Tuesday, July 09, 2013
Confession Tuesday - the Celsius Edition
Tuesday means confession time and I confess that I'm feeling a little punctual today so let's head to the confessional.
Reader it has been a week since my last confession and
this seems all a bit circular if you know what I mean.
I confess that I wanted to surprise my wife by cooking something new from a recipe book of quinoa dishes. This idea came to me because Cathy has utilized quinoa in cooking - though not in ways that particularly seemed appealing to me. We both like stuffed peppers. I've made them with ground beef and ground turkey and when I saw a recipe for stuffed peppers with quinoa I thought this would be a great dish for us to try together so I embarked on it tonight.
When I make stuffed peppers I usually do it in the oven & use a Pam like spray on the peppers. At say 350 degrees. This recipe called for them to be submerged in warm water and cooked at 180 for 10 minutes covered and another 5 minutes uncovered. I thought this was incredibly below temperature and time but I trudged on with the cooking. I confess while I deep down knew this was not possible it never occurred to me that the recipe was in Celsius, hence it would have been about 400 in Fahrenheit. Consulting with my wife we made necessary changes and went on successfully finish the dish. I confess that in spite of my lack of common sense we were able to create a really enjoyable dish.
I confess that this week I've wasted way too much time playing Words with Friends. My wife got it on her new phone and she got me to playing it again. I've had something like #%*!( games going at once.
Some of this may be because the past few days I've had problems with my laptop and it has frustrated me and caused me to get off track on writing and the has emotionally drug me down. I know this is no excuse - simply a reason. I've spent too much time on the phone with tech support and this thing is going back. Then I resort to playing games. Vicious cycle.
Sunday, July 07, 2013
Hardly Worth Mentioning
A poem I wrote several years ago found a home at Punchnel's.
Hardly Worth Mentioning is the second poem of mine to appear in Punchnel's Magazine these last two months.
I always find interesting material in Punchnel's...It's a fun stop on the Internet and not just because of my work. ;-)
Friday, July 05, 2013
You Are WHO You Are
“Today you are You, that is truer than true. There is no one alive who is Youer than You.” Dr. Seuss
Thursday, July 04, 2013
Yeah for the Simple or No Xanax Required
I spent close to two hours today with support trying various methods to disable the touchpad. This is something that is supposed to be option. Pushing the Fn button and the f9 buttons should disable it, but no, not for me. We tried numerous other possibilities which always came up empty. Tried uploading other files and setting changes - nothing. I finally gave up for the afternoon. I refused to do a refresh as that would have meant reloading programs. I was not up to that tonight.
A few minutes ago I did the Fn & f9 buttons (something I've tried repeatedly and Walla! They worked! I'm typing this without the touchpad miss-interruptions. It's really cool! I'm a happy person again.*
*No Xanax was used in the creating of this happiness.
Tuesday, July 02, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Keep Calm Edition
Yet another week has come and gone. Won't you come with me to the confessional?
The planetary alignment is not presently good for the vehicles in our family. We have multiple car issues that have all hit at once. I confess that car problems are a big stressor for me. Fortunately we have not had a lot of them lately but the astro-vehicular alignment was like a plague yesterday and we are still dealing with the repercussions and likely will be for a couple days more. My poor tired daughter picked me up from work, took me to the chiropractors tonight and then my final destination for the evening. She still has places to be yet tonight. I confess I appreciate her help but feel for her and her late nigh driving saga.
With the 4th of July holiday falling on Thursday I confess that I feel cheated. Monday or Friday would work quite nicely. I'm pinning for a 3 day weekend and I cannot lie. I confess right now I have the melody for "I like big butts and I cannot lie" running through my head and an the words "big weekends" substituted for rumps. It's a little weird, I'll give you that.
I got some really good poetry news yesterday but I confess that I cannot share it just yet.
I confess that I'm reading in my Kindle more lately. I confess I STILL prefer real pages in binding. I do like the convenience of it and the % as opposed to page numbers.
I've debated some things lately with respect to my poetry and these little internal debates while not new, have presented with levels of clarity I've not been accustomed to. This is good because it means that I've not been fretting as much about such things as do I enter this contest; to I submit the work here or there and then being a piece with myself after the deadlines have passed.
I think I'm becoming a calmer poet. This also seems to be crossing over into other aspects of my life. I confess that this feels like a good thing.
