Petra, by David Bjorgen, from Wikimedia Commons |
Three hundred years before Christ
Nabataeans,
Arabian nomads,
abandon goatskin tents
chisel homes into cliffs
build elaborate conduits
create a new way of life.
Fifteen hundred years
and a half a world away
the Anasazi
abandon the ways of nomads
build houses that climb the side of cliffs
learn to farm and create pottery
create a new way of life.
Looking at those worlds
of cliff climbing houses
I cannot help but believe
we are all connected
somehow.
(C) Carol Wilcox
Mesa Verde, Colorado |
A little about my process.
I am and always have been a morning writer. That said, at this point, writing poetry in the mo just is not possible. This is that crazy busy time of year in schools. I'm working three jobs right now (literacy coach, managing the after school clubs, and also teaching for our ELL department). Every weekend, I drive to Colorado Springs, usually both Saturday and Sunday, to be with my mom, who has had some major health issues and has just been moved into assisted living.
So this year, my poetry writing has pretty much looked like this:
1) Get up in the morning. Read Mary Lee and Kevin's latest creations. Feel amazed at their brilliance.
2) Google the place we are writing about. Skim a few websites until I find one or two that are interesting to me. Today, for Petra, I am especially liking the American Museum of Natural History.
3) Sometimes I copy the article into a word document and highlight or mess around to see if there is a found poem waiting to be writing.
4) Kind of put the place in the back of my head for the day. Think about it as I am going about my day. Yesterday, I got some ideas while I was sitting in a huge traffic jam on the way to work (45 minutes on I-70). The day before I had some thoughts while I was proctoring our states blessed event (then had to try to remember them for a whole hour because we are not supposed to write anything down while we are doing the test).
5) Get home from work at 6. Eat. Walk the dog. Sit down to write at 7:30 or 8.
6) Procrastinate for 30 minutes or so.
7) Wish I would never committed to this dang poetry challenge.
8) Reread the article.
9) Try to write something.
10) Post about ten o'clock.
My morning joy is checking my inbox to see what direction you went and what EQUALLY AMAZING AND CREATIVE (and don't you forget it!!) poem you came up with!
ReplyDeleteI totally channelled the cliff dwellers in AZ and CO as I skimmed through photos of Petra. What is it about humans and cliffs? Safer to have our backs to the wall and be way up high, I guess.
Don't forget -- a haiku counts!!