Category Archives: Tragedy

In tragedy there is light – Original Poem

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I hugged my child today
The warmest hug I ever did feel
So safe; so warm; so tight
I could not let go

I could not release him into a world fueled by hostility and death
The fire and smoke has clouded my vision of the future

In a moment of sorrow I bowed my head

Humbled by the prospect of peace
Warmed by the heat of a new sunrise
Spiritually enlightened by humanity

My son looked up at me with sadness in his eyes
In a soft trembling voice asked me “why?”

I hesitated as I closed my eyes willing the answer in a way to sooth my child and ease my wounded heart
Words did not find their way to me

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Guided by instinctive love, I looked at my son and said “you”

You are my reason for living
You are my my hero
You are are the happiness I find every morning and the final thought every night

Without you, I don’t know why

You are the meaning of my future not yet written
You are the legacy that will show the world the path to the grace of humanity

I looked at my son and once again began to believe

The smoke is gone now
No longer clouded, I find the strength to rise again and walk, hand in hand with my child to the promise of a new tomorrow.

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In the Wake of Tragedy – Remembering the Victims in Connecticut

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“Tragedy is a tool for the living to gain wisdom, not a guide by which to live.” – Robert Francis Kennedy

“Acceptance of what has happened is the first step to overcoming the consequences of any misfortune.” – William James

“Seeds of faith are always within us; sometimes it takes a crisis to nourish and encourage their growth.” – Unknown

“If we climb high enough, we will reach a height from which tragedy ceases to look tragic.” – Irwin Yalom

“When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they can seem invincible, but in the end, they always fall. Think of it–always.” – Mahatma Ghandi

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“Life is filled with unanswered questions, but it is the courage to seek those answers that continues to give meaning to life. You can spend your life wallowing in despair, wondering why you were the one who was led towards the road strewn with pain, or you can be grateful that you are strong enough to survive it.” – J.D. Stoube

“Everybody going to be dead one day, just give them time.” – Neil Gaiman

“When a man is in despair, it means that he still believes in something.” – Dmitri Shostakovich

“Even death has a heart.” – Markus Zuzak

“To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die.” – Thomas Campbell

“Love is how you stay alive, even after you are gone.” – Mitch Albom

“Man never made any material as resilient as the human spirit.” – Unknown

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“Instead of weeping when a tragedy occurs in a songbird’s life, it sings away its grief. I believe we could well follow the pattern of our feathered friends.” – William Shakespeare

“Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood.” – Unknown

“Tragedy is a representation of action that is worthy of serious attention, complete in itself and of some magnitude – bringing about by means of pity and fear the purging of such emotions.” – Aristotle

“A tragic situation exists precisely when virtue does not triumph but when it is still felt that man is nobler than the forces which destroy him.” – George Orwell

“Embrace each day, realizing it is a present sent with love from above.” – Uknown

No More Tears
No More Anger
No More Bloodshed


What are you waiting for? – Seize your moment

“The future starts today, not tomorrow.” – Pope John Paul II

I have seen enough love pass me by to say enough is enough. What are we afraid of? As we sit back in our safety net and shield ourselves from the perils of life, the only certainty that follows is the closer we get to death.

How many friendships have been lost because someone felt the other may want more and they were afraid to confront the situation?

How many relationships failed because of the fear of falling in love?

How many dreams unfulfilled because of the possibility of failure?

How many passions unrealized because we guard against risk?

Life is moving forward second by second, minute by minute, hour by hour. How cliche is it to say “life is short” or “live each day as if it is your last”. For most, waited words either on ourselves or others. We don’t live each day with “purpose”. We live each day in comfort by going to work, saving our money, living within our means and hopefully retiring with enough money to live out our lives.

As a child, we are not awakened to the realities of adulthood. The greatest gift our parents can give us is allowing us to dream without limitations. We see a universe that never ends, buildings we can leap over and fantasies of heroism and romance.

We tell our children we love them each and every night before they go to bed, but not often enough to our life partner. Children will get on a bike or skateboard, fall and get up again until they master the art of the ride? How many of us change our commute to work..ever? Children want to be the greatest in the world. Adults want to live through the week so they can go fishing?

Are you seeing the issue here?

We are fragile beings who truly can see life reach a bitter end with one mistake, one error of judgement, one unfortunate twist of fate. We are the most delicate beings woven into a complex machine with one unique feature that sets us apart, the ability of rational thought. We are gifted with the minds to dream and achieve.

Nothing brings people together and forces them to re-evaluate their lives more than tragedy. It is this phenomenon that presses our invisible reset button and for a moment, just a moment puts us in a place to look at life’s path and determine if it is the right course. That moment fleets away very quickly and we slip back into the routine that we have grown to be so comfortable and safe with. It is comfort and routine that we embrace, not risk and uncertainty. How ironic, for the true dreamers, the immortal legends, the pioneers ignite their inner child to achieve the impossible by taking risk.

I can’t tell you how to lead your life or judge whether what you do is right or wrong. All I can do is this; remind you of who you are and what you are capable of. Do not sit back and let this gift of life pass you by. It is a gift, a wonderful exciting gift.

You are born with an unshaped legacy that only you can mold and sculpt and thus become an immortal soul.

We never have yesterday or tomorrow; only this moment.


Smallest Heart Can Make the Biggest Impact – Allison Griffor (Death of a 5 Year old saves 3)

“In the shadow of death, life is given new meaning”

Allison Griffor, 5, donates heart and other organs to other children

By Brad Franko and NBC News 2 Charleston

Doctors were able save Allison Griffor’s organs to save other children in need. Griffor is the 5-year-old shot during an attempted home invasion early Tuesday morning.

A family spokesman said doctors used Allison’s heart to save a 2-year- old child. She was also able to donate to two other children. One of her donations went to a child at MUSC. Two others went out of state.

A family spokesman issued a statement Friday at Waterfront Park, in Downtown Charleston. Richard Douglas told reporters, the park was Allison’s favorite spot.

A Facebook page dedicated to prayers for Allison and the Griffor family also delivered the sobering news.

“It is with a very heavy heart that I have to say that our prayers for a miracle were answered, just not the way we had planned. Allison has been called home to her heavenly father. Her family made the decision to donate her organs, which will be the miracle that other children have been waiting for. through this she will live on,” the statement says.

William Griffor says, he and his wife woke up to someone trying to kick-in their front door the Tuesday before she died.

“I ran to the front door and yelled hey and was about to open the door to grab whomever it was when I reached for the lock there was a blast through our door,” Griffor wrote in the comments section of a story on Counton2.com.

He said, he grabbed his three kids and put them in the bedroom with his wife on the floor. It wasn’t until deputies came in, and turned on the lights that they realized Allison was shot.

Deputies are still searching for a suspect, and are working to see if a similar robbery is connected.

The Griffor family is asking for donations to be made to:

“Allison Griffor Fund”
Mail to: William and Allison Griffor Fund
First Federal of Charleston
PO Box 118068
Charleston, SC 29423


September 11 (9/11) Music Inspired by or provided comfort during the period the tragic events

Playlist Inspired by September 11, 2001

As we move closer to the tenth anniversary of a day we will never forget in our lifetimes and our children’s, we often take time during an anniversary to add additional reflection on the importance of this tragedy. It was a day that changed our lives and how we view life today.

As an native of the Northeast, the events of that day took on a much more personal meaning, but whether you were in New York or China, it affected each of us in a very personal way. During the period after that, musicians, artists, poets and writers, let their guard down to open up to us and share their personal feelings about the events of that day.

As a tribute to September 11, 2001 and a thank you for all those that let us in their lives, here is a playlist and select videos to help us get through this anniversary together.

