My Spiritual Side Needs

 

angel1

Angels©Maurya Simon

Who are without mercy,
Who confide in trumpet flowers,
Who carry loose change in their pockets,
Who dress in black velvet,
Who wince and fidget like bats,
Who balance their haloes on hatracks,
Who watch reruns of famine,
Who powder their noses with pollen,
Who laugh and unleash earthquakes,
Who sidle in and out of our dreams
Like magicians, like childhood friends,
Who practice their smiles like pirates,
Who exercise by walking to Zion,
Who live on the edge of doubt,
Who cause vertigo but ease migraines,
Who weep milky tears when troubled,
Whose night sweats engender the plague,
Who pinion their arms to chandeliers,
Who speak in riddles and slant rhymes,
Who love the weak and foolhardy,
Who lust for unripe persimmons,
Who scavenge the fields for lost souls,
Who hover near lighthouses,
Who pray at railroad crossings,
Who supervise the study of rainbows,
Who cannot blush but try,
Who curl their hair with corkscrews,
Who honeymoon with Orion,
Who are not wise but pure,
Who behave with impious propriety,
Who hourly scour our faces with hope,
Whose own faces glow like radium,
Whom we’ve created in our own form,
Who are without mercy, seek and yearn
To return us like fossilized roses
To the wholeness of our original bloom.

T.S.Eliot

I love his poetry. I’m particularly fond of Macavity, The Mysterious Cat. We named our youngest tabby cat Macavity because like Eliot’s cat in the poem whenever things happen he is nowhere to be seen.This beauty with the golden eyes is our baby.img_2115-2

https://allpoetry.com/Macavity:-The-Mystery-Cat

I adore Eliot’s writing. His grasp of poetry and it’s purpose in society is sheer brilliance. I’ve chosen a few quotes that define poetry’s role for a poet like me.

“Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of personality, but an escape from personality. But, of course, only those who have personality and emotions know what it means to want to escape from these things.”

“Poetry may make us from time to time a little more aware of the deeper, unnamed feelings which form the substratum of our being, to which we rarely penetrate; for our lives are mostly a constant evasion of ourselves.”
My own poetry frequently is an escape from the person I am inside. Years and years of being one person to survive and another that loves creative expression and the musical flow of language but had to keep it secret writing gave me to a way to put all the jumbled emotions into perspective.

Author Connection 3

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Positivism matters

“I write to find strength.
I write to become the person that hides inside me.
I write to light the way through the darkness for others.
I write to be seen and heard.
I write to be near those I love.
I write by accident, promptings, purposefully and anywhere there is paper.
I write because my heart speaks a different language that someone needs to hear.
I write past the embarrassment of exposure.
I write because hypocrisy doesn’t need answers, rather it needs questions to heal.
I write myself out of nightmares.
I write because I am nostalgic, romantic and demand happy endings.
I write to remember.
I write knowing conversations don’t always take place.
I write because speaking can’t be reread.
I write to soothe a mind that races.
I write because you can play on the page like a child left alone in the sand.
I write because my emotions belong to the moon; high tide, low tide.
I write knowing I will fall on my words, but no one will say it was for very long.
I write because I want to paint the world the way I see love should be.
I write to provide a legacy.
I write to make sense out of senselessness.
I write knowing I will be killed by my own words, stabbed by critics, crucified by both misunderstanding and understanding.
I write for the haters, the lovers, the lonely, the broken-hearted and the dreamers.
I write because one day someone will tell me that my emotions were not a waste of time.
I write because God loves stories.
I write because one day I will be gone, but what I believed and felt will live on.”
Shannon L. Alder

“Shannon L. Alder is an inspirational author that has set out to write the most inspirational quotes on Goodreads. To date, she has written 1,200 quotes (beating out the top competition: Dr. Phil, John Gray, Dr. Laura and other relationship gurus) and she is still going strong! Her quotes have been published in over 100 different books, by various relationship authors and in several online magazine articles (Psychology Today, Huffington Post, etc.). Her philosophy or Shannonisms are centered around celebrating your uniqueness and freeing yourself from your fears so you can live with purpose.She addresses in her quotes the issues most people face that prevents them from taking themselves to the next level (self-esteem, lack of focus, fear, anxiety, self-righteousness, mental illness, lack of positivity, not caring, control issues, jealousy, and anger).”

