As a child, I loved weekends. As an adult, weekends…eh…



Every man has a jewel
a pearl oh so rare
tis time we look into their heart
and find it lying there
to judge is not our place
condemn we need not do
whatever we find dismayed
will yield a need, so true
we owe no one anything
but in love we serve them
til that which is perfect comes
to take away the dim
so look beyond the clouds
embrace each with your heart
for now we see through masks
and only know in part
although we must have faith
hope makes us not ashamed
the greatest is love no doubt
which never carries blame.
©Glendal Wallace 2025

You lived with purpose and passion
reflected in all that you did:
for you were the Art of beauty
beauty embraced with the warmth
and light of your smile—
a smile that spoke kindness, grace, joy
a beauty that spoke ease in your presence
strength in your essence
for you were the Art of giving
giving enriched with a heart of delight
you gave us gifts like a ready laugh
encouraging words like an evening bath
for those you loved—giving
was your nature, your purpose
for you were the Art of having courage
courage empowered by the will to fight
life’s battles and fight you did through
years of pain, moments of shame
fighting through struggles and countless tests
some you mastered, more or less
but He who knows the heart saw you through it
for you were the Art of loving others
your love engulfed with everyday acts
service, generosity, artistic reciprocity
that was the aura of your love
a heart that loved life and life
loved you right back…
now gone you are from pain and strife
you leave us with your Art-istic life
and we say thank you.
©Glendal Wallace 2025

To swirl aimlessly in flight
to frolic through luscious green parks
hurriedly flowing city streets, gaze at beautiful castles
whose beauty fails to compare to newly wedded bliss
love deserves
to skip to sounds of morning birds
scurry along cast iron fences
listen pensively to nature’s evening melodies
then stop—at whim—to sit on steps of contemplation
pondering, waiting its next move
Oh yes, love deserves
despite seasons of sadness, sickness, stale days
despite plateaus of poverty, perplexity, painfulness
despite crossing egresses of injury, injustice, indecency
despite treading cobblestones of chaos, cultural divides
despite rolling meadows of misery, misfortune, malice
Love still deserves
to believe all things…hope all things…endure all things
So yes, let love dance—it must
lift its limber arms in praise and adoration
victoriously glide along streets of faith
paved with grace-filled moments
sprinkled with mercies, surprises, passion
yes, let love exude its breathful aura
whisper its tender request
close its eyes, give warm kisses
ooze its playful pheromone
wiggle its feet (if it wants)
for love deserves its dance

Today I have learned that existence and self-worth is not defined by lifestyle or job title. We all have worth and giftedness. It is those unerring qualities that come forth whether people or situations try to block our path or not. Our light can and will shine.
There had always been an adequate amount of synchronicity in my life especially in my adult life, professional life and teaching career. But, when I decided to seek and subsequently obtain my administrative credentials, I trusted that the cosmic flow of having what I assumed was mine to have, possess, garner would be simple and with purposeful ease. Boy, was I in for a huge awakening. On the final day and in the selfsame hour that I completed my administrative internship training, I discovered that there were roadblocks already set in place to obstruct my advancement in order to keep me right where I was—working in a rigid classroom-based teaching position. Every administrative opening that I qualified and applied for remained a futile effort and heart-rendering struggle.
This pattern remained in place for four brutally painful years. Midway during that period, I prayed to overcome the hurt and pain of feeling stuck, rejected and nonvalidated in my professional worth. In time, with the support of family and friends, I learned to accept the reality of my struggle, forgive the road blockers (Oh, they did manifest themselves), and move on with my life.
Today, I love what I do—I love who I serve—I love my students—I love the place where the sole of my feet tread. I am fully grounded in gratitude—in knowing that I am where I am supposed to be.