Podcasts about National poetry

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Best podcasts about National poetry

Latest podcast episodes about National poetry

Voice of Islam
Drivetime Show Podcast 03-10-2024 - Access Denied and Poetry

Voice of Islam

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 99:52


Date: 3/10/24 Join Raheel Ahmad for Thursday's show from 4-6pm where we will be discussing: “Access Denied” and “Poetry”. Access Denied Imagine your child had to choose between dinner or a device; what would they choose? It may sound like a silly question but this is the reality for millions of children in the UK facing digital poverty. Join us as we discuss whether interventions such as ‘End Digital Poverty Day' held on the 12th of September, are a sufficient means to tackle this issue for the future. Poetry On 3rd October, National Poetry day a British campaign is celebrated to promote poetry. In this show, how poetry can be used to inspire and influence people especially looking at the poems of founder of Ahmadiya Muslim community Mirza Ghulam Ahmed (AS). Guests include: Katie Heard - Head of Research and Data Insights at Good Things Foundation Producers: Mutbashra Ahmed, Manahil Khalid and Azka Hina

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 30

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 7:46


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our last prompt of the year – optional, as always! Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem in which the speaker is identified with, or compared to, a character from myth or legend, as in Claire Scott's poem “Scheherazade at the Doctor's Office.”Poem for TodayA Dark Elf (Drizzit) 30 April 24 For ages beyond measure he has existed From a race of those who shunned the light He stood out from their accursed nature He became a hero to some A traitor to his people And when he tried to pursue his natural instincts of life He was abandoned by both When I first read of his travels and adventures in Icewind Dale It wasn't his fighting prowess that I admired It wasn't his abilities I coveted It was his ability to stand up for himself In the face of what others said was right or wrong The light that comes from the darkness Is always brighter than the light that comes from the sun It has much farther to travel And more dangers to overcomeReach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT ChannelIG: @createartpodcastTwitter: @createartpodCreate Art Podcast Newslettertimothybrien.substack.comSpecial MessageIf you have found value in this...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 29

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2024 7:41


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our optional prompt. If you've been paying attention to pop-music news over the past couple of weeks, you may know that Taylor Swift has released a new double album titled “The Tortured Poets Department.” In recognition of this occasion, Merriam-Webster put together a list of ten words from Taylor Swift songs. We hope you don't find this too torturous yourself, but we'd like to challenge you to select one these words, and write a poem that uses the word as its title.Poem for TodayAlbatross 29 April 24 The chip on my shoulder Grew legs and wings And started to strangle me It fed me regurgitated lies And was my sole source of nourishment The weight on my shoulders got so bad That I stooped when I walked My head was always down I was focused on what was behind me Instead of the path before me I felt comfortable I felt safe in my solitude I felt good that I would be the harbinger of my destruction But then I got tired of being tired I got tired of having the weight I didn't need I saw others who didn't struggle like I did And I wanted what they had So, I stopped eating the food I pried off the wings and feet And I threw the bird off my shoulders I was able to leap I was able to find new food I was able My back straightened My steps increased And I was able to do more Be more Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel:

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 27

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2024 9:20


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our prompt – optional, as always! Today we'd like to challenge you to write an “American sonnet.” What's that? Well, it's like a regular sonnet but . . . fewer rules? Like a traditional Spencerian or Shakespearean sonnet, an American sonnet is shortish (generally 14 lines, but not necessarily!), discursive, and tends to end with a bang, but there's no need to have a rhyme scheme or even a specific meter. Poem for TodayThings Left Undone 27 April 24 There are squished raisins around the floor being covered by dust bunnies There are several records that were desired that are left unplayed Multiple piles of books growing monthly that are unread The comic books that provided an escape now are trapped in stasis Sketch pads that haven't been scrawled upon with deteriorating-colored pencils Left over pressure treated boards from a deck that needs to be sealed and stained A fire pit that has never seen a fire lit or had smores roasted upon Keyboards that creak when looked at in anticipation of being played Awards just waiting to have their time in the spotlight on a wall of love Empty cardboard boxes that used to be the home waiting to be recycled A neighborhood waiting to embrace the occupants of this home An infinite amount of blank digital sheets waiting to be filled with ideas Letters waiting to be crafted to let friends know their importance And here I am among all of this, bored, wanting to create but never knowing where to start Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT ChannelIG:...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 28

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2024 8:46


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayour optional prompt for the day asks you to try your hand at writing a sijo. This is a traditional Korean verse form. A sijo has three lines of 14-16 syllables. The first line introduces the poem's theme, the second discusses it, and the third line, which is divided into two sentences or clauses, ends the poem – usually with some kind of twist or surprise. Poem for TodayNothing Is Not Me 28 April 24 The coffee pushes me forward because I need to be pushed I can't be left alone for too long for I will do nothing Nothing is never what I wanted to be, nothing is not me Trying to fill the holes that hope to be fulfilled with things Amassing things and trinkets just collects dust and debris Things filling up nothingness are empty, nothing is not me Promises to do better, ideas that inspire, It begins with an effort, and then more effort Effort is movement, to move is divine, nothing is not me Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT ChannelIG: @createartpodcastTwitter:

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 24

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 8:08


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayFinally, our (optional) prompt for the day is another one pulled from our 2016 archives. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem that begins with a line from another poem (not necessarily the first one), but then goes elsewhere with it. This will work best if you just start with a line of poetry you remember, but without looking up the whole original poem. Or you could find a poem that you haven't read before and then use a line that interests you. The idea is for the original to furnish the backdrop for your work, but without influencing you so much that you feel as if you are just rewriting the original! For example, you could begin, “Shall I compare thee to a summer's day,” or “I have measured out my life with coffee spoons,” or “I miss them, but it wasn't a disaster,” or “they persevere in swimming where they like.” Really, any poem will do to provide your starter line – just so long as it gives you the scope to explore. Poem for TodaySaid The Shotgun To The Head (Kimo Style) 24 April 24 I can taste the metal in my mouth from a double barrel Don't worry, I am not being kidnapped or robbed I have done it to myself My finger is not on the trigger I won't write the story of my life On a blood and brain spattered wall For too long I have thought this was the way to end things And I felt good that it would be in my hands And not someone else's I felt in control that I could end things Anytime I wanted to Anytime it got too deep But now I have too much to live for And I don't want to have those I love Seeing the ending of this movie I have relied on the pain that comes with carrying a shotgun in my mouth And I am tired of the taste I have enough metal in my mouth With fillings that crack my teeth With porcelain crowns that feel off With the drilling that it took to put them there I am putting the shotgun down In front of a crowd Hoping they never need to feel the need To shove a weapon in their mouth My mouth spits wisdom And hope And encouragement And maybe a better path The...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 25

