Tag Archives: Christian poetry

Sparrows: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

As a child, completely open and vulnerable to the Divine, laid in a bed of grass, I theorized – death, evil, goodness and Truth – and poked my fingers through the march of time.

Like sparrows, within me, they always took flight. Always thinking things I was taught never to vocalize. Things it seemed others didn’t prioritise. These Truths, they still well and rise, even now that they’ve been brought to light.

Yet now dulled by age and tired eyes, laid in a bed of blankets, I trivialize – death, evil, goodness and Truth – and sleep away the march of time. But these sparrows – they still take flight.

//Sparrows

//Collette Kristevski, 3/25/2019

For more original poetry and art follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia.

An Untitled Poem by Collette Kristevski

That Immovable One moves within me.
That Invisible One appears to me.
That One who Created comes to me,
holds me, a feeble creature,
when I wail and want to cease being created.

Behold, the Immortal One, who cares for me!
I, the fragile mortal maker of trivial complaints,
the discontented dreamer of frivolous daydreams,
the blasphemous breaker of blessed covenants.
Yet I, an easily destroyed fleshly one, shall not be destroyed.

For that One who died is also Life,
and Life rests in these mortal tendens,
on this lying tongue,
in this musing mind,
in these clenched, stubborn white-knuckled fists.

Someday I will finish drying myself up.
Then will that fountain of Life spring forth from me.
And I will say “I remember You.”
Maybe then I will not ceaselessly
re-enter this dry spiritual desert.

But, even still,
and despite myself,
both then and now,
He still comes to me
and reveals Himself to me with equal splendor.

//Untitled
//Collette Kristevski, 3/21/2019

For more original poetry and art, follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia.

Healing, Cleansing Motherhood: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

It was a healing pain,
a cleansing pain.
One last gasp,
and a life came from a death.
Death of the selfish,
of the self.
I am mother,
not because I gave birth to life,
but because of what was birthed in me:
a healing pain,
a cleansing pain.
And here,
before his wise innocence,
I die everyday,
and am birthed again,
again,
through a healing pain,
a cleansing pain.
The paradox of motherhood:
sometimes he is the child,
and sometimes I.

//Healing, Cleansing Motherhood
//Collette Kristevski, 3/16/2019

Follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia for more original poetry and art.

Curated: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

Window shoppers scrutinize
the divisive diatribe,
the preachy, pithy egoic lines,
memes of a world disorganized.
Shiny projections,
filtered (im)perfections,
enslaving mankind to contagious counterfeiting –
an invisible insurrection.
Get a glimpse
of their carefully curated museum minds
through windows the size of a palm.
Everyone is the other,
and no one is himself-
masquerading authenticity.
Even these words,
at first ignited somewhere else –
a subtle mimicry.

//Curated
//Collette Kristevski, 3/12/2019

Follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia for more original poetry and art.

Problem: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

We pontificate on the Divine,
philosophize the Cosmos
and moralize the Other.

But we ourselves
are the entities to be analyzed.
We are our only philosophical problem.

We are problem enough.

//Problem
//Collette Kristevski, 3/5/2019

For more original poetry and art, follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia.

Enlightenment: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

There used to be an innocent child
resting at the peripheries of my heart.
Upon seeing it’s malevolence,
he believed he had been enlightened
and never returned again to rest.

Enlightenment
Collette Kristevski, 3/7/2019

*art and words are my own*

For more original poetry and art, follow me on Instagram @paradoxandpaschalia.

Negligence: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

We mine the mind,
– philosophize.
What we find
we think is gold.
We plunge the depth
of intellect,
but neglect the soul.

Negligence
//Collette Kristevski, 3/8/2019

“Men are often called intelligent wrongly. Intelligent men are not those who are erudite in the sayings and books of the wise men of old, but those who have an intelligent soul and can discriminate between good and evil. …These men alone should truly be called intelligent.”
St. Anthony

We have grown old by sinning: A Poem by Collette Kristevski

I.
In infancy
we did not attempt to utter unutterable things.
We knew without knowing how we knew,
and we let ourselves dwell there,
in that sort of meaningful magic.
We knew to doubt the doubts.
So we lived fierce and free,
suckling the bosom of that odd Truth.

II.
It was not until
they ripped us from those arms of peace
and sat us under the tree of knowledge
that the magic became monotony,
that we forgot how to rest.
Our unsettled minds
now living in invisible chains,
but knowing not why it is hard to be free.

III.
In fear,
now we only love meekly,
when we mean it violently.
Our minds becoming dull day by day,
straining for knowledge,
but resisting Wisdom;
desiring rebirth,
yet resisting the Spirit.

IV.
We have grown old by sinning.

//We have grown old by sinning
//Collette Kristevski, 2015
*art and words are my own*

Today I left my apartment three times: A Journal Entry Prose by Collette Kristevski

I have started a new journaling practice. At the end of every day I sit down and write whatever is on my mind in the form of a poem or prose. I don’t worry about grammar or editing typos. I just write whatever comes.

Today was a beautiful day – a day representative to me of a shift in the atmosphere of my life. I’ve had quite a few major break throughs over the past two to three months – ones in which things tucked away in the attic of the unconscious are unpacked and brought to the front yard for observation. I’ve only ever had a few of these events in my life, but over the last few months I’ve had a stream of them. I’ve uncovered some dark corners of myself, and when those dark corners are uncovered and brought to light, they don’t have power over you anymore. And so, today, I had this amazing day – one characterized by a feeling of presence and happiness that I had not experienced since 2013. One I had not experienced since before spiritual crisis, before what I can really only describe as trauma, though I never felt comfortable calling it that in the past. This journal in form of prose is what I wrote to capture that shift in me. It is a simple outline of my day today, but expressing all of the presence and beauty that I experienced – that I am beginning to experience again for the first time.

Today
I left my apartment
three times.
On the first,
my son
played with the rocks on the landscape.
I picked an orange flower –
like the sun –
and a branch with tiny yellow leaves –
like lingering Autumn.
He reached up to me with tiny hands
for comfort,
as if fear of the outdoors
would swallow him up,
as if my arms, though tired,
have so much strength in them.
On the second,
I considered purchasing an ice cream
at the nearest ice cream shop.
But then I remembered
that this particular ice cream shop
used to churn out my happiness
when I couldn’t create it myself.
I drove to the nearest coffee shop instead
and purchased a chai tea latte –
single shot of espresso with coconut milk.
I didn’t even care
that it was my final coffee dollar
for the next week and a half.
I just wanted to turn the volume up
on the day’s happiness,
drop by drop.
I listened to a man wax poetic
about suffering –
how it softens us.
I giggled.
Later,
I cried.
I returned and prayed the Sixth Hour
as my son’s lips grazed the icons.
On the third,
the sun was going down.
It peeked through the clouds,
a pinkish tint.
I carried my son,
stopped to pet two dogs,
and looked at the decor on the patios.
I watched my son
run through a sprinkler puddle.
I followed him
up the stairs to the apartment,
slowly, so slowly.
Slowly,
like healing.
Slowly,
like grace.

//Today I left my apartment three times
//Collette Kristevski, 3/6/2019