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    The World Will Follow Joy


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      THE WORLD WILL FOLLOW JOY

      ALSO BY ALICE WALKER

      Hard Times Require Furious Dancing: New Poems

      A Poem Traveled Down My Arm: Poems and Drawings

      Absolute Trust in the Goodness of the Earth

      Her Blue Body Everything We Know: Earthling Poems

      Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful

      Good Night, Willie Lee, I’ll See You in the Morning

      Revolutionary Petunias and Other Poems

      Once

      THE

      WORLD

      WILL

      FOLLOW

      JOY

      Turning Madness

      into Flowers

      {New Poems}

      ALICE WALKER

      THE NEW PRESS

      NEW YORK

      © 2013 by Alice Walker

      All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form,

      without written permission from the publisher.

      Requests for permission to reproduce selections from this book

      should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press,

      38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013.

      Published in the United States by

      The New Press, New York, 2013

      Distributed by Perseus Distribution

      LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

      Walker, Alice, 1944-

      [Poems. Selections]

      The world will follow joy : turning madness into flowers (new poems) / Alice Walker.

      pages cm

      Poems.

      ISBN 978-1-59558-887-6 (e-book) (print)

      I. Title.

      PS3573.A425W67 2013

      811’.54—dc232012041853

      The New Press publishes books that promote and enrich public discussion and understanding of the issues vital to our democracy and to a more equitable world. These books are made possible by the enthusiasm of our readers; the support of a committed group of donors, large and small; the collaboration of our many partners in the independent media and the not-forprofit sector; booksellers, who often hand-sell New Press books; librarians; and above all by our authors.

      www.thenewpress.com

      Book design by Lovedog Studio

      This book was set in Monotype Walbaum

      10987654321

      Contents

      Foreword

      What Makes the Dalai Lama Lovable?

      If I Was President (“Were” May Be Substituted by Those Who Prefer It)

      From: Poems for My Girls

      Don’t Be Like Those Who Ask for Everything

      Knowing You Might Someday Come

      Turning Madness into Flowers #1

      What It Feels Like

      Before I Leave the Stage

      Remember?

      Working Class Hero

      The Ways of Water

      You Want to Grow Old Like the Carters

      The Answer Is: Live Happily!

      Word Reaches Us

      When You See Water

      This Is a Story of How Love Works

      Alice and Kwamboka

      May It Be Said of Me

      And Do You See What They Have Bought with It?

      She

      Our Martyrs

      The Tree of Life Has Fallen

      To Change the World Enough

      Blessed Are the Poor in Spirit

      What Do I Get for Getting Old? A Picture Story for the Curious!

      Desire

      March Births

      Two Boys on a Pink Tricycle

      Coming to Worship the 1,000-Year-Old Cherry Tree

      Listening to Bedouins, Thinking of Bob

      Peonies

      Black and White Cows

      Worms Won’t Need a Menu

      From Paradise to Paradise

      Sailing the Hot Streets of Athens, Greece

      Life Takes Its Own Sweet Time

      One Meaning of the Immaculate Heart

      To Stand Beaming and Clapping

      And in That Sacred Time

      Why Peace Is Always a Good Idea

      Hope

      Tranquil

      The Raping of Maids

      This Human Journey

      In This You Are Wrong

      Hope to Sin Only in the Service of Waking Up

      The Part of God That Stings

      9/11: An Irrelevant Truth

      The Buddha’s Disagreeable Relative

      We Who Have Survived

      Racism Dates Us

      The World We Want Is Us

      The Joyful News of Your Arrest

      Every Revolution Needs Fresh Poems

      The Foolishness of Captivity

      Despair Is the Ground Bounced Back From

      Occupying Mumia’s Cell

      Another Way to Peace

      We Pay a Visit to Those Who Play at Being Dead

      Democratic Womanism

      Democratic Motherism

      After Many Years and Much Silliness

      When I Join You

      Going Out to the Garden

      Notes

      Photo Credits

      In loving memory of Rudolph Byrd

      so deeply missed

      and of the miracle that was our trust.

      And for G. Kaleo Larson

      My working-class hero.

      Foreword

      To a woman in whom the state of true motherhood has awakened, all creatures are her children. This love, this motherhood, is Divine Love—and that is God.