I’ve discovered we are soul sisters. There is something to be said for having one’s emotions validated.

Her writing that I am the most familiar with are her books but I’ve recently begun checking out her blog on goodreads and facebook because I enjoy her thinking process.

300 Questions to Ask Your Parents Before It’s Too Late

300 Questions LDS Couples Should Ask for a More Vibrant Marriage

They both offer ways to open communications with your children or your spouse. Both books will become go-to conversation starters time and time again.

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1391130.Shannon_L_Alder?from_search=true

Child Abuse Awareness

Who Protects the Child?
©Lyn Crain
Denial, not my daughter or son
They wouldn’t hit anyone
Maybe they yell at lot
Or sometimes give a swat.

But that is not abuse
Where do people get these views?

Based on the unique number of victims, an estimated 78 percent (78.3) suffered neglect, an estimated 18 percent (17.6) were physically abused, an estimated 9 percent (9.2) were sexually abused, an estimated 8 percent (8.1) were psychologically maltreated, and an estimated 2 percent (2.4) were medically neglected. In addition, an estimated 10 percent of the victims (10.3) experienced “other” types of maltreatment such as “abandonment,” “threats of harm to the child,” and “congenital drug addiction.”

http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb/resource/can-faq7

https://www.childwelfare.gov/topics/systemwide/statistics/can/natl-state/

https://www.childhelp.org/hotline/

 

Micro-Poetry: Paper Balloons

Imagery and writing flow smoothly together ❤️

Linda J. Wolff | Founder of Wolff Poetry Literary Magazine's avatarUrban Poetry

To believe in dreams is like seeing paper balloons hang from a purple sky, on branches reaching for hope in the rain. But even then, anything is possible if you believe it can happen because dreaming is a reality.

©Linda J. Wolff 2017 – http://www.urbanpoetry2017.com
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Name Consideration?

Have you considered the importance of a name? I was reading an author recommended by Theresa Barker when we discussing one of my earlier posts about poetry connections.

She mentioned Garrison Keillor, so I went and looked him up because I was not familiar with his work. I discovered this poem and was quite amused. I hope you enjoy his sense of humor as much as I do.  Thank you Theresa.

Publicity by Garrison Keillor

Listen, my children, and you shall hear
Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere,
Who rode along with Sam Prescott
And William Dawes, but Revere got
The nod cause he rhymes with “year,”
So “One if by land and two if by sea”
Was given to Mr. Revere, though he
Was only one rider of the three,
And Sam and Bill gave many alarms
To various Middlesex towns and farms
But wound up in obscurity
Because the names Sam Prescott
And William Lawes simply were not
As pleasant to the poet’s ear,
And so we revere one cavalier
And two were denied their rightful fame.
It all comes down to the sound of your name.
If Henry Thoreau had been Wally Ballou,
Would we still esteem Walden as we do?
If Emily Dickinson’s name had been Misty
Would she have gotten so much publicity?

So listen, my children, and you shall learn:
Life takes many an unfair turn.
Many a hero goes unsung.
And I will make this simple assertion:
Though you’re idealistic, and brave, and young,
Get yourself a publicity person.

It makes me wonder if my life has been impacted by my name. As an artist, we do have the opportunity to create a persona with a name of our choosing. Hmm, maybe there is an advantage after all to a pen name. What do you think?

What to Do While Your Nano Novel “Rests”

The key for me is to explore many different writing paths to keep myself motivated and my mind opens to new ideas which will benefit what work I have in progress. I know writing poetry, my edits are much better when I let them sit and come back with new eyes. I have no doubt this is true of all genre writing. I have to give my mind a break if I’m too involved I  can’t look at it with a new perspective.

theryanlanz's avatarRyan Lanz

bedroom bed rests

by Kelsie Engen

Many first time writers will finish a first draft and then immediately dive into revisions. It’s sometimes difficult to convince them that this is exactly the wrong thing to do. After all, we want to keep the momentum going right? So we immediately set to work on the edits, pounding away on the keyboard until our fingers are as bloody as our red pen. And pretty soon, we’re sick to death of our novel and we can’t bear to look at it.

So we set it aside and can’t bear to look upon it for months. And then we don’t get our books finished–because we hate them.

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Teen Dating Violence Awareness

You Pray by Lyn Crain

You pray
the pain to stop
it won’t for many hours.
Suffering silently, you pray.
He watches you coldly
You boldly stare,
silent.

“Dating violence is more common than many people think. One in three teens in the U.S. will experience physical, sexual or emotional abuse by someone they are in a relationship with before they become adults. Help us spread awareness and stop dating abuse before it starts!”

I was a teen bride and alone with my abuser. We lived in a very isolated rural area and I had no phone or car. Many of my poems in In My Shoes, My Poetic Journey from Abuse to Victory discuss that difficult time. There wasn’t social awareness of the problems that we have today. But unfortunately, the problem still exists. You can help our youth by raising awareness.

“Wear Orange Day is a national day of awareness where we encourage everyone to wear orange in honor of Teen DV Month. In 2017, it will be held on Feb. 14. You can wear orange shirts, nail polish, ribbons, jewelry, shoes or anything else you can think of! Tell people why you are wearing orange and post pictures and updates on Instagram and Twitter using the hashtags #Orange4Love and #RespectWeek2017.”

http://www.loveisrespect.org/resources/teendvmonth/

http://www.lyncrainpoet.com

Author Connection Series 2

How can we keep poetry alive?

W.S. Merwin says,” Poetry reconnects us to the world.”

Poets are not published by the big publishing houses like they once were. It is harder than ever to break into the publishing arena.

We really are a small community and the more we support each other in our art the more we can promote poetry.

“Separate we come, and separate we go, and this be it known, is all that we know.”
~ Conrad Aiken.

I disagree because I believe together we can find a common ground. Reading one’s poetry helps writers fine tune their skills.  It also helps writers working in other genres develop their narrative and imagery.

It can be hard to step outside our little box of words but collaborating with other writers sparks new ideas. The rewards of working together go far beyond reaching new audiences because it challenges the author to approach their medium differently.

“Genius might be the ability to say a profound thing in a simple way.”
~ Charles Bukowski

However, the search for genius can involve a group effort.  Think of the Algonquin Table or Hemingway’s drinking with his buddies.  These discussions weren’t accidents but provided value to those who participated.  That’s why they kept happening.

Look at a poem for a minute and ask yourself these questions:

  1. Is it free verse?
  2. Is it structured in a specific form?
  3. Is there a specific pattern?
  4. Rhyme or non-rhyming?
  5. Is there a music of repeating sounds?
  6. Do the stanza breaks feel natural? Can you sense the energy of the poem?
  7. Is there a natural cadence when you read?
  8. When do the subject matter and the narrative arc?
  9. What part of the poem appealed to you most?
  10. What discoveries did you make in the text?
  11. Did the author rely on strong nouns and verbs or did they use adjectives and adverbs to create imagery?
  12. Did the title and the verse connect for you?
  13. Consider the different pauses when you read it out loud? Is it the same if someone else reads the same work out loud? Is there a crescendos, accents, or flexibility in the pauses?
  14. Is there an emotional tone of the poem? A shiver affect?
  15. What kind of insights or information could be revealed if a different speaker? Would it serve the poem better?
  16. Are there cliques? Words that jump out at you from other poems?
  17. How does this poem contribute to the overall conversation in the poetry world?

As writers, we need to develop our art to reach its full potential in this ever-changing world.

 

“For when ideas flutter in haze, we collaborate without notice and collect them as butterflies only to set them free into the world.”
Shawn Lukas

[i] https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poets/detail/w-s-merwin

[ii] http://famouspoetsandpoems.com/poets/conrad_aiken/quotes

[iii]http://famouspoetsandpoems.com/poets/charles_bukowski/quotes

[iv]https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/collaboration?page=2

 

 

 

Walk alone

I love the imagery and the cadence of this work! What a great opening to a poem, “damaged people have seen hell, they don’t need Bibles to tell them when the angels fell.”

TheDarkestFairytale's avatarThe Darkest Fairytale

Damaged people have seen hell
They don’t need Bibles,
To realise why the angels fell.
The little they’ve received
Is the most they’ve known,
Walking in the ashes
Of what life has thrown.
They’ve met the humans
With very little humanity,
Seen the cracks in this world
And drowned in the reality.
The scars are indented
Right down to the bone,
Earning the strength
To walk alone.

K

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