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 7:54


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayLast but not least, here's our optional prompt for the day. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem based on the “Proust Questionnaire,” a set of questions drawn from Victorian-era parlor games, and adapted by modern interviewers. You could choose to answer the whole questionnaire, and then write a poem based on your answers, answer just a few, or just write a poem that's based on the questions. You could even write a poem in the form of an entirely new Proust Questionnaire. Poem for TodayHow I Want To Die 25 April 24 That depends on when you ask me The typical high schooler trying to escape their history Then a gun to the head If you are asking the spiked haired, leather jacket wearing, dangling earrings punk rock 18-year-old In a blaze of glory If you are asking the morose warrior poet smoking weed 13 times a day He'd want to go out sleeping and continue the deep sleep of death If you are asking the Avant garde grad student with a boulder on his shoulder Slicing of the wrists comes to mind If you ask the homeless philosopher Then a bottle of pills seems about right If you are asking the man who left Chicago and all his friends for what he called love Then a bomb strapped to his chest over a bridge carrying thousands of travelers But if you ask me today At home In my bed With my loved ones in the next room No tears No sadness I'd rather be left as the traveler I am As my spirit animal demands A few words of encouragement spoken to me From someone I respect A send-off into the other lands Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 21

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 10:12


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our (optional) prompt! Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem that repeats or focuses on a single color. Some examples for you – Diane Wakoski's “Blue Monday,” Walter de la Mare's “Silver,” and Dorothea Lasky's “Red Rum.”Poem for TodayThe Color of High School 21 April 24 I remember the scene shop in the theater where other students were tagging the walls with Rush, I was blasting out UB40's Red Red Wine I'd sing that song till my throat turned red Feeling the words touch my soul every time Filling me with hope that I would find a love worthy of that song Drinking the apple wine Night Train with its dark red label When at my lowest points I'd scrawl on my notebooks our mascot the J-Hawk With a gun pointed at his head And the pale blood of loneliness and teen angst splattered against an indicated wall No one saw these depictions Which is probably for the best The walls of some of the hallways glowed when we lost power A high school built initially to be a prison had few windows At least that is how the story went The stoners and the underground kids flicked their lighters And we found our way to the blazing exit signs that always had power The crimson letters guiding us to safety At the D Door Where smoking was tolerated I'd see teachers and students monkey fuck each other To light their cancer sticks and cowboy killers And the rhythmic dull red glow of the embers matched their breathing My high school was a vampire's paradise Gym uniforms, sport uniforms, the carpeted triangle All reflected their devilish desire for blood There was blood at every fight There...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 23

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 8:40


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our (optional) prompt. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem about, or involving, a superhero, taking your inspiration from these four poems in which Lucille Clifton addresses Clark Kent/Superman.Poem for TodayRight Bicep 23 April 24 The embodiment of vengeance sitting on a throne of the bones of the souls he has damned Is embedded on my right bicep Part of the right arm of justice That I use to correct the wrongs That have occurred He sits there with a face so dour He sits there looking exhausted He sits and views all the work left to be done It never ends This world isn't fair As I teach my children But there are those in this world That come in after the tragedies To make sure they never happen again I put you there Because I have always desired to be An instrument that can dispassionately dole out vengeance But I find my emotions take hold And I cannot damn another soul for their wrongs I am not the judge, jury and punisher So, you will have to sit on my arm Until I can burn out the emotions And one day be like you Without a heart Without a soul Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel:

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 22

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 11:10


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayLast but not least, here's today's optional prompt. This one comes from the poet and fiction writer Todd Dillard, who provided this idea on his twitter account a few months ago. The idea is to write a poem in which two things have a fight. Two very unlikely things, if you can manage it. Like, maybe a comb and a spatula. Or a daffodil and a bag of potato chips. Or perhaps your two things could be linked somehow – like a rock and a hard place – and be utterly sick of being so joined. The possibilities are endless!Poem for TodayTwo Sides Same Coin 22 April 24 The coffee-stained steno note pad decided one day to crawl from under the dust of neglect and seek out the cell phone Its wire binding was loose and its companion the bic pen had been lost after never coming back from getting cigarettes The pad of paper felt neglected, its blue lines fading Where once my innermost thoughts filled its pages Now were curling up unused and unwanted The pad scrapped along the floor Leaving a scratch in the flooring And it saw the endless stairs up to my room Sighed deeply and found a way to the top by standing on end and grasping for the next step My cell phone was communicating and noting my breaths and snores as I slept Plugged in and cared for like a king It slept just a mere foot from the bed Unaware of what was coming up from the basement The blue light and the life-giving electricity flowing through its circuits Years ago, I had abandoned one of my oldest friends And determined that due to low light And spilled drinks And the fact that i couldn't see the words I had inscribed I would switch to reading my poetry off my phone as I had seen younger poets do It was easier to flip through apps on a phone Versus flipping through pages of steno note pads Sometimes I would bring the wrong one Other times due to clumsiness I would spill my coffee and the liquid would seep into the pages Low light at most readings made it impossible to see The steno climbed the last stair And made its way into the...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 20

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 10:27


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayOur optional prompt for the day challenges you to write a poem that recounts a historical event. In writing your poem, you could draw on your memory, encyclopedias, history books, or primary documents. If you're interested in a little research, you might find interesting this collection of letters written during the American Civil War, or this collection of primary documents concerning South Sea voyages. Or perhaps you might find something of interest in digging through Europeana, an online clearinghouse of digitized materials from cultural institutions across Europe.Inspiration for this poem came from Ronald Regan Radio AddressPoem for TodayCrate Digging 20 April 24 A package had been sent it me The shape familiar Just over 12 inches square So carefully I opened it And found placed with care A record sleeve with no picture And the only writing on it was Ronald Regan 1961 I opened it and found the familiar shape of a 12-inch record with no label So, I took off the record I had played last Something by Miles Davis or john Coltrane And put this new, mysterious record on the platter Recovering from the demon rum and weed That my jazz obsession claimed on me I pressed the play button And the tone arm raised, Moved over to the starting groove And set down as delicately as a mother placing her newborn baby down for a nap I sat back into my easy chair As the sound of Ronald Regan's voice came over my speakers There was no music Just his voice droning on and on He told me the horros of socialized medicine And how that would destroy my savings How it would cost me my livelihood How it was unamerican How my son, he must not have read my FBI...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 19

