read write prompt #26: are you my mother?

by Blythe

It’s the time of year when the earth blooms with warmth and color, baby robins crack through eggshells to naively take on the world, and Hollywood moms proudly strut about to reveal their winter-night-born love-bumps. And the American greeting card industry is counting on us all to send our mothers a card.

I resisted making this week’s prompt about mothers, because it seems like too conventional of a choice. But I did a little research on the American version of the holiday at wikipedia, and it turns out that when social activist Julia Ward Howe suggested the celebration, it was intended to be a day when mothers came together to speak out against war, which I think adds a little (pacifistic) spunk to the day.

Let’s face it: love them, hate them, fear them, miss them – or all of the above – the bond we have with our mother is one of the most primal and life-forming we will encounter. It might be natural that the relationship would show up in some of our poetic work, and this week I think it would be a great focus. (Here are some examples of poems about mothers.)

Maybe your relationship with your mother does not deserve a reverential ode — a vengeful or mournful piece would work just as well. Maybe you can find inspiration in Mother Nature, Mother Theresa, or the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo. Think through the people and events in your life that have mothered you. You could write about your experience as a mother, or your aspirations to become one.

Ideas for collaboration:

  • Choose a photo or some words describing your mother and exchange them with another poet. Write about each others’ mothers.
  • In the spirit of Julia Ward Howe’s vision, get together with other poets and write protest poems on a cause you are all moved by. Protest Poems is a great online resource by one of our Read Write Poem members.
  • Ask your mother or a mother figure in your life to write something with you.

Whatever slant you take, remember this: Eat your veggies. Clean your plate. If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.

Oh, and come back Monday after midnight and find the Get Your Poem On post. Leave a comment for us, with a link to your poem of the week.

get your poem on #19

by Blythe

From now until midnight one week from today, comments on this post will be open, so you can leave a permalink to your blog post for this week’s contribution.

Be sure to check back through the week and see what others have written in response to ideas about garbage- or other environmental issues: Read Write Poem!

Please, link back here in your posts, either with a hyperlink to Read Write Poem or by using the badge in your post. Sidebar links are great but it helps our “internet health” when you link in every post you contribute to the project. And please add “Read Write Poem” in your tags, if you don’t mind.

For the new folks: Please take a few moments to read the About pages, including our Copyrights page. If you have any questions about the project after reading through those pages, email us at info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.

read write prompt #19: go green!

by Blythe

As Juliet mentioned on Monday, this Friday — March 21 — is World Poetry Day.

So I thought we could all take some time to go green this week. Laud the beauty of nature, decry the ruin of the earth, or simply ponder all the things we throw away and ask yourself this fundamental question: what is trash? There are many directions you could take this prompt: Get inspired by a news story on the environment, spend time in nature trying to make new observations or imagine the state of our environment at some point in the future.

Ideas for collaboration:

  • Keep a list of everything you throw away for a day. Exchange lists with a partner, and write a poem based on each other’s lists. (You can also try a variance of this on your own, but people may think it odd if you ask about what they have thrown away or find you poking around in their wastebasket.)
  • Reduce, reuse, and recycle! Choose a poem you have written that you would be happy for a partner to deconstruct and reassemble. Exchange and reassemble each other’s poems -– bonus points if you choose poems with an environmental theme as fodder.
  • Partner up and give each other assignments in contradiction. Choose something environmentally themed (like recycling or landfills) and a disparate subject (like relationships or dance), and combine the two in a poem.

Whatever you do this week, try mixing in a little poem and a little green this week. The earth will thank you.

Come back Monday after midnight and find the Get Your Poem On post to leave a comment for us, with a link to your poem the week, whether it is green or any other color.

Update: We’ve dropped the link to the blog posting environmental poetry for World Poetry Day, not because we don’t support that cause, but because the blogger hadn’t given satisfactory credit to one of our participants. Giving credit for work shouldn’t be such a tricky thing; it would be very simple to add the writer’s name at the end of the poem and not rely only on the writer’s name being in the title post with a “link back.” It’s always smart to refresh your knowledge about copyrights — we have a quick look, with some links, on our “on copyrights” tab.

get your poem on #13

by Blythe

From now until midnight one week from today, comments on this post will be open, so you can leave a permalink to your blog post for this week’s contribution.

