NaPoWriMo 2018 Days 10 through 13

Day Ten On April 10, 2018 from NaPoWriMo.net

 Today, we’d like to challenge you to write a poem of simultaneity – in which multiple things are happing at once.

Concurrence

As I sit, willing a poem to come
by door, by window, or casual thought
the heater hums, warms the room to summer,
droops my eyelids closer to each other
wills me to doze instead of write.

As I sit, the day passes by the window.
She’s wearing her same grey dress she
wore yesterday and the day before.
She frowns in the window, her clouds
lowering, perhaps angry she cannot pass
through the glass and into my room.

As I sit, cars vroom by too fast
for the street, in a hurry to
somewhere or in a rush back.
A small-town idea of getting things done.
A small-town way of going nowhere.

On the wall, a tiny black bug creeps
toward the painted scene of a
Mexican market that blends into
the background of the room, seldom noticed
It hangs its memories of elsewhere and the spice
scent of subtropical flowers and the sea.

I take a tissue, capture the creature’s
small existence, ending in a moment
his long journey from the floor.
Perhaps, like me, he hoped for
some warmer welcome.

His, in a wormhole of the picture’s frame.
Mine on the beach near the market in Acapulco.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Carol A. Stephen
April 10, 2018

Day Eleven On April 11, 2018

 a poem that addresses the future, answering the questions “What does y(our) future provide? What is your future state of mind? If you are a citizen of the “union” that is your body, what is your future “state of the union” address?”

 

After the White Light

In the future I will live
further away from the sun

although live is not quite
the right word.

I will be surrounded
by the earth, becoming earth

as my bones and ashes
burrow deep into the soil

the soul separates
a different energy

body and mind will separate
their existences, create new

sparks in the energy
of the parallel universe

Carol A. Stephen,
April 11, 2018

 

 

 

 

DAY 12

“Today, we’d like to challenge you specifically to write a haibun that takes in the natural landscape of the place you live. It may be the high sierra, dusty plains, lush rainforest, or a suburbia of tiny, identical houses – but wherever you live, here’s your chance to bring it to life through the charming mix-and-match methodology of haibun.”

Day 12 haibun attempt:

Noting that I do not usually write in this form, or any Japanese form, for that matter.

Haibun:

She counts her many winters on worry beads she keeps in a drawer by her small bed. They come faster now, and colder, with a chill that creeps into her bones. It stays with her now, this snow inside the body, this ice running through her blue veins. Her landscape no longer vast, for even as time quickens her pace slows. She moves now with a measured step, the fragility of age that mocks her with memories of summer fields of wildflowers, the ones she ran through as a child.

Daisies in green grass
crushed yellow white haloes
small suns melting snow

 

Carol A. Stephen
April 12, 2018

 

Day 13

Today, we challenge you to write a poem in which the words or meaning of a familiar phrase get up-ended. For example, if you chose the phrase “A stitch in time saves nine,” you might reverse that into something like: “a broken thread; I’m late, so many lost.” Or “It’s raining cats and dogs” might prompt the phrase “Snakes and lizards evaporate into the sky.”

Evolve

The large reptilians were first to leave,
melted into rivers of sweat that carved
shores of great lakes and inland seas.

Only their tiny brains
survived, becoming
something other.

The smaller scaled creatures, the first
frogs, toads, the turtles all waited
to become.

As the waters cooled into snow,
they dreamed themselves
fur, almond eyes,

sharp teeth
for protection, sleek bodies,
a deep purr.

They persuaded the later apes to
provide food, shelter
and worship.

Apes, who
would become
the first  humans.

Carol A. Stephen
April 13, 2018

 

NaPoWriMo 2018 Day 6 through 8

NaPoWriMo Day 6 prompt:  “Today, we’d like to challenge you to write a poem that stretches your comfort zone with line breaks.…”

 

A Cold April Rain 

 In the light
of day, trees
in overcoats of thick ice, their branches
droop and sway and
the tree’s trunk cracks under the weight.

in the light
of day, roads
slick-coated in grey ice, hide
under a thin layer of snow. Everything
slides west toward the sun.

in the light
of the sun, ice
turns clear, then melts, the runoff rivering
toward drains, the overflow
and puddle at curbs and in front of mailboxes.

the storm ends
and in its wake
we mourn the death of trees.

