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Holistic homily id est...

(Homilia eventually takes on the "usually short sermon" meaning in our modern homily, and then incorporated into the Latin used by writers of the early first millennium).

 

Parents (at least first generations) 
from subcontinents 
(a large, distinguishable part 
of a continent, such 
as North America 
or southern Africa) 
often select names
in accordance with their homeland – 
the United States of America 
and the country of India 
(which latter country – 
surprisingly enough 
significantly smaller 
than the United States, whereat 
The United States 
encompasses a land area 
of approximately 
9,833,517 square kilometers, 
making same land - 
home of the free 
land of the brave 
about three times 
larger than India, 
which covers around 
3,287,263 square kilometers,
which loosely translates 
means India roughly 
33.43% the size of the United States,
nevertheless a humongous piece 
of real estate 
as pertains to this poem)

from Vedic literature or deities,
frequently consulting priests,
gurus, or family elders
to ensure the name
brings auspiciousness
and matches the child's birth
chart Parents often select names
from Vedic literature
or deities, frequently
consulting priests, gurus,
or family elders
to ensure the name
brings auspiciousness
and matches the
child's birth chart
entitling such offspring
directly affecting and impacting
a newborn boy or girl
with a combination of constituent factors
steeped in tradition where 
"Ambiance" and/or spelled "ambience"

often used interchangeably,
both meaning the same thing
the distinct "vibe," feeling,
or tone of a place
such as Phoenix Physical Therapy
located at 345 June Drive
suite 140 Harleysville
100 PHOENIX Rehab
19438-3115,
and after just

one session earlier today

eleventh of June

two thousand and twenty six,

whereby I feel uplifted analogous

when the Kripalu Ashram
in Sumneytown, Pennsylvania
offered workshops
for non-community members
a good thirty five years ago
and no matter yours truly (me)
signed up for Yoga
(he could never
tie himself into a pretzel),
but nevertheless bestowed 
with magical realism from Ambika
Sanskrit: अम्बिका, IAST: Ambikā)
meaning "mother,"

"mother of the universe,"

or "dear mother,"

(frequently representing

the Hindu goddess Durga or Parvati)
intoned her hypnotizing, mesmerizing,
and soothing intonation,
the participants buoyed aloft
into the ream of blissfulness
(perhaps other than yours truly)

experienced a lightness of being.


 

Matter of fact all the residents
who comprised aforementioned
spiritual community adopted
a macrobiotic diet
whose underweight emaciated bodies
frequently with sunken chests
resembled those of
concentration camp victims
and most babies born
during the booming surge
in popularity during
the early/mid nineteen seventies
the former above 
viz geographic buoys and gulls
likely got their name hashtagged
this based the all knowing
Google Chrome search engine,
predicated, on the zodiac
linkedin into astrological calculations
(nakshatra), the child's birth sound,
or spiritual significance,

often finalized 
during a Namkaran ceremony,

whereby parents often select names
from Vedic literature or deities,
frequently consulting priests,
gurus, or family elders
to ensure the name
brings auspiciousness
and matches the child's birth 
plus off the chart 
particular aura, characteristics
such as charisma, karma 
(instant or otherwise), 
persona and otherwise.

— Jane A. Rug, May 12, 2026

About This Poem

Style/Type: Free verse

Review Request Direction: What did you think of my title?
How was my language use?
What did you think of the rhythm or pattern or pacing?
How does this theme appeal to you?
How was the beginning/ending of the poem?
Is the internal logic consistent?

Review Request Intensity: I want the raw truth, feel free to knock me on my back

Editing Stage: Editing - polished draft

About the Author

Region, Country: PA, USA

Favorite Poets: Robert Burns, Charles Dickens, Robert Frost, Matthew Scott Harris, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Sylvia Plath, Gary Snyder, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman

More from this author

Critiques

neopoet

neopoet

3 weeks 3 days ago

Neopoet AI [2025-04]

The below is a computer-generated response from Neo, Neopoet’s AI:

This poem undertakes an ambitious exploration of cultural identity, naming traditions, and the intersections of geography, spirituality, and personal experience. The sprawling, prose-like structure and interspersed factual details create a dense tapestry that challenges conventional poetic form, which can be both a strength and a potential obstacle for reader engagement.

**Strengths:**

1. **Thematic richness:** The poem weaves together diverse elements—geographical comparisons, Vedic naming customs, personal anecdote, and spiritual symbolism—offering a multifaceted meditation on how names carry cultural, spiritual, and personal significance.

2. **Use of detail:** The inclusion of specific data (e.g., land area comparisons between the U.S. and India) and references to particular places and practices grounds the poem in concrete reality, which contrasts intriguingly with the more abstract spiritual themes.

3. **Intertextuality and cultural references:** The invocation of Vedic literature, Sanskrit terms, and Hindu deities adds depth and invites readers to consider the weight of tradition and ritual in naming.

**Areas for development:**

1. **Structural clarity and pacing:** The poem’s length and dense, paragraph-like stanzas can overwhelm the reader. Breaking the text into more distinct stanzas or sections with deliberate line breaks could enhance readability and emphasize key ideas or shifts in tone.

2. **Consistency in voice and perspective:** The poem shifts between an almost academic tone (with detailed statistics and explanations) and a personal narrative voice. Clarifying the speaker’s role and unifying the tone could strengthen the poem’s emotional impact.

3. **Focus and conciseness:** Some passages, such as the detailed address of a physical therapy center or the description of macrobiotic diets and emaciated bodies, feel tangential and may distract from the central themes. Consider pruning or integrating these details more tightly to maintain thematic coherence.

4. **Use of repetition:** The poem repeats certain phrases (e.g., “Parents often select names from Vedic literature or deities, frequently consulting priests, gurus, or family elders...”). While repetition can be a powerful poetic device, here it risks redundancy. Revising these sections to vary phrasing or deepen the reflection could enhance engagement.

5. **Imagery and metaphor:** The poem relies heavily on exposition and factual information but could benefit from more vivid, evocative imagery or metaphorical language to convey the emotional resonance of naming and cultural heritage.

**Suggestions:**

- Experiment with restructuring the poem into smaller, more digestible parts, each focusing on a particular aspect (e.g., cultural naming traditions, personal experience, spiritual significance).

- Use line breaks and stanza divisions to create rhythm and highlight contrasts between the factual and the mystical.

- Consider sharpening the focus on the emotional or symbolic significance of names, perhaps by expanding the personal narrative or exploring the feelings associated with carrying such a name.

- Reflect on which details serve the poem’s core message and which might be streamlined or omitted.

Overall, the poem presents a compelling subject with rich material but would benefit from editorial refinement to clarify its voice, structure, and thematic focus, thereby enhancing its poetic power and accessibility.

Please send feedback about Neo (our AI critique system) to our contact form.

Geezer

Geezer

3 weeks 2 days ago

I never...

 did understand whatever possessed anyone to believe that depriving the body of the nutrients it needs is going to make one God-like.
That is like putting a modern-day computer in a Model-T Ford, and expecting the best results. Yes, we are the product of just a few generations, in a land that is vast, wrested from the natives by false promise and outright conquest. We still haven't learned, we are just using bigger clubs, that might kill most everyone on the *&*#ing planet, if something goes wrong. No wonder the aliens don't announce themselves, Those ones we "captured" ?  

Have been manipulating the governments that think they are "co-operating"
out of the goodness of their hearts. I wonder who, those underground bunkers are really for? Hmmmm... I've read somewhere that ants store food that gets moldy and is like steak for them; a harvest constantly added to.
Hey, if they are trapped inside there, with no way out... Just a few thoughts here. ~Geez.
.