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 10:15


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayFinally, here's our prompt – optional, as always! This one comes to us from Moist Poetry Journal, which posted this prompt by K-Ming Chang a while back:What are you haunted by, or what haunts you? Write a poem responding to this question. Then change the word haunt to huntPoem for TodayHaunted, Hunted By 19 April 24 I saw the look on her face The horror of almost losing her life I heard the way she tried to speak but no words formed When the words did come forth She sounded like the 4-year-olds she would never know I felt the leathery skin Tissue paper thin, veins easily seen but not easily pierced I smelled the stains on her fingers And the ashtray breath when she kissed my cheek Her heart had given out She was initially unable to speak The one who was so protective of me Was now the one that I protected Her dead body with makeup on that she would never wear I said goodbye to that corpse knowing there was nothing there Walking back from the park At the start of the pandemic My left side turned off From shoulder to toe there was nothing there Walking between my two children Each one holding me up On the left was my child who reminded me of the mother I lost On my right was the child that reminded me of my fury and anxiety They got me home without incident And I laid on the couch Unable to tell my wife what I was feeling Worse yet, unable to tell her what I wasn't feeling I didn't end up in a pine box that day My speech has slowed a bit, halts from time to time I can hear it, but no one else notices I can feel the oblivion coming but no one else listens I quiet myself in preparation The end will be lonely Even if I am surrounded by my loved ones I will be unable to say it is time I make plans to leave a sign for when it's time to die Wanting to...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 18

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 9:04


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our (optional) prompt! Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem in which the speaker expresses the desire to be someone or something else, and explains why. Two possible models for you: Natasha Rao's “In my next life let me be a tomato,” and Randall Jarrell's “The Woman at the Washington Zoo.”Poem for TodayThe Name Tattooed on My Arm 18 April 24 Looking down at my right arm Seeing the skull and the fu-man-chu With a fedora and sunglasses And the name scrawled there Is the person I wanted to be I gave him a name And a tortured history And a dismal future Just on the right side of destitution He was my voice for decades When I didn't know what to be He sat there under my skin As a reminder As a warning That I may become him one day Parts of me desired that ending It was so poetic So romantic He'd be someone I'd give up my sweet ass to in a heartbeat if he'd have me He was dark and dangerous Mysterious and stoic Nothing could touch him Feelings could not sway him He was comfortable in his own skin He is the things I am not I created this phantom To fight the nightmares To fight my weaknesses Naturally he doesn't have any He was my hero Like Bukowski or Kerouac Until I became a father And thought that if he tried to date my daughters He'd be carried out in a pine box I so wanted to be him But he is not real He is not sustainable He would not be able to do what I do Live the life I live Be a father Be a partner Be supportive He is selfish He is all the bad qualities that I don't need And yet At times I want to be...

The Mountain-Ear Podcast
A Story about what poetry is, some of our revered Colorado poets, and the history of National Poetry month

The Mountain-Ear Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 18:21


This is a Story about what poetry is, some of our revered Colorado poets, the history of and how to celebrate National Poetry month. We have also included what The Mountain-Ear is doing to celebrate this momentous month in literature. Thank you for listening to The Mountain-Ear podcast featuring the news and culture from peak to peak.SUBSCRIBE ONLINE and use the COUPON CODE PODCAST FOR A 10% Discount for ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS https://www.themtnear.com/subscribe/ You can find us online by visiting https://www.themtnear.com/Find us on Facebook @mtnearYou can contact our editor at info@themountainear.com.Thank you for listening.

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 17

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 9:25


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayLast but not least, here's our optional prompt for the day. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem that is inspired by a piece of music, and that shares its title with that piece of music. Need an example? Here's A. Van Jordan's “Que Sera Sera” and Adrian Matejka's “Soave Sia Il Vento.”Poem for Todayhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5W-o5Y_GunUJupiter The Bringer of Jollity 17 April 24 To be born as the father of the gods was born In such a similar way Brings us both to level ground I can only imagine that these were the sounds Echoing through the universe to mark both of our births When the members of the orchestra reach that point of the crash I am transported to that fateful day After the birth, the horns come in And coddle the youngster Making them warm and feel comforted The safest place in the world The march of time starts The fun times of youth are sprinkled here and there With the sounds of flutes and triangles The first challenge is encountered And the refrain returns of warmth and comfort The march picks up The pace quickens And the birth of our progeny happens All is silent And the process begins again And the pace slows back down And we enjoy the moments Basking in the pride we feel Trying to make these moments last forever We get to encounter what our predecessors felt when they held us The march slows as our bodies age The greatest things happen And we instead of watching our growth We watch theirs And then the begin the process And we as grandparents are doubly blessed We see the process happen again And again if we are lucky And we look to see the process happen one more...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 16

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 9:27


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayhere's today's (optional) prompt, taken from our 2016 archives. Today, we challenge you to write a poem in which you closely describe an object or place, and then end with a much more abstract line that doesn't seemingly have anything to do with that object or place, but which, of course, really does. The “surprise” ending to this James Wright poem is a good illustration of the effect we're hoping you'll achieve. An abstract, philosophical kind of statement closing out a poem that is otherwise intensely focused on physical, sensory details.Poem for TodayWinning 16 April 24 Awakened by a child's nightmare The rest of the morning wrecked with thoughts that won't stop Remembering almost 16 years ago Sleeping on a beanbag Forgetting the name of the company I worked for Remembering how I used to roll my own cigarettes Smelling the encrusted tobacco on my yellowing fingers Buying my first house and worrying about how to pay for it The kid behind these eyes With spiked hair and a ponytail Modified mullet Dangling earrings Wearing a real leather jacket with chains Always afraid of the dark And the secrets it holds Finding a tribe in the places that god hated That same tribe dispersed throughout the big sky country Listening to an old guy singing songs badly, on purpose These thoughts come back as I hold my babies I am a man Not wanting to uphold the easy definition These thoughts come through at 6:34 AM EDT While a television plays the news of the world And the fan cools the air Moving it from one end of the room to the other A child with pink eye, a child with anxiety Two cats prowl the grounds One with a single clouded eye, the other with diabetes A snoring wife, whose dreams I am not allowed to see A half-painted picture by numbers facing away from me Photo Negatives is not how you should live your life Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me,...

