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"Reflections"
©1998 and beyond  Kenneth G Woolcock

         Creation of this section was prompted by an email we received from a young lady, Penny in Kuala Lumpur, who often sent moving and thought-provoking clips.

         "Brian's Story" is such a piece and it moved me to create this area. You can find it in the index on the right, together with links to some personal verses.

         There's so much emphasis on getting rich and the dream of a Million Dollar Business that we spend insufficient time reflecting and being grateful for the many blessings we already have. Is it that we just don't recognize them?

         That's the purpose of this page - I hope it achieves it. More importantly, I hope that you enjoy and gain something. Even if it's just a few minutes to relax, read, and reflect.

Love and Light to all who drop in.

Links to NervousNewbies are in the left margin for your convenience. This is not a Business page but third-party banners might be used to earn traffic or income. The content of banners (if shown) is beyond our control. We hope you understand and that it doesn't detract from the nature of these pages or spoil your enjoyment. Thank you.

Full Circle - A Mother's Love
By Kenneth G Woolcock.

Published in "Lasting Moments"
An Anthology of Poems - June 1998

As one gets older, progressing through life,
one links with a partner, husband or wife.
That partner can give much love and support,
understanding and help of one sort or another
but cannot give some of the gifts of one's Mother.

She is the one who sets most of our fears,
guiding us through our formative years.
Showing us how to behave with respect
for our fellows about us
... and what to reject.

Though we strive to follow the way that She paved
it sometimes turns out that we fall or we fail.
Without a rebuke She accepts our mistakes
with a smile... not a frown for letting her down.

'tis only by failing we learn to succeed
and She knows this so well now her life's almost spent.
She cared for her offspring and tended their needs
'til she sees them arrive...
just as She leaves...
for that final repose...
knowing that they achieved.

©  January 1998  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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Until we meet again
By Kenneth G Woolcock

I am not this body that you have known,
but spirit seen in human form.
So weep not when this body has gone,
for spirit's just gone home.

All things have their time and this body's time will pass
and fade to dust from whence it came,
whilst spirit's time will last.

I am you, you are me...we two are really one.
When you want me I'll be there to help you carry on.
You'll even see me if you look
out on the autumn leaves,
in winter's frost, in springtime rains
and even summer sun.

To see me, not with worldly eyes, try to understand
and look at all around you,
fashioned not by mortal hands.

Your inner eye is where I'll be;
I've been there all the while,
to see me, think a tender thought,
just think of me and smile.

Spirit knows no limits, no box or even earth;
In air is where the spirit lives,
the wind its place of birth.
I've always been free spirit and always shall remain
within the air, upon the wind.....until we meet again.

©  January 2000  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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No words can ever say
By Kenneth G Woolcock

There are no words can ever say
our hurt when loved ones pass away.
Their grief all goes when they pass on,
their work in this world has been done.

Those left behind grieve for a while
but think of loved ones with a smile.
Our pain will ease each day by day,
those loved ones haven't gone away;
their spirit lives in time and space,
blessing us with loving grace.

©  July 2007  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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Borrowed Time
By Kenneth G Woolcock

We live our lives on borrowed time,
That borrowed time is short.
Should we do the things we want?
Or do the things we ought?

Life isn't always easy,
Or that's the way it seems
Do what we want, or what we ought?
Or listen to our friends?

We must hear that voice inside us,
Not the nagging, doubtful voice,
But the voice that's full of promise,
The voice that's full of dreams.

That's the voice to follow,
Through which the truth will shine,
"Go fight your fight, treat each man right.
Don't hang about so full of doubt.
Don't squander borrowed time."

©  March 2002  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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How We Change
by Kenneth G Woolcock

Back in the days of my childhood
I felt safe and violence was rare,
I was blessed with wonderful parents
and thought they would always be there.

I was a child of the forties,
born shortly after the war,
my Father had been in the desert
with the Army Medical Corps.

At Christmas we'd visit relations,
Dad and uncle would sit and discuss
all the places they'd been
and the things they had seen,
Army buddies - and not giving up.

Through young eyes my Dad was my hero,
he must have seen terrible things,
I would listen in awe and amazement
as Father would tell of comrades who fell,
booby-traps, minefields and bad dreams.