      —Amma

      Turning Madness into Flowers

      It is my thought that the ugliness of war, of gratuitous violence in all its hideous forms, will cease very soon to appeal to even the most insulated of human beings. It will be seen by all for what it is: a threat to our well-being, to our survival as a species, and to our happiness. The brutal murder of our common mother, while we look on like frightened children, will become an unbearable visceral suffering that we will refuse to bear. We will abandon the way of the saw, the jackhammer and the drill. Of bombs, too.

      As religions and philosophies that espouse or excuse violence reveal their true poverty of hope for humankind, there will be a great awakening, already begun, about what is of value in life.

      We will turn our madness into flowers as a way of moving completely beyond all previous and current programming of how we must toe the familiar line of submission and fear, following orders given us by miserable souls who, somehow, have managed to almost completely control us. We will discover something wonderful: that the world really does not enjoy following the dictates of sociopaths and psychopaths, those who treat the earth, our mother, as if she is wrong, and must be constantly corrected, in as sadistic and domineering a way as that of a drunken husband who kills his wife.

      The world—the animals, including us humans—wants to be engaged in something entirely other, seeing, and delighting in, the stark wonder of where we are: This place. This gift. This paradise.

      We want to follow joy.

      And we shall.

      The madness, of course, for each one of us, will have to be sorted out.1

      —Alice Walker

      August 2012

      www.AliceWalkersGarden.com

      What Makes the Dalai Lama Lovable?

      His posture

      From so many years

      Holding his robe with one hand

      Is odd.

      His gait

      Also.

      One’s own body

      Aches

      Witnessing

      The sloping

      Shoulders

      & Angled

      Neck;

      One hopes

      He

      Attends

      Yoga class

      Or does Yoga

      On his own


      As part

      Of prayer.

      He smiles

      As he bows

      To Everything:

      Accepting

      The heavy

      Burdens

      Of

      This earth;

      Its

      Toxic

      Evils

      & Prolific

      Insults.

      Even so,

      He sleeps

      Through

      The night

      Like a child

      Because

      Thank goodness

      That is something

      Else

      Daylong

      Meditation

      Assures.

      You could cry

      Yourself to sleep

      On his behalf

      & He

      Has done that

      Too.

      Life

      Has been

      A great

      Endless

      Tearing away

      For

      Him.

      From

      Mother, Father, Siblings, Country, Home.

      And yet

      Clearly

      His mother

      Loved him;

      His brother & sister

      Too: Even his

      Not so constant father,

      Who

      When Tenzin was

      A boy

      Shared

      With him

      Delicious

      Scraps

      Of

      Succulent

      Pork.

      He laughs

      Telling this

      Story

      Over half a century

      Later

      &

      To who knows

      How many

      Puzzled

      Vegetarians:

      About

      The way he sat

      Behind

      His father’s chair

      Like a dog,

      Relishing

      Each juicy

      Greasy

      Bite.

      Whenever I see

      The Dalai Lama

      My first impulse

      Is to laugh

      I am so happy

      To

      Lay eyes

      On

      One

      So effortlessly

      Beautiful.

      That balding head

      That holds

      A shine;

      Those wire framed

      Glasses

      That might

      Have come

      From

      Anywhere.

      That look of having offered

      All he has.

      He is my teacher;

      Just staying alive.

      Other teachers

      I have had

      Resemble him

      In some way;

      They too

      Were

      &

      Are

      Smart

      And Humble;

      Fascinated

      By Science & things like

      Time,

      Eternity,

      Cause & Effect;

      The Evolution

      Of the Soul.

      A

      Soul

      That

      Might

      Or might not

      Exist.

      They too

      See all of us

      —Banker, murderer, gardener, thief—

      When they look

      Out across

      The world:

      But that is not all

      They see.

      They see our suffering;

      Our striving

      To find

      The right path;

      The one with heart

      We may only

      Have heard about.

      The Dalai Lama is Cool

      A modern word

      For

      “Divine”

      Because he wants

      Only

      Our collective

      Health

      & Happiness.

      That’s it!

      What makes

      Him

      Lovable

      Is

      His holiness.

