Pages

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

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

You Don’t Own the Poem

public domain photo - modified (darkened to night & added "fireflies")

You Don’t Own the Poem
(The Poem Owns You)

One night,
(mayhap after midnight)
you catch a glimpse of some-
thing (maybe moonlight)
sifting through the curtains,
dancing on the floor

and it draws you out-
side where you find (yourself
captivated by) some-
thing (perhaps a field
of wildflowers
lit by flickering fireflies)
  
You cup your hands
trying to capture
just a tiny smidgen
(with pen and ink)
of that beautiful,
magical glow

but you know
(no amount of holes
in any jelly jar lid
can sustain them
so) you have to
let them go.

PSC / 2019-Apr





Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Perfidious Poem - PAD Day 11



Perfidious Poem

I know, in this, that I am not alone,
(and wonder if you feel the same way too.)
This is a task I’d much prefer postpone
or better still, perhaps “forget” to do.

While one might choose to rant and rave and rail,
it’s rare to find a rose without some thorns.
‘Tis best, mayhap, that cooler heads prevail.
So I’ll bite the bullet, grab bull by the horns.

Daylight’s burning. Best to get this done.
(I’ve spent more time already, than intended.)
I’d like to finish up before the sun
lets yet another poet be un-friended.

 But, please (yes, pretty please with sugar on it)
Swear you won’t request another sonnet.

PSC / 2017-Apr



 My offering for Day 11 of Robert Lee Brewer's Poem-a-Day (PAD).

Assignment: a sonnet AND/OR an anti-form poem


 

Monday, June 9, 2014

The Writers’ Blog Tour: My Writing Process



The Writers’ Blog Tour: My Writing Process

(by “PSC in CT”)

 

WELCOME!

photo by PSC / 2014


TODAY’S BLOG POST is NOT a POEM.

 

Yup, you read that right.  Today’s blog post is NOT a poem. 

It's another stop along the “WRITERS’ BLOG TOUR”.   

Today, the tour makes a stop in CONNECTICUT.

 

I've been asked to share some “PSCecrets” of “MY WRITING PROCESS”.

  But, before I do, let me first offer up my


THANKS to De JACKSON. . .

(one of my favorite poets) for inviting me to participate in this writing tour! 

De Jackson is a parent, a poet and a Pro Crastinator of the highest order. She feels most alive when she has salty sea toes. She’s a terrible housekeeper, a mean Scrabble player, and hopes someday to live up to this lofty job description: 

I’ll be the poet who sings your glory, and live what I sing every day. – Psalm 61:8.

 You can read more of De via this link to her blog: WHIMSYGIZMO

AND check out her own "tour stop" in: NEVADA

~

And now… on to CONNECTICUT!
~

The Writers’ Blog Tour: My Writing Process

(by “PSC in CT”)




 Q:  What am I working on?


First, let me say that “working” is a strong word for what I’m currently doing – or more accurately, not doing.


I have a number of images and ideas floating around in my head… in notebooks… on random scraps of paper… in boxes and various computer files – some percolating, others more stagnant.   

The mix includes several chapbook ideas, a half dozen kids’ picture books, a one act play and a haphazard collection of greeting cards.  One friend of mine recently requested a calendar of my pics & poetry, so that’s on the table too. 


At present, however, the most pressing thing I am “working” on is growing my blog, despite a somewhat sporadic muse.  This is important to me because I am fascinated by the idea that once you share a poem you’ve written, you never know how far it might travel or whose life it may touch.  
 see poem: Johnny Appleseed  

Also, a friend once said, “poems should not sleep; they're meant to be shared”.   
 hence:  Poems Should Not Sleep   

My blog provides me with my own personal garden where I can plant a few "seeds" and watch them sprout and (hopefully) grow.  

photo by PSC / 2012


Q:  How does my work differ from others of its genre?


Well… ummm… I wrote it...?  


I believe that every writer’s work is different, because one’s writing is a complex combination of all those qualities, experiences and perspectives that make each individual unique.  Many writers will use the same tools and techniques (internal rhyme, rhythm, alliteration, assonance, consonance, enjambment, etc.), but each applies them in his/her own unique way.  Like snowflakes, no two people are exactly alike.  Heck... no ONE person is exactly the same!  Just like the river, we’re changing all the time!
  
see poems: Self Portrait and If I were a Clock 
 
photo by PSC / 2014


When it comes to subject matter, I write mostly (I think) about nature and the environment, people (myself & others – both real & imaginary) and personal relationships -- not necessarily in that order.  
  
Case in point, see poem: Since the Big Bang

But, then again, there are plenty of other writers who focus on similar topics.


Word choice is particularly important to me:  how words sound, as well as what they mean.  (Do they play nicely together – sing & dance – or break out in fisticuffs?)  I love poems that use words with multiple & different meanings; this provides additional layers & depth within a poem.  

And I’ve been accused of practicing that out-of-fashion poetic “sin”: personification (tsk tsk!)
  


But then, I don’t believe that certain “human qualities” are the exclusive property of human beings. 



