Tuesday, March 06, 2012
Sunday, March 04, 2012
Meg: 107: What Phobia?
image by Sarolta Ban
He hides his nervousness behind a Mercurochrome mask
feels the grittiness of a public humiliation just the same
with no particular reason that he can articulate.
It's just the size of everything is so outlandish.
The rivers of mascara that flow like lava.
Mars and Jupiter staring him down.
What phobia should he choose
as he recoils from it all?
He has become the two legged atom
randomized and feeling underfoot
an ant fleeing as the real world trudges on.
Michael A. Wells
Saturday, March 03, 2012
Magpie 106: Canned Art
photo credit: Bob Adelman, 1965
Through the eye's prism
rows upon rows of Avant-Garde
a canned future
handy in a missile crisis -
it's all good- art saves!
Cut into it if you must.
Preserved for generations
to come - taste it - um good!
Michael A. Wells
Writer's Anguish
Daniel Kalder writing in the Guardian takes on the matter of writers who self-censor in a fascinating piece that opened my eyes with a bit of history about many authors who have penned work that they subsequently destroyed rather then all publication or in some instances sought and failed to keep the material from seeing the light of day.
Examples of writers and their anguish over what might be published and in the instance of Nikolai Gogol one has to wonder if his decision to burn his work was not more anguish then he could take as he stopped eating and died.
I generally have though of self-censorship more in terms of having ideas or simply general topics I am too uncomfortable to write about. I know these can be sources of great anguish and maybe at times hamper a writer from perhaps moving their work from say one level to something more profound. Maybe it isn't so much a specific idea or topic that would make that extraordinary piece but just having something, anything holding back is like putting a stopper in a bottle.
Interesting article - read it here.
Examples of writers and their anguish over what might be published and in the instance of Nikolai Gogol one has to wonder if his decision to burn his work was not more anguish then he could take as he stopped eating and died.
I generally have though of self-censorship more in terms of having ideas or simply general topics I am too uncomfortable to write about. I know these can be sources of great anguish and maybe at times hamper a writer from perhaps moving their work from say one level to something more profound. Maybe it isn't so much a specific idea or topic that would make that extraordinary piece but just having something, anything holding back is like putting a stopper in a bottle.
Interesting article - read it here.
Friday, March 02, 2012
On Being a Poet
"Being a poet is like having an invisible partner. It isn't easy. But you can't live without it either. Talent is only 10 percent. The rest is obsession." ~ Selma Hill, Contemporary Women's Poetry, 2000
Foreign Friday
It's a sad thing when you are writing a post for your blog and you feel like a visitor to it. I've been away from here a week and I also feel like I've been away from the life in general for a week. I've been sick and off work all week but should return on Monday after a followup doctor's appointment.
Things that somehow feel foreign to me....
Things that somehow feel foreign to me....
- Eating. I should lose a ton of weight but I know I probably won't. I've had days where all I ate was a bowl of Cheerios. One day it was a bottle of Glucerna. Another it was simply two eggs. Last night I had a small stake portion and some corn [the corn was the best part] and my wife must have thought I was pathetic. Part of it has been at time no appetite, but even when not my blood sugar numbers have been elevated substantially during this illness and that has caused me to be cautious about intake.
- Writing. I've done none other then attempting to make a journal entry which if I recall I left hanging in mid sentence.
- Poetry. I'm separating Poetry from Writing here only to demonstrate the magnitude of impact. The couple of times I would think about writing poetry it seemed I became nauseous feeling. I'm not saying I've suddenly fallen out of love with poetry just that my whole cycle-of-life thing has been tremendously impacted.
- TV. I seem to be able to tolerate it only in smaller doses.
- Shaving. This is not unusual for me when I'm sick as I generally will not shave when I'm under the weather.
- Driving. It's been a few days now.
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Friends
I did a poetry reading tonight at a Quaker House Church on a theme of war & peace. Not a big crowd but a friendly bunch... no pun intended.
Besides reading some of my own work I introduced them to a poem by Carolyn Forche and talked a little about the subtlety in her work and how effective she is with witness poetry without sounding preachy.
After a reading dry spell, this makes my second reading in two weeks.
Besides reading some of my own work I introduced them to a poem by Carolyn Forche and talked a little about the subtlety in her work and how effective she is with witness poetry without sounding preachy.
After a reading dry spell, this makes my second reading in two weeks.
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