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Casey: Take the time to say you care

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  • Casey: Take the time to say you care

    Marlborough Enterprise, MA
    July 11 2004

    Casey: Take the time to say you care
    By Helen Marie Casey / Local Columnist
    Sunday, July 11, 2004

    Perhaps we are all like the character in the novel who laments, "I am
    obsessed by the fear that there will not be time enough." We sit by
    our barbeque or under a tree and, try as we may to relax totally into
    the moment at hand, we are more often than not owned by the clock or
    the calendar. We are indentured.

    We are antsy when we are without projects or work and we fidget
    when we have no idea of what the day will hold. What we really want
    to do is be in control of our time and of the future itself. What we
    want is impossible. We are like the little boy who attempted to empty
    the ocean bucket by bucket: our ambition outstrips our capacity. We
    cannot number the days we have nor can we know what will empty itself
    into our life. And this gives rise to our fundamental terrors:
    disaster can as easily knock us down as not. Our imagination runs
    riot with the possibilities.



    We do our best to safeguard everyone dear to us but the
    reminders of how little control we have are everywhere. Nightly
    newscasters tell us about the toddlers who fall out of windows or off
    third-story porches. News stories of the serial killer who buried his
    victims in his yard stretch across the ocean right into our front
    room. Wartime atrocities have become our daily fare.

    Little wonder that we take fright at the smallest provocation
    and see danger where there is, in fact, nothing visible. Little
    wonder that we are learning to be wary. Little wonder that we are
    withdrawing into ourselves when what this tired old world wants is a
    little more embracing and a little less handwringing.

    There are always individuals who find ways to transcend the
    horrors that life presents and even to rescue meaning from its hiding
    places. Fortunately for the rest of us, these individuals are often
    artists and they fill the empty spaces that surround us with
    language, paintings, sculptures, dance, and music.

    Poet and teacher Gregory Djanikian writes of the Armenian
    genocide, about which one might think nothing good could be made.
    Yet, the poet uses memory, storytelling, and simple, familiar images
    to remind us that so long as there is memory and language, the
    destroyers do not hold the ultimate victory.

    The poet-conjurer begins one of his mesmerizing poems this way:
    "I can tell you it was a village/fertile and full of grain,/that the
    moon grew full above it/before it darkened./I can tell you that the
    figs/were abundant, their tiny seeds/were like small gems, hard/and
    round in the mouth."

    As the poet continues to describe the village, the women, and
    the men -- all disappeared -- he makes them reappear. He makes the
    village idyllic and his love for his people palpable. He makes it
    possible for his readers to recall that while there is much humans
    cannot control, there is also much that we can control. We can refuse
    to be mastered by fear or threats. We can refuse to give up on the
    fundamental values and principles that define us. We can refuse to
    allow anyone to write the horrors out of history lest forgetting them
    -- or being ignorant of them -- we come to repeat them.

    A little past the midpoint of his poem, Gregory Djanikian speaks
    of the men of his village: "I can tell you that the men/deep in the
    fields of wheat/would lie down soon/and disappear into its many
    roots."

    These summer days we may be restless about any number of things
    but about a few things we should have singular clarity. We need each
    other is the first thing and the second is that we ought to say so
    now and again. If we don't say so, it's always possible there won't
    be time enough.
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