It’s been 30 days. A poem and a post each day of the month of April. I’ve fallen into a rhythm, finding spaces for the writing, surfacing ideas for poetry and posts. I know this about myself, the habit of writing makes writing easier for me (not necessarily better, but easier). So what will happen tomorrow? Will I write anyway?
I was drawn to a photo of a circle today and the idea of a circle. No beginning, no end. Maybe the perfect metaphor for the 30th day of the 30-day poetry challenge.
Circle
Never-ending curve
beginning and end
indistinguishable
blended
whole
a hole?
Spots and blots
polka dots
rounded
rounding up
containing
all 360 degrees
Cycle
repeating
birth and death
water
air
never-ending curve
begins
where it ends
Circle
Douillard 2018
My students are busily curating their poems, selecting about 10 poems to publish in their own books. They are working to revise and refine…and the poems are gaining depth as they try out new techniques and experiment with form and line breaks.
Here’s one Stone wrote about an engineer who was an accidental paleontologist!
The Secret Engineer
Deep deep underground was a secret engineer.
He never told anyone he saw a dinosaur
because he built a time machine.
There was a hot and blazing sun with loads of heat.
He was in the prehistoric time
He was the best mathematician, he made the best discovery.
With his engineering mind and his scientific brain his inventions were the
Best!Stone
Rylan has been writing poems about softball.
Will She Swing?
Yellow with red stripes
resting in a leather open oval
waiting anxiously for the umpire to call out
STRIKE!
Fastball
Change up
Drop ball
Will she swing?
Rylan
And Sadie revised her poem about fire’s evil plot
Fire Plot
The fire hisses and cracks in its pen amongst the burnt and crisp logs.
Its angry arms reach up into the umber sky,
then shrivels down.
The fire sneaks up on pieces of marshmallow fluff, thinking of a plot to escape from the charred black pit and leap into the world.
Maybe to a hillside or a house, spreading fiery anger and sadness with it.
When it discovers the perfect scheme, it crackles and reaches into the dark, sending a swirl of smoke into the starry night.
Sadie
As April ends so does National Poetry Month. I know the power that poetry has on writers and thinkers and learners. The sustained attention that results from 30-days of writing also has power. I’m thinking about other ways to stoke the fires of writing for my students and myself, establishing a firm practice of writing that will take us beyond the end of the school year. Wish me luck!
You’ve had such a creative, productive month, Kim, and it’s been a pleasure to share some of that experience through your blog. I love your circle photo and poem–the perfect analogy for this 30th day. Congratulations!
Thanks Molly. This has been a new experience…and a good one. I’ve enjoyed getting back to a daily writing practice. Blogging keeps me honest! Thanks for the comments and encouragement!