To Helen

You taught me what pain was.

You showed me how hollow the darkness could be

And how it would consume every light

Tucked in each corner of our soul,

From the brightest to the faintest.

You shared me the unbearable loneliness.

You showed me how a bird, once wounded when young,

Still could not fly until the end;

How happiness could die and never be revived.

Yet, the biggest lesson you gave me is

No matter how bitter life tastes on our tongues,

No matter how broken we have come to be,

No matter how unhappy we might feel,

We can still be a great gift for others,

For it is through your bitterness and pain,

Your brokenness and grieve, your loneliness and fear,

I learn to be grateful.

Helen Ryan (RIP Oct 6, 2012)

“Thank you for sharing me your precious life. Hope you finally realize that you have been a gift and I am sorry for not being there in your darkest hour. May the Lord welcome you and comfort you with everlasting joy and peace.”

A Sonnet

The pebbles and the moonstone in the rain

Are gleaming like a cup of falling stars.

The bloody feathers and the dewy petals

Are gathered like enormous roses-beds.

The damp and dusty hall after the storm

Is fuming fragrant odor of dead dreams.

The broken strings of lyra and guitar

Are tuned to play no melody tonight.

The bouncing lilies and the shattered hope

Are floating, dancing as they glide away.

The rusty knife mixed with some sugar cane

Are stirred, dissolving into my sweet tea.

The Sun! Will he come home again to me?

Yet, maybe I enjoy this darkness more.

September 30, 2012

– a small project to help my student 🙂