Melissa Peeler
Composed: September 2022

To Like or Comment, please click on title and open in a new tab.
Posted in Personal Thoughts, Poetry

National Poetry Month (Post #3)

Post #3 for National Poetry Month. I would be remiss if I did not highlight Emily Dickinson. There are several of hers I like, but one of my favorites is “Because I Could Not Stop for Death”.

Fun Fact regarding her poems. In one of my exams in a college Literature classes we were given a set of poems and we had to identify the poet who wrote it. The trick to identifying a Dickinson poem was that most of hers can be sung to the tune of “Amazing Grace.” Likewise, her poems and “Amazing Grace” can also be sung to the tune of “The Yellow Rose of Texas” and the theme song of “Gilligan’s Island.” Hope I have successfully planted an ear worm in each of your brains for the day. You’re Welcome.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/emily-dickinson?fbclid=IwAR3ErbITWO7IUWz5LB3HH2sxS_V9diBA5RBoQ3FLYwJEEXR8zdL42g5Ddi4

Posted in Personal Thoughts, Poetry

National Poetry Month (Post #2)

In honor of National Poetry month, here is my second post high-lighting poets or poems that I have enjoyed over the years. For my take in why poetry matters see my previous post from last week.

This is a poem I have encountered and studied many times throughout the years with both my personal reading and my literature studies in college. It ranks up there with my favorite top ten. Mostly, because for such a short poem it tells a big story. Rich’s masterful use of imagery and metaphor are a talent I aim for (but struggle with and fall short with) in my own poetry. Simple understated phrases reveal so much. The lines “The massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band / Sit heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand,” combined with “ringed with ordeals she was mastered by” tell us so much about the harsh life she endured within the confines of marriage without having to explicitly explain it. Especially when combined with the fact that the tigers she is creating “do not fear the men beneath the tree.” The poem is ultimately a poem bemoaning a period of time when women did not have the freedom, voice, and self-agency that we do today (especially in this country). So, why and how does a poem like that speak to me as a never married woman who though very supportive of women’s rights certainly doesn’t consider herself a raving feminist. (We can have the discussion about raving feminists another day if that raises questions for anyone.) Although on the surface this poem speaks of one person and one issue, I believe the underlying message and framework can be applied to many situations and issues. Most of us at some point, whether for a lifetime or just a period of time, have felt constrained, held back, forced to be silent, or stuck because what we want or desire for ourselves runs contradictory to the ideas of our family or society as a whole. It may not be a wedding band that sits heavy on our hand. But we can feel the weight of other’s opinions and judgments just the same. And we, like Aunt Jennifer, find ourselves sitting in envy of the tigers who “Will go on prancing, proud and unafraid.”

https://allpoetry.com/Aunt-Jennifer’s-Tigers

Posted in Personal Thoughts, Poetry

National Poetry Month (Post #1)

April is National Poetry Month. Stay with me please! I know the idea of reading poetry doesn’t appeal to all people. I’ve heard many people say “I hate poems,” or “I never understand poetry.” That hurts my soul, because I believe the truth underlying those statements is either that the person has never been properly taught how to read and appreciate poetry or that they only remember being forced to read poetry in school and never really connected with poems that spoke to them. Yes, some poems are hard. There are many I read that I come to the end and say, “I don’t get it. I don’t like it. It’s not for me.” And that’s okay. Because there are others that I read that awaken emotions in me and reflect who I am and what I have experienced and it’s like spending time in the presence of a good friend. My goal was from the beginning of this month to share some of my favorite poems and poets each day of April. Obviously, I failed at that. But over the next couple of days I am going to try to change that. Please be open and check some of these out. And even if there is a poem you don’t understand as a whole but it does have that one line or turn of phrase that speaks to you, hold on to that. Because that is enough. And don’t be ashamed of the ones you don’t get or don’t like. It’s fine. Just like novels, non-fiction books, and yes even movies, we all have our own genres that work for us. Doesn’t make one wrong or right. It just makes us different. And that is a good thing.

I have started today with Robert Morgan who is a native North Carolinian. He is currently a literature professor at Cornell University. I find many of his poems to be accessible in a way that they present simply with easily recognizable ideas or things. But within that simplicity can be some very profound meanings and truths. There are many layers within his poetry. That is one reason I wanted to start with him. I think whether you are a poetry reading novice dipping your toes in the water or you are an experienced reader who can deep dive into the depths, you can appreciate his work.

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/robert-morgan?fbclid=IwAR1AC1fdKzKQpBbz1fhDqZuxKmRXdSQ_-LkN-0ctVqoO5p_J0o_hr_eKi_o#tab-poems

Posted in Poetry

In the Church Pews – A Poem

In the Church Pews
by Melissa Peeler


Eager Faces.
Bored Faces.
Exhausted Faces.
Angry Faces.
Distracted Faces.
Longing Faces.

Some Seeking to Praise.
Some Wanting to be Praised.

Behind Each Face a Universe of Stories.

Stories of Loss.
Stories of Pain.
Stories of Wrongs.
Stories of Love.
Stories of Joy.
Stories of Success.

Behind Each Face a Soul Yearning.
To Weave the Stories into Meaning.

Around, Within, Among, Hovers the Holy Spirit,
Bearing Holy Instruments and Prepared to Knit
An Eternally Embracing Blanket of Love
With threads of Mercy and Grace from Above.



Initially Written March 31, 2019 / Revised March 26, 2022

To Like or Comment, please click on title and open in a new tab.

Posted in Poetry

Departure – A Poem

Departure
by Melissa Peeler


A cobalt moon shimmers between
darkened leaves, while her watery
twin echoes in kind beneath
rippling waves left in your wake.
Moons, Leaves, Ripples - all wave goodbye
to your silhouette as it is absorbed
by the night in the bend of the river.
All wave but I.
Instead, I turn aside and vanish
within my own dark abyss.



Written June 1, 2012

To Like or Comment, please click on title and open in a new tab.