Friday, November 29, 2024

Poetry Sisters Write to Jane Hirshfield's Two Versions

I missed our Zoom this week, so I went into this challenge blind. Mary Lee set this back in January when she was enamored of a new-ish poem by Jane Hirshfield. If you have access to The Threepenny Review, you can find it in the Summer 2023 edition.

I used Hirshfield's poem as a mentor text and followed her structure very closely. I tried writing about several different topics, but I've been a bit melancholy lately, so when every poem came back to the same subject, I ran with it. 

Two Versions 
(after Jane Hirshfield's Two Versions)

In the first version, I held my mother’s hand.

Hospital staff traveled in and out of her room.

One no-nonsense nurse nodded after checking her respiration.
Another patted my shoulder with empathy after wetting her lips.

What was my hand doing, I now wonder
gripping hers so tightly
as it once did in childhood while crossing the street?

Was it disbelieving? fearful?

And why, when I conjure a lifetime of whispered moments,
over Scrabble boards, in the kitchen, on the phone,
do I think, after all our glorious days together, of this?

In the second version, there is only guilt,
of which I know everything.

Except to have been there in her final days.

So much time, so many tears. In darkness
and in light, I am still begging pardon.

Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

    Would you like to try the next challenge? In December we are writing Haibun (prose + haiku) or Haiga (art + haiku). Are you with us? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on December 27th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

    This week, my poetry sister Tanita Davis is hosting Poetry Friday. I hope you'll take some time to check out all the poetic things being shared today. Happy Poetry Friday, friends! 

    Friday, September 27, 2024

    Poetry Sisters and Seven Ways of Looking

    This month's challenge was to write in the style of Wallace Stevens' poem Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird. Since 13 stanzas is a lot, we gave ourselves some grace and decided to go for only seven ways of looking at something. 

    A small group of us met on Zoom Sunday to write and discuss the prompt. I left that session thoroughly confused about what my topic should be. I tried writing poems on the Statue of Liberty, sunflowers, the color blue, and clouds. None of those got me more than a few stanzas, and they weren't pretty. I wondered if following the mentor poem more closely might set me on the right track. I chose the bird I regularly see on my walk to work as my subject and ultimately found my way through the poem. I will return to this one because I may just have six more stanzas in me to get this poem to the magic number of thirteen.

    Seven Ways of Looking at a Heron

    I
    The lake hosts a gaggle of geese
    a paddling of ducks
    and one unmoving heron

    II
    I relish the empty house
    Like the pond
    claimed by a solitary heron

    III
    In the gray light of dawn, heron waits
    a fixture in the daily ebb and flow

    IV
    Heron knows
    all things are difficult before they are easy

    V
    A wader and the water
    are one
    A wader, the water, and a fish
    become one

    VI
    Heron glides across the water
    breakfast in her belly
    bloodstain on her neck

    VII
    I prefer the quiet of the heron
    Ducks quack, geese honk 
    breaking the morning stillness
    I understand the heron

    Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

    You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

      Would you like to try the next challenge? In October, we are writing to a prompt from the book The Practice of Poetry: Writing Exercises from Poets Who Teach, edited by Robin Behn and Chase Twichell.

      Are you with us? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on October 25th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

      This week, Irene Latham of Live Your Poem is hosting Poetry Friday. I hope you'll take some time to check out all the poetic things being shared today. Happy Poetry Friday, friends! 

      Friday, August 30, 2024

      Poetry Sisters Write Ekphrastic Poems

      At least once yearly, we challenge ourselves to write poems to photographs or works of art. I love writing to the shared images and rarely choose my own, but this time, I did.

      In early August, I spent time at the National D-Day Memorial and was struck by the replica of the sculpture “Le Monument aux Morts.” The original stands in Trevieres, France. Erected in 1921, it was intended as a memorial to men from the town who died in WWI. In 1944, it was damaged during the battle for Normandy. The town decided not to repair it as a reminder of the damages of war and the fragility of peace.



      I chose 6 words from the plaque describing the statue. Those words are: second, history, memory, soil, face, and war. I wrote the first stanza using them in the order I found them and then rearranged them to write this sestina.

