
Under Our Feet
Molly Beth Griffin
(Author)Description
Amid the everyday dramas of a walk to the bus stop, a drive to the grocery store, a trip to the zoo, how do we slow down and pay attention to the small miracles around us? We think of mindfulness as something we get to do when we escape from our kids-sitting alone in an immaculate yoga studio or on a quiet retreat in some pristine location. But children don't have to be a barrier to contemplation. They can inspire a special kind of awe in the natural world and in the mundane details of life-but only if we stop and notice. Yes, during bath time, and while we weed the garden, our kids-especially, sometimes, our most challenging kids-can show us deep truths. And when the larger world seems to be falling apart, we must realize that our daily struggles aren't separate from those events. How are we connected-to the world, to each other, and to those parts of ourselves that we've put on hold or hidden away? How can we walk alongside our children, at their pace, and let them teach us to see the world in new ways? "I wrote these poems during the year of my son's autism diagnosis. I found that I was more able to cope with each impossible day if I could find a few beautiful moments to focus on. I would take photos, while out with my children, and then after they were finally in bed I'd go back and look through those photos and write-digging in to the meaning of those brief blessings. Even though I was exhausted and overwhelmed, I'd spend some time dwelling in that place of beauty and abundance that they'd shown me. Over time, I realized I was training myself to notice those moments. My hope is that by reading these poems, readers will be encouraged to do the same."
Product Details
Publisher | Finishing Line Press |
Publish Date | March 09, 2018 |
Pages | 36 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781635344295 |
Dimensions | 8.5 X 5.5 X 0.1 inches | 0.1 pounds |
Reviews
Molly Beth Griffin's new chapbook, Under Our Feet, gives us poetry that honors the smallest things of the universe, values the joys and struggles that come when choosing to raise children, poetry that asks us to consider the blessings of the natural world, and what we will do with those blessings, and, poetry that insists that private joys and struggles must always be kept in perspective as the world of racism and wars continues. Most compelling, I think, is Griffin's clear-eyed understanding that everything is connected. As she writes about the killing of Philando Castile, or the Orlando massacre, she offers us her judgements, in powerful lines of poetry, and places herself as witness. She also, in this carefully focused chapbook, chooses, notices, acts, and thinks deeply and unsparingly about the poet's right and obligation to judge, to speak, to live with and love human beings and the material world.
Deborah Keenan, author of ten collections of poetry, most recently,
so she had the world, and a book of writing ideas, from tiger to prayer.
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