Q:  Why do I write what I do?
 
That’s easy.  It’s what wants to be written!


My writing may be sparked by something I see or hear, taste or smell, a photo, painting or song, a news clipping, snippet of conversation, a scent, a snack, a prompt on someone else’s blog…. the list is endless!

Often, it’s something that has touched me profoundly in some way:   
like a news article about twin sisters separated in infancy [see Immeasurable] or elephants grieving the loss of a beloved human being [see Elephant Whispers].

It may be the request of a friend who’s taken a beautiful photograph that’s just begging to be captured in a poem [Thrice Captured] or a gorgeous photo offered up as a prompt on a another web site [The Gift], or even my own pictures:




 Whatever the inspiration, if it moves me in some way, I’ll be off to “work” on it.  And yet, despite what I may think I’m writing about, there are plenty of times when I am surprised by what comes out.  I’m never sure exactly where a poem will take me until I get there.  


That’s part of the fun of writing – discovering what wants to be written!  

 
photo by PSC / 2011



Q:  How does my writing process work?


“Process” is another strong word.  I’m not sure that you could call what I do a “writing process”; it’s more like a happy accident. 



Having spent many years as an IT professional struggling to meet unrealistic & unreasonable deadlines, I have (mostly) managed to divorce myself from clocks and calendars these days, and am endeavoring to embrace Brenda Ueland’s philosophy of “moodling” (as described above).  This makes for a sporadic writing schedule, and many missed deadlines at prompted sites that I visit somewhat erratically.   


At the present time, I write mainly for my own enjoyment – and that of my friends and family – and I try not to beat myself up (too much) for any apparent lack of writing drive and ambition. 


When I AM being productive (and even when I’m not), I am a morning person by nature, so morning is when I tend to get most of my writing done.  (Although, I must admit that sometimes weeks – and even months – may go by, without my penning so much as a single poem.)  Still, several times each week, I enjoy walking the local nature trail and I always take my camera & digital recorder with me, so I can capture any idea(s) that may spring up.
  
see: And So I Walk  (Is that a “process”? 
 
photo by PSC / 2010

I also try to keep pen & paper handy for those times, day or night, when inspiration might strike (– hoping that it won’t slip away before I can catch it.) 
   

Often, a poetry site's prompt will help me capture an elusive idea and pin it down into a specific poem.  Below are links to TWO of my favorite “poetic prompting” sites.  Both offer a positive, friendly, nurturing environment and deserve much credit for inspiring my own poetic muse:

(Wed prompts and Apr/Nov Poem-a-Day Challenges)  
AND
(originally “Poetic Bloomings” by Walt Wojtanik and Marie Elena Good)


And there's one other site that's offered me inspiration (in a "small" way): 
  
~
So, THAT pretty much sums up MY “writing process”!

~

I hope you’ve enjoyed this CONNECTICTUT stop along The Writers’ Blog Tour as much as I’ve enjoyed earlier sojourns along the way. 

Thanks, again, to De Jackson, for inviting me to play!
~
NOW, it's my pleasure to announce the NEXT tour stop in:

ONTARIO, CANADA

I’ve crossed paths with this poet at Walt & Marie Elena’s Creative Bloomings, as well as visiting her own blog site.  She’s also been the most encouraging & frequent visitor here, keeping me company as I Wander and Ponder.  Please, welcome to the tour... 

PATRICIA A McGOLDRICK


Here's a link to Patricia's site: PM27’s BLOG 
Please, stop by anytime.
 (She'll post her own "tour stop" on Monday, June 16th)
Patricia A. McGoldrick at L’Anse Aux Meadows
Patricia A. McGoldrick is a Kitchener, Ontario Canada writer.    Her poems have been published in a number of anthologies, including:  Animal Companions, Animal Doctors, Animal People, Beyond the Dark Room, an international collection of transformative poetry (proceeds to Doctors Without Borders/MSF) and Poetic Bloomings -- the first year.  Her poetry and reviews have also been published in the Christian Science Monitor, The WM Review Connection, and ChapterandVerse.ca

Recent titles include Potato, plus an acrostic fiction piece, Best in the Bruce! Her poem, Girls and Green Apples was selected as Monday’s poem for week of June 2, 2014.

Patricia is a member of The Ontario Poetry Society and the League of Canadian Poets.



Patricia's BLOG address is: http://pm27.wordpress.com/

You can also find her at:
Patricia A. McGoldrick (Google Author site) and
@pamcgoldrick (Twitter)




~ Related Links ~


You may continue on the Writers' Blog Tour 
(it's a little like time travel!)  
from right here in...  

CONNECTICUT on 6/9/2014...


You can choose to step FORWARD to...
6/16/2014:  Patricia A. McGoldrick in Ontario, Canada
 


... or step BACKWARD to...

6/2/2014:  De Jackson in Nevada
5/20/2014:  Marilyn Braendeholm in the UK
5/26/2014: Hannah Gosselin in Maine


Whichever direction you choose to go from here,
you're sure to enjoy the trip!