Wednesday
Apr282010

In praise of process

This morning over coffee, my husband and I worry over his mother's health.

One thread leads to another and mothers are on my mind. 

Washing dishes, I think of my mother and how her voice, when she telephoned, strained for light. I've heard the same searching tone in a friend lately. Her mother passed away and her days have turned slow and dark. Last year, another friend lost her mother abruptly.

At the kitchen counter, I wipe up crumbs and jot a line. Fold laundry, jot another. I feel the zing of ideas swirling, words forming. The physical act of writing, combined with the mental and emotional rush of words, creates an adrenalin faith. Words rise and bubble, catch air, gasp for more, multiply.

I don't know if a poem will arise from these disconnected places but I am forever grateful for the process, for the reverent way words form an altar of hope.

 

Monday
Apr262010

Poetry of Place 

 

In a poem one can use the sense of place as an anchor for larger concerns, as a link between narrow details and global realities. Location is where we start from.  

- Maxine Kumin

 

Robert Michael Pyle

Charles Goodrich

Penelope Scambly Schott

With the publication of Windfall: A Journal of Poetry of Place, I am thrilled and honored to be in the company of these and other noted Pacific Northwest poets.

And I especially appreciate the focus editors Bill Siverly and Michael McDowell bring to their twice-yearly journal. In a world papered with publications, Windfall remains unique by emphasizing poetry "written in the Pacific Northwest and which is attentive to the relationships between people and the landscapes in which we live."

My poem has found a home in the Spring 2010 issue.  

A Shape Half Gone

It's been a year since I came to this beach, where
where we gathered as sisters, spread blankets and limbs
across warm sand and let the strained sun lull us
while the girls dug trenches, climbed rocks, found
shells the shape of hearts.

A year since I spoke the word, knowing
now how rape divides all time and banter, each
of us sliced by the severity of its cut.

You find heart-shaped stones at every turn.
From walks you return full, love spilling
from hands and pockets.

When I admire the rocks arranged on the mantel
you're surprised I have not found the same.
But they're everywhere, you say.

And I think of fall leaves fading,
the moon crescent against ebb tide.
Everything half gone, while you see plenty.

When I married, the pastor asked me to repeat
"In plenty and in one."
Of course, I thought, but my husband said,
"In plenty and in want."

Is there a difference?

Last year on this beach, I wasn't looking for
rock solid love, wasn't searching for a shape
to contain.

Instead, your daughter found a heart-shaped shell.
In its center, a perfect hole. No crack or ripple
but smooth, as if just born.

- Drew Myron 


Tuesday
Apr202010

One Word

image from PostSecret.comOne word changed my day.

Miss. 

As in, Thank you for shopping with us, Miss.

Note the absence of the word Ma'am. Last week I nearly leaned across the counter and kissed the pimply-faced young man who had the kindness and good training to call me — a 40-plus woman — Miss instead of Ma'am

It takes so little to warm my heart. 

 

Friday
Apr162010

The one that got away 

 

It was puppy love in that we both loved your puppy more than each other.

 

Missed chances. Young crushes. Old regrets. Who hasn't felt the "What if?" or the "Why not?" of a former flame?

Andy Selsberg understands the pull of old love. He's compiled a collection of messages people have written to former flames and objects of affection — all anonymously. Dear Old Love lets us ruminate in the touching, funny, spiteful and sometimes sad sloppiness of the "ones that got away."

Much like Six Word Memoirs and PostSecret, Dear Old Love is a crazy, desperate blend of heartbreak and hilarity.

 

 

Wednesday
Apr142010

Draw down to book drawing 

The 2010 Poetry Book Giveaway is in full swing! We're halfway through National Poetry Month, and halfway to the drawing to win books. Have you entered? 

Fifty (yes 50!) blogger-writers are taking part in the Poetry Book Giveaway, created by poet Kelli Russell Agodon at Book of Kells. Each blogger will give away two books of poetry — one of their own, and one of their favorites. 

Enter here to win:
1. Forecast - A word-art collaboration with paintings by Tracy Weil and poems by Drew Myron (me!) 

2. The Real Warnings - poems by Rhett Ismeman Trull

To enter:
1. Write a comment below by May 1, 2010. Include your name and contact info (so I can reach you if you win).

2. Two names will be chosen in a blind drawing on May 1, 2010. 

3. Winners will be posted here on May 2, 2010. 

There is no entry fee & no trickery. Just free and fabulous books! Enter below, and then visit Book of Kells for links to other book giveaways.