I remember those years we went fishing
and the toy yacht he bought me one day.
One summer I was bored
so Dad went to the store
- bought a toy he could hardly afford.

Although we never did have much
Mum and Dad would always provide
clothing, good food, love and strong shoes,
Mum often would have to decide.

Dad taught me to ride on a cycle,
a girls' bike was all that we had,
it belonged to my sister
and she let me ride it,
Dad held me so I would not fall.

When I was just twelve years or thirteen
Dad bought me a bike of my own,
not a new one but one from a junk shop,
a sports bike with lights and a horn.

The fact someone owned it before me
didn't bother me one little bit,
Dad taught me to strip it,
clean it and fix it,
so I did that and painted it red.

Through my childhood my parents said little
about how I should learn to behave,
instead they led by example,
live a good life, love others and save.

By the sixties this kid was a rebel,
long hair, fast music, loud clothes,
I didn't break many rules,
never did any harm,
but I knew I had radically changed.

Dad was always there to help me,
to guide me and help me decide,
financing a car, motor-bike or guitar,
Dad was there to help and provide.

My attitude to Dad was obnoxious,
but his love for me didn't change,
I saw him as old,
out of touch, going bald,
but he never got into a rage.

No longer did tales of the desert
fill me with wonder and awe,
I still saw my Dad as a hero
but I wanted no more of "the war".

Every day Dad would sit in our parlour
after lunch and before going back
to the school where he worked,
for subsistence it seemed,
so his principles have my respect.

Around about my age I'd lost him,
just one day before sixty-five,
I was filled with disgust
that he'd given so much,
such a cruel life - no way to survive.

All those days my Dad spent in our parlour
I wondered what he had in mind.
I thought he was sleeping,
remeniscing or dreaming,
maybe thinking of new things to try.

But now as I'm getting older
I realise that wasn't the case,
Dad had to relax, meditate and unwind,
before going back to what he might find,
some sick kids and what else to face.

Too often I wish I had listened
and asked for his wisdom to share,
many times I crave for Dad's guidance
and regret he is no longer here.

So now as I sit in our parlour
I think I know what my Dad did,
he tuned in to Infinite wisdom
to see where he may be led.

I follow my Father's example
and kick back, relax in my chair,
my eyes might be closed,
but not sleeping,
and I know that my Father is there.

So cherish those you have around you,
remember to show them you care,
treat them with respect
and you'll have no regrets
when they have passed on
and you're left on your own
just think of them - they will be there.

Dedicated to my Father who was much wiser than
I ever gave him credit for. His music went with him.

©  February 2006  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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Love in the Mist
by Kenneth G Woolcock

The time has come to capture
the many thoughts that haunt me
about a lovely lady
much more than just a Friend.
I feel there is no justice
when all around me tremble
about the life before them,
things they feel they cannot change.

We all have it within us
to do what we were born to,
my Lady sees it also
in a meeting of our souls.

And should I want my lady
I whisper "Love come hither"
She's with me in a moment
In that tranquil space within my mind.
Others can't imagine
the comfort that she gives me
Being here, although she's absent
in that distant place a world away.

To love but not to have her
Yet have but never hold her
And still she brings me comfort
to that tranquil place within my mind.
Some say that it's a pennance,
This turmoil that pervades me,
For errors of my judgement
In those past lives I have led.

I don't believe it's like that
The Universe has blessed me
That I can find contentment
in visions most may never see.

Life passes like quicksilver
Brief moments strung together
like pearls dropped from a necklace
spilling scattered on the floor.
Too soon it's gone forever
Too oft we lose the moment
not putting into motion
the dreams we know we should have lived.

I do not fear the Reaper
his spectre will not scare me
Prepared to meet my Maker
but Please, Lord... give me time
To do the things I have to,
the music's still within me,
Please help me get it out there
so the Universe may share.

And so, my lovely Lady
I hope you will forgive me
For I feel I have been selfish
in revealing this to you.
May be we'll never make it
nor consumate our Friendship
but I know deep down your feelings
are pure for me as mine for you.

©  February 2006  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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Rock 'n' Roll - I Wish
by Kenneth G Woolcock

I Wish I could have been there, the day the music died,
and spent the years before then
with Buddy and the others by my side.
Not that I'd want to go the way
that took those young men out of life,
but the thought of having known them all,
would mean my life was spent
in witness of their skill and growth
and all their gained success had meant.

The Winter Tour was not a thing
that Buddy chose to do,
but he did it of necessity,
when the coach broke down, they flew.

I wish I could have had the chance
to be there, in those early, hectic days,
to see them all in concert,
all those young men on the stage.

Sam Cooke, J.P., Ritchie, Fats and Dion, Buddy knew,
Eddie and The Platters.... they all knew The Drifters too.
Pioneers of a music, be it solo, group or band,
unlike any other, some folk could not understand.

Many years have passed but their music still lives on,
although they're not forgotten and other friends have gone
to meet them in another plane...
one day I'll join that throng.

June will lead the gospel choir, Johnny singing bass.
Waylon's there and Jesse, in Fury's Wondrous Place. Gene has had his leg fixed but holds it straight and stiff,
he keeps it as a trade mark, like Elvis Aaron's quiff.

Rick will throw a Garden Party
and Ray will play the keys,
Lennon sings 'Give Peace a Chance',
I sure know that's bound to please.

It's wrong to say the music died
when the plane went down that fateful day,
we were robbed of youthful talent - true,
but their music's here to stay.

Their music gave me pleasure
in the springtime of my youth,
and, even now, through autumn eyes,
it still reveals a simple truth.

I know I have a talent, a vision and a dream,
not for me the music but a different creative theme.
It might not fire a generation, like Buddy chose to do
with unrelenting passion and the drive to follow through;
but it would reach those who want to have it all,
I know that much is true.

What's missing is the passion, the reason and the 'why',
to use the talent with effect before time slips swiftly by
and not to go and meet them unfulfilled and ever wishing,
to take my music with me because I had no passion.

I wish that I could find it, the passion which I crave
to give meaning to this empty life before I'm in my grave.
If that could happen in my time I'd feel my life well spent.
not on wishing, but with passion
which was truly heaven sent.
I wish.

©  April 2006  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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Beware - the Skillet
By Kenneth G Woolcock.

Here in the UK, wishin' for a holiday,
somethin's gone wrong, now I gotta stay home,
can't go away 'cos I gotta fix the aircon.
It's too damn hot and I wish it was not,
can't walk the dog so I'll grab myself an ice pop.
Suck it and see if it satisfies me,
if it don't do the trick then I'll just do a belly-flop.

No water in the pool and no way to get cool
so I just take a hike or grab me a motorbike.
Go for a spin but you know it's a sin
to go on the run when there's things that gotta be done.
Go to the basement lookin for the air vent.
Too dark, can't see, someone's here with me.
"Who's that? Damn cat! Watcha think yer lookin at?"

Swimming pool, aircon, gotta get the jobs done,
can't find an air vent, contact the government.
Reply from public health was "Fix it yerself.
The only engineer we got is one from the bottom shelf .
Get him by Monday, Friday, some day."
Don't wanna tell the wife 'cos I bet I know what she'll say.
Just a pile of grief to last me through 'til pay day.

Place looks like a cave, she's been tryin to save,
but I made commitment and spent it on the Internet.
Here she comes, is she totin a gun?
"Stand still, don't run! I wanna word with you, son.
Silly damn skid, yuh don't know what you did."
She stood back, took a swing,
then smashed me with a skillet lid.

Saw bright stars, went and lifted a car,
head wasn't clear, spinnin', goin' nowhere,
some place, lost face, wanna quit the human race.
Here comes Joe and he's walkin' real slow,
head down on the ground, lookin' for a place to go.
"Come with me and we'll go to the sea"
his wife gave him grief and he's as bad off as me.

When yuh gotta house, sharing house with a spouse,
gotta discuss things, think about them wedding rings,
can't go yer own way, remember all the dingalings.
Turn a new leaf, she won't give yuh no grief
until the next thing and she calls you a cheap thief.
Stay cool or move on, just avoid the dingdong,
give her a kiss and sing the girl a love song.

©  July 2006  Kenneth G Woolcock
http://nervousnewbies.com

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