29 April 2022

Poem in Your Pocket 2022: "Nebraska"

As fires raged around our community in the fall of 2018, and people found out we were heading to Nebraska, the most common question I received was "Why Nebraska?" Isn't it just corn and tornadoes? Although stereotypes might (sometimes) be based in truth, although we have yet to experience a full-blown tornado since arriving--just a couple of warnings, this place is starting to grow on me. I spent my last two years of high school in the Midwest, and I like it. True, I miss the mountains, and I miss the beach, too. There's just something about the skies here, though.

Lately I've been trying to explore some of the literary history and poetic experience here in the state of
Nebraska. What I am finding is encouraging. So as I have searched for a poem for today, I wanted to find something that represents part of my experience with the cornhusker state. Side note: I still have not converted to Big Red.

A recent favorite, as witnessed by last year's post, is Ted Kooser. However, I decided to find something newer, a poet I had not read before. In Nebraska Presence: An Anthology of Poetry, edited by Greg Kosmicki and Mark K. Stillwell, I unearthed many gems, but I ultimately decided to go with "Nebraska" by Kelly Madigan Erlandson.

“Nebraska”

This is a place for things that take time. Long histories
that need to be unrolled and laid out across oak library tables,
with a hard-backed book set on each corner to keep them pressed open.
Here, we understand that shadows fold their wings and settle down
in midday, tucked underfoot like a coyote den the unschooled never
notice. We can see a fire in the next county, the smoke a thundercloud
of blackbirds twirling for fall, grouping and regrouping themselves
as though to remember something already lost, washed out
and splayed in the wet clay of the creek bed. You can drive
an entire afternoon here and not see a person, but all the way
the meadowlarks will be opening the doors of their throats,
letting out music like milkweed seeds delivered downwind.
You might start counting those birds after awhile, picture them
as mile markers on the telephone wires, wondering if you’ve seen
the same one over and over again. We have more stars here, so many
that strangers think there is something wrong with our sky, that it’s
fake or that Sioux women have beaded our night with constellations
not seen in Minneapolis or Memphis, fresh ones that we can give
names to as we lie on the hood of the car. We can call one Mountain
Lion Reclaims Ancestral Home, after the cougar who roamed up
a wooded thicket into Omaha this fall, ranging until the zoo director
shot him with a tranquilizer dart. Here we can keep naming star puzzles
until the threat of sunrise blues the black space above us.
This is a place for things that take time, the long stitching together
of soft spots in the heart, the wind across the Missouri River Valley
scooping loess into hills unlike any others on this continent,
seeds stored in the cellar of the prairie for a hundred years
patient for fire, unable to crack themselves open without it.
This is a place where disappointments deep as aquifer
can spill themselves out, fill up and empty again, as many times
as the wound requires. This is a place where a person can heal,
or choose not to heal. We have both kinds.
                                                                                  --Kelly Madigan Erlandson

If you want to play along, Here are the rules:

1. Find a copy of your favorite poem...or one that tickles you fancy today...or one that actually fits in your pocket. Finding in on your phone is okay, but it's always more human if you have transcribed it yourself and fold it up and put it in your pocket.

2. Carry your chosen poem around all day, ready to be shared. Don't forget to share with me!

3. Share the poem with people (friends, neighbors, complete strangers) throughout the day.

4. Soak in the awesomeness that is poetry!

5. Check my Instagram (@joeaveragewriter), Twitter (@joeavgwriter), or Facebook for the video of this year's poem!

If you want even more fun, check out my chosen poems from years past!

11 April 2022

Little Poems to Celebrate!

 I have been thinking how I wanted to celebrate National Poetry Month this year, and I told myself, "Self, we are not going to simply wallow into Poem in Your Pocket Day (April 29) and do nothing more." So I looked around through some old notes and I found these four little creations that I scribbled with my daughter on New Year's Eve 2019. Brooklyn wanted to write and draw with me before midnight, and this was the result. And somehow, they never found the light of day until now. We called our creations Cardboard and Crayon 'Ku. I joked about opening an Etsy shop. Maybe I still should. (Not really.)




Okay, no Etsy shop.

Whatever your poetic tolerance or potential (not directly correlative), take some time and celebrate a good poem today (not necessarily these). I'll be back later with something else.

16 February 2022

Climbing Back up the Rabbit Hole

My dad often jokes that he was so poor growing up that he couldn't even pay attention. (Rimshot, if you please.)

As an educator with over 22 years of experience, I've seen quite a few students not paying attention--to a lesson, to each other, to life, to themselves.

I am also guilty myself of not paying attention. My list of side quests is quite extensive. For example, instead of writing a syllabus for a new class, I am am writing a blog post. I have also become quite adept at Retro Bowl lately. We all go down the rabbit hole every once in a while, right?

Taken from https://imgflip.com/memetemplate/242759032/Distracted-Student

This morning I gave my composition class a work day--they have a research essay draft due next week, and between answering their questions and helping them refine their research questions, I read. And as I am wont to do while I read, I share short passages that cause me to ponder.

From All Learning is Social and Emotional: Helping Students Develop Essential Skills for the Classroom and Beyond by Nancy Frey, Doug Fisher, and Dominique Smith (2019), I dug out this nugget:

"In truth, any person's sustained attention is punctuated with intermittent loss of focus. Things seem to pop into our minds out of nowhere, and then we're off task or off-topic. The skill of maintaining attention, then, is not about extending one's attention span but rather about choosing to return to a task after attention has been lost. It includes noticing when attention has faded and having strategies to bring it back to full strength. These strategies can be as simple as writing a note about the thing that popped into your head and then returning to the task at hand, or taking a breath and refocusing" (p. 72).

A nervous smattering of chuckles came from a couple groups who were "working together." One girl piped up to the others: "Teach just outted y'all!" They cackled for another minute, but then we began an earnest discussion about study habits and what they needed to stay focused.

Now this may not be revelatory to many, but I think it makes a lot of sense. Someone else can explain the science, but the use of strategic metacognition works wonders for me (when I want it to). However, I believe that most students need to have these types of skills taught to them explicitly. That may come in the form of a study skills class, or simply being aware of themselves and their tendencies to become distracted.

If I can train my students simple strategies to get themselves back on task, the possibilities are endless!

So I am asking you few readers, what are some strategies that you use to get yourself back on track, especially when the task at hand is an onerous one? What makes up your ladder to climb back up the rabbit hole?

19 January 2022

Regaining a Bit of My Groove through Painting and Poetry (Inspired by Sunsets)

 Part I:

As you may or may not have noticed, I have not done too much writing lately...at least much that I have shared. And I think that my lack of production, coupled with lack of time dedicated to writing or other creative endeavors, has shaken a little of my confidence...or at least my creative confidence.

Part II:

Over the past two or three weeks I noticed an influx of sunset pictures on social media, too. And then I started noticing them again as I have had to run kids back and forth to rehearsals, to jobs, to the dentist, or to find a COIVD test. And I kept seeing them--all distinct from the previous day. Then the sunrises came, too, as I drove to campus each morning. For several consecutive days I drove blinded by beauty. My mind drifted through all sorts of metaphors regarding life, death, resurrection, the afterlife (and breakfast). It's a wonder I did not crash.

Part III:

Last Tuesday I was in charge of an activity for the 14-15 year old young men and women at church. Since Brooklyn falls into that age group, I asked her. She wanted to paint. Great idea. So I forced myself to create. I admit it was a struggle to come up with an idea at first, especially since I kept running back and forth with supplies for the teenagers (and they blasted the soundtrack to Disney's Encanto louder than should ever be played. Sidenote: (I am sick of Bruno!)

Part IV:

Right before I left the house, I saw an amazing sunset over the rooftops of my neighborhood. That became the inspiration for my amateur painting. After it was finished, I felt that it needed a poem, so I worked on that for the past few days. Now the desire to write and create and play is coming back!

Part V:

"Glory to Come"


Preparing

for His night shift,

the Master daubs the remnants

of today’s palette

over the blue-gray canvas,

sloshing purple and pink;

and with the waning light,

He rinses His brushes

through the clouds,

momentarily

spilling orange gold

around the edges.

 

The slipping sun winks

before sinking to black—

one last promise

of another masterpiece

to come.


Part VI:


As always, critiques and criticisms are welcome.

 

I think I'll post a little writing every so often...some polished...some rough. And I welcome any comments or criticisms or cupcakes you care to throw my way.