Amen
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Confession Tuesday - My Passions Edition
It's been one more wedding anniversary, back to back home runs and a Saturday off from submitting and writing and yes, one more week since my last confession.
Saturday being our wedding anniversary I took a break from both submitting and writing so that we could get out of the house and celebrate without distraction. We succeeded in doing so and I did not worry that the sky would fall in. I confess that it would not have been surprising for me to freak out about not at least submitting if not writing, but I was proud of myself, maybe a bit relived even that I did not stress out. I was able to separate myself completely from any obsession that I changed my routine. It really was refreshing to feel the detachment.
My son and I went to the ball game on Sunday and amazingly the Royals had back to back home runs. Almost as amazing they won. They have had little offense of late. Of course when it comes to baseball I confess my heart really belongs to San Francisco.
A few days ago I read an article about another article. And then another about the same article (of the second part). Okay, if this is getting confusing the article about which all others pointed was a Harper's essay by Mark Edmundson titled Poetry Slam or the decline of American Verse. The Edmundson Essay sits behind the Harper's paywall, and I'm not a subscriber so I've not seen the real thing. (That too is a confession) Edmundson at least by the quotes from other responses I've read was pretty harsh in his assessment of the current poetry scene. I've talked with a couple of other poets who have read the responses but again not the Edmundson essay. It's funny but such discourse about poetry/poetics often remind me of hot stove league. If you are not into baseball, the hot stove league is the chatter that of the happens off season between baseball fans pining for the real thing. They debate possible trades, theoretic benefits of such player swaps between teams. I confess I have long seen similarities between poetry and baseball. It's no wonder I love both.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Can A Person Be Reading Too Many Books?
The fact is I do often read multiple books and quite frankly I'd say eight-ish is likely an accurate count if I were to sit down and list them. Do others have a ongoing host of books commanding their attention at one time? I haven't even mentioned the poetry books on my night stand that I've already read but continue to go back to from time to time, often in the evening to read two or three random works before I retire.
Yes, I could finish books faster if I stuck to one book at a time, but my mind gets easily fragmented into different areas and causes me to in any given week want to be feeding my divergent interests. Is that such a bad thing?
I guess what I am wondering is... am I an enigma? Please, someone tell me that I'm not the only person who scatter reads multiple books at one time. Humor me, even if you would never think of it.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Ginsu Knife Edition
Close your eyes with me and pretend it's Tuesday. Are you with me? Good!
It's been one father's day, one chiropractic visit, a new poem in publication and a June week since my last confession.
I confess that it feels like we've transitioned into summer and that's all right with me. I'm not one who does heat well, but so far it has not been that bad. I realize the hottest part of the year is still ahead, but I have spent some time reading and occasionally writing on our deck as the dogs play. I confess that it may be early to be singing the praise of summer but I am going to try and embrace the spirit of summer. At least for now.
I confess that having three poems accepted in less then 48 hours last month has spoiled me. I am well aware that this was a most unlikely occurrence. I've had thee in one month before but never in two days. Having started Submission Saturday some months back, I confess that I am more optimistic about my work being published. I hate to think of it like this but being published is a little like selling Ginsu knifes or encyclopedias door to door; metaphorically speaking that is. You have to hear "no" a lot if you are ever going to get one "yes".
I confess another thing about June that is exciting is the fact that many of the shows we like to watch on TV are coming back into their new seasons. Yeah.
I had a dream last night that my wife and I attended our class reunion. This was pretty interesting since I confess I've never attended my class reunion. I've wanted to but Cathy has had no interest in attending with me. Don't get me wrong, she has never discouraged me from going, she just has never had any desire to go along. I've never wanted to go alone. So last night in my dream we went together. This morning I could only recall one person out of all the attendees that we know. I confess going wasn't worth it.
That will about do it for this week. Until next week, keep pushing your Ginsu knifes.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Toy Soldiers - Summer Issue of Boston Literary Magazine
- Tewksbury Mental Hospital by Elaine Moynahan
- The Gift by Corey Cook
- How We Too Haven't Stayed Young by Rene Lee
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Amazon sales of Orwell's 1984 rise 9,500%
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Confssion Tuesday - On Time Edition
Dear Reader...
It's TUESDAY and it's confession time. I confess that I cannot recall how many weeks it has been since I actually confessed on Tuesday. I've been late, late, late. I'm thinking it's been three, maybe even four weeks since I last got it right.
Tonight I got together with some other poet friends in the northland. We read and wrote and it was all good. I confess that I realize that I need to get out more to readings & other events.