You will not be forgotten


September 11 – A Day We Will Never Forget….11 Years Later, My Personal Journey

It was sometime after seven when my phone rang. I was groggy and half awake but somehow felt the need to answer my phone. Kim was the on the other end frantically telling me to turn my television on. Without hesitation or knowledge of why, I did. She then began to tell me the cryptic pieces of information surrounding a plane going into the World Trade Center. It was moments later when I witnessed the second plane make a permanent impression in my mind. I soon hung up and continued to stare at the screen as my eyes got lost far beyond the scenes I was seeing on the television screen.

I sat silently and still on the floor, watching, absorbing, and reflecting as the news trying to make sense of this madness. Memories of my days on Wall Street came back quickly and I could remember my footsteps from the PATH train to Broad Street. Now that path is covered in rubble and smoke and the familiar sounds of taxis are now filled with screams.

After several hours, without knowing what to do or who to call, I played nine holes of golf. Upon completion, as I walked the final path to the clubhouse, my phone rang. I don’t know why, but had a feeling the news was not good. I had no reason to believe that the call from my parents home phone was good or bad news, but I knew. Maybe it was the day playing in the back of my mind or perhaps the knowledge that my parents rarely ever called me during the day. With a brief hesitation, I answered to hear my father on the other end confirming my notion. I received the news that my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Mid afternoon on September 11 as the world reacted, lived and digested what would become the most memorable day of our lives, I stood alone hearing the word you never want to hear in relation to a family member, friend or yourself.

Much of the next several hours were a bit of a blur. Sometime in between the hours of 8:00 PM and 10:00 PM I leaned on a rock just outside my apartment and looked up at the sky. My first thought was of the deafening silence filling the sky with only the view of stars shining. No planes, no helicopters, no sound resonating. Of course this being in the middle of a remote part of Oklahoma would not have shocked anyone but living seven miles from an international airport meant something else. How can complete silence send shivers down one’s spine? I don’t know, but the empty sound was the spark that drove me into a period of weakness and sorrow. I shed a tear as an entire day of devastation ran circles in my mind. Over and over I remember the calls, the videos, the commentary and through all that, it was the silence that sent me over the edge.

That was September 11, 2001.

One year and six days later, we lost her.

A decade has passed, ten years older and more mature. The world as you and I know it changed that day, not in a temporary mode but a permanent way of life. It awakened us to the notion that we are all vulnerable. How often to we go to a movie and watch a blockbuster about an apocalyptic event and sit in awe at the wonder of Hollywood magic? Yet, to witness the unimaginable happen before our eyes wondering and praying that our friends and loved ones were not part of this madness is something not many of us would pay the price of admission for. I grew up in New Jersey, raised by two home bread New York parents. Spent some time on Wall Street living the American dream. Never in the midst of the madness known as New York City could I imagine an event so catastrophic ever happening in my backyard.

If asked what emotions went through my system that day, I would have to say shock, fear, heartbreak, concern, confusion and hope. I am sure you are thinking why “hope” in that list of negative emotions. Well, without hope, we have nothing. Everyday we live with the risk of tragedy whether it affects one person or thousands, yet each day we wake up to a new sunrise with the hope of a day filled with happiness and love.

September 11 was tragic for me in so many ways, mostly personal. I needed to feel hope that as a family we would be by my mother’s side supporting her, comforting her and knowing together we could beat this disease. As we come closer to the 10th anniversary of the day that changed our lives forever, I will be thinking about my mother and the struggles she had to endure so that we could have the blessing of having her in our lives.

My greatest tragedy of that day was not the events over lower Manhattan. It was that I was not there to hug and hold my mother when she received the news of the unwelcome visitor in her body. I’m sorry Mom.


The Nothing Man see Everything…

The Nothing Man is all around.
He is sitting on the bench in the park.
He is under a tree contemplating the rebirth of a life left behind in the trenches of shadows suffocated by the air that we breathe.
He is in your dreams.
He is standing at the station watching the trains go by.
He is the man you are, the man you want to be and the man you could have been.

He let it all go to only find the real truth was the bond between him and her.