Myth Matters
National Poetry Month: Humor and the unexpected turn

Myth Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2024 43:29 Transcription Available


"Well, that's the trick: the sudden unexpectedness inside the over-known." --- Heather McHughWhat type of mood does the word "poetry" evoke for you? Do you associate poetry with the profound and weighty? The concerns of the soul and the seriously sacred? I rarely look to poetry for a laugh and I wonder why, when there are many brilliant moments of humor to be found there. In celebration of National Poetry month, here are ten or so humorous poems from Roald Dahl, Billy Collins, Carol Ann Duffy, and others.I'm joined by poet and songwriter Rags Rosenberg, a longtime friend of Myth Matters who adds a few of his thoughts and poems to the mix. Thank you Rags!I hope you enjoy the episode and please share your favorite poems of the moment with me! Thanks for listening.Support the showEmail Catherine at drcsvehla@mythicmojo.comPost a positive review on apple podcasts! Learn how you can work with Catherine at https://mythicmojo.comBuy me a coffee. Thank you!

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 15

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2024 8:12


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our prompt – optional, as always! Today, we'd like to encourage you to take a look at @StampsBot, and become inspired by the wide, wonderful, and sometimes wacky world of postage stamps. For example, while it certainly makes sense that China would issue a stamp featuring a panda, it's less clear to us why the Isle of Man should feel the need to honor 2001: A Space Odyssey in stamp form. From Romanian mushrooms to Sudanese weavers to the Marshall Islands getting far too excited over personal computing, stamps are a quasi-lyrical, quasi-bizarre look into what different cultures (or at least their postal authorities) hold dear.And if you're not on or able to access the @StampsBot account, fear not! You may find an inspiring stamp or two by perusing the online “International Philately” (say that three times fast) exhibit from the National Postal Museum.Image I used https://twitter.com/StampsBot/status/1779219469635613169/photo/1 Poem for TodaySelf-Delivered Eulogy 15 April 24 It was the last album from a man who transcended what was normal It was his last goodbye No one was worthy to say the final words So, he said it all himself In a world that tried to define him He constantly defied expectations I wept on that day he left us And when I saw his song Lazarus on the screen I felt this was his end We won't see another like him Saying that seems so passe' We didn't have much to compare him to Prince, yes, Hendrix possibly Freddy and Leonard were cut from the same cloth And I wept when they passed There was a hole that refused to be filled No one could console me No one ever will He was a black star in a sky full of light He marked his ending with one last curtain call Leaving us with one last goodbye Thise who mocked him And tried to take his hero status down a...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 14

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2024 9:57


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday's (optional) prompt asks you to write a poem of at least ten lines in which each line begins with the same word (e.g., “Because,” “Forget,” “Not,” “If”). This technique of beginning multiple lines with the same word or phrase is called anaphora, and has long been used to give poems a driving rhythm and/or a sense of puzzlebox mystery. To give you more context, here's an essay by Rebecca Hazelton on her students' “adventures in anaphora,” and a contemporary poem that uses anaphora to great effect: Layli Long Soldier's “Whereas.”Poem for TodayListless Is How 14 April 24 Listless is how I wake Looking at my goals of the day What I need to accomplish Needless chores each and every day Actions that won't be remembered in perpetuity Listless is how I feel As the motions that are meaningless begin to take shape Looking at all the things I want to fill this hole in my soul Watching the dust pile up I can't even keep up with cataloging the objects that I once thought I desired Listless is how I live my life Without interest in the outcome Without passion that used to drive me on Without the interest in learning new things Without challenging the status quo Listless is how I move through the day Pushing through the fog that is comprised of mental strain Pushing through the obstacles I place in front of me Pushing through the mud that becomes paintings Pushing through the words on the page Listless is how I sleep Never getting the rest that I find is required Never inspired by what I see in dreams Never recharging myself and taking naps that pushes me farther behind Never catching up and going ahead of where I want to be Listless is how I never wanted to be Avoiding the trap of thinking none of this...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 13

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2024 8:48


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for today our optional prompt for the day asks you to play with rhyme. Start by creating a “word bank” of ten simple words. They should only have one or two syllables apiece. Five should correspond to each of the five senses (i.e., one word that is a thing you can see, one word that is a type of sound, one word that is a thing you can taste, etc). Three more should be concrete nouns of whatever character you choose (i.e., “bridge,” “sun,” “airplane,” “cat”), and the last two should be verbs. Now, come up with rhymes for each of your ten words. (If you're having trouble coming up with rhymes, the wonderful Rhymezone is at your service). Use your expanded word-bank, with rhymes, as the seeds for your poem. Your effort doesn't actually have to rhyme in the sense of having each line end with a rhymed word but try to use as much soundplay in your poem as possible.Poem for TodayWord bank: See : turntable Hear :music Touch : prickly Taste : sour Smell : vinyl Concrete noun : Speaker Record Sleeve Verb : Cradle Lift Analog Escape13 April 24 I escape to my mancave and gaze at the turntable When I am able The music that escapes the speakers The kick fills my ears and I am feeling weaker My skins sensation is prickly The heart beats quickly When the record spins My hand moves toward the air And when the sounds stop, I open another sleeve And begin to weave my mind into a sour mood I feel dower by the hour And cradle the next vinyl The fable I tell myself makes me mindful of the time And I spin another until I find my favorite thing Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email:

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 12

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2024 8:20


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem that plays with the idea of a “tall tale.” American tall tales feature larger-than-life characters like Paul Bunyan (who is literally larger than life), Bulltop Stormalong (also gigantic), and Pecos Bill (apparently normal-sized, but he doesn't let it slow him down). If you'd like to see a modern poetic take on the tall tale, try Jennifer L. Knox's hilarious poem, “Burt Reynolds FAQ.” Your poem can revolve around a mythical character, one you make up entirely, or add fantastical elements into a real person's biography.Poem for TodayThe Sprelly Man 12 April 24 Peanut allergies be damned Let me tell you the tale of one Who has thrived in what some call The dark ages of these legumes Bright and colorful is he Tasty and smooth is his body When left to long He splits into oil and mass Don't leave the Sprelly Man in the cupboard too long Take him out daily For your source of protein And sweetness Pair him up with his dear friend Pineapple Jelly lad Spread him all over the best bread money can buy And you too will change your religion Or at least your thoughts of the simple PB&J sandwich Sprelly man wants you to be stronger Happier than you have ever been Sprelly Man is looking out for your best interests Better than a high school counselor I met the man of Sprelly long ago His beard was blacker than a new moon night Deeper than the ocean More manly than he had a right to be We talk about his exploits When I patron his store A place of...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 11