      ***

      If I Was President (“Were” May Be Substituted by Those Who Prefer It)

      If I was President

      The first thing I would do

      is call Mumia Abu-Jamal.

      No,

      if I was President

      the first thing I would do

      is call Leonard Peltier.

      No,

      if I was President

      the first person I would call

      is that rascal

      John Trudell.

      No,

      the first person I’d call

      is that other rascal

      Dennis Banks.

      I would also call

      Alice Walker.

      I would make a conference call.

      And I would say this:

      Yo, you troublemakers,

      it is time to let all of us

      out of prison.

      Pack up your things.

      Dennis and John,

      collect Alice Walker

      if you can find her:

      in Mendocino, Molokai, Mexico or

      Gaza,

      & head out to the prisons

      where Mumia and Leonard

      are waiting for you.

      They will be traveling

      light.

      Mumia used to own a lot

      of papers

      but they took most of those

      away from him.

      Leonard

      will probably want to drag along

      some of his

      canvases.

      Alice

      who may well be

      shopping

      in New Delhi

      will no doubt want to

      dress up for the occasion

      in a sparkly shalwar kemeez.

      My next call is going to be

      to the Cubans

      all five of them;

      so stop worrying.

      For now, you’re my fish.

      I just had this long letter

      from Alice and she has begged me

      to put an end

      to her suffering.

      What? she said.

      You think these men are the only ones who suffer

      when Old Style America locks them up

      & throws away

      the key?

      I can’t tell you, she goes on,

      the changes

      this viciousness

      has put me through,

      and I have had a child to raise

      & classes to teach

      & food to buy

      and just because

      I’m a poet

      it doesn’t mean

      I don’t have to

      pay the mortgage

      or the rent.

      Yet all these years,

      nearly thirty or something

      of them

      I have been running around

      the country

      and the world

      trying to arouse justice

      for these men.

      Tonsillitis

      hasn’t stopped me.

      Migraine

      hasn’t stopped me.

      Lyme disease

      hasn’t stopped me.

      And why?

      Because

      knowing the country

      that I’m in,

      as you are destined to learn

      it too,

      I know wrong

      when I see it.

      If that chair you’re sitting in

      could speak

      you would have it moved

      to another room.

      You would burn it.

      So, amigos,

      pack your things.

      Alice and John and Dennis

      are on their way.

      They are bringing prayers from Nilak Butler and Bill Wahpepah;

      they are bringing sweet grass and white sage

    &nb
    sp; from Pine Ridge.

      I am the President

      at least until the Corporations

      purchase the next election,

      and this is what I choose

      to do on my first day.2

      ***

      From: Poems for My Girls

      The Chicken Chronicles: Sitting with the Angels Who Have Returned with My Memories

      —Pax Ameracauna, chapter 22

      How can Humanity

      look the deer

      in

      the face?

      How can I,

      having erected

      my fence?

      ***

      Don’t be like those who ask for everything

      For Queen Miriam (Makeba) who stood on swollen feet and sang her people to freedom

      Don’t be like those who ask for everything:

      praise, a blurb, a free ride in my rented

      limousine. They ask for everything but never offer

      anything in return.

      Be like those who can see that my feet ache

      from across a crowded room

      that a foot rub

      if I’m agreeable

      never mind the staring

      is the best way to smile

      & say hello

      to me.

      ***

      Knowing You Might Someday Come

      For Kaleo

      Knowing you might someday come

      and how unprepared I’ve always

      been

      like Mr. Sloppy

      in Charles Dickens’

      our Mutual Friend

      I made a list:

      not meat, vegetables, beer and pudding

      but number l, warmth.

      number 2, warmth.

      number 3, warmth.

      number 4, a good snuggler.

      number 5, someone who sings

      while he/she works.

      number 6, a dancer.

      number 7, someone who grows

      & is intrigued by

      the mind. And

      by the spirit too.

      Number 8, someone who is loved

      by animals; and loves

      them back without

      a thought.

      number 9, someone who smells

      delicious.

      number 10, someone whose anger

      lasts no longer than mine.

      number 11, someone who

      stands beside me. behind me. If necessary

      in front of me.

      number 12, someone who

      is a passable cook.

      number 13, Someone who laughs

     

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