Love lost is a tragedy because love is the only truth. It is the essence of existence and the answer to the questions that stand before us every day we inhabit this earth.
We are born alone and die alone, but the only gift we can receive is love.

The Nothing Man knows that and willingly lost the only explanation of meaning.
He knows for he has lost.
He is left behind.
Falling into the sea, he tries to catch himself before he drowns.
Can he recapture that shared feeling that brings the energy of two into one powerful act of suggestion.

He is the Nothing Man, but knows all.
He knows the impulse, the chase, the bond and the release.
He has seen the full spectrum of seed to flower and crushed it in an act of selfishness.

Why would the Nothing Man destroy the only thing that kept him alive?
He needed to bleed to feel the pain bottled up inside.

He is the Nothing Man.
He is alone in body and mind, but forever bonded in spirit.
He needs to capture once again before the blood drips to the dirt and buries itself forever in the ground.

We pray for Nothing Man for he is within all of us. He provides us guidance and gives us shelter in the loneliest hour. He is the man in the mirror reminding us that true love is a gift. One to be cherished and held like a fragile egg. Do not search; for it will find you. Do not hold on too tight; for it will break.

Always, always cherish it every moment that you share a breath.


Sonni’s Abyss – Here is your chance to own the book ahead of the new release, “A Beautiful World”

Mark A. Leon, Voice of Modern American Poetry takes a vision in poetry that will provide a new and old audience of readers a contemporary concept of poetic expression. Introducing Sonni’s Abyss – A Collection of Poetry and Photography. Let Mark’s words of inspiration find a home in your heart.

Here is your chance to purchase ahead of the new release, “A Beautiful World”

Samples and Purchase Link:

http://sites.google.com/site/markalex222/home

Through a decade of personal success and tragedy, Mark A. Leon has taken his global journey and provided the reader with a collection that will penetrate the emotions and bring you to another place that will ultimately allow you to face your own personal path with strength and courage. Sonni’s Abyss is the newest collection of works from Mark A. Leon. Follow his journey and in time make it your own.

Mark started his life excursion in New Jersey and has experienced his personal vision in Alaska, Italy, Switzerland, Netherlands, France, Spain, Mexico and the United States coast to coast. During his own personal adventure, he has absorbed a deeper understanding of global culture while maintaining his strength from his family and circle of friends that have supported him. During the last decade, a series of events have brought Mark to extreme periods of deep despair to moments of euphoria. This book outlines his journey in a way that is fresh and deeply showered in emotion. Utilizing metaphorical angles, derivatives of nature, spirituality, love, death and rebirth, this exploration has been embraced by readers of all ages.

Mark believes that everything in our lives is poetry from the songwriter to the composer to the teacher. Each and every one of us expresses a feeling of truth and understanding in our art. Expression of oneself is a true artistic form but the ability to transfer and affect the life of another individual is a true gift. This book is a testament to how the written word can change a life. That is the true victory; the ability to help one life and find inner happiness and peace.

The journey begins with one page. Let’s yourself go and start your own personal exploration of reflection. Let Sonni’s Abyss help you find your path.

Thoughts on the book, Sonni’s Abyss:

“His beautiful and honest prose draws you in as they reveal a modern look at everyday emotion. His sense of time and place bring you the world through his eyes, while his sense of home brings you to new places. His passion for life, almost tangible as you read his accounts of love, loss, and faith.” – Jill – (Georgia)

“This book reads like a journey with each poem representing a different time or event.” – Jane (New Jersey)

Please take the time to read samples of Mark A. Leon’s words of inspiration and I hope you can share this book with people you love.

Mark is also a contributing author on two collections raising charity for impoverished children in African entitled Poetry for Charity – Volume I and Poetry for Charity – Volume II

http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=2996281

Link to purchase of Sonni’s Abyss at Barnes and Noble

http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Sonnis-Abyss/Mark-A-Leon/e/9780595520275/?itm=1


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