      Echoes of War

      Standing at her feet, I think for a second
      of the tragedies of modern history
      hiding in our collective memory
      we know horrors are buried in the soil
      it’s a past we cannot face
      yet we’re still a world at war

      We are burdened by weapons of war
      firearms the leading cause of death in youth, seconds
      change lives, scars etched upon their faces
      mass shootings not just history
      but present on our soil
      Columbine, Sandy Hook, Uvalde—names burned in our memory

      Their epitaph reads “in memoriam”
      we lose in peace and war
      on home and foreign soil
      our first sons and daughters, our second,
      and third, changing family histories
      sorrow written on every mourner’s face

      On its face
      loss becomes a memory
      a blip in our history
      not a game this tug of war
      we have no time to lose, not one second
      we must nurture our fertile soil

      From this earth, this very soil,
      we rise to comfort every weary face
      time’s healing touch felt with each passing second
      old wounds begin to fade from memory
      planting hope in bodies ravaged by war
      softening the edges of this cancerous history

      Pages turned in the book of human history,
      hold lessons learned, deeply buried in the soil
      when Earth shook under the weight of war
      its narrative shaping humanity’s face
      we hold the lost in our memory
      honor them each passing second

      We make history as we face the future
      fragile peace holding on our soil, the memory
      of war fading for the briefest of seconds

      Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

      You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

        Would you like to try the next challenge? In September, we’re using Wallace Stevens Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird as a model for looking at something in different ways. We might settle on 7 or 4 or 12 ways. Looking deeply and differently are the keys here. Are you with us? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on September 27th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

        This week, Susan Thomsen of Chicken Spaghetti is hosting Poetry Friday. I hope you'll take some time to check out all the poetic things being shared today. Happy Poetry Friday, friends! 

        Friday, July 26, 2024

        Poetry Sisters Write Want-Ad Haiku

        The challenge this month was to write haiku in the form of classified ads. It's been a doozy of a month for me for too many reasons to recount. Suffice it to say I missed our monthly Zoom and I dashed these off early this morning before a walk with the dog. We did promise ourselves that these prompts weren't about perfection, but drafts and sharing. In that spirit, I share these little insights into my state of mind these days. I know haiku don't traditionally have titles, but I really needed those extra syllables!

        Wanted
        one perfect poem
        ordered up like a taco
        drive-thru preferred

        Wanted
        one more day with mom
        skilled time traveler needed
        no fee too great

        Wanted
        one doppelgänger
        for household chores, work meetings
        signed, desperate for sleep

        Poems ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

        You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

          Would you like to try the next challenge? In August, we’re writing ekphrastic poems to photographs. Find an image that inspires you and write away. Are you with us? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on August 30th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

          This week, Marcie Flinchum Atkins is hosting Poetry Friday. I hope you'll take some time to check out all the poetic things being shared today. Happy Poetry Friday, friends! 

          Friday, June 28, 2024

          Poetry Friday is Here!

          Welcome to Poetry Friday! I'm so happy to be hosting you here today, especially on this last Friday of the month when my poetry sisters and I share the poems we've written to a new challenge. This month we wrote poems about wabi-sabi, with wabi-sabi as the title. In Andrew Juniper's book Wabi Sabi: The Japanese Art of Impermanence, wabi-sabi is defined this way. 

          Wabi-sabi is an aesthetic that finds beauty in things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete. Taken from the Japanese words wabi, which translates to less is more, and sabi, which means attentive melancholy, wabi-sabi refers to an awareness of the transient nature of earthly things and a corresponding pleasure in the things that bear the mark of this impermanence.

          In his book Wabi-Sabi Simple, Richard Powell described wabi-sabi as a philosophy that acknowledges a lifestyle that appreciates and accepts three simple truths: "Nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect." 

          We had a wonderful Zoom call on Sunday, during which we had a wide-ranging conversation about wabi-sabi. I really wanted to write in a form, so I decided to experiment with the tritina. The tritina is composed of 3 tercets and a final line (envoi) that stands alone. Similar to a sestina, though shorter, it uses a set of 3 alternating end words instead of six. The form is: ABC / CAB / BCA / A, B, and C (final line/envoi). As I was writing, it felt like I didn't have enough room to play, so I tried a sestina. That was disastrous, so the tritina is what I stuck with.

          Wabi-Sabi
          art and architecture value
          the golden ratio, the perfection
          of divine proportion, its pleasing beauty

          but what is beauty?
          what do our choices say about what we value?
          does the circular bell tower lack perfection

          because it leans? is perfection
          solid, straight, and tall? beauty
          lives in a cracked bell—liberty has value

          why value perfection when there is beauty in what is broken?

          Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

          You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

            Would you like to try the next challenge? In July we’re writing haiku that resemble classified ads or Buy Nothing group posts. Are you in? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on July 26th in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

            Please join the Poetry Friday party by leaving your link below, and don't forget to leave a comment to let us know you're here. Happy poetry Friday, friends!  

            **NOTE** 
            Denise Krebs was kind enough to point out that Inlinkz doesn't work for everyone. If you click on a link and Inlinkz won't connect, go to the upper right-hand corner of the "refused to connect" page and click on the X. That should take you to the site. If that doesn't work, leave me a comment and I'll link those pages here.

