I see everything and
I have seen everything that ever was
I toss the world – leaves, your hair, your papers
your clothes, your kites and I laugh.
I push sails out to sea and turn
mighty turbines, I move the ocean,
lift sand and send it flying,
scatter seeds, befriend the birds
and change the earth.
No man can tell me where to go,
thunderstorms and the slowly turning
earth drives me, pole to pole.
Nothing escapes me, in my fury
I destroy, break trees, tear apart houses
and there is no power to stop me.
But on a sunny day, when the sweat beads
on your forehead, I will caress you
with a cooling kiss and you will bless me.

Copyright ©2025 Lisa Paul
Bjorn is the host of d’Verse Poets Pub and he challenges us:
So today I would like you to challenge yourself and try to write from a different perspective or maybe even several perspectives than what you normally do.
You can do this by either writing something totally new or if you prefer, take an old perspective written from for instance first person singular and change it to third person.
Or write a poem about a collective: we. Do you need the otherness of they to define that collective.?
What do you get? How does it feel? and most importantly how do you think it will affect the reader? is the reader included or excluded?
If you feel like it you may want to combine the perspective with that of personification and write from the perspective of an abstract object such as a baloon.