14 Comments

Wonderful poem and post Brian. Listening to some else's opinion of our work can be eye-opening and very helpful. Especially when it is someone we trust.

Expand full comment
author

So true! Thanks for reading and sharing!

Expand full comment
Aug 26Liked by Brian Funke

Brian, I hear this poem quietly noticing the tender human need for safety, for certainty. We're all born with this craving. But as we begin to question the status quo, we see how this reflexive need can limit our *deep enjoyment* of the Mystery, Love and Infinity of God. For me, it's been a humble awakening.

The more we learn, the more one sees the vast plain of Mystery opening ever-wider.

Sometimes we see this in learning other things: like how to parent our children, or how to be a true friend to our partners, how to practice our profession, to make our art--or how to let ourselves be unconditionally loved.

The question statement is an excellent concept!

To *not* know, but to rest in the unknowing.

That's the beauty of the practice. That's poetry.

Expand full comment
author

So well said Ann. Thank you for your reflection on this reflection 😁

Expand full comment
Aug 28Liked by Brian Funke

Sorry for the sermon 😬 I have so much respect for the questions.

Expand full comment
author

Oh gosh, never apologize, I love reading what you share!

Expand full comment

Did I misread your post? It’s a poem inside an essay about the creation of the poem, right? I think if that as auto-commentary. Odd word in common English. But some literatures are full of auto-commentary where the author of verse then writes an essay about the meaning of the verse.

Expand full comment
author

Oh I understand now. I didn’t know that term. With poetry I like space between the poem and any “explanation”. I think poems can speak for themselves. That’s why I publish a poem first, then do a reflection a week (or 3) later…give a reader time to form their own feelings and thoughts. What do you think?

Expand full comment

Very cool. People probably like it? My stuff is highly coded, so I’m torn. The auto commentary would certainly make it more accessible. But I wonder if it “leaks” energy that way.

Expand full comment
author

Agreed. I think there is value in an authors explanation and value in a reader sitting with something that doesn’t make sense to them, until an insight comes. I think the latter is more valuable though…but not every reader wants the work of waiting 🙂

Expand full comment

Thanks for the model and inspiration

Expand full comment
author

Thanks for the chat. Hope to continue the poetry conversation with you further!

Expand full comment

I’ve been wondering about auto-commentary for my work. How do you find it as a process and a product?

Expand full comment
author

Hi! I’m not following the question, what do you mean by auto-commentary?

Expand full comment