            You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

            Click here to enter

            Friday, May 31, 2024

            Poetry Sisters in Homage to Body Parts and Lucille Clifton

            This month's challenge was to write in the style of Lucille Clifton while paying homage to a body part, as she does in the poem homage to my hips. Our Zoom call was a week early this month, allowing for time off for Memorial Day weekend. We all bumped up against body image and body weariness (a much better word than age) issues. Considering our bodies in this way was deeply humbling.

            After many stops and starts on poems about various body parts (feet, calves, ears), I have two drafts to share. I haven't mastered Clifton's tone, but it was fun to try.

            homage to my brain

            this brain is a big brain
            not genius big, but
            packed with Jeopardy categories'
            useless facts big.
            this brain is a science brain
            a nerdy brain
            that muses on temperature and pressure
            and the solubility of carbon dioxide in water
            when soda goes flat.
            this brain is a pessimistic brain
            sometimes apocalyptic brain
            filled with existential what-ifs
            prompted by social media
            and doom scrolling.
            this brain is a noisy brain
            a disobedient brain
            refusing to quiet
            standing in the way of
            a good night’s sleep.

            homage to my feet

            these feet are powerful feet
            they have marched
            in formation and run
            hilly miles. these feet
            are expressive feet
            oozing with joy in
            going barefoot in the grass
            dipping into tepid pools
            soaking in a warm, salty tub.
            these feet are pilgrim’s feet
            climbing mountains in Tibet
            or walking the serpentine
            path of a labyrinth
            every step a meditation
            and prayer. these feet are
            political feet, walking miles
            in communion, standing
            up for people and
            the planet.

            Poems ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

            You can find the poems shared by my Poetry Sisters at the links below. 

              Would you like to try the next challenge? In June, we’re writing poems about wabi-sabi, with Wabi-sabi as the title. In Andrew Juniper's book Wabi Sabi: The Japanese Art of Impermanence, wabi sabi is defined this way. 

              Wabi-sabi is an aesthetic that finds beauty in things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete. Taken from the Japanese words wabi, which translates to less is more, and sabi, which means attentive melancholy, wabi-sabi refers to an awareness of the transient nature of earthly things and a corresponding pleasure in the things that bear the mark of this impermanence.

              In his book Wabi-Sabi Simple, Richard Powell described wabi-sabi as a philosophy that acknowledges a lifestyle that appreciates and accepts three simple truths: "Nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect." Will you write with us? Good! You have a month to craft your creation and share it on May 31st in a post and/or on social media with the tag #PoetryPals. We look forward to reading your poems!  

              This week, Janice Scully at Salt City Verse is hosting Poetry Friday. I hope you'll take some time to check out all the poetic things being shared today. Happy Poetry Friday, friends!

              Tuesday, April 30, 2024

              NPM 2024 - Book Spine Poem 30

              For National Poetry Month this year, I am perusing my bookshelves and building book spine poems. Since someone pointed out I'd written poems about spring, summer, and fall, I knew I couldn't leave out winter.


              Zero is the leaves on the tree
              How do you know it's winter?
              Animals
              snack, snooze, skedaddle
              snowflakes fall
              Old bear
              time to sleep
              wait, rest, pause
              Footprints in the snow
              bear snores on
              Time flies
              On a snow-melting day
              snowman - cold = puddle
              Wake up world!
              Spring is here

              Poem ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2024. All rights reserved.

              Sources
              • Zero Is the Leaves on the Tree by Betsy Franco, illustrations by Sino Arihara
              • How Do You Know It's Winter? by Ruth Owen
              • Picture This: Animals by Margaret Hynes, illustrations by Andy Crisp
              • Snack, Snooze, Skedaddle: How Animals Get Ready For Winter by Laura Purdie Salas, illustrations by Claudine GĂ©vry
              • Snowflakes Fall by Patricia MacLachlan, illustrations by Steven Kellogg
              • Old Bear by Kevin Henkes
              • Time to Sleep by Denise Fleming
              • Wait, Rest, Pause: Dormancy in Nature by Marcie Flinchum Atkins
              • Footprints in the Snow by Mei Matsuoka
              • Bear Snores On by Karma Wilson, illustrations by Jane Chapman
              • Time Flies by Eric Rohmann
              • On a Snow-Melting Day: Seeking Signs of Spring by Buffy Silverman
              • Snowman - Cold = Puddle: Spring Equations by Laura Purdie Salas, illustrations by Micha Archer
              • Wake Up, World!: A Day In the Life of Children Around the World by Beatrice Hollyer
              • Spring is Here: A Bear and Mole Story by Will Hillenbrand

              It's hard to believe this is the last day of April and the last book spine poem for a while. You can find all the poems I've written this month on the Book Spine Poems page. I can't thank you enough for joining me on this journey.