Saturday's Poem: Kindness
KINDNESS by Naomi Shihab Nye
Before youknow what kindness really is
you mustlose things,
feel thefuture dissolve in a moment
like salt ina weakened broth.
What youheld in your hand,
what youcounted and carefully saved,
all thismust go so you know
how desolatethe landscape can be
between theregions of kindness.
How you rideand ride
thinking thebus will never stop,
thepassengers eating maize and chicken
will stareout the window forever.
Before youlearn the tender gravity of kindness,
you musttravel where the Indian in a white poncho
lies dead bythe side of the road.
You must seehow this could be you,
how he toowas someone
whojourneyed through the night with plans
and thesimple breath that kept him alive.
Before youknow kindness as the deepest thing inside,
you mustknow sorrow as the other deepest thing.
You mustwake up with sorrow.
You mustspeak to it till your voice
catches thethread of all sorrows
and you seethe size of the cloth.
Then it is onlykindness that makes sense anymore,
onlykindness that ties your shoes
and sendsyou out into the day to mail letters and
purchasebread,
onlykindness that raises its head
from thecrowd of the world to say
it is I youhave been looking for,
and thengoes with you every where
like ashadow or a friend.