Tag Archives: NaPoMo

Day 30, NaPoWriMo 2019

A minor family emergency (everyone is okay) and an impending college graduation have diverted my time and attention for more than a week, but today I was able to write. As the talented and wise Luanne Castle gently reminded me, my 30 days of poetry don’t necessarily have to be consecutive. (Thanks, Luanne!)

I will work with the remaining 30/30 Facebook Poetry prompts in coming days, but here is some found poetry from Jenessa Abrams’ review of Reema Zaman’s memoir I Am Yours for the Chicago Review of Books.

Site of Ruin

It’s difficult not to wonder
what seeing your arrival as a collapse
can do to the soul. Steadfast belief
in love pulses, bleeding
into every encounter,

every failure, that blurry line
between being bound to another
and being physically
restrained by them. Rape
is not a turning point, a plot device:

unsettlingly, life continues
unaltered. She is a woman,
a person of color, an immigrant.
There is no legal justice.
Finding her voice, discovering

the weapon that has always been
becomes a promise, a declaration
of inward affection and hard-fought
acceptance. Re-authoring her story
shatters her chains, frees her.

Source: https://chireviewofbooks.com/2019/04/30/review-authoring-a-life-on-reema-zamans-i-am-yours/

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viridiflora

viridiflora tulip ‘Spring Green’

Day 18, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “street signs.”

Signs of spring

All along the street, signs pop up
brilliant as flowers, unexpected
as mushrooms: new-leaf green
Roofing by Sta-Dri, Vote for So-and-so
in variegated red-white-blue, apple red
We Support Teachers, Pesticide
Application Keep Off in crime-scene yellow.

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lilacs

another sign of spring: lilacs from the neighborhood

Day 17, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “afterglow of soup.”

Oak Ridge Stew

Everything was grown in the kitchen garden
out front, in the yellow clay that gives those carrots
such a cheery glow. The onions are shaped
a little strange but they taste just fine,
though the turnips seem to have an extra bite.
We dig potatoes at night when it’s easier
to see them, bright against the fresh-turned
soil. Eat up! The flavors are incandescent!

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Day 16, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “write a poem that is more about sound than meaning. let’s call this sound surfing.” I am indebted to Evelyn Christensen for this poem, derived entirely from the answers she posted to her 1-Minute Morning Mind Stretch for April 15.

Apes age for ages as gaps
gape and gas gashes. A hag
has a heap of pages and peas
on a peg that sags with sap.
Sage is she, with a shag
the shape of the sea.

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april 15 2019 one minute mind stretch

Day 15, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “overboard.”

Recurrent

again and again I board the boat
in my dreams, and again and again
there’s the storm and the swamping
and the shouts and the chaos

like before the book of Genesis
opens, before God sets everything
in order, only in the dreams there
is no God, no order, no time

again and again I struggle through
blankets and billows only to find
myself in bed, sweat-soaked,
the taste of marine fuel in my mouth

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Day 14, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “how to.”

Present

She tells me no one cares about her, and I resist
the urge to declare my love. She says she is waiting
to die, and I offer no list of things to live for.
No denial. No objection.
No argument. No dissuasion.

Because her pain is the message,
not her words. Because her suffering
is what moves her, not her reasoning.
I respond with sorrow, with shared
regret and fellow grief, for her heartache
will not be soothed by logic, her distress
cannot be calmed with evidence.

No force of mind will lift her
so I lie beside her on the floor and she sees
her own face reflected in my brimming
eyes. Responding to the sad woman
looking back at her, she rises when I do,
captivated by the play of her features
in that unexpected mirror.

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daffys

fragrant daffodils from my yard

Day 13, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “brilliant nothing.”

So eager was the blushing lad,
his bride-to-be forgave his haste
when the glittering ring she had
turned out not diamond, only paste.

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Day 12, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “empty storefronts.”

Main Street

Once this was the place you wanted
to be, where gloved ladies met for lunch
and shopping, shoes and pocketbooks
tastefully matched to clean-cut
dresses. Shopkeepers waited
on all customers as a matter of course,

keen eyes tracking and shaping
national trends and their local
manifestations. Generations of youth
were fitted for first suits and first bras
and shoes for first communions
and bar mitzvahs, then proms and balls,

weddings and job interviews. Now
a soup kitchen and a pool hall anchor
three blocks of windows lined with faded
butcher paper and “For Lease” signs
while leaves and old newspaper gather
in the recessed doorways.

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magnolia

yellow magnolia from my yard

Day 11, NaPoWriMo 2019

The 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt was “something borrowed from another poem.”

Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day,
with steamy heat that makes men limp
and inert, and noxious insects that worry
the living and the dead? Or a day in spring,
with air awash in cloying fragrance
and pollen, and queues of storms that savage
the landscape? Or winter, with perfidious
footing and winds that lacerate tender
flesh and tear limbs and power lines
from their moorings? Rather would I see
in thee autumn, which marks its passing
with kaleidoscope splendor, light slanted
long like a parting caress, and the intricate
bedazzlement of frost formations.

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autumn leaves

Day 10, NaPoWriMo 2019

This poem has nothing to do with the 30/30 Poetry Facebook prompt (junk mail). It just came to me while I was doing dishes, and I have a lot of other work to do today so I’m going to run with it.

Things that keep me up at night

driven by an irrational fear
that it might suddenly disappear
from my watch list, last night
I binge-watched the third season
of Victoria on PBS Masterpiece

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