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 - 20. NaPoWriMo 2018 Week One
NaPoWriMo Week One
1.
A choice not made is still a choice,
Hidden deep, stifled voice
Until the dam bursts open wide
Exposed to all, nowhere to hide.
2.
Winter melds into spring
Juxtaposing white and warmth
Scoffing at the date
3.
Brown appliances
Green wallpaper
Lacquered wood table
With extensions for special occasions.
Pungent tang of liverwurst
And stench of limburger,
Tastier than their odors.
Pancakes with crisp edges
And butter-flavored syrup.
Chocolate and sugar
Blended together into a fudgy treat.
Laughter
Song
Numbered plastic cubes
Tossed on lime-green plastic coverings
Prompting exclamations
Or groans.
Occasions now commemorated
In silent photographs.
4.
The Keurig you gave me for Christmas
spews half a cup of bitter brew
full of grounds
and the acrid taste of vinegar
from attempts to clean the blockage
preventing the smooth passage
of dark liquid into the waiting vessel.
The broken machine occupied
Precious counterspace for years
Until it was relegated to the trash bin
To make room for a new appliance.
5.
Cats don’t have existential fears
Or crises of conscience.
Their greatest joy is to
Curl into the brightest sunspot
And simply be.
6.
Anomia
“I would like blue,” she says,
Reaching for the green pencil.
“It’s very drokar outside.
I can’t wait for spring.”
“Drokar?” I ask.
“Yeah, I hate shoveling it.”
“You mean snow.”
“That’s what I said.
Black is better for flowers,” she states
As yellow scribbles fill the paper petals.
7.
The kneeling gardener whispers to the hidden tulip,
“Claw and tear your way through rock and soil, so
Winter may run from this sign of spring.”
Prompts used:
2. Images of spring
3. Write about a room or rooms you remember from long ago—a kitchen perhaps.
4. What prompts me to miss you? Write a poem about missing a loved one, deceased or otherwise departed. You might center the poem on a simple object that calls thoughts of this missing person to mind.
7. Create a one sentence poem from a list of five or six words. I asked Aditus to send me a list of words and this is what he sent: Knee, tear, tulip, claw, run, rock, whisper, hide
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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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