Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Saturday, May 16, 2009

POEM: The Flow


Today I want to write
some days that is all I really want to do
admittedly, almost shamefully
not to mother
nor to be a wife
not even a friend
but just to sit with pen and paper
or keyboard and screen
and write
pour words out like drops of blood
empty my veins
release the flow
cleansed by getting out the thoughts
before they disappear and become lost
unfamiliar, mutated
like a tangled clot

Yet the very distractions
that keep me from the page
are what give my voice
something to say

Strange beast, this writing thing
without the pull away from it
I would never be able to come back
the longing would be filled
with other things, perhaps
the pull would be away
from other places
that flow would be redirected
and I would bleed no more
but I think
the wound would somehow still be missed
like a phantom limb
haunting my memory
but without remembering

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

POEM: evening unleashed

evening is letting go
there's little left to do
what's still undone will have to wait
the precious bit of time remaining
belongs not to the putting away of things
but to getting comfortable
settling down
unwinding thoughts
unraveling the tightly wound tether
that ties me to the day
loose now I drift
floating
the words come if I am patient
ideas flourish in front of me
on the page
they weave their way gently
until they are complete
unexpectedly
and the last knot releases
soaring
I am done
until tomorrow

Sunday, April 19, 2009

POEM: voice


I’ve found my voice
I recognize it
as if it were always mine,
only lost for a while
Yet I know that all it speaks
is different now,
a quality that is new
emerging
from the center
this midpoint that lies
between all there is for me
and all there has been
My new voice recognizes me
and knows we belong together

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

POEM: waking words


poetry doesn't let me sleep

it tickles my dreams

and pricks my tongue

to speak of morning

POEM: snowflakes from my pen



my words

falling like snowflakes

from my pen

catch them on my tongue

the page

before they hit the ground

and melt away

Thursday, April 2, 2009

POEM: Hungry Muse


Feed the Muse
give Her books
poetry and art
movies and shows
even websites and blogs
to devour
to distract
a filling detour
She will be hungry for Them
an immense appetite
unquenchable thirst
elixir
to prime the Pump
and churn out Work
the reward
satiation
brief
it's feeding time again all too soon
an empty plate
equals an empty page

Sunday, March 29, 2009

POEM: Tidbits


I like small poems
seemingly harmless
they are tasty soundbites
torn off in small portions
nibbling
at thoughts and realizations
little by little
barely noticed
until there's nothing left
devoured
bones revealed
no scraps
no leftovers
only crumbs remain

POEM: Black Gold


My mother leaves my coffee can open
morning is stale, flat, weak


She uses the last slice of bread
noon is empty, unfullfilled, hungry

My mother put rotten food back in my refrigerator
my evening is disturbed

Why?

She says she didn't know where I wanted to put it
thought I had a special place
for things spoiled

I do
my childhood memories make handy containers

my dreams compost the scraps
slumbering, steaming, changing
awake I sift through the clumps
and enrich my writing with the best
of the worst

Friday, March 27, 2009

POEM: Alice in Writer-land


Poetry is easy
just follow the rabbit
and trust that the hole
leads somewhere

Fiction is hard
you have to convince
someone that there was a rabbit
and describe the hole
without revealing too much all at once
letting the reader follow you instead
and discover Wonderland for themselves

POEM: Shelf Life



Poetry doesn't keep
you can't put it on hold


that first thought
word
image
can't be put aside
it must be written down quickly
lest it fly away

The trail must be followed
leading you to the end
or you will get hopelessly lost
and never find your way again

Poetry is a dish best served hot
it goes bad quickly
one millisecond past the expiration date
and it is spoiled
rotten
barely resembling it's original form
inedible

POEM: Morning Pages


Straight from sleep

my thoughts are deep

they will not keep

from my pen, they seep

Monday, March 23, 2009

ESSAY: Mountain Letters - My Writing Life


When I was a little girl of three, after watching someone on TV write something, perhaps it was Bugs Bunny scribbling a note to Elmer Fudd, I took a piece of paper and made my own wavy, jagged lines undulating across the page. Line after line I tried to imitate the crooked scribble I'd seen, imagining what it all said, probably even saying it out loud while I wrote. After I was done, I brought it to my mother in the kitchen and I proudly said, “Look Mommy, I wrote you this,” to which she offhandedly replied, “That’s nice, Honey, but those aren’t real words, real words have letters.” I was undeterred and snapped back, “These are real letters, they are mountain letters,” and off I went in a huff.
Rejection of one’s work is never easy.