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2024 8:05


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayFinally, our optional prompt for the day honors the “ones” in the number 11. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write either a monostich, which is a one-line poem, or a poem made up of one-liner style jokes/sentiments. Need inspiration? Take a look at Joe Brainard's poem “30 One-Liners” or Frank O'Hara's “Lines for the Fortune Cookies.”Poem for TodayThings The South Taught This Yankee 11 April 24 Texas: If offered a beer, you drink it, even if you hate beer because you don't turn down hospitality It's always bigger in Texas, whatever it is Armadillos that you run over are funnier in sombreros and cans of the beer that you hate, take a picture Playing Me and Bobby magee and breaking out into the Peanuts theme song is only done in Mexican bars Don't mess with Texas Not all who live in Texas are bigoted christians, some are as heathen as you are Remember the Alamo, and watch out for Ozzy's piss and freshly chewed bat heads The bigger the belt buckle the smaller the dick Everyone is armed, don't start a fight Y'all ain't from here is a warning shot Grits made with cherries are delicious Pickled Okra is a food group I am more man that you could ever be and more woman than you could ever have This ain't Burger King, you get it my way or you don't get the damn thing North Carolia: Maddog and nighttrane make for an interesting morning Don't go into an Airborne bar unless you are Airborne Outer Banks = OBX, don't ask why, there isn't an airport there Anything you can do I can do better, hold my beer Say it with me FayetteNam Virginia: The war of Northern Aggression If you ain't from here you are a carpet bagger You are not a resident unless you were born here, don't care if you pay taxes Its's a commonwealth not a state 95 is a parking lot...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 10

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2024 7:51


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayAnd now for our optional prompt! Ezra Pound famously said that “poetry is news that stays news.” While we don't know about that, the news can have a certain poetry to it. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem based on one of the curious headlines, cartoons, and other journalistic tidbits featured at Yesterday's Print, where old news stays amusing, curious, and sometimes downright confusing.Poem for TodayPreacher Advises Against Going To Hell, It will Be Boring 10 April 24 Lets just put aside the concept of hell for a minute Since it is not in the bible And has been mistranslated so many times Can we agree it is a separation from your god for a minute And according to you this would still give me eternal life What if i don't want that What if I just wanted to die and be done What if lets just say I want one chance to do everything I will be known for Let it all ride on this life And cash in my chips and let them fall where they may But no I am not given a choice if I want to come into this world And if I choose to depart prematurely (according to you) I will be forever punished Would it surprise you I like my sex a bit rough I enjoy having fingernails draw blood down my back I enjoy having my nipples bit into and my neck marked up with burses It shows me that I am alive I like some pain when I am fucking Both inflicting it and getting it I don't mind having someone pleasure themselves in my asshole While I thrust deeper into someone else Your hell excited me According to you the people i would rather hang out with will be there The people that Jesus hung out with will be there And yes some harp music is nice to sleep to I'd rather feel the drum beat of heathens fill my soul See my idea of hell Is much like Satre's Hell is other people whom I don't want to hang out with Which would be people going to your heaven So your fairy tale That is supposed to scare me Like i was a little child That I actually believed in for...

WPKN Community Radio
Spotlight on Arts and Cuture — April 2024 — Poetry Month

WPKN Community Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 59:59


This episode of Spotlight on Arts and Culture is a celebration of National Poetry month featuring a conversation with poet, artist, and archivist Shanna Melton. Shanna Melton runs the Writer's Group in Bridgeport, a monthly creative writing workshop.

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 9

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2024 7:20


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayOur prompt for today (optional, as always) takes its inspiration from Pablo Neruda, the Chilean-born poet and Nobel Prize Winner. While he is most famous in the English-speaking world for his collection Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair, he also wrote more than two hundred odes, and had a penchant for writing sometimes-long poems of appreciation for very common or mundane things. You can read English translations of “Ode to the Dictionary” at the bottom of this page, “Ode to My Socks” here, and “Ode to a Large Tuna in the Market” here.Today, we'd like to challenge you to write your own ode celebrating an everyday object.Poem for TodayOde to a Dear Friend 9 April 24 You sputter when I awake Your smell warms my cold soul The dark liquid you produce welcomes me From the dream world into our dismal reality So many ideas and conversations have been sparked by your power Revolutions planned and implemented Wars won or lost by your availability You are more precious than gold More effective than antipsychotics You my dear friend truly understand in the silence you provide You are more spiritual than some cheap ass wine or stale cracker You have saved more people from their deadly habits You, not the sun, are the reason we wake in the morning You, not our loving children, are we want to encounter first If you disappeared, our only choice would be suicide Or worse tea I would become a tree-hugging hippie to protect you from extinction And slaughter all the pandas in existence Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 8

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 7:17


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday, we challenge you to write a poem that centers around an encounter or relationship between two people (or things) that shouldn't really have ever met – whether due to time, space, age, the differences in their nature, or for any other reason.Poem for TodayAt The Movies 8 April 24 As I was sitting at the Siskel Center Watching Salo I noticed in front of me Two figures that seemed out of place Well one was definitely out of place Dressed in clothes from the 18th Century The other man Was dressed from something out of the 1930's They sat there sharing a pipe And the familiar smell wafted towards me Throughout the movie they cackled Like crazy men And they spoke to each other loudly in French An usher tried to quiet them And other patrons harumphed and bemoaned these two figures I sat there with my popcorn and soda Wondering what the deal was Why these two men seemed so familiar The movie ended The lights came up People were filtering out of the theater But I and the two men stayed in our seats I approached them And tried to comprehend their conversation Each one had smiles and seemed to enjoy the show And in m broken French I introduced myself The man dressed as if he was from the 30's gave me a card With what I assumed was his name A Breton It had a woman's ass being supported by two Greek columns And he introduced his companion as the Marquis De Sade I left with them And we went back to my studio apartment Drank wine Smoked from their pipe And I woke up on the floor the next day Feeling enlightened And violated Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 7