Be sure to check back through the week and see what others have written in response to ideas about sacrifice- or inspirations from other sources: Read Write Poem!

Please, link back here in your posts, either with a hyperlink to Read Write Poem or by using the badge in your post. Sidebar links are great but it helps our “internet health” when you link in every post you contribute to the project. And please add “Read Write Poem” in your tags, if you don’t mind.

For the new folks: Please take a few moments to read the About pages, including our Copyrights page. If you have any questions about the project after reading through those pages, email us at info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.

read write prompt #13: no pain, no gain (sacrifice in poetry)

by Blythe

Today marks the beginning of Lent for Christians around the world. It is a forty-day season of fasting and prayer in preparation for Easter.

I was raised in a family that did not take much notice of Lent; I associate this time of year with various fish promotions at the local fast food joints. (Even though I’ve chosen to participate in Lent a few times in more recent years, the season still evokes for me the cool gray afternoons of my pre-teen years enlivened by a fish filet sandwich from Burger King.)

My reminiscences of Lenten seasons past have led me to this week’s prompt suggestion: sacrifice.

There are countless ways to take on the subject – religion and spirituality need not be involved. Maybe there is a person whose sacrifice surprised, impressed, or saddened you. Maybe (like Edna St. Vincent Millay in her infamous “First Fig“) you can focus on what we choose to sacrifice to have the life we desire. Or you could write about what we sacrifice unknowingly, or, like Donne in “Love’s Diet,” you could take a look at the self-imposed sacrifices we often make in love.

Then there are the sacrifices of ancient cultures, altruistic behavior in the animal kingdom, the sacrifices we wish we could take back, and the sacrificial hit in baseball (props to anyone who can come up with a decent sports poem).

You may also want to consider taking some tips from those who practice the purposeful sacrifice of Lenten fasting and consider some change to your poetry routine.

I read a great article a few months ago about a gifted and prolific photographer who decided to limit himself to taking one photograph a day for a year, and he had great things to say about how much that artistic “fasting” changed his perspective. He felt that those were some of his richest, best-planned photographs, and that the experience changed the way he went about looking for and setting up shots, even after the year was over.

Perhaps, if you’re like me, you need to sacrifice something else (Project Runway and HGTV be damned!) in order to give more time to poetry.

Tips for collaborating:

  • Find a partner, and give each other fasting-related writing assignments. For example, try not to use any adjectives (in speech or writing) one day.
  • Keep a list of the ones you are tempted to use. Write about those words or the experience.
  • Come up with other “abstinence” assignments for each other.

Whatever sacrifice you make this week, come back next Monday and share the second week of Lent with the poets who make Read Write Poem a part of their writing practice.

read write poem news

  • read write poem napowrimo anthology
    June 20, 2010 | 1:36 pm

    The Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology is still in production. Selection, placement, layout and copyediting are taking longer than anticipated. Thank you for your patience. I hope to have the piece completed in July. For those who have emailed asking if they can be included, the May 7 deadline for submission of work stands. Those who met that deadline will be included. Please check the post on this site listing who I received submissions from by that date. If you submitted your work by the May 7 deadline in accordance with our guidelines and your name is not listed, send an email to info (at) readwritepoem (dot) org.

  • read write poem napowrimo anthology
    May 5, 2010 | 3:09 pm

    Remember that Friday* is the deadline for submitting work to the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Anthology. Check out the guidelines for submission in the main column (to the left). On May 8, we’ll post a news item listing everyone we’ve received work from. If you submitted work and your name is not on that list, please let us know. Thanks!

    *I initially said “tomorrow,” but I meant to say “Friday.”

  • napowrimo congratulations, and a reminder
    April 24, 2010 | 12:05 pm

    It’s the final week of the Read Write Poem NaPoWriMo Challenge! Just 7 days left. With that, a reminder that Read Write Poem will culminate with the anthology featuring work from those who complete the challenge. A post with details for submitting to the anthology will be published May 1. Be sure you remove any information from the site that you want preserved — such as group content and personal messages. Those elements of the site will be removed May 1 as well. The main site will remain up as an archive.

  • ‘underlife’ tour at january gill o’neil’s blog
    April 20, 2010 | 8:11 pm

    January Gill O’Neil’s virtual book tour has moved to her site and is underway now. Check out the lineup at Poet Mom.

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