Welcome to my National Poetry Month project for 2026, where I am playing with poetry by generating poems in playful ways. Today's poem was inspired by Haikubes.
The Miss Rumphius Effect
The blog of a teacher educator discussing math, science, poetry, children's literature, and issues related to teaching children and their future teachers.
Sunday, April 05, 2026
NPM 2026 - Day 5
Saturday, April 04, 2026
NPM 2026 - Day 4
Welcome to my National Poetry Month project for 2026, where I am playing with poetry by generating poems in playful ways. Today's poem was inspired by Metaphor dice.
Friday, April 03, 2026
NPM 2026 - Day 3
Welcome Poetry Friday friends.
For National Poetry Month this year, I am writing poems generated in some playful manner. I am using metaphor dice, haikubes, Paint Chip Poetry, Mad Libs, words cut from newspapers and magazines, magnetic poetry, an online poem generator, roll-a-poem, and more.
You can read my first two poems at the links below.
April 1 - Paint Chip Poetry - A Villanelle for Adam and Eve
Thursday, April 02, 2026
NPM 2026 - Day 2
Welcome to my National Poetry Month project for 2026, where I am playing with poetry by generating poems in playful ways. Today's poem was inspired by MadLibs.
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
NPM 2026 - Day 1
Welcome to my National Poetry Month project for 2026, where I am playing with poetry by generating poems in playful ways. Today's poem was inspired by Paint Chip Poetry.
They called each other friends in Eden’s shade
where nothing hid and every fruit was free
there was no hint their trust would ever fade
They laughed at all the easy choices made
till one sly snake said, “Taste and you will see”
they called each other friends in Eden’s shade
One bite, and suddenly the truth would wade
through blame — “Not me, not me! It must be thee!”
there was no hint their trust would ever fade
Their easy bond at once began to jade
their pointing fingers no one could foresee
they called each other friends in Eden’s shade
The garden watched as fault lines were displayed
as laughter soured to brittle irony
there was no hint their trust would ever fade
Expelled, they trudged where once they’d idly played
now less as friends than awkward company
they called each other friends in Eden’s shade
there was no hint their trust would ever fade
The gorgeous tapestry above, called The Garden of Eden, can be found at The Met.
For fun, I also wrote a limerick.
There once were close friends, Eve and Adam,
who wandered God’s bright, blooming garden.
But one fateful bite
turned their laughter to spite—
and trust slipped away as they hardened.
Poems ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2026. All rights reserved.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
National Poetry Month 2026 Project
It's that time of year. April begins tomorrow! I've spent the last few weeks thinking about my project for National Poetry Month. In 2025, as my NPM project overlapped with the 100 Day Project, I found myself feeling overwhelmed and pressed for time. Last year I took on the challenge of writing in a new form, an often new-to-me form, every day. This year, I'm going to give myself a bit of grace and open the door to playfulness. There is no theme this year, no specified form, no requirement other than to have fun. To that end, I give you this year's project.
Every poem I write this year will be generated in some playful manner. I'll use metaphor dice and haikubes, select paint chips, fill in a mad lib, use words cut from newspapers and magazines, try out an online poem generator, and give roll-a-poem a try.That's it for now. I'll see you tomorrow for the launch of NPM 2026.
Friday, March 27, 2026
Poetry Sisters Unravel the Ovillejo
Tanita set this month's challenge to write an ovillejo. Here's a bit of information about this form:
"…the “ovillejo,” an old Spanish verse form that means “tight little bundle.” “-ejo” is one of our blessed diminutives, and “ovillo” means “tangled ball of yarn.” The last line is a “redondilla,” a “little round” that collects all three of the short lines. The rhyme scheme is established, but the meter is at the poet’s discretion, although in Spanish the longer lines tend to be octosyllabic (8 syllables)."
Some sites suggest lines 1, 3, and 5 should ask a question and that lines 2, 4, and 6 answer them. Other sites suggest a pattern of a long line followed by a short line. The best description I found was at the site Astra Poetica.
I tried several of these variations, always beginning with the last line and working backwards. I'm not particularly happy with these and recognize that I need to play a bit more with them, but I do have two drafts to share.
This first poem uses a favorite line from the poem I wrote last month. The second uses a portion of a Mary Oliver quotation.
A Whale Breaches
Poems ©Tricia Stohr-Hunt, 2026. All rights reserved.
I hope you'll take some time to check out all the wonderful poetic things being shared and collected today by Marcie Flinchum Atkins. Happy poetry Friday!
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