Showing posts with label a poem a week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a poem a week. Show all posts

Monday, 17 March 2014

Don't look down


‘Lock the door, get naked, stand in front of a mirror and write about Exposing Yourself.

That is probably the most surprising poetry workshop prompt I ever heard.

It came just three weeks into a project that I am participating in online with more than 500 other poets.

Most of them I don’t know, although we are getting to know each other rather well now - having ‘got naked’ together before we had even met, we had no choice but to become acquainted, at least in our virtual nudity.

And now, in week 11 of the 52 week mission, we are all becoming familiar with each other – and with each other’s work. And there is a wonderful and fantastic range of new poetry coming out of this project.

Those of us who are posting our work – and not everyone does – are doing so at first-draft stage and opening ourselves up to criticism and comments. But it is a really generous writing community and it feels safe to post at this early stage.

So, there we all were, in week three of the 52 project  ...  getting to know each other in our nakedness on the closed Facebook page where we share and comment on our work. 

(It's never too late to join in -- write a poem a week, start now, keep going... check the website --- http://fiftytwopoetry.wordpress.com/

Unless the thought of 500 poets of all ages and body types getting their kit off puts you off, of course.

The ‘get naked’ prompt came in the week I turned 60, so there was a particular resonance for me about being starkers and being honest … in front of 500 'strangers'.

The resulting poem is below (now revised a little from its first 'in the raw' version). I chose the title because I am scared of heights:

Don’t look down 

Down there is danger;
where the heart lives,
where blood pumps and flows,
where the womb couches,
where the life stuff happens.

Up here, around the head,
dark blond hides grey,
and steady blue eyes still sparkle
in a face not quite looking its age;
up here, all is well.

Up here, you still hold the picture
of the size 12 hourglass,
the flat stomach,
the small firm breasts;
pert little arse; the thigh gap.

Down there are the scars of a life lived -
there are wrinkles, flab and … much slippage.
Don’t look down,
and don’t turn around;
don’t even try the rear view.

Just turn off the light
and love me in the dark.






Friday, 10 January 2014

Not so random resolution


Starting a New Year with a resolution to work on my own creative writing for at least one hour every day seemed like a plan.

Ten days in, so far so good. That must be ten hours now, at least. There are two new poems in the can so far, and another on the way.

If it fails, which it won’t,  I can always take on the challenge of writing a poem a day throughout April, as I did last year for National Poetry Writing Month  

But it won’t fail. Helping me achieve this target is the fabulous scheme, '52', set up by poet Jo Bell. The aim is to write a poem a week through 2014. And part of the plan is to read new poetry too.

It’s run through the website: http://fiftytwopoetry.wordpress.com/
where a subject/prompt is posted weekly (usually on Thursdays). Last week was ‘approaching the year’, this week, ‘a journey’.

Work can be shared if you wish (and commented upon) in the closed Facebook page:

For me, this is a great aid to achieving a worthwhile target. If the prompt doesn’t work for me one week, I will do something that does – but I will produce at least one poem a week.

At the end of the year there will be 52 new poems – more if I do a poem a day through April as well. 

I haven't managed to keep my other resolution yet -- half an hour of yoga every day. Oops. There is still time time catch that one ...

I shall be walking the beach tomorrow morning, for inspiration for 'the journey'. In the meantime, this was the first of the 52 -- 

New Year 2014


Stars fizz all over this still night;

while down here, on the dark road,

silence hangs chill;

broken only by our laughter

and the light in our hearts;

and the resolute crack-crack,

left-right left-right tick tack

of your boots on tarmac,

as we march into this new year.