Thursday, September 18, 2025

“Navigating a Moment"



 
Destruction on a daily basis
Leaves me shell-shocked
But that’s the goal
 
Rip and tear families apart
By screaming, “Other!”  
Over and over and over again
 
Demonize educators and scientists
By screaming, “Other!”
Over and over and over again
 
Stifle art, silence music, and dictate words
By screaming, “Other!”
Over and over and over again
 
Battered and bruised
I retreat
And feel shame
I take on blame for their abuse
My stilted words dying on the page
 
How do I navigate this moment?
 

Copyright 2025 Elizabeth Abrams Chapman

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

"The Optimist"

  


I cannot spend my days counting losses   
focusing on withered branches and leaves   
opening my heart to your dark decay   
I refuse to bear your broken crosses   
over my threshold—into my beliefs   
by allowing your destruction to stay   
like a hurricane that swirls and tosses   
my gentle soul upon wild waves that heave   
and boil, pulling me under and away   
to the mirage of  dead albatrosses   
where your empty eyes gaze restless and grieve   
for the simple joy of a sun drenched day   



Tuesday, September 16, 2025

"In A Perfect World"

 




In a perfect world

we wrap our children within love, beauty, and grace

the fear
of heavy hands or words that scorch
of empty stomachs and lonely nights
of filth and destitution
            slayed


In a perfect world

we protect the Mother

            the rape
                        of forest and field
                        of streams and oceans
                        of mountain peaks and sloping valleys
            eradicated


In a perfect world

we honor knowledge by encouraging free thought

            the condemnation
                        of different traditions
                        of diversity in truths
                        of multiplicity of dreams
            abolished



In a perfect world . . .


 



Copyright 2013 Elizabeth Abrams Chapman


           


   

Sunday, September 14, 2025

"Don't Tickle the Dragon"


The Dragon Slayer by David Chapman


She soars above river and ravine in magnificence
while despair and fear play hide-n-seek with her smoky shadow.
With penetrating eyes, she seeks and destroys all defiance.
She melts lives with fiery breath and renders fair fields fallow.
Her arbitrary death paralyzes her innocent prey
by syphoning hope from their simple souls one-drop-at-a-time.
Her teeth and claws razor flesh leaving misery and dismay
As she devours their life-blood—without reason, without rhyme.
On bended knee, mankind prays to the ancient gods for relief
And many brave souls with sword and shield challenge her to the death.
Enflamed by anger, she slays them all—fueled on by pagan belief.
All hope becomes lost to young and old—all fear her scorching breath.
Offerings of their children temporarily satiate her greed,
‘til the young princess stands by lakeside awaiting destiny.
A Christian knight from lands unknown approaches on steady steed.
He vows to slay the beast if all pledge to Christianity.
His lance pierces the dragon’s thick hide with a near fatal blow;
with the princess’s girdle, he leads the creature from the lake.
With Ascalon, he impales the dragon—watches her blood flow.
The people cheer, the king sings praise, and an alter he does make.
From the alter spouts water pure, curing all ailments that grow.
The villagers gather ‘round each eve to dance and sing again
of lessons learned from valley to peak that all children should know—
“Don’t play with fire. Don’t pee in the wind. Don’t tickle the dragon!”



Copyright 2013 Elizabeth Abrams Chapman