Carol A. Stephen
for April 6, 2018

Day Seven On April 7, 2018

“And now for our (optional) prompt. In our interview, Kyle Dargan suggests writing out a list of all of your different layers of identity. For example, you might be a wife, a grandmother, a Philadelphian, a dental assistant, a rabid Phillies fan, a seamstress, retiree, agnostic, cancer survivor, etc.. These are all ways you could be described or lenses you could be viewed through. Now divide all of those things into lists of what makes you feel powerful and what makes you feel vulnerable. Now write a poem in which one of the identities from the first list contends or talks with an identity from the second list. ”

Accountant Speaks, Poet Answers Back

Poet, you lack focus and attention,
you have no sense of order, no plan, no deadline,
just write when the urge comes
and the pile of undone writing
at the end of the month is growing.  Your
nput exceeds output, the way
debt might exceed assets. You
don’t pay your dues to your poetic muse.

Accountant, don’t you see?  It isn’t
black and red, it doesn’t work
the same as 4 -2 = 2.
A poem might be 4 +2 = 6 but at its heart still- 4.

There is no balance sheet, no double-entry books,
It’s not like inflows and outflows at all.
It comes when it comes or it doesn’t
come at all. The poem isn’t a transaction.

It’s an idea, will ‘o’ the wisp,
chimera, figment, dream.

It’s a ghost you chase after.
It’s a butterfly fluttering on the wind.
Carol A. Stephen
April 7, 2018

 

 Day Eight On April 8, 2018

And now for our prompt (optional, as always). Let’s take a leaf from Shelley’s book, and write poems in which mysterious and magical things occur. Your poem could take the form of a spell, for example, or simply describe an event that can’t be understood literally. . .

 

Spells for a Summer Day

Whisper the spell for smooth, taut skin
the face of youth shining back in the glass

Whisper the spell for one last love,
the one that the soul was meant to know

Whisper the spell for fairy dust, for a magic wand
and for wanderlust, far away castles that float in air

sun always shining, weather always fair
the song of the birds, the flowers of spring

Whisper the spell for everything
we wished for as children.

Be young again, free, and full of laughter
Let go the fear of what’s coming after the last day

we breathe, the last day we speak, the last
day we whisper the spells in the glass.

Carol A. Stephen
April 8, 2018

 

NaPoWriMo 2018 Two Sylvias Press Day 8

This prompt was to imagine a famous person creating a unique landmark:

 

Somewhere in Tupelo

there’s an evergreen, towering
like a skyscraper, point brushing
against clouds, branches

festooned with memorabilia: replicas
of gold records, ribbons looped through
needles, labelled Heartbreak Hotel
miniature Grammys for gospel music.

Tiny pink Cadillacs dangle, hubcaps
still shiny. Someone climbs a ladder
once a week, to polish all the wheels.

Draped scarves grace necks of
rock idol dolls, dressed in white
suits, rhinestones still gleaming.

Somewhere there’s an Elvis tree,
still decorated for Christmas.

 

Carol A. Stephen
April 8, 2018

NaPoWriMo 2018 Two Sylvias Press Day 7

Today’s constraints from Two Sylvias: write about something complicated, restrict line lengths e.g. four words, three words, two words, no words etc. and number of lines to between 8 and 12.

Here’s my attempt, which started as a found poem, then I played with it:

Origin. Intelligence.

 

Mystery. The parts don’t
make sense. The visual
way back, the reptilian.
Balance. Territory. Sex.

 

Snakes stare back, thinking
Is she lunch?

Monkey emotion.
Social hierarchy.

Prefrontal.
Rational.
Where am I anyway?
You? Behind your forehead.

Carol A. Stephen
April 7, 2018