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 7:00


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday, we'd like to challenge you to write a poem titled “Wish You Were Here” that takes its inspiration from the idea of a postcard. Consistent with the abbreviated format of a postcard, your poem should be short, and should play with the idea of travel, distance, or sightseeing. If you're having trouble getting started, perhaps you'll find some inspiration in these images of vintage postcards.Poem for TodayWish You Were Here Postcards to Heaven 7 April 24 If you are reading this Then you already know you are dead I survived the journey I have surpassed what you have left me with I have a home A wife Some kids And I didn't go to jail And I didn't cheat on my wife And she didn't cheat on me And I didn't rape my children And they aren't living in fear of me And they aren't living in fear of an imaginary sky buddy I was able to use this useless degree To make a life for us I win You are dead And your death was almost my undoing But I went forward I kept moving And it's hard to hit a moving target Reach Out To The PodcastTo reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation.Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel:

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 6

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2024 9:00


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday's we'd like to challenge you to write a poem rooted in “weird wisdom,” by which we mean something objectively odd that someone told you once, and that has stuck with you ever since. Need an example? Check out Naomi Shihab Nye's poem “Making a Fist.”Poem for TodayLearning About Life Backstage 6 April 24 Bathroom walls Subway cars Discarded napkins at the bar Elroy was here tagged on a city alley way These are the places where philosophy starts But on the back of a high school theater set Is where I found my calling Life is like a shit sandwich The more bread you put on it the less shit you have to eat Was what i saw one day In the dim light of the stage And I have tried to put more bread in my life Because it has been a shit show I've tried wheat And only found that to be dry I have tried pumpernickel And my teeth turned black I have tried multigrain Only to pick out seeds in my teeth But sourdough, oh sweet sourdough When it is toasted with butter or oil Is the best bread to have to cover up the smell I once tried ciabatta And she broke my heart Well her brothers were going to break my arms So I stuck with plain white bread for prom Is naan considered a bread or just a vehicle for food consumption I have never been able to tell And the pita? Is it a pocket of goodness That I can crawl into And swim around in with tzatziki sauce And falafel and lamb What bread is best to make shit taste better And what bread is considered part of the sandwich equation? Will we ever know And why do we accept the shit in our sandwich Dripping out of the sides Does diarrhea count as shit Or must it be a log And what about a hotdog bun If we get a nice chunky log to come out Filled with corn and the remains from other shit sandwiches we had to...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 5

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 10:01


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday we'd like you to start by taking a look at Alicia Ostriker's poem, “The Blessing of the Old Woman, the Tulip, and the Dog.” Now try your hand at writing your own poem about how a pair or trio of very different things would perceive a blessing or, alternatively, how these very different things would think of something else (luck, grief, happiness, etc).Poem for TodayThe Father the Kids and the unholy spirit 5 April 24 I lied many times to protect you And I told you to never lie to me I said your grandparents were dead So that's only a half-lie I told you some of the horrors that befell me at their hands And I told you I was trying to be better than them Because they didn't know what they were doing That was a lie Through living, I discovered many of the things they told me were lies And so you too will discover that there is no tooth fairy There is no Easter Bunny or Santa Claus There are evil people in the world that want to destroy you And some of them you are related to And that is what I have to protect you from So, they are dead to me And it's not too much of a lie And I want you to not live in lies Because when we live in lies We are living in fear And there is enough of that to go around I don't want you to fear the dark Or the monsters that lurk in your head Or the monsters that lurk in mine I've killed them many times He told us from a young age that his parents had died We felt sorry for him and compassion He told us eventually what had happened When we turned 18 When he thought we could handle the truth But we missed out on having a grandfather When all the other kids had nice normal families We wonder what else he has lied about Is he really our father Is he really kind and protective Can we ever trust anything he says This family lives in the shadows And we want to see the light Is the anger we feel at being lied to The anger he struggles...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 4

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 7:20


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for today prompt for the day challenges you to write a poem in which you take your title or some language/ideas from The Strangest Things in the World. First published in 1958, the book gives shortish descriptions of odd natural phenomena, and is notable for both its author's turn of phrase and intermittently dubious facts. Perhaps you will be inspired by the “The Self-Perpetuating Sponge” or “The World's Biggest Sneeze.” Or maybe the quirky descriptions of luminous plants, monstrous bears, or the language of ravens will give you inspiration.Poem for TodayThe Sleeping Habits of Mammals 4 April 24 Sleek, silent, soft and deadly The one-eyed ninja rests on my side of the bed Peering out to see who is coming Through her one cloudy eye The other eternally removed I've always liked cat That others would find challenging And this tiny creature Who holds her own against impossible odds Reminds me that no matter our frailties She can hold her own Last night she laid upon me Feeling her weight like a blanket She calmed my nerves And made sure I slept deeply Fluffy, crying out in the night from loneliness Boots slowly trots to her feeding bowl When I wake in the morning You come to my side and pet my arm for me to pet you You groom my fingers and hand to catch the fur that is coming off And then you slowly trot to the huge stuffed bear next to the window and watch the days pass by I can hear your breathing And a few snores When I approach Your eyes lazily look towards me Interrupting your beauty sleep But you need none, you are a beautiful and graceful creature When you have a bad dream, I can expect you cuddled up next to me in bed But usually, you prefer to sleep alone In the big living room where you roam and inspect everything You tolerate my amazement of your cathood stature And you tolerate my astonishment at your...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 3

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 7:20


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayhere's our prompt for the day – optional, as always. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write a surreal prose poem. For inspiration, check out Franz Kafka's collection of short parables (my favorite is “The Green Dragon”).Poem for TodayA Coffee Shop in Abilene Texas 3 April 24 I walked into a coffee shop in Abilene Texas Spent the next few decades trying to find it again The Purple Pope of Abilene was slinging drinks behind the counter He was also slinging smack in the back room Preaching the words of one Andre' Breton Who I never heard of in my travels at that time A painter sat in that coffee shop He mistook Abilene Texas for Abilene Kansas And was stuck there for decades for his mistake He sold me paintings of Nietzsche and Hendrix And one that was cursed with ants crawling over skulls in a jungle He was our version of Dali There were poetry readings spontaneously Mostly young men gathered around a table Slipping pieces of paper back and forth to each other And the one I call Bear Belting out my feeble scratching's with the authority of Tzara Helping me find my voice in the chaos of the day On-the-spot spectacles occurred with no frequency Drag shows, one-act plays and pronouncements Spelling out the flaws of this Texas town As if Artaud was among us Sharing his absinthe As these playwrights downed another spiked smart drink Oh to be back there Back in my youth When life was simpler When I thought I had made the biggest mistake I found a home Where I could be what I dreamed If only for a few hours a day And after all these years of searching For another place to replace the first one I have found it But now I am the old man The...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 2

