Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Random Thoughts

I’m one of those weird people who enjoys lying down under a tree and listening to the wind blow through the leaves. There’s something that speaks to me on a primal level when I escape from technology and the indoors, and I just fall back into the nature that we forget about so often.

Call it what you will (my preferred term is reflection), but I need time to clear my head from the stress and worry of daily life. Thirty minutes beneath a tree leaves me feeling more refreshed than any eight-hour period on a manmade bed. This is when I feel that I allow God to truly speak to me.


Give it a try sometime. You never know what will occur to you with time spent in reflection, in the peace and quiet of nature.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Poem - Lyrid

The sublime thought, to slip Gravity’s snare
And fall through Your creation
I’m tethered here instead
A mere spectator to the power
Minutes spent in waiting
For that tiny flash of light
A second passes and it burns out
An apt metaphor in regards to mortality
How many centuries spent
Travelling untold distance
What stories could cold rock tell
Since its birth at the Creation?
What scars marked your surface?
Collisions with celestial bodies
So much time spent in motion
To become sparkling light on my eye
Yet You knew this pilgrim’s destination
As surely as You know my own
I rest safe in Your hand for the journey
Until final transformation to soaring light

Yet where this cold light has passed in a wink
The light of Your faithful will endure forever.

Randall Madden
April 24, 2014

Sunday, April 20, 2014

The Columbine

In a world of stone and concrete
A gentle flower was born
A bud was slowly forming
A timid glance at this world
It yearns to share its beauty
Others there surely are
Yet in this world filled with cold unlife
How can such things be spoken?

The young flower resolves to be silent
Simply living the beauty it knows.

With time the young flower grows carefree
Today will be the day
Its azure petals gently parting
To share beauty and grace with the world
Then comes the uncaring boot
Any warning is now too late
The crushing pressure, irreversible fate
And the Columbine flower is gone.

Blue petals barely formed
Burgeoning life extinguished.

Yet the caring hand descends
Lifting up the slain young flower
Its value now known by many
Immortal to beholding eyes
In death, the flower has conquered
Its petals, in memory, undying
A jaded world stopped for the briefest of moments
And recognized oft-forgotten beauty.

The Columbine flower remains in remembering hearts
Forever young and hopeful.

Randall Madden

April 9, 2014

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

In Memoriam - Columbine

Sunday, April 20 will mark fifteen years since the shootings at Columbine High School. Sometimes we tend to forget the tragedies that affected our country and shaped it over the years, and we need to be reminded of what was lost.

One student that was lost in this tragedy comes to mind frequently for me, as she was an aspiring writer. She would go to the library as her place of refuge during her free time, and use the quiet to work on poems and her autobiography. As many of you know, the library was the scene of most of the violence carried out that day. The student’s name was Kelly Ann Fleming.


Today, I want to display one of her poems. It is already viewable around the Internet, but it cannot hurt to show her work somewhere else. While it can be painful to remember such events, to allow the loss of so much young life to be forgotten is inexcusable.

Can That Be?
Kelly Ann Fleming

I step outside, what did I hear?
I heard the whispers,
And the cries of the people’s fear.
The loneliness of wisdom,
Can that be?
The sad, sad sorrow that I see,
That’s past in the trees,
Is it true, can it be real?
Can I let them know how I really feel?
The things that I have seen,
The things that I have felt,
The feelings of sorrow
That I hope will soon melt.
Wherever I looked,
Wherever I turned,
I see shadows all through the night.
I put my head down and said a little prayer,
To tell the Lord the sad, sad sorrow,
And the lonely cries that I have heard.
After a minute of silence, of wisdom,
I looked up slowly,
I saw a thing that I have never seen.
I saw a light and asked myself can that be?
Was it real or was it a dream?
I didn’t know but hopefully
It will come to me.
It was bright and I was scared.
I didn’t know what or if I should see.
I looked and then it came to me.
It was a dream.
When I was turning to walk away,
I heard a voice.


Kelly Fleming was sixteen years old.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Why I Write

Writing has always come easily to me. I won’t say it has always been well executed; I cringe and laugh at some of the stuff I wrote when I was younger. I’m sure one day, I’ll look back on the things I’m writing now and feel much the same. In the end though, I would still chalk most of my writing up as a success.

So what does it mean to be successful at writing? To me, writing is an art form, just like painting, photography, sculpting, or any other noble pursuit. Then we can be left with the problem of trying to define the meaning of art itself. I say “problem” because art is an incredibly subjective beast. Obscenity is much like art in this regard, and in the oft-quoted words of United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, “I know it when I see it.”

I personally believe the goal of art, regardless of its medium, it to speak to another human being’s soul. We can rate art from that point based on its effectiveness in doing so, but I believe art can be considered “successful” if it is able to do this in any capacity.

You may disagree with me, and if so then that’s perfectly acceptable. Art is not one of life’s great truths, except in the sense that it most definitely exists. I think that mutating, shifting nature that lies behind art is a big part of what makes it so special in the first place.

Call it “finding your muse,” call it “being in touch with your inner self,” or call it “corny.” Whatever you choose to call it, all artists know exactly what I’m talking about. We write/draw/sculpt page upon page of material just for those few moments of existential high that come when we truly connect the dots that are hidden behind the fabric of life. We seek to pull forth that truest essence of reality, clouded by war and famine, greed and hardship. Whether it comes from reading Shakespeare or the simple poem of a child, every now and again we feel the raw ends of art connect, and we experience a transcendent beauty for those few moments.

Perhaps it is said better with a quote from Dr. Keating in Dead Poets Society.

“We read and write poetry because we are members of the human race. And the human race is filled with passion. And medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. But poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for.”

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Poem - Greed

At season’s end I trod the wood
A respite from winter’s touch my sole desire
Comfort against wrathful pain
Fallen man, the cause of loss

The world’s magnanimous beauty unfurls
Like Solomon’s splendor, the leaves beguile
Golden coins, so high above
Good to the eye, I resolve to make them mine

Nearby I behold a squat old tree, no glamor in its name
Its boughs protected me during summer’s storms
An evergreen, unchanging still
Normalcy in the midst of new extravagance

How do I attain the comfort
Of these shimmering jewels on high
Perhaps a wait at the provider’s feet
Will provide healing against the coming loss

With time the force of nature speaks
And bends the boughs above
My heart’s desire, tumbling down
Now just dead and brown.

Perhaps a climb to these heights unknown
To gain my golden greatness
Others have dared the passage before
Some have fallen, but the reward seems greater

Tearing bark consumes my flesh
I wonder at the cost
The golden leaves, proximity alluring
But my strength is like dawn’s mist

At last I’m among the goal of my endeavor
Yet triumph gives ground to confusion
On closer inspection my flawless comfort
Stands somehow diminished

Still, I will claim my long-sought prize
Recklessly, my arm extends
The golden leaves pull free, and I
Descend in gravity’s unfeeling embrace

What has stopped this final plunge
Interposed between I and Death’s hand
The bountiful, aged evergreen!
Arrested in its rough caress

As winter comes I make my bed
Beneath the old squat tree
Dreams fill my head, what might have been
The last of my prize wilts away

The forest now is dead and brown
Buried in winter’s icy embrace
The emerald beauty of my evergreen
Shines in this world of loss

A revelation strikes me, too late to change the past
I failed to note the old tree’s worth
Yet as winter comes, and I breathe my last,
The evergreen still surrounds.

Randall Madden

March 31, 2014