The past few weeks I've been hooked on Scandal. I confess that I often catch on to TV shows multiple seasons into to them. My wife and I both have been zipping through two seasons and wow - the shows are captivating. Honestly I was hooked 15 seconds into the first episode. My daughter Cathy Ann turned us on to it.
I'm keeping my fingers crossed as I type this. I've had some issues with my new laptop and I hope that these issues are all behind. I confess I've learned one thing about Windows 8... it is designed to just start all over when you have problems. Neat? I'm not so sure. Anyway, I'm typing with crossed fingers.
I confess tonight I wrote a keeper at the poetry meeting. I will return to it in a day or two and start reworking it to see where it takes me.
I came home tonight thinking of watermelon. We have had two super sweet ones in the past week. I had that taste hanging onto my tongue all day. I confess it was all gone when I got home. Last year the watermelons were sub par and scrawny. I confess I'm looking forward to a replacement melon in the next few days.
Sunday, June 09, 2013
The Mag - 172 / Walled Memories
Saturday, June 08, 2013
Submission Saturday....
- last 12 months - 66
- submissions still pending 24
- accepted still pending publication 2
The Mag -171 / We Have Never Known
Thursday, June 06, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Um edition
I confess that I have toyed with changing the date but I suspect that would not work any better. If you get busy and forget, or as I confess the case was Tuesday night, I took my daughter to a ballgame then crashed and burned when we got home.
I confess I have not written much since the weekend. I've actually thought about taking a short break and while I ruled this out I realized if I haven't been writing much I already have essentially taken a break of sorts. Are you starting to realize a theme here? Like say confusion?
But let's go back to Tuesday night. I Confess that as much as I love baseball, being there with my daughter was the real treat. My wife and I used to go to games sometimes together but she doesn't like the heat, humidity, scorching sun (pick one) that normally is associated with the game. I don't blame her for that. Still, I confess that miss her at games.
At the game Meghan and I saw an interesting bird on the guy wire that held up the net behind home plate. Using my Audubon phone application we determined it must have been an Orange crowned Warbler. This was a cool memory of the ballpark, as was Gordon's throw from left field where he nailed the runner on what seemed like a sure fire double. I confess the Royals offense sucked. But you find you moments in a game where you can. Sometimes the bats aren't happening.
I confess that I still recall today as the day Robert F. Kennedy died. Having won the California Primary on the night of June 5th I still recall shortly after excitedly hearing clips from his victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel in LA, the news wires were abuzz with word of him being shot a close range in the hotel. I was in school back then and I recall that we had a class picnic planned at Tower Park. Several of us stayed glued to a transistor radio for reports on his condition throughout the morning.
Last weekend I had to go up on our roof and make a repair in a leak around a vent in our roof. I confess that my knees are just beginning to feel within a normal range from my roof trip. If they remain of only minimal discomfort I plan to get my bike out a ride a bit this weekend. Of course that also depends on having a weekend that is not all showers.
I confess my head feels a little clearer now. Maybe confession has been a good thing. I confess my lunch our is about over and I need to get back to work.
Saturday, June 01, 2013
Submission Saturday - On Deck
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Feeling A Tad Bit Overwhelmed - RECOMMENDED READING
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Confession Tuesday on Wednesday - Bad Habit Edition
Forgive me readers:
Yes it's been a week but I could swear it should be longer so I have even less excuse. I confess I firmly believe it should be Friday. When you think about it that is pretty pathetic since I had a Monday holiday. That on top of a week's vacation!
Travel is tiring to me so the vacation was a bit draining. I confess I love flying but everything else with travel, time zone changes, the hurry here and hurry there, these things try my patience.
I confess that I am ready to send out some new material this weekend when I do Submission Saturday.It always excites me when I have new material to send out. Still, I can't help it, I worry that I should have tinkered with it longer as soon as it drops into the mailbox or I hit the send button.
I confess I still have dirty clothes from the trip and I need to do laundry tonight.
I confess that I need to get up and let the dogs out as they are looking at me in a most perturbed manor.
Until next week - may all your habits be good ones!
Monday, May 27, 2013
Journal Bits - May
May 2nd - This morning traffic snarled but couldn't keep me away. I arrived in time to resent being here, to resist the start of the day without success.
