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 - 28. NaPoWriMo 2019 Week Three
NaPoWriMo Week 3
*warning - #20 contains disturbing content
Poem# 14
Peas
Green bombs
Lurking behind potato or beef
Waiting to explode their vileness
On the unsuspecting.
Poem #15
June
Laughs and dances like a bubbling brook,
Swirling and twirling
Splashing against immobile rocks,
The fuddy-duddies.
Sweeps branches, fish, and canoes
Into the heart of summer.
Poem #16
Fly, little dog, to our home in the sky
Encumbered no more, your burdens to lie
Aside and rejoice in the absence of pain
And the knowledge we will soon meet again.
Poem #17
Loud buzzing precedes the air raid
Incites adrenaline-ridden panic
Screaming
And flailing limbs
As terror-driven legs blindly try to
Outdistance the threat.
The plump black and yellow creature
Lands placidly on crimson petals,
Wondering what all the fuss is about.
Poem #18
Fog
Ephemeral envelope
Stealer of sight
Hunter of hope
Insidious intruder
Dissipated by dawn
Poem #19
The rooster of ego
Struts around his barnyard,
Pecking those who don’t conform
To his arbitrary rules.
The farmer takes the long route to the barn,
Preferring to avoid confrontation.
The rooster of ego
Struts around his barnyard
Crowing his accomplishments whether others want to hear
Or not
Proud that he drove off the fox and the cat,
Fishing for compliments deserved
Or not.
The rooster of ego
Struts around his barnyard
Angry he wasn’t stroked
Attacking all in his way
Until the rooster of pride
Takes him down a few pegs.
Poem #20
The high school was the perfect destination
On a bright summer day
For two kids proud of the responsibility of pushing
The new cousin’s stroller while he napped
In the comforting heat of the sun.
We talked of the future
And summer camp
And cute boys
As we walked past suburban cape houses
And the baseball diamond next to the school,
Swarming with activity.
Just past the sports field, we approached
A corner of the school
Secluded
Containing a fragrant lilac and
A man wearing a white and gray striped baseball uniform,
His pants around his ankles.
Probably taking a leak, I thought. Gross.
He saw us and walked out of the alcove,
Pantsless
Penis jutting forward.
He made eye contact with our mirrored sunglasses
As he strutted past us,
Two tweens and a baby,
Then went back to his corner.
We walked silently past the school.
“Was that an erection?” my friend eventually asked.
I shrugged. “I think so.”
We headed toward home and
Never spoke of it again.
Prompts used:
Poem 14: Prompt: I love Lorna Crozier’s vegetable poems. These poems have made me look in a new way at vegetables—at the farmers’ market, on my cutting board, even on my plate. Write your vegetables too.
Poem 15: Let your poem have the name a month in its title and then attempt to capture the essence of that month, perhaps anthropomorphizing the month in question, giving it human-like personality.
Poem 16: Whatever your feelings about the existence of soul, somehow bring a mention or discussion of soul into your poem today. This poem is written for one of my BFFs who lost her beloved fur-friend today.
Poem 17: Let your poem be abuzz with bees, literal bees or metaphoric bees.
Poem 18: Unprompted. Inspired by my drive in to work.
Poem 19: A combination of two prompts: Random Titles (The Rooster of Ego) and The Repeated Word Prompt: Allow one word in your poem to be repeated often and in a way that contributes to the poem’s meaning and effectiveness. You might repeat whole phrases as poetic anaphora, as in the poem “A Wind” below. You might create a structure with your repetitions as does the wind poem.
Poem 20: Prompt: Under the Bridge: These two poems remind me of one another, and they remind me of those adventures in later childhood and early adolescence when one is still having the outdoor explorations and adventures of childhood, but suddenly the shadows of adulthood, sexuality, and gender roles creep in. The prompt is to write an “under the bridge” poem. Have it hint at the dark underbelly of the crossing into adulthood. I suppose the central theme is the beginning of the loss of innocence.
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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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