My Poetry

November 25, 2013

Humility


 This is a poem of hope. I wrote it one night as I sat before a nativity scene and was struck by my insane amount of pride. I begged to be simple, I begged to have my pride ripped apart so I could be free. And this is what I wrote:


Castle of straw so proudly built,
Work of rotting hand.
Fort of mortals, sheath of bones,
Built upon the sand.

Bar by bar, each hopefully snatched,
Blindly seen as gold,
Now revealed as cruelest steel
By choice was each one mold.

Numb I sit in self-made cage
Lost in easy pain.
Still I write my hope and life,
Blood scrawled across the page:

Rip me to shreds, I beg, I plead
Scourge this frozen corpse
Tear my heart and make me bleed
Shake me by Your force.

Make me small, a sliver of me
So I may freely slip
‘Twixt these bars that cage me here
Into Your loving grip.



November 11, 2013

solitude&prayer

"The whole value of solitude depends on one's self; it may be a sanctuary or a prison, a haven of repose or a place of punishment, a heaven or a hell, as we ourselves make it."
- John Lubbock -
 "Prayer reveals to the soul the vanity of earthly goods and pleasures. It fills them with light, strength and consolation; and gives them a foretaste of the calm bliss of our heavenly home."
- St. Rose of Viterbo -
I wandered around campus today and found a nice little spot behind the softball field overlooking the highway and the river. I sat down with back and head resting against the metal fence and let my music and the scenery flood my senses. As I pulled out my iPod to switch songs, I saw that it was 3:00. I pulled out my ear buds, put my iPod away, unwrapped my rosary from around my wrist and prayed a divine mercy chaplet. Solitude and prayer, peace and rest. What a perfect escape.

November 10, 2013

mini retreat

"JK I'll be there in half an hour"
Great. I was already to the JC (our student center) and didn't want to walk back to my dorm across campus just to immediately turn around and come back so I took a left and went to over the Port area. I was planning on going to my usual spot in front of the nativity scene but for some reason I decided to walk a little farther to the stations of the cross. Following the signs with the arrow pointing down the hill "First Station" I walked down the well-worn wooden steps built into the side of the hill. 
I walked. The warm autumn air picked up leaves to dance before me, around me, behind me -- I was walking away from the place of academic buildings and dorms and in to a place of retreat encircled by leaves of brilliant red and yellow. The fallen leaves left space between the trees for the outside world of roads and zooming cars to break through. It did not detract from the serenity of the place but provided comforting contrast -- a place of simplicity and beauty versus the hectic world of industry. I was in a safe place.
Reaching the first station I stopped and took in the image of our Lord being condemned to death.  I was struck again by the individual-ness and personality of it all. It is so easy for me to think "He died for us" but "He died for me"? Me, Liz Knab, the individual? Me? Really? Dang. 
I spend so much time thinking of how to lead others to Good. How to help them reach Him, what arguments could be made, and how to truly, truly love and care for others. I spend so much time worrying about the problem of conversion and praying for others' conversion that I begin to neglect my own relationship with Him. Staring at the image of Him I thought, "I want You for me." and it took me a second to tell myself that it was okay to think that, that I'm not being selfish. Yes, conversion is brilliant and must be done, but how could I ever do it effectively if I don't know Who I'm leading them to? 
I continued to walk the stations, winding my way back up the hill, and sat down in front of the image of Jesus comforting the women (how fitting, I thought) 
I just sat, soaked up the beauty of it all and relaxed.  It was a place of stillness and I was so incredibly grateful. 

November 7, 2013

humility.

Why do I so often shun hate a lovely expression of my God because it is shown through another person? Lord, please teach me to be humble.

Tonight, a girl from down my hall was in my room singing a song she just wrote. It was gorgeous. She is gorgeous. But my first reaction was to shut it out because of silly ol' envy. Sitting against my door with arms draped across my knees, I watched her and checked myself. I took a breath and actually listened to the words she sung and let myself appreciate the beauty of it all. Her words moved me to prayer and a realization about something I had been struggling with.
Pride does nothing to further our talents, gifts, or lives -- it only keeps us from enjoying the beauty of the variety of expressions of our amazing God. So just sit back, relax, and enjoy the goodness.