A poet, a police officer 10/13/21 ------------------------------------------------------------ Thought of an old friend, I'm not sure why. It was more than a decade ago that I last saw him. Haven't heard from him since, but that doesn't make him less of a friend in my mind. He was a police officer, but he hated being a police officer. His father was one, and his older brother was one. I think his grandfather was too, if I recall correctly. I never asked, but I'm guessing he got into the business for the most obvious reasons. Very little resistance in a path that your family has known for generations. Perhaps his problem was that he was a poet. Not the kind that writes down words, but the kind that dreams and watches the clouds and loves the wind. Can a police officer be a poet, or vice versa? Maybe so. I know another police officer now who's a writer (at least in his heart, and as an avowed wish.) The issue with my old friend was, I think, that the weight of his profession got into his soul. The grime of it. The ugliness of it. He talked about an instance once, it was a sting operation with an undercover officer acting as an underage prostitute. Things were going well, until the arrest. In the car of the suspect he found some religious items. He spoke with the man, and learned that he had been in trouble with the law, and had been seeking redemption. This troubled my friend greatly. It's not an ugly thing to seek redemption, and it's not necessarily an ugly thing to slip up in that seeking. Something else got to him, I think. It was his poet's heart, and poet's mind. In those, he saw the world in black-and-white ways, where the good did good, and the bad did bad. And here was a man, who wanted to be good, to do good, but he was not doing good. Was this man good? Or bad? Or is it really that simple? I never spoke with my friend about this after he told me the story. But I've thought about it. I think he was in the wrong profession. Maybe he wasn't, and just needed to find his footing. Maybe we need more poet police officers, I don't know. But I think, rather, that it would be better if he got out and did something else with his heart and mind. Maybe he already has.