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2024 9:31


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday, we'd like to challenge you to write a platonic love poem. In other words, a poem not about a romantic partner, but some other kind of love – your love for your sister, or a friend, or even your love for a really good Chicago deep dish pizza. The poem should be written directly to the object of your affections (like a letter is written to “you”), and should describe at least three memories of you engaging with that person/thing.Poem for TodayWhen You Found Me 2 April 24 When you found me I was at the ripe old age of 19 Didn't know my ass from a hole in the ground And some days I feel the same When I walked into that coffee shop in Abilene Texas And I still live there in my mind You welcomed me Gave me a start on my journey Made sure My Favorite Things played In that dust bowl of a town Where I thought I had landed on Mars And the civilization I had encountered before Didn't prepare me for what was ahead When you found me again As I was driving all over my hometown of Screw City Getting high 13 times a day I sat there with an old friend Whose feet stank of bad cheese Who didn't have enough money to pay for electricity Who had a god that he followed religiously Whose sister was my next conquest You stood by me and made sure my car didn't kill anyone Including me You and my old friend listened to my rantings As I read books from other madmen And found that you had found them as well And I wanted to emulate them In hopes you would cradle me in your warmth When you found me next I was still on the weed And I handed you over to my nephew In hopes he would surpass me In hopes he wouldn't have to struggle as much In hopes he would be able to handle the dragon raging on the inside You found him, but he was too young And had others finding him Helping him tell his story Accompanying him through his journey And now in the mornings when he sleeps in after driving around all night I invoke you to slip into his brain and provide some sort of relief When you found me for the first time Before the coffee...

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month Day 1

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 8:55


What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), celebrates the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates oneself to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayToday, we'd like to challenge you to write – without consulting the book – a poem that recounts the plot, or some portion of the plot, of a novel that you remember having liked but that you haven't read in a long time.Poem for TodayWaking to a new life 1 April 24 Based on Metamorphosis from Franz Kafka It was a day in June, 2014 I woke up bleary eyed on a couch Much like other nights, but I heard some noises around me Noises that weren't the Redline El Noises that weren't police sirens Noises that weren't cars honking An unknown body laid next to me I heard their breathing The snores seemed familiar from long ago Like I had laid with this person before But I didn't know who it was And I sprung up Something inside me said there should be more sounds The daylight had broken The heat of the day started And I was somewhere I didn't remember The air smelled different There seemed to be more space As my eyes grew accustomed to the dim light peeking through I looked over the coffee table And saw two babies Gurgling, happy, warm and fed Gently waking up, small yawns, gripping at invisible animals The person beside me was a lover from the past This wasn't my studio on the north side of Chicago But I didn't know where I was And a small cry broke the silence And a cat strolled past casually, calmly My instincts took over And I walked to the baby crying Hushed them, cuddled them And my past lover quietly watched the baby and I Her eyes piercing through the fog And welcoming me back into the world That we had created The baby was tiny, fit on my forearm, needed a new diaper And I took them over to the table A table filled with diapers and wipes And like an

More Math for More People
Episode 3.18: Where Joel and Misty read poems at work and a reprise of a conversation with Gail Anderson about assessment

More Math for More People

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 32:07 Transcription Available


It's National Poetry at Work day! Joel creates a haiku on the spot and Misty reads everyone a poem by Langston Hughes. How will you celebrate?Also, they reprise a conversation with Gail Anderson, one of the writers in the Curriculum and Assessment department, about assessments. A lot of excellent reminders about how to deal with assessments, particularly in your first few years of teaching CPM. Lastly, it's the beginning of 2024 and the approximate midpoint of the school year. How are you taking care of yourself? The PL team chimes in with some good ideas for balance and mindfulness. The More Math for More People Podcast is produced by CPM Educational Program. Learn more at CPM.orgTwitter: @cpmmathFacebook: CPMEducationalProgramEmail: cpmpodcast@cpm.org

Front Row
Dan Levy, National Poetry Library at 70, Clarke Peters

Front Row

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 42:22


In the work for which he is best known, the multi-award winning television sitcom, Schitt's Creek, as well as being the show's creator, Dan Levy played the capricious David Rose whose wedding with his business partner, Patrick Brewer, was the focus of the final episode. He discusses new Netflix movie, Good Grief, which marks his debut as a film director and in which he plays a man blindsided by the unexpected death of his husband.Poets Lemn Sissay and Lily Blacksell join Front Row to reflect on seventy years of the The National Poetry Library, and the 70-Poet Challenge to mark the anniversary.Clarke Peters talks about new television drama, Truelove, in which he stars as one of a group of friends in their 70s, who find that a jokey pact to help each other have dignified deaths suddenly has to be re-considered as a serious commitment.Presenter: Samira Ahmed Producer: Ciaran Bermingham