May 6th - The weekend was uniquely positive in terms of writing... Three poems accepted for publication within 48 hours is so exciting and unfortunately sets a new bar that I'm sure I will not often reach again - but there is hope like the stars, I can look from the distance and dream.
May 7th - If the sun sets today on my life/I will not disappoint the cartographer/for my journey will be one that is not/subterranean but rallies around/dancing light and open byways.
May 9th - two books in the mail today from Martha Silano - her own The Little Office Of The Immaculate Conception and Radial Symmetry by Katherine Larson. Woot!
May 10th - I tend to isolate things like bird songs/or the lessor popped kernels of corn./Or things my wife says with special emphasis/on the details detached from major points.
May 12th - yesterday I thought a workshop to eight writers... then in the evening I sent out three poems.
Time has been unfriendly to me and I left my sanity in the midst of a new operating system on a computer that is pounding the blood vessels against a phantom anvil inside my head.
May 22nd - In Tempe, AZ for Meghan's wedding - It's been a lazy sort of day... I've finished a poem draft today and got some reading done. Trying to be open to another poem coming to me....
May 23rd - The bubble wrap is gone/the thing now is just/boxed delight - fragile.
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Late
It's been a grueling week and a day since my last confession.
I confess the obvious.... I'm a day late.
I'm on vacation - day three now but it hardly seems like it. I confess that I traveled 1,354 miles more or less to arrive at my destination (Phoenix) yesterday and I am wiped out. I feel as if I could have flapped my arms to get here rather than by jet. Some of that is because my last week at the office was an intense one trying the leave less on the burner for others to deal with and make my return less stressful as well. I confess the latter never seems to work.
The flight on Southwest wasn't too bad. Only a little turbulence in the early going and I expected it given the turbulent weather in the Midwest these past few days. I haven't flown in a while and I generally enjoy it. When I fly I confess I'm a window hog.
I took a brief swim this morning and it did loosen up the stiff mussels. I confess I really am going to need a nap today. I do have some quiet time available for writing and I intend to make use of it.
We are here for my daughter's wedding and I confess that that I am both excited and anxious about it. I'm very happy for her and I want her wedding day to come off perfect. I confess I'm not sure what that would look like, but I have ideas about what it might not look like. I realized they rarely are picture perfect but I want her memories of it the be good ones. Happy ones. Lots of friends and good time.I confess I love the scenery in Arizona but hate the heat. How people live here I cannot imagine.
I confess I had diet coke withdrawal earlier but I'm halfway through a 44 oz and doing better now.
My prayers have continued to flow for the people in Moore, Oklahoma. I can only imagine how hard it must be for those homeless there now not to mention families that have lost loved ones.
This morning my cell rang and it was our disposal company with a message that trash pickup next week would be pushed back a day due to the memorial day holiday. Even during vacation, life goes on.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Submission Saturday Starts in 30 Minutes
It sucks when you have work out that is waiting someplace you'd like to see if find a home and don't want it to submit it any place else till you here back. I do a lot of simultaneous submissions but there are pieces that I really want to control more where they might end up. Getting picky I guess.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Busy Week Edition
It's been two weeks, three poems accepted, one new laptop and a poetry workshop since my last confession.
I confess that I have this mysterious pain that comes and goes just below my right waste-line. It's been doing this off and on for a while now and I've gone to the doctor they can offer no explanation so far. Labs are fine, no bladder infection, x-rays show nothing extraordinary. Sometimes I'll go a while with nothing and then the pain can be bad enough to keep me awake parts of the night. It's good to know some of the things that have been ruled out but it remains frustrating just the same.writers
Saturday morning when the sky was bright with invitation I was conducting a poetry writing seminar with 8 writers who could be out soaking up the sun rays but were instead sitting around tables doing writing prompts for three hours. I confess that I was appreciative to have such an attentive group to work with.
My new laptop is an ASUS & it has windows 8 operating system on it. I have been a Tashiba user for a long time. I did not pick this one out. My wife and computer savvy daughter did. Windows 8 dealt me a fit the first two days. It's still not my favorite platform but I am getting the hang of it.
It's been a pretty good week... And I've had three new poetry books delivered by the postman since the weekend you can't get much better then that.
Wednesday, May 08, 2013
Poem Up On Punchnel's
Sunday, May 05, 2013
Feel Good Delivered By E-Mail
I know we can't always have what we want but it really feels good to get several poems accepted over two days as opposed to several rejection letters over two days.
This is just another example of my Submission Saturday venture paying dividends.
Worked on some re-writes today. I'm trying to put together about three more pieces that need some fine tuning so that they can be ready for prime time too.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Confession Tuesday - feeling life edition...
Friday, April 26, 2013
Why Poetry Can be About Anything
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Confession Tuesday - stalking death edition
Dear reader:
Tuesday night and I've just got home a short while ago. It's been a long-long week since my last confession and I'm ready to get this over with so I can put it behind me and move on and unwind tonight.
My wife used to talk about driving a fast 45 MPH or a slow 45 MPH. But 45 is 45 right? I guess it's kind of like time. Twenty-four hours is twenty-four hours and yet some days seem like an eternity, and extrapolated a week of those kind of days are like, a week of eternities. My mother-in-law decided to stop dialysis recently and of course the result of that is that the body will finally shut down, death becomes imminent. Her decision has dictated much of the past ten days or so. My wife has been dutifully at here bedside some of every day. In many instances spending the night with her. I've watched her (my wife) attempt to find some degree of normalcy each day where there is nothing normal. I know this is far more difficult for her then myself, but I confess it's not easy to watch my wife go through this with her.
There have been several times that we thought, or someone would convinces us that it was her time. Her time has really been taking it's time. I got a call from her today at work and rushed home to run her out there. She had not planned to go out till tonight but they called from the care facility to tell us they though the family should come out. On of here brothers had been there all day and they had been in touch throughout the day.
Oh, and they said they were putting out refreshments for the family. Refreshments? Really? I confess this seems a little circus like.
We went out and were joined by other family members. Honestly she looked pretty good. Her breathing pace has slowed but she was not breathing labored. She is in a sleep. Some occasional facial expression changes though not many. She once sort of squinted open her eyes. Cathy ended up staying the night (as she had planned) but she and I agree, Mom is not looking like tonight is the night.
There are aspects of our life that seem on hold. Only because of the uncertainty of the end time. Each day is another possibility. I know Cathy hopes it is sooner then later. She has at times asked me to pray that it comes soon. I confess that I feel uneasy with such prayers.
In the meantime, death (a subject that clearly takes me outside my comfort zone) seems to dominate my day and night and I have no control over it.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Submission Saturday
One rejection letter so far this week. It was a journal I had not tried before.
I have a poem that I am nearly ready to move out of the draft garage this week and park it with the other work that I submit from. I've got several drafts that are keepers that are approaching that same nearly ready for prime time status but I don't like to push these along too fast as much as I'd like to. I have I've always believed in that I've sent to several journals without success and I am thinking of messing around with it some more to see if I can get a new perspective on it before I send it out again.
Tuesday, April 16, 2013
Confession Tuesday - petty anger edition
I confess that I did not confess last Tuesday and I don't remember for sure why - except that it has been a crazy time these past week to 10 days and if I would pick most any night last week I could tell you with certainty I was exhausted and on low function by the time I got home most evenings.
I finished off a journal, switched out the copy with a refill from my journal binder yesterday. I confess a brand new journal refill always leaves me feeling fresh and hopeful. I'm weird that way. I guess my hope is that the new journal will have smoother flowing hand writing, less crossed out or scribbled things, and perhaps more interesting writing in it. See how naive I can be?
Sooner or later it was bound to happen... I fell off the NaPoWriMo wagon this week. THIS is why I don't like doing it. This is the same reason I dislike New Years resolutions. What part of doomed do people (me) not get? I am however going to move forward writing a poem today and hope that over the next week I can catch up and finish out the month with 30 poem drafts. No promises though...
This morning my wife dropped me off at work and kept the car so that she could drive out an check o her mother in the nursing home. I saw that someone was in my designated parking spot in the lot. I have to tell you that I was angry about this, even though I was not going to need the spot today. Sitting at my desk, I was fuming about it until I started feeling petty about it. Then I confess that I rationalized that the driver (who has been warned this is designated parking) had no idea that I would not be driving today and still had the nerve to take the spot. But then I felt petty again.
Sunday, April 14, 2013
The Tax Culture & Finding a Little Happiness
April 15th is a day the tends to resonate in the mind of Americans. It's a date that's particularly memorable to us. Ask a married couple what day he/or she proposed and they often won't know right off. What day is Tax Day? April 15. Bang... right away they know the answer.
In American culture taxes have become tied to death as two things you can't get out of. It's no wonder April 15 has become such a dreaded but easily remembered day. In recent years various businesses have played on this trying to evoke some cheer and pleasure in the lives of ordinary people by offering give-a-ways... food and other items of cheer.
