Faith, Hope and Love

4/13/26

Category: Psychology, Suffering

A poem about my experience as an immigrant boy in America.

 

Faith, Hope, and Love

“The substance of things hoped for,

the evidence of things unseen.”

 

Even in the shadows, Faith,

which is the shimmer of things

that’ve long lost their luster,

still slices like lightning.

 

“So let’s go all in.”

 

“Slow down,” says Hope.

“Caramel-colored skin tones

moved into the pale-yellow house

on De Soto Street.”

 

The ebony boys chased home

the Nicaraguan refugee,

right up to the broken screen

frowning on a dilapidated porch.

 

His chubby thighs ran inside

just in time to slide his cup across the table

for his ole man to pour him a drink

as he wiped his Latino eyes dry.

 

Too afraid to speak and too prideful to cry,

he wished he’d shouted out the window,

 

“Am I so different than you?

I thought we all bled red.

 

“Is it because I just got here?

 

“Isn’t this the neighborhood

where we’re allowed to play with the broken toys

we find splattered with blood inside chalk outlines?

 

“And what about stamps?

No, I’m not talking about the ones you pay for,

lick and stick to an envelope.

 

“Isn’t this the place where food stamps don’t judge

what we use them for?

 

“Isn’t this cruel game the epitome of irony?

My country—

Castro’s and Che’s communist coup—

coughed up my family,

tainted with the smell of indigestion,

as America promised us puke-free asylum

with ironclad discretion.

 

“But here you are,

calling me out to take away

the one thing that makes me feel safe—

a yellow and black bicycle with a basket for all my secrets,

used-wheels my father worked for

by humping graveyard shift after graveyard shift

as a security guard on Bourbon Street.

It was my bastion of Hope.

And now it sleeps under your bed.”

 

And then there are those

who explain away this contradiction as paradox,

telling this new boy on the block

he’s too young to understand.

 

“Maybe that’s true.

I’m only ten years old

but I know what oppression preys like

long before it crouches at my door,

long before it became social justice’s battle cry.”

 

But the story isn’t over.

This isn’t goodbye.

 

“How do I know?

Cause Love is the final virtue.

So I’ll make this short—

I forgive you.

 

“And that’s what makes the story good,

across all ghettos and barrios.

Love lingers long after the final gunshot.”

 

5/6/26

A sage man once said, “The first and greatest victory is to conquer yourself.” –Plato, Laws I.626e When did knowledge replace wisdom, or facts replace virtues? Was it during the Enlightenment when rationality and science replaced the objective standard of divine justice and righteousness? This sounds terribly right. And it explains a lot about what’s…

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4/13/26

Category: Psychology, Suffering

A poem about my experience as an immigrant boy in America.   Faith, Hope, and Love “The substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen.”   Even in the shadows, Faith, which is the shimmer of things that’ve long lost their luster, still slices like lightning.   “So let’s go all in.”  …

Read More »

3/4/26

After 20 years of planning, researching, writing, and editing, SALVADOR is finally finished and available to purchase and enjoy at https://a.co/d/0d62xt6p! SALVADOR was originally inspired by two books: The Jesus I Never Knew and The Da Vinci Code. I loved how Philip Yancey highlighted the humanity of Christ in the former, and I loved how…

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