CuW (NaPoWriMary 2)

I nearly wrote about copper tungsten this evening because I was still being goaded by Jeannine’s periodic table from yesterday and CuW has such a beautiful look to it.

Instead, I did my 3 pages of scribbling, which went all over (but neither to arches nor tungsten), and ended up with a sonnet idea and an almost-quatrain.  Perhaps something to come back to, tomorrow.

our breath leaving hoar frost on our scarves

Progress: I wrote a fairly decent first draft of a poem about being one of my grandfather’s pallbearers.

Prompt for today: Write a poem about falling out of love. (I stole this one from the discussion over at the P&W Speakeasy.)

In other poetry news, Astropoetica published their Spring 2009 issue yesterday, which includes my poem “Northern Lights” as well as work by Deborah P Kolodji, Michael Meyerhofer and others.

Mirrored at joannemerriam.com.

Poetic Asides Challenge, day 2

An Asian American

Lighten up,
even friends would say
whenever she cringed
at a singsong chant
or failed to laugh
during Avenue Q,
each order a knife
that carved her into
less of herself around them
until all that remained
was a cheshire grimace.

– pld

Fool (NaPoWriMary 1)

I had intended to post last night with my goals for this writing marathon and having failed to do so I feel as if I am already behind.

My goal is to write every day, not just every weekday. If it’s new scribbling, I’m holding myself to my three page rule from last time. I would like to work on Queen of the Steppe if so motivated, so I’m going to count revision as writing. Also, I would like to write at least one (new) pantoum because the journal is becoming all triolets, all the time.

Tonight? There are so many options, Joanne gives metaphor,
the Portland Art Museum an enchanting picture of arches I must return to, Jeannine the periodic table. So I confess to jealousy:

The whole world’s made of metal
to an astro geek, too heavy
with its many shells and layers,
banal in its scarcity.
Give me exploding pink shockwaves
of hydrogen, abundant mother
material whose lightweight arms
curve matter with the grip of gravity.

Real spark even if not high art. What fun.

people risk their lives on perilous mountains to see these birds

Progress: None. I watched the peregrine falcon who sometimes hangs out on the balcony on the 11th floor of my workplace, instead of writing. Tonight is trivia at the Barley House (pretty much the only thing going on in Concord, NH all winter long) so I don’t expect to get much done. I’m planning to do two poems Saturday to make up for it.

Prompt for today: Read Write Poem on metaphor.

Mirrored at joannemerriam.com.

NaPoWriMo plans, and first instalment

I was sick for 2 days, so I’m cheating a bit and backdating my first 2 NaPoWriMo entries.  I’ve written next to nothing poetry-wise since September, and I’m going to get over that by writing every day for the next month.  And I’m going to post it all, in its terrifyingly rough and unedited nakedness, here.  To give myself some guidance, I’m going to write about the trip I took across Canada and back through the southern US last summer.  I camped the whole way, there was much chaos and bad weather, and there should be plenty to keep me going.  The writing itself will probably be terrible–I’m an obsessive reviser and will usually go over a poem for weeks or months, or at least days, before showing it to anyone–but I’m interested to see what it will feel like to post first drafts publicly.  It means I’ll also have a record of what I first wrote, which I can compare the final version to much later down the road.  They’ll probably be insanely different, since I try not to self-edit too much during my first drafts.  If I do any revising during this time, I’ll hold it back at least until NaPoWriMo is over.

I feel like I need to post a whole slew of disclaimers about how this isn’t what my poetry looks like by the time I edit and publish it, alongside a bunch of pleas for patience and mercy, but what the heck.  Here’s day 1.

Heading Out

Out of the rain forest that holds you like green fog,

through the the alkaline lakes by Kamloops,

the pocket desert in Osoyoos where owls burrow down

in the roots of cacti, the running joke of Spuzzum—one house,

one gas pump, and somehow still a town—

over the mountain border, a half hours’ stop

in Banff, espresso and eight-dollar Internet, the irony of elk

hoofing it down the sidewalk, past Starbucks and the GAP

and tourists who want photos with wild bears—what is it

with them, a death wish? But who wouldn’t

want to die here, under bright snow, next to the lake

so clear and deep there aren’t words for all the colours

glowing in it.