Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
April Musings - 12. NaPoWriMo 2017 Week Two
Day 7
Prompt: Warning Poem - Let your poem imply a story through the narrator’s warning to another character.
Regret is a bitter pill to swallow, my dear.
Don’t let it consume you like an insidious disease.
Throw it out like the trash it is
Or, even better, burn it into oblivion.
Heed Dylan Thomas’ words and
Rage against the dying of the light.
When the circle closes and it’s your time to lie here,
Speak with pride about a life well-lived.
Run into open arms.
Write the Great American Novel – even if it’s only great to you.
Take the trip you’ve been putting off.
Tell those you love how you feel, even if those feelings aren’t returned.
It’s not too late to create your legacy, like it is for me.
Day 8
Another ‘warning’ poem. A bit lighter, this time. Dedicated to Mr. N. We tried our best… honest!
The next time you hooligans decide to
Wear your cleats while running through my yard,
I’ll turn the hose on you!
Maybe that will get the message across
Since your parents don’t care to.
It’s taken a lifetime to reach the perfect shade of green
And the right thickness—like a cushion for aching feet.
I don’t mind the extra money for the summer water bill.
The freshly-mown smell and diagonal pattern makes my
Weary heart happy.
Each chunk you rend like a predator consuming its prey
Takes a piece of my soul.
And don’t think I’m oblivious to the looks and comments, either.
I may be old, but I’m not deaf or senile.
If the hose doesn’t work, I have less pleasant ways to make my point.
So heed my words,
Damn kids.
Day 9
The prompt is to form a list of your mistakes so that it somehow becomes a poem.
List of Mistakes
1. William – We should have spent our lives together, but I was too stupid to realize it.
2. Richard – My virginity was a game that I lost.
3. Rodd – Not so much a mistake as convenient.
4. Javier – Desperation that led to heeding bad advice.
5. Peter – Life made sense for the first time, until my world shattered.
6. Being single – Either a mistake or a blessing, depending on the day.
Day 10
Prompt: Tell the story of one of your own scars or a scar on someone you love.
Wipeout
Self-propelled wheels fly over concrete,
As streaming hair tries to keep pace.
Freedom screams triumphant from within.
Concrete changes to gravel,
But legs continue to pedal
Faster and faster forward,
Then slam backward,
Causing tires to tilt
Precariously sideways,
Landing horizontally
in a spray of gravel
Now embedded in flesh.
Nurse Ratched’s vice-like grip
Is oblivious to writhing and screams
As the gravel is removed.
Day 11
Prompt: Write an Antidote poem, a lifebuoy for yourself that could work for others. A poetic antidote might be a prayer, a spell, a flood of gratitude, or a joke.
I am grateful for
Shrouded yellow eyes
And black velvet purrs.
Curled together contentedly,
You’re always within reach.
Day 12
Prompt: Write a full moon poem with a Buddhist feel — an Asian clarity, simplicity, and depth.
Lunar
Hypnagogic eye
silent sentinel
guarding a realm
where the absurd
is accepted.
Day 13
Headline poem. The exercise is to cut out headlines/words from newspapers or magazines and arrange them on paper to form a poem. I’ll also post a pic in the Gallery so you can see the visual form of my headline poem.
From behind my umbrella,
Who knows how many handsome strangers
I’ll bump into,
Fall back in love with.
Start fresh.
Adventures ahead
Will change everything.
- 7
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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