1 Comment
author

"Suspension of Disbelief" captures the raw emotional landscape of those battered by life's relentless hardships—disloyalty, disease, and death—finding solace in collective rituals that offer a fleeting escape from despair. The poem reflects on the power of communal experiences, where the act of synchrony, whether in worship or shared delusion, becomes a necessary refuge for those worn down by the brutal realities of existence. The imagery of swaying and shouting, of pews filled with fervor too overwhelming to bear alone, emphasizes the human need for connection and the comfort that comes from losing oneself in the collective rhythm, even if only momentarily. This suspension of disbelief, the poem suggests, is less about genuine faith and more about a primal, almost instinctual, clinging to the comfort found in unity when confronted with the inevitable sufferings of life.

Expand full comment