Walking the neighborhood to bag your garbage carelessly tossed out the car catching the ATM wind of receipts airborne blowing forty grand words of garbage living breathing dying on streets in deserts of deserted care death row shelters rare freedom rides for your abandoned fury garbage spinning wheels on asphalt Saturday morning passing by the mourning man's bicycle trailing a balloon of collected garbage exchanged for cashed survival hungry for a dream while brokered sherpas carrying your garbage left behind on ominous Everest, King of mountains one hundred thousand pounds of garbage claiming the dead of riches hailing empty words of environmen ta-lists masked in ocean's animals swimming with garbage and hills of children sifting through land fills foraging treasures to bag a meal as humans dig through piles of trash cans as shields from the rain of protests used by students leaving better homes for homeless as garbage collectors toss privilege into trucks while our hands and feet raise Hallelujahs carrying the brokenness of garbage for a King. Garbage for a King | deborah t. hewitt
For weeks now, my husband has renewed our commitment to clean up the careless, tossed aside garbage in our neighborhood for the sake of our King and all He has given us. We can do the little picture at home as we walk and thank God for all we have. It can feel totally maddening, as you pickup someone’s coffee cup or dog poop “in a bag” six feet from a trash can, but won’t you join us if you can? It’s the good fight.
Also, if you want to get a pet, please go to the shelter first. We are now throwing away and euthanizing “purebreds” daily in our country. Top abandoned dogs are Huskies and the Belgian Malinois. Literally, designer dogs are sitting in cages with the sweetest mutts. Just watched two Labradoodles, from a rescue I support, get adopted after being found with broken legs wandering in Los Angeles. Such good news they are now in loving homes. Both dogs had completely snapped back legs. This isn’t rare. It’s devastating times for dogs, cats and for discarded working Amish and race horses. It’s sickening for human beings living on the streets, however, for innocent creatures it is almost unreal to know what man does. If you can stomach, here’s a report on the horse slaughter holding pens. Discarded like trash.
Consumption breeds carelessness and irresponsibility. So don’t consume all the cuteness of breeder animals on social media. It’s driving the abandonment. “Likes/attention” can turn into too much responsibility. In church, yesterday, a couple spoke of their kids flying to another state to buy a purebred dog. Thousands of dollars. All I could see is the millions of abandoned faces clamoring for attention in the shelters, tails wagging for a “walk” to their death. Purebreds. I left feeling sad. It’s no joke. It’s never too late to be informed.
The earth is the LORD’s and all that is in it, the world, and those who live in it; for God has founded it on the seas, and established it on the rivers. - Psalm 24:1-2
“So I throw up my hands
And praise You again and again
'Cause all that I have is a hallelujah
Hallelujah
And I know it's not much
But I've nothing else fit for a King
Except for a heart singing hallelujah
Hallelujah”
- Gratitude | Brandon Lake
Read about what’s happened to Mount Everest here.
Gehenna described in the Bible is a big trash dumb that stinks like sulfur, and it is another name for hell. It goes on to say that in the afterlife realm, unrighteous souls are punished by spending eternity cleaning it, and they will want to die but can’t.
Pretty apropos punishment if you ask me!
Thank you Deborah for being brave and shining a spotlight on this problem. I couldn’t click on the link and view the horses in the pen. 😓
Incredible poem about all the garbage humanity leaves behind. It’s really staggering. Kinda doesn’t bode well for us does it? Seems like all we’re good for is leaving a trail of garbage in our wake.