When?
“you say I am strong
When I think I am weak…”
- “You Say” by Laura Dangle
Some days,
you wake up wondering,
who am I;
where did I come from,
larger than simply
mom and dad.
While this may seem
a personal,
individual quest,
it is really very superficial
and self-centered.
Isn’t more the quest,
what needs to be done
and what can I do?
Especially in a world
filled with misery and pain.
If this is true,
and I believe it is,
then we are social creatures,
part of a world community of beings
evolving on a small orb,
circling a minor star
in one corner of an unknown,
but knowable vast
and endless cosmos,
then what we do
defines who we are.
Why then, is it we are taught
to look inward,
to self,
when what is urgently needed
is to look outward,
to our diversity
and continuity,
then act against the horrors
we see before us.
Why is it that
our community
is defined narrowly,
by borders, walls,
and countries,
rather than humanity
as a whole?
I have written this poem many times,
pointing to our lowered sights,
to those American illusions,
self-delusion of seeing help
as looking at our feet,
taking a few steps
and thinking we have done something noble
and can now sleep good at night.
Barbara Kingsolver wrote once,
“some of us know where the wealth comes from,
some of us don’t,
but we wear it all the same.” *
There is a morality here,
a morality based on ages old traditions,
and fantasies of ‘comfort zones’.
To be blunt,
it is cowardice and inhuman
to simply be guided by what
“keeps us safe”, “comfortable”
or what is commonly known.
Here is something Bob Avakian has said,
“the whole point of principle is that
you have to fight for it when
it is not easy to do.
There is no need for principle
if the only time it is applied
is when it doesn’t matter” **
I started this poem
listening to Lauren Dangle’s song,
‘You Say’,
thinking how so many of us feel
damaged, weak
and alone.
But as the song progressed,
I though,
there is a way out of this;
how we are confined
in many different ways,
but all of us are capable of
breaking out
and together,
build a better world.
And in doing so,
“free the spirit
from the cell”. ***
Aztec Warrior/redzone 10.23.19
*this quote is from Barbara Kingsolver’s book The Poisonwood Bible.
**this quote from Bob Avakian can be found in his book, “Basics -from the talks and writings of Bob Avakian”; it can be found on page 154.
***this quote is one of the lines in the song, “The Internationale”








hello dearest Aztec Warrior this is profound and true sometimes I feel like I can never do enough I do on my small scale just smiling at a person can make all the difference or a simple hello great write ❤️