This year I've searched for some of the Tax Day Perks and found some interesting things.
- Between 6PM and 8PM stop by participating Cinnabon bakeries and get free Cinnabon bites. A little sweet to make you smile.
- Arby's offers curly fries & potato cakes all day Tax Day with coupon. This is their third annual give-a-way & what's better on such a day then comfort food?
- Office Depot will do up to 5 lbs of shredding for free with coupon on Tax Day
- Get a Tax Day Rib-bate for 2 for $10.40
- White Castle - 15% off entire purchase on Tax Day with coupon.
- Free HydroMassage on Tax Day through April 19 with coupon..
- Sorry, this was for early filers but In LA and San Francisco you could get a "brand new" Trojan Vibrator while supplies last on Thursday and Friday. (Glad they were new). Anyway, this stimulus package may be the most innovative yet.
Friday, April 05, 2013
Thought for the Day
Thursday, April 04, 2013
Wednesday, April 03, 2013
Celebrating Poetry
Meanwhile I've completed poem #3 on the third day of NaPoWriMo so I've not fallen off the wagon yet. (fingers crossed)
Recalling Dana Gioia's book of essays, "Can Poetry Matter?" I give you the following link to a Chicago Tribune story on Maj.General John Borling who writes poetry of survival.
Have you written or shared a poem today?
Tuesday, April 02, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Poet Crush List Edition
It's been one Giants Baseball regular season game, 6 & a half innings of another, one NaPoWriMo poem and one one week since my last confession.
April is that cruel month when some of us inflict the agony of 30 poems in 30 days on ourselves. I confess that I've stepped knee deep into this madness again this year. Some years I avoid the pressure and other times I just plunge right in. This is a plunge year.
This month being National Poetry month I though it would be a good time to update my Poet Crush List. I started doing this some time back and I believe the last time I did it was like May of last year. So almost a year and being April I thought it would be a good time to revisit the Crush List and revise it. As writers, we are supposed to be all about revision aren't we?
So my Poet Crush list is comprised of ten living poets. If I would do this three or four times a year it would likely fluctuate back and forth like undulating waves coming ashore sometimes what's left behind is familiar and sometimes it's new. With that in mind I will give you the new list and my last list.
NEW LIST - April 2013
I Confess these poets rock my world!!!
- Mary Biddinger
- Dean Young
- John Ashbery
- Denise Duhamel (new to List)
- Kelli Russell Agodon
- Stephen Dunn (new to list)
- Sharon Olds
- Natasha D. Tretheway (new to List)
- Diane Ackerman (new to List)
- W. S. Merwin
- W. S. Merwin
- James Richardson
- Sharon Olds
- Kelli Russell Agodon
- Dean Young
- John Ashbery
- Mary Biddinger
- Ada Limon
- Charles Simic
- Beth Ann Fennelly
Monday, April 01, 2013
WALL TO WALL POETRY - NATIONAL POETRY MONTH
It's National Poetry Month and NaPoWriMo month as well. I typically struggle about committing to NaPoWriMo as I have a sort of love/hate relationship with it. I don't really care for the pressure to create because I feel that it conflicts with the best physical and mental dynamic for good writing. I have no problem writing daily and I strongly believe in it. But saying I'm writing a poem every day of the month is a lot of pressure.
There are days it comes easy. There are days & nights that it's tough to birth a poem no matter how hard you try. I consider these all poem drafts because rarely do I ever write a poem in a single setting. I generally try to get something that shows enough promise to be a keeper - something that can be improved over time. But for the sake of NaPaWriMo, these are poems in the most primitive context.
If after 30 days I have 30 poems and 6 or 8 are real keepers, then that's an outstanding month. That is the bar I'm setting this year.
I am posting my daily work on a private poetry forum. This gives me some accountability and allows for some feedback but at the same time is is off the beaten path of the Internet so that the work is not truly published and I am free to work on these pieces for possible submissions down the road.
Are you participating? How do you approach it.?
I intend to be very active on my blog this month. Tomorrow is my normal day for Confession Tuesday. It's been almost a year since I did my last Poet Crush List. I'll be updating that list as part of my Confession.
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Confession Tuesday
Somehow I've managed to settle a lesser form of mental stimulation. I'm not proud about it.
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Dead Writers Cologne - How can you not be inspired?
I know you have a puzzled What? look on your face about now but consider according to J.T. Siems, "This blend evokes the feeling of sitting in an old library chair paging through yellowed copies of Hemingway, Shakespeare, Fitzgerald, Poe and more. The Dead Writers blend makes you want to put on a kettle of black tea and curl up with your favorite book."
Simes is the Seattle brain (or nose) behind this enterprise. It's a unisex blend and it's available here.
*Note this is not and endorsement of the product. I have not tried it but it is curiously intriguing.
Pope Peeps
What would Easter be without Peeps? I love Peeps - probably not the best thing for diabetics. They do make a sugar free variety these days and they are not bad.
Fortunately for Catholics worldwide, well will not have to go through Easter without a Pope. And as you can see at the left, we has Pope Peeps thanks to The Monkey Cage. They outfitted a whole Papal Conclave of Peeps in red felt Cardinal suites. Is that not a crack-up?
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Lazy Edition
Another week has come and gone. Let's go to the confessional.
Dear Reader:
I confess that I'm being lazy tonight. I'm doing this blog post from my phone because I don't want to fire up my laptop.
I confrss that I've slacked off on reading. I have several books started and this psst week have not gotten much further into any of them. I hope to read some tonight when I finish my confession.
I have say that I enjoyed getting reacquainted with Bailey's Sunday. It's been a while since I have indulged in any. I confess I like it a little bit too much.
The past two nights I've had itchy eyes. I went out and bought some eye drops last night but I confess they are again annoying me. Right now i'm so annoyed by them I feel like poking them out. Ok, not really but obvioudly have had the thought enter my mind.
I don't know what it is but I've read a bunch of really good poems the past few days. These are for the most part from poets new to me. I confess it's strange that so many of them have struck me as especially enjoyable. Perhaps I will share links to some of them in a blog post later this week.
I confess that's all I have to give tonight. Have a good week...
Amen
Sunday, March 17, 2013
An Irish Blessing
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Hey Hey it's Saturday...
Ok, the big deal is this... I started organizing myself so that I do my submissions on Saturday. I just finished this week's. Yeah!
Last week was the start of this new plan/habit. Maybe it's too early to call it a habit yet, but I have accomplished my planned submissions now two Saturdays in a row. In addition, last Saturday I was an over achiever and submitted someplace in addition to my plan.
Now about the plan. I am trying to plan at least three months in advance. That assures a couple of things. Each quarter of a year I now want I need to do for that period of time. Since I check the reading dates I can make sure I'm getting material to the various Journals and venues that I want to be in and not miss their deadlines or like I've often done, realize on Friday night that a deadline is two or three days away and I've given no thought to what I'd be sending so in the pressure of it all I say, "F it" and just let it pass. "F it" is a well developed form of procrastination for me.
So you see, this not only affords me better control over my calendar of submissions but it also assures that I have time to explore the best fit for my work. Let's face it, if you don't take the time to explore best options and you just slap together three to five poems and send the out, can you really be surprised when they come back in your face rejected? If you want an editor to truly take time to consider your work, take some time and be thoughtful about what might be a best fit for the Journal you are submitting to. Are you always going to nail it? No, but it's better then throwing the spaghetti noodles on the wall to see if they stick.
I've said it before, I hate submitting work. I'd rather write then submit. But no one has ever come up to me and said "Hey, give me something, anything and I'll publish it." And if they did, I might not want to be in what they just published.
So from now on, if it's Saturday, It's Submission Saturday! I've actually felt good these past two Saturdays after achieving my submission objective. So maybe I'll start to like this thing. Or, at least not hate it so much.
In both instances I've felt so good when I was finished, since I was at my laptop I just kept on working either with rewrites or starting new stuff.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Confession Tuesday on Wednesday
Sunday, March 10, 2013
The Mag 159: The Cycle
Saturday, March 09, 2013
The Mag 158: All Is Spilled
Friday, March 08, 2013
Talking to Poems
Me, I'm transitioning from Diet Coke to Chardonnay. I've been working for several hours on a poem and our conversation had grown old and tiring so I've stopped for now.
Do you talk to your poems? Ok, more specifically your poems in progress. Drafts. First drafts, second drafts, twenty third drafts?
My conversation with this evening's poem-in-making has started out asking a single line where it would like to go. It said take me to the other side of what you just said. So I said ok and abridged. I asked what will we do after we've contradicted our opening line. I go no response. (sipping wine) I don't know about you but when I ask a direct question of a poem-in-making I expect at least that it will clear it's throat and appear to be thinking of a reply. I was about to repeat the question when it said you assume too much.
I'm not sure how I feel about a poem - especially one in the making assuming it knows what I'm assuming. I thought it important at this point to make it clear that I had no preconceived notions about where this poem was going. It quickly shot back, "Good!"
I studied my words on the page. Flipped a stanza. Cut some words. Another "Good" arose from the page. "You approve then?" I asked. I was told yes, but for the time being. I thought about moving the opening line to another location in the poem. Cautiously I was told that was worth considering, but encouraged to consider too making the opening line the title of the poem instead. I said I'd keep that in mind.
My head is spinning at this point and I suggested that I really thought it might me time to step back and let this all rest upon the page a while. Maybe overnight. There was a sigh... "No offense, but working with you can be tiring." I responded, "Oh, you think so?" and I saved the work in progress.
Tuesday, March 05, 2013
Confession Tuesday
Sunday, March 03, 2013
The Planning Poet
One thing I'm being is realistic. I'm not trying to send work to 10 places in one weekend. First, I want to be able to stay on a steady work schedule. The last thing I want to do is set myself up for failure from the start.
Knowing at the beginning of one week what publication I am focusing on that coming weekend allows me time for quality forethought to each submission package.
I've gone crazy cranking out submissions in the past like all in one weekend and they instantly cold for months. It's no secret, I said it many times before, I dislike the process of submitting work. Still, I'm well aware that it's all part of the process. Unless I'm just going to write and throw all my work in a trunk and forget about it, then I need to get real about my commitment to the whole process.
By the end of May, I'll let you know how this is all working out for me.
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Confession Tuesday - Recklessness and Poetry Edition
Dear Friends:
It's been a week and maybe 17 inches since my last confession.
I confess that if it's Tuesday, I'm confused. Or Snow Blind, or both! Confused because due to a big storm that dumped maybe about 11 inches (give or take) on us last Thursday - I ended up with a 4 day weekend when they shut down work. I go to work Monday but another winter storm advisory for Monday -Tuesday caused them to shut down again today. The conditions this morning were complicated by a mixture of sleet and snow. It looks like about another 6 inches on top of the previously 11. All of this change in work routine complicates my cognitive view of the calendar.
There was a very nice man that helped free my car on Thursday when I drove back from the office only 40 minutes after arriving when they shut everything down. I don't know his name but thank you!
I confess that if we have to shovel the drive for any additional snow, I have no clue where to put it. It's stacked out front about as high as it can go.
Normalcy is now abnormal and it is challenging in ways I'd never imagined. It's easy to feel stir crazy inside, but it seems so white every which way you look that everything outside looks the same so it's hard to feel there is much deviation inside or out.
I confess that Monday at the office it became clear that snow was not the only thing piling up. So were phone messages and work. I confess that it is to the point that being away from the office is not relaxing but stressful because at some point I will have to deal with what I can only imagine is a dam breaking and the work flooding everywhere.
Sunday I had the marvelous experience of auditing a Dean Young Master Class at UMKC. I confess that I am even more impressed with Dean Young then I was before and he had already been on my radar. What I found Sunday was that his whole view of poetry so fits into my own concept but he is able to articulate what that is far better then I have been able to.
I also had reservations to attend his reading/New Letters interview Monday night at the Library. Even as they were telling us mid-day that the impending storm was going to be severe enough that they would already shut down the offices the next day, I hoped that the evening weather would relent. I hoped that the Library would not cancel the event. I stayed in town at 5:00 instead of heading home. I checked with the library and they were closing the library at 7PM but the Dean Young event would go on. So with reckless abandon I chose to risk it and go to the event. By the grace of God the sky that looked so ominous held off until the event was over and I pulled into our drive. The the sleet came, then the snow.
I confess that I now have to read The Art of Recklessness: Poetry as Assertive Force and Contradiction.
I confess that I am trying not to think about the mountain of work growing at the office, but I think I can actually hear it and it's hard to ignore.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Really Good Weekend
- Audited a Master Class taught by Dean Young. It was both a thrill and a real learning experience.
- Yesterday I got some submissions out that I've procrastinated over.
- Surprise of the afternoon, Dana Guthrie Martin was at the master class and she recognized me and introduced herself.























