The Halfway Point: Poem a Day

On the first day of this month I began the ”poem a day” experiment. After all, it is March, cold, slushy, and dreary. I needed a pick me up, an attitude adjustment per se. So I set out to write one poem per day for the entire month, thirty-one days total. I am now halfway through this experiment.

Days one and two, the
challenge is on my mind…so I write.

Day four, I forget until
8 pm while I am watching tv. I composed a haiku about the cat with her tail in
my face, quickly onto the only paper I had near me, my organizer. The poem sucked,
but it took me out of my tv-induced stupor. Maybe it accessed a different part
of my brain, not sure. But the process of sitting down, opening my notebook and
picking up a pen is therapeutic for me. The brain has to concentrate on the
process and in effect it forgets the current worry or anxiety plaguing it. The
thoughts  turn from the late student loan payment to writing. Perhaps this is a form of positive reinforcement. I am
thinking of my dog now, distracting her with a piece of cheese, long enough to walk
by the neighbor’s hairy beast. That is what I do with my brain when I write,
here cerebral cortex, look, yummy words, now forget that pesky Sallie Mae.
Last week I went to a reading of young women high school students’ work. Before reading, each student’s respective teacher would introduce and let the audience known why each girl enjoyed writing. “Creating something beautiful out of nothing,” was one response, “entering another world,” another. So the question arose: Why do I write? Maybe I write to escape that part of my brain consumed with fear and worry. When I  am engrossed in writing a short story I do not worry about the bills or how I am going to get all of the house clean before the guests arrive. I connect with something that is not ego (most of the time.) Some folks have said that ego is edging god out. Maybe when I write I am connecting to god. Writing for me is part of a spiritual practice.
Day 8, I have nothing to
write about. I am covering a math class and see a poster on the wall. I write a
horrid little poem, entitled “Polygnomials.” Really it is about polynomials,
but I am still clueless. I felt as if I was reaching for words that didn’t feel
like coming out to play. But I fulfilled the goal, it was after all a poem, just not a very good one. 

Day 15, I take a poetry
workshop and am re-energized. I want to write today, I guess that was all I was
asking for at the beginning of the month. I want to go through the first 16
poems and scratch out all of the crap poems (as if I am any judge.) But the
crap poems serve a purpose, they waved the cheese in front of my nose, they
whispered to me, calling me out from the closet, the easy
land-into-bed-and-watch-mindless-tv-trap. So tomorrow will be the 17th
day, it takes 28 days to change a habit. Can I slip into a habit of daily
writing? My soul would benefit. 

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About Me

I wrote and published my first blog post on May 26, 2009. I was about to turn 36 and had been accepted to Mount Holyoke College as a non-traditional student, on my way to completing a Bachelor of Arts in English with a minor in Medieval Studies. I had managed, finally, to know what general direction I was traveling. As a self proclaimed voracious reader I knew that I needed a vocation that would allow me to engage daily with words: reading words, writing words, and hearing words. I also needed to eat, so I navigated my way to a teaching position and I began to fine tune my craft. I love to teach and I love my students, but I also needed to continue to hone my own literary technique, voice, and style. I continued my education in order to delve deeper into literature, making connections, and most definitely, writing. I gained more confidence as a reader as well as a writer of both creative and analytical text. That first blog post in 2009 is short, the writing average, and the topic mundane, but as I continued to learn from other writers I began to understand that to become a better writer I needed to write more. Each time I write and release a poem, a post, or a story, I hone my skills. I invite you along for the ride, for this journey of mine as I attempt to wrangle a wealth of ideas and competing directions into an organized freshly paved path to publication. I might get distracted along the way, but sometimes those detours lead us to amazing views and new friends. 

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