empathy poems

Used to Be | Sherrie Faulkner - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Used to Be | Sherrie Faulkner

When the mother first held her daughter
And kissed her tiny brow; so sweet
She did not dream for her a future
That included dumpster diving to eat

When on career day, the young man read out loud
I want to be a doctor and stop sickness and pain,
He was not secretly planning to be an addict
And shoot heroine into his vein.

When a little girl thinks about a white dress
And the details of her wedding day,
She does not plan to try to survive
By giving her body away.

When the teen who was jumped into a gang
Finds himself with a gun to someone’s head,
He was once a boy of three
Whose grandmother read him stories before bed.

A young mother lays her baby down to sleep
On a roach infested mattress on the floor.
The tears in her eyes aren’t from happiness
Because she couldn’t wait to grow up poor.

So the next time you judge an individual
And start handing out labels so liberally,
Close your eyes and try to picture
The child that they used to be.

On an Accumulation of Small Observations | Cate Gable - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

On an Accumulation of Small Observations | Cate Gable

For Neil

Culture, the water we swim in, and some version
of the future aggregated by clues—that brand name
on a shirt, straight white teeth, an iPhone versus flip—
keeps us in place, as the children lining up for school
in Kanazawa knew just where they stood,
who was above/below. Ijeoma Uluo, whose name
is melody, spoke about race as we wriggled in our seats.
Of course we want to do what’s right, what’s fair
yet our privilege separates. Being white
how do we feel each slight, each wound to Blacks
more murderous than the last? We’re wrong, we’re
rich, we’re deaf to deafness, blind to blindness,
trapped. Let the oceans inundate, let flies
suck at our lips, and I will know to take
your hand, fall down beside you in prayer.

The Good Samaritan | Stan Morrison - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

The Good Samaritan | Stan Morrison

This good samaritan was a pauper
Responding to the suffering of another
While the one-percenters walked away
Tightly holding onto their obscene wealth
Love thy neighbor, who is my neighbor
Anyone with whom I may share a moment
Anyone who may simply catch my eye
Empathy is at the heart of Golden Rule
Eternally directing all good hearts

Behind a Face | Arunima Saha - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Behind a Face | Arunima Saha

“I slow down my car’s pace and stare, at the human race.”
I look out of the window as the car comes to a halt, in the traffic.
I see faces, hundreds of them, all unfamiliar to me, all anonymous to me.
I see bodies, filled with despondency.
I see gazes, I see human mazes.
I find myself sinking in the roaring quietude of the engines, the honking of the horns.
I look ahead and there are buses and bikes and cycles and rickshaws standing in the queue.
I look back and I see the same.
I find mothers desperate to earn for their children.
I see men fighting their own fight.
There is a knock on my window pane and I turn around to see a little girl of eleven or twelve, with flowers in hand. Her eyes are swollen, with dark patches under them. She screams silently to be saved.
She is worth more than the money I gave.
There is a story behind every face but, in the end, it is all a haze.
There is a prologue to every epilogue.
Now, I know that the real world lies beyond a weekly catalogue and a daily monologue.
I see drained-out looks on certain strangers’ faces.
I find them tired of sitting in the very same cubicle from ten to five.
I look for genuine smiles, but all I come across is meaningless sighs.
There is more to life than unheard cries.
There is more to life than unexplained “Goodbyes”.
There is more to life, more than you realize.
“I slow down my car’s pace and stare, at the human race.”

November 9 | Leah Mond - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

November 9 | Leah Mond

Crestfallen, we stomped out boots over the crunchy leaves and down the steps into the subway tunnels where grieving commuters tuned out a little more than usual today

I thought I heard Mother Earth say “In some ways, she’d be just as bad anyway” as evidenced by the strange sunlight of this strange November day. “She did this too, in some kind of way…”

And I don’t like to argue with Mother Earth, but the day before I had to tell her “A flood is gonna come if I don’t make this strange sunlight go away”

So I sat down on the part of this walk that makes sense to me, where the beaten-up harbor smells like the sea. It’s where I usually go to get clarity – but that day? So scared of the blood, he took the wind right out of me.

“But you can swim and handle the wind” she whispers as the tide comes in.”

Yes, it’s true, I know how to swim. But it was others who’d sink as the tide came in.

And though I am the one who doesn’t need to sun every day
The plants, they will die if you take it away!

And, then, the sweet Mother Earth that once cradled me when I was ill
Disappeared with the wind and I was forced to be still

The clouds blocked the sun and the beams went away
And the shine on the harbor went from blue to gray

And it was 8:55 so we headed to the ship
Latinas and Muslims and LGBT folks in the mix
In shock, you’d wonder if we were indifferent to it
But the wind hit us harder than we’d like to admit

And it wasn’t until I left the embrace of the mother
That I approached the crowded boat with my sisters and brothers
Me light, them dark, we were separated at birth
As it rained on their crops and I drank from the Earth

I drank from the Earth, having no idea
The frenzy that floods cause for the people I see here

Here in the city that stole me from trees
Where I learned from others how to master the breeze

I breathed in their struggles, I stood in their trains
Until I could no longer swallow water, knowing how much they get screwed when it rains

So I am now on this boat with the gardeners and their weeds
It’s a dreary ride with an oppressive breeze
And I lock eyes with a woman, she’s darker than me
The fear. We connect. I finally see what she sees.

Outcast | JD DeHart - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Outcast | JD DeHart

I remember in my
ignorant, growing youth
the temptation to be
rude to the outcast.
To align myself with a
seemingly popular set.
At first, I have in.
But there was a time
I finally decided a voice
of grace and good will
far outweighed the need
to fit in with all the nasty
in the world.

More at https://jddehartfeaturepoems.blogspot.com.

Wishful | Langley Shazor - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Wishful | Langley Shazor

Where are we?
In this place
This space
This life
This existence
Do we stand to be snuffed out
By our own well-doing
Or does doing well
Bring us life?
Does it matter to those
Who don’t mind
Or to those whose mind
Only matters in ways
Of self-righteousness?
Can we find ourselves
Free ourselves
Love ourselves
That we may love others?
This is hope
This is faith
This is what we strive for
Or are we merely dreaming?

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