Catherine Gonick: Pick of the Week [ed. Terence Winch]

Catherine Gonick web 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Thoughts of God       

For me, behind the Christian 

God breathed the Jewish God.

Jesus was a person of interest

and I wasn't introduced to Allah.

Who knew what God was thinking?

The important question is

whether the universe is

friendly, Einstein said.

As a Jew he thought he knew

but had to ask.

There is no deity

in Buddhism, yet Tara Brach

and other Buddhists talked

about an underlying goodness 

that's within, and without,

an immanent-transcendent

permeation of our none-too,

all-too solid skin.

I thought, if God exists

as something larger-than

that wishes to be known,

I might be God's thought

temporarily brought to light

as my life. 

When I imagine biting

into a lemon, saliva starts up.

When I try thinking as if

I believe 

a benevolent God exists

I feel a bit warmer

in a safe-room of my own

as if inside a small prayer

prayed by God, for me.

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Catherine Gonick is the author of Split Daughter of Eve (Sheila-Na-Gig Editions, 2025). She is a winner of the Ina Coolbrith Prize for Poetry and was a finalist in the Louisville Actors Theatre 10-Minute Play Contest. Her work has appeared in journals including Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Pedestal, The Orchards Poetry Journal, One Art, Of the Book, and The Nu Review. She lives in the Hudson Valley, where she works with her husband in a company that seeks to slow the rate of global warming.  [This poem appeared first in The Nu Review #7.]

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The opening panel of R.Crumb's The Book of Genesis                                                The opening panel of R.Crumb’s The Book of Genesis