By Robert C. Koehler
     Who am I (now)? Iâm still trying to figure this out. Itâs a harder job, I fear, even than putting all my dishes, all my clothes, all my books and miscellany away. I have moved from my house of 40 years â from the city of Chicago, where I lived for almost half a century â to a retirement community in Appleton, Wisconsin, to be near my family.
Yeah, itâs called a retirement community, not an old folksâ home or some other cynically realistic name, which is fine with me, even though, dadgummit, I ainât retired. But as I sit at my computer today â my primary writing day â I feel the urge to retire, a.k.a., give up, shrug and do nothing except kill time. At the same time, a terrifying cry rips through me. Iâve gotta keep writing! Never has this cry felt more urgent.
My life is totally different now, but my journey, to face the soul of the unknown, to carve understanding from it and put it into words, continues. Yes, things are different. The unknown is larger and more profound for me than itâs ever been. and I feel, in a way, more lost than Iâve felt since childhood. So my writing has to confront a paradox. How can I presume to write with certainty if I donât know what Iâm talking about? I see only one way forward: Intensify the honesty I bring to my words â personalize it â and in the process turn certainty into complexity.
I say this as I try to transition beyond the sheerly personal columns Iâve written in the last two months, as my life has changed, and look again at the world at large, which, oh Lord, continues to run amok . . . from the school shooting last week in Minneapolis to the bombing and starvation and endless horror in Gaza and around the world, which âworld leadersâ continue to inflict on those dubbed the enemy, or children of the enemy (and thus the future enemy).
This is my world. I feel, ever more deeply, the dehumanization that is inextricably a part of the global boundaries â national and personal, political and spiritual â we have created, and which we sustain with an us-vs.-them militarism that puts the whole planet in danger. Even as I age, I cannot let myself grow dull to this. I can only scream: No-o-o-o!
And I quote part of a poem I wrote in the wake of the 1999 Columbine massacre, about a vigil gun-rights advocates held in defiance of President Clintonâs visit to the site of the horror. They held signs that said, âGun Control Kills Kids,â and, âWe Will Never Give Up Our Guns.â The poem is called âVigil.â
. . . I am in awe
of the deadeye imperturbability
of the armed righteous
who look upon the worldâs suffering
and see targets.
They stand in potent prayer
with hands clasped
and arms extended,
judgment on a hairtrigger,
God in the recoil.
I believe them.
I believe they believe
in their own innocence
and the innocence of guns,
to clean, to cradle,
to cherish and employ.
What you have to understand
is the good they do,
kicking out home invaders,
the furtive dark-clad,
the malevolent, the incomprehensible,
the hungry.
More innocent still
is the worship of guns
and the worship of the gods
they allow us to become. . . .
The consciousness of fear wonât go away, but our sense of what constitutes power over it â what constitutes God â must, and will, continue to evolve. This is the hope I pray and bleed for. This is the hope I carry in my heart as I hobble through my new apartment, reminding myself that our journey isnât over.
Robert Koehler (koehlercw@gmail.com), syndicated by PeaceVoice, is a Chicago award-winning journalist and editor. He is the author of Courage Grows Strong at the Wound, and his album of recorded poetry and art work, Soul Fragments.