I called them mountain letters because that is what they looked like to me then, like row after row of mountains, high and low, tall and small. But I knew my mother was right, they were not, in fact, real because I couldn’t remember what I had written, couldn’t tell what it said anymore. Some innate desire to communicate got the better of me. I went back into the kitchen and asked my mother to show me real letters. That day she showed me how to write my name. I was hooked. I wouldn’t leave her alone after that. Every chance I got I pestered her to teach me until I learned how to read and write. It was the greatest gift she ever gave me.

It wasn't long before I wrote my own stories, trying to emulate what I read in books. I remember some of those first pieces I wrote, they were always about a girl who discovered some secret, something that made her different from everyone else. She’d always known she was different, but now she understood why. And now that she understood that why, she needed to learn how to accept it, how to make use of it, or how to transcend it. Sometimes it would be all of the above. I think that scenario still captivates me to this day.

Songs came pouring out of me, too, sung loudly from my backyard swing set and later copied painstakingly into a notebook. Poems were written about flowers and secret woodlands, about dogs, about horses and best friends moving away. They were written about mean fathers and unbearable little brothers, too. There were love poems about teen idols like Donnie Osmond or David Cassidy. And eventually they were written about real boys, too -- oh my, the poems and love songs I have written through the years.

I wrote journal entries, copious diaries that started full of promise, overflowing with thoughts, hopes and dreams, only to drift into empty pages and be abandoned, then restarted in other notebooks, again and again. I was fickle.

I wrote letters, I wrote cards, I wrote children’s stories for the little kids in my family, my neighborhood, later for the children I was in charge of as a babysitter or nanny.

I wrote essays on politics, on music, on drugs, and on religion. I wrote plans for my future, names of my future children, lists of places I wanted to live, things I would someday do.

When I was 23 the place I lived in burned down in the middle of the night. I barely got out with my life. After, I was able to recover some things, but most of my writing was destroyed. I didn’t write anything for a long time. It was too hard to think of the fragility of it all, both life and word.

I did write during that awful decade I sat in a chair, fat, round, depressed, hiding from the world and stuffing my anxiety. But I never wrote about the things I should have. I didn’t write about being fat, or being scared, or being lifeless or empty. You could call it a different kind of writer’s block, more of a blockade. It was ok to write about this but not that, this can come out but that has to stay secret. Call it “selective writer’s block”…sort of like selective hearing.

Is there such a thing as selective living?

I wrote little when I was going through infertility, well, maybe a poem or two, but not much really. I didn’t write during any of my pregnancies. I think I was busy literally creating a person so I didn’t have any figurative creative energy to spare. Or maybe I was afraid to write about loving them too much until they were safely here. I had three miscarriages and did write poems about my lost babies, but only once they were gone.

When my two precious children were finally, safely, miraculously here on earth I loved them so much I gave all my energy to them, it flowed from me like milk from my breasts, vibrated from my aching tired arms after holding them for hours as they fussed or slept peacefully – I had little poetry for that, no prose could truly capture the essence of that painful heartbreakingly beautiful gut wrenching joy. That’s okay, that’s how it’s supposed to be with new babies. I wrote them each their own lullaby, beautiful in its simplicity. They think all children have personal lullabies. I hope they always do.

But now my children are not babies, they are still little but they are not newborn infants. Now my house will not burn down and even if it did I can keep back-up discs. Now I have lived 45 years and have come near death more times than I should have and know how fragile, how short life can be. I want to have something to show for it that is mine, mine alone. My children are a gift, and how they turn out is as much their own accomplishment as it is their father’s and mine. But my writing now is for me, it is for me to give to myself, to show myself that I matter on my own. I have something to say and I can say it in such a way as to make someone, anyone, feel. Even if more often than not that someone is just me.

And so I write. I write because it is the one constant in my life for nearly as long as I can remember. It is the only thing I have consistently been any good at, however good that may be. It is who I am. I would write even if no one read it but me. Even if everything I wrote looked like the mountain letter scribbles of a three year old, illegible, meaningless to anyone else, I would still write it down.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

POEM: Brighid's Song



You are the cauldron and it’s hearthstone home
Both water and wellspring from whence it’s drawn
You are seed,
the bloom,
the heavy fruited vine
The hopeful sharpened plow and waiting fallow field
You are the green shaft of grain, the nourishing dark loaf
The Smith’s glowing forge and malleable iron both
A swift pointed arrow and the unknowing mark it seeks
The pen
the unsung words
the terrible white page, still blank
You are the candle and the flame it bravely bears
You are the mirror gazed upon…and the relection I see