U.P. Notable Books Club
S4:E7: Superior Voyage with the Marquette Poets Circle

U.P. Notable Books Club

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 64:36


Season 4: Episode 6--The UP Notable Book Club presents four authors from the Marquette Poets Circle speaking about "Superior Voyage." The Crystal Falls Community District Library in partnership with the U.P. Publishers & Authors Association (UPPAA) presents author events with winners of the UP Notable Book List.  For more information please visit the links below www.UPPAA.org  www.UPNotable.com  marquettepoetscircle.wordpress.com  Four Authors from the Marquette Poets Circle; Marty Achatz, Milton J. Bates, Lisa Fosmo, and Beverly Matherne talk about "Superior Voyage", the group's second anthology.The circle was formed in 2012 by Matt Maki, Claudia Drosen, and Janeen Pergrin Rastall to celebrate poetry and guide each member in finding his or her inner poet. In a true spirit of community, the circle has held workshops, Open Mic nights, and readings for more than a decade. Superior Voyage includes the work of no less than forty-two poets with each contributor fielding two to six entries. MARTY ACHATZ lives in Ishpeming, Michigan, with his wife and children. He has taught for NMU's English Department since 1998. He holds a Master's Degree in Fiction and an MFA in Poetry. His work has appeared in many journals, anthologies, the book-length collection The Mysteries of the Rosary, and two spoken word albums, Slow Dancing with Bigfoot and Christmas with Bigfoot. Marty served two consecutive terms as U.P. Poet Laureate and is currently President of the U.P. Poet Laureate Foundation. Marty is also the Adult Programming Coordinator for Peter White Public Library. MILTON J. BATES is the author of books about the poet Wallace Stevens, the Vietnam War and the Bark River watershed in Wisconsin. His poetry includes the collection Stand Still in the Light (2019) and two chapbooks, Always on Fire (2016) and As They Were (2018). He lives with his wife, Puck, in Marquette, Michigan. LISA FOSMO is an Upper Peninsula Michigan poet, from Escanaba. She has been published in various regional journals and anthologies of note. She currently serves as a judge for the National Poetry contests of the NSFPS, and is the newly elected Vice President of the U.P. Poet Laureate Foundation. She is the author of a full-length book of poetry Mercy is a Bright Darkness,, Golden Dragonfly Press (2023). BEVERLY MATHERNE, 2023 and 2024 U.P. Poet Laureate, is professor emerita of English at Northern Michigan University and the author of seven bilingual books of poetry; her latest, Love Potions, Teas, Incantations. Beverly served in NMU's Department of English as director of the Master of Fine Arts program in creative writing, director of the department's visiting writing series, and poetry editor of Passages North literary magazine. Widely published, she has received seven first-place prizes, including the Hackney Literary Award for Poetry, and four Pushcart nominations. Widely traveled, she has done over 360 readings across the U.S., Canada, and France―and in Wales, Belgium, Germany, and Spain.

RNZ: Afternoons with Jesse Mulligan
National Poetry Day!

RNZ: Afternoons with Jesse Mulligan

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 7:18


Today is National Poetry day and continuing the Afternoons tradition - we'll be holding our annual audience poetry slam competition. To judge again this year we have Dr Tracey Slaughter along in the studio.

95bFM
Various Artists w/ Frances and Liam: August 18, 2023

95bFM

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023


E whai ake nei, coming up on the show today:  Frances speaks with Paula Morris, editor of HIWA, about a new anthology of contemporary Maori short stories out of Auckland University Press.  Liam also had a yarn with Erica Stretton about National Poetry day, taking place on and around next Friday, August 25th.  Frances also speaks with Imogen Taylor about her show ‘murmurs' opening at Michael Lett this evening   Plus, a stacked art guide to finish things off - make sure you go to the 95bFM Record Fair tomorrow and help keep the b afloat! ⛵⛵

maori various artists national poetry hiwa paula morris auckland university press
RESHAD RADIO
REVENGE RADIO EP.4 | Poetry for Dummies

RESHAD RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 133:28


April was National Poetry month and this episode marks a moment in time where Jas has convinced Reshad to tap into his inner poet! Tune in and see what you think

Kaatscast
Financial Literacy at Ulster Savings Bank

Kaatscast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 25:47


April is Financial Literacy Month! It's also National Jazz Appreciation Month, National Fresh Celery Month, Foot Health Awareness Month, World Landscape Architecture Month, and National Soft Pretzel Month. But let's just stick to finance for now, a topic that affects us all throughout the year. And for a refresher on that topic, we met up with our local bank branch manager, Samantha Awand-Gortel, for a conversation on banking and finance in the Catskills and beyond. Did we mention April is also National Poetry month? Hey, ChatGPT, how about a limerick on financial literacy to get us started? There once was a person named Jill Who never learned to manage her bill But with financial literacy in hand She could finally understand And now she's financially fit and chill! It's no Carolyn Wells, but honestly, financial literacy poetry is hard to find. Pictured: Ulster Savings Bank Phoenicia branch manager Samantha Awand-Gortel, with a poster by some appreciative (and financially literate) Phoenicia Elementary Schoolers. Many thanks to our sponsors: The Mountain Eagle, Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce, and Briars & Brambles Books --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kaatscast/support

Myth Matters
Myth, Poetry, and the Power of the Word

Myth Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 40:16 Transcription Available


April is National Poetry month!Myth and poetry have a long, shared history. In fact, our oldest known myths are poems. Have you ever wondered why this might be?I suspect the intuitive rightness of myth as poetry springs from the ancient understanding of the sacred power of the word. In this episode, we explore the creative power of speech with the aid of a handful of contemporary poems that reference myths. These poems also give us a chance to plumb the questions at the heart of these myths.I hope you find a poem, a poet, a thought, a moment in this podcast that inspires or provokes you. As Jeanette Winterson says: " [...] a poem is like a shot of espresso – the fastest way to get a hit of mental and spiritual energy."Thanks for listening and keep the mystery in your life alive.Support the showEmail Catherine at drcsvehla@mythicmojo.comPost a positive review on apple podcasts! Learn how you can work with Catherine at https://mythicmojo.com

Warm Thoughts
Episode 162: Relaxing with a Good Book

Warm Thoughts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 2:33


During the Thanksgiving and Christmas season, many people travel by air and land to visit family. It is a busy time, and often the stress and strain from travel and the social events can cause us to feel overtired. It becomes apparent that we need to focus on the reason for the season. In my travels throughout the years, I have noticed people relaxing while reading a book. It is one of the ways of finding quiet moments of relaxation. I usually travel with books and find moments to have some quiet thoughts from the heart. Recently, a poem I wrote during some quiet moments was published in "The Best Poem of the 90s" by the National Poetry anthology. I will share these thoughts with you my dear readers of the warm thoughts column: My Bible and I. "We travel together, my Bible and I. Through all kinds of weather, with smiles or a sigh. In sorrow or sunshine, and tempest or calm, it's friendship unchanging, my lamp and my Psalm. We've traveled together, my Bible and I, when life has grown weary and death e'en was nigh. Yet through all the darkness of mist or of roam, I found it a solace, a prayer, and a song. So now who shall part us, my Bible and I? Thou sword of the Spirit, bid error to fly. And still through life's journey until my last sigh, we'll travel together, my Bible and I." The Bible is the most read and is a guