Showing posts with label National Poetry Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Poetry Month. Show all posts

23 April 2024

Another Call to Keep Writing Thanks to Nikki Giovanni

I love listening to Nikki Giovanni tell her story about her poem "A Bench (for Toni Morrison)." Today, as I read this poem to inspire my students to scribble a few words, it kicked my butt back into gear to write. After each of my failures to sustain a consistent writing habit, I inevitably receive a call to repentance. "A Bench" was mine today. (Poem all the way at the end of the post.)

Each time I pick up my pen from where and when I last dropped it, I tend to scratch out a few paragraphs (like these), often teeming with self-deprecating chastisement, and then I set a goal or two (usually one), and then I start anew in my quest to be a more consistent writer. As you now witness, my pitiful public penance is now penned (vomit-inducing alliteration very much intended this evening), and I get to move forward. However, this time I am not making any grand promises I know I will not be able to keep. I know that my professorial and ecclesiastical responsibilities reduce my personal time, but I do want to write more frequently. I now teach the Teaching Writing for Secondary English Teachers course at my university, and I know that I need to lead by example. I know that only writing produces text.

So here is my conundrum: I can squeeze in small chunks of time, but I need to be smart about where I direct my writing efforts. I have a few thoughts, but would genuinely appreciate some feedback from my teeny audience. (That's y'all.) Where should I direct my efforts?

Option A: random personal narratives and thoughts (as previously expressed on this blog and other random locations).

Option B: focus on more important life-defining moments in my personal history.

Option C: finish up the scraps of poetry I have been drafting over the past several years (or at least some of them).

Option D: look to write something professionally (teacher-practitioner style).

Option E: just write curriculum.

Option F: none of the above.

Let me know what you think, and I'll take Ms. Giovanni's advice. (Poem posted below.)

“A Bench” (for Toni Morrison)

benches aren’t just pieces of furniture

sure

we find them at rest stops where birds have stopped over

and truck drivers have pulled aside

to smoke a cigarette

(no matter how bad they are for you)

and yes

in fabulous museums we find

benches decorated sometimes

with gold or bronze

and the faces of the famous

sometimes we even find benches

among the poor

which are simply logs put across the other

or sometimes just bricks

piled and put deeply enough into the earth

to stabilize those who need comfort

 

but benches are actually

a metaphor

they are friends we call on sad days

they are two old ladies who bring

Duck Eggs when your Grandmother passes

 

they are a friend’s mother

who makes a quilt when she hears

you have lung cancer

and mostly they are the voice

on the other end of the phone

who says “Write”

when you are so sad at losing your mother

“Write” when you don’t know where to go

“Write” when the only person who can read you

is on a Cross

“Write”

because it is your job

“Write”

 

---Nikki Giovanni

 

 


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.

22 April 2015

A Poem or Something

Now that it is National Poetry Month, I should probably write a poem or something. But my first item is business is to remind you that this coming Thursday, April 30, 2015, we will be celebrating Poem in Your Pocket Day. If you aren't sure what that entails, check THIS LINK or THIS ONE or even THIS ONE.

Now the story about this new poem. Yesterday, during our class poetry slam in 5th period, I spouted the phrase "I don't throw points around like confetti" in response to a student comment regarding how few points I assign projects in relation to another teacher. I stopped, and a rather astute student saw my hesitation and quickly quipped, "Mr. Anson, you better write that down. That was some good word choice."

She was right, so I wrote it down. During 6th period I scratched out some notes. During 7th I wrote a rough draft. Today during passing periods I touched it up a little. I'm not completely satisfied, but I have been persuaded by those who have read it to share it as it is. Just know that it is still a rough draft.

“To the Student Asking If He Can Improve His Grade Two Days After Report Cards Have Been Mailed Home”

No,
you can’t
have extra
credit to supplant
the work
you never pretended
to care about
until judgment day
came
and sentence was
passed.

The fruits of your
incubated inattentiveness
and insistent procrastination
have matured,
and it’s time to harvest.

A crossword puzzle?
to replace
the argumentative essay
we spent four
weeks constructing in class,
you ask?

Are you serious?
Or do you struggle
in math, too?

I don’t toss
around points like
confetti;
class is not a party—
show up to be entertained;
it’s not Oprah—
you’re not going home
with an A,
or even a B,
just because you woke up
long enough for roll call.

No ice cream,
no presents,
no participation trophy
grades are awarded
for simply showing up
and depleting
the oxygen supply of my classroom;

no cake,
no microscopic cookie crumbs
fall to anyone
but the red hens who know
that life
will not be served
on a silver platter, or even a plastic tray
from the dollar store,
and who are willing
to scratch
and sow
and sweat
and tend
and reap
and create a future for
themselves.


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.