One of my favorite very-very-short poems about spring:
Spring (Again)
by Michael Ryan
....
Photo courtesy of kidmoses at Pixabay.
One of my favorite very-very-short poems about spring:
Photo courtesy of kidmoses at Pixabay.
I wanted to share this one by Naomi Shihab Nye for a few reasons:
So. Poetry. Goats. Severance.
You're welcome.
(Read the rest of this short, delightful poem here, and you can listen to the poet reading it here.)
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The Poetry Friday round-up this week is being hosted by Laura Purdie Salas.
Photo thanks to RitaE at Pixabay.
This ("Sabbaths, 2005, VII") is a beautiful one from Wendell Berry.
It begins like this:
I know I am getting old and I say so,
but I don't think of myself as an old man.
I think of myself as a young man
with unforeseen debilities.
and ends like this:
And now you must go here to read the dozen or so lines between that exquisite beginning and that sublime ending.
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Carol Varsalona has the Poetry Friday round-up today at Beyond LiteracyLink.
(Image by Mirka at Pixabay.)
Photo: Wikimedia Commons |
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Photo by Markus Spiske |
When it's time to choose a guiding/inspiring/motivational/comforting/perfect (aye, there's the rub) word to take me through the upcoming year, I do what I do with everything: Overthink it and paralyze myself. (Do you think that little "perfect" requirement has anything to do with that? Naaaaah.)
For 2024, I chose "Hope" but also stre-e-e-etched Hope out, seeking maximum mileage:
For my 2025 word, I did an online quiz to see if I was inspired by the word it gave me. I took the quiz three times and every time it gave me Create. I was tempted to fight it, as I often do with that kind of thing. I'm a Gretchen Rubin Questioner/tipping-to-Rebel and I thought:
"Why should I trust a random online quiz? Shouldn't I find my own word? Wouldn't that be more authentic? Am I lazy to use a quiz? But some quizzes are great, like the Four Tendencies. After all, 'Questioner' nails it. But this is different. Or is it?"
And then I thought:
"Shut up and just adopt the word, Karen. Create feels just right after the healing, the overcoming, the patience, and the emergence. JUST USE THE WORD."
So I will. But I wasn't done (over)thinking it.
I stre-e-e-etched the potential of Create a little further, and here's what I came up with:
I like what it invites me to and I have all kinds of ideas about all kinds of writing I want to create going forward.
Overthinking, apparently, isn't all bad. 🤔 I even decided it was worth writing an acrostic poem in its honor:
I've got a little more Emily Dickinson for you this week — a well-known classic that I turn to often. It's the perfect way for me to kick off 2025, a year in which we'll need lots of hope perching in our souls to keep us motivated and moving forward. As one wise woman often says, "Don't agonize, organize."
I missed Poetry Friday last week. If you did too, check it out at Tanita Davis's {fiction, instead of lies}. The Poetry Pals used Jane Hirshfield's "Two Versions" as a mentor poem and crafted their own takes (inspired by Hirshfield's theme, structure, or lines). They created some stunners, so do hop over and read your way through those beauties.
This week, Carol at The Apples in My Orchard is hosting. Carol has been caring for her aging father, spending 16½ hours on the road (in one day!) and dealing with a lot (I see you, Carol!) Send her some virtual hugs and love today and enjoy all the poetry she's rounded up for us here.
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I missed PF last week because we spent Thursday and Friday out of town. My daughter and her husband hosted Thanksgiving. My middle daughter, whom I blog-named "Betsy Ray" (after our beloved Betsy in Maud Hart Lovelace's Betsy-Tacy books) was nine years old when I started this blog in late 2005. She was NINE. And now she and her husband are killing it as Thanksgiving hosts. We had a marvelous day and a marvelous meal. (I told her to marry a man who cooks, and she did. Yay!) The only parts of the meal we provided were the pumpkin pie (my mom's extra-spice recipe), gluten-free/dairy-free biscuits, and gf/df chocolate chip cookies. Anne-with-an-e (who was twelve when I started the blog — TWELVE!) and her fiance brought the dairy-free mashed potatoes, which Ramona (who was THREE when I started the blog) pronounced the best ever. When she was three, she didn't like "mashed-potatoes-with-the-skin-on, eww" but her culinary palate expanded over the years. Sadly for her, a few years back, just as she was perfecting the ultimate pepperjack grilled cheese sandwich with marinara dipping sauce, she needed to go gf/df, as Betsy had to a few years before. We're still working on perfecting the gf/df diet but overall we've made huge progress.
Aaaaaanyway...that's where I was last week. Enjoying the many pleasures of spending time with all my favorite people. Counting gifts and blessings. Giving thanks for beauty seen and unseen. "Looking at the Sky" and getting my thirst for a touch of heaven quenched. (Stealing the imagery of a thirst quenched from the last line of the poem. It's a short and perfect piece.)
My youngest daughter ("Ramona," the artist and poet) introduced me to Rudy Francisco, and if I haven't shared his stuff on Poetry Friday yet, I've been terribly remiss. He's marvelous, and this one is so good: