Wednesday, January 15, 2014

To The Stump In my Garden

Day 7- Take a walk until you find a tree you identify with, then write a poem using the tree as a metaphor for yourself or your life.

To the stump in my garden that has begun to sprout
Mere days after its branches have been shorn:
Teach me whatever lessons you have learned

How to give thanks for your still solid roots
And how to recalibrate the hardened fibres of your bark
And make life once more.

Lemons

Day 5- Write a three line poem about lemons without using the following words: lemon, yellow, round, fruit, citrus, tart, juicy, peel, and sour.

My mouth puckers at the taste
But it is not without a lesson:
Take nothing without a pinch of salt

In Your Old Age

Day 3- Find the nearest book (of any kind). Turn to page 8. Use the first ten full words on the page in a poem. You may use them in any order, anywhere in the poem.

Senescence is the great equaliser.
great men, average men,
men of faith, men of none
living life with the promise
that some of its secrets will be revealed
but all you will ever learn
are verbs like forgetting
and dying.

Upon Review

Day 2- Who was the last person you texted? Write a five-line poem to that person.

I cannot write about you.
Poetry reveals truths
And I cannot hear those truths
Without revealing hurts.
I still have not healed from your last wounds.

Light Pollution


“the light reveals all
sins,” she always said. but the
dark shows me the stars.

Updates

Last October I attempted a 30 poetry challenge. I didn't get very far, but I'll be posting a few of the poems I didn't hate here.

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Back Home

(Lyrics from Back Home by Andre Tanker)

 
i went away / i leave an i come back home / i come back to stay / i must see meh way

It feels as though every time I leave, it takes longer to come back.
first six months, then nine, now ten–
as if they have been grooming me to leave forever.
I ask myself how people could leave for years and years and never look back?

not even once?
But the truth is, it gets easier.
What is one year more when you’ve been gone for five?
or ten?

or twenty?

i went away / i leave an i come back home / i come back to stay / i must see meh way

 Each time I fear that she will not take me back.
I think anyone who has ever left home for length of time can tell you about that fear
that you have changed too much to go back to the place
that you cannot call it home without a sour taste in your mouth.
You don’t live somewhere without it changing you and can’t come back without those changes
Whether is a yankee accent, or an expectation of something better.

i went away / looking for another home / tried to run away / run way from my destiny /

Yuh see, we is d people who does come back sayin ting like
“Well back in Canada…”

in another world / a world that was strange to me / tried to change myself / change my identity

But what we doesn’t tell yuh is how we don’t fit there either
Because whatever Canada or New York or England or other northern promised land we have created
Despite the efficiency of public transit or the cheapness of “food”
We know that we will never really be more than our hyphenations
Than our exotic accents
Than our otherness.

Calling there home gives you that sour taste too.
You can’t live somewhere without it shaping you, and you can’t leave without taking whatever idea of home you had with you.

i went away / i leave an i come back home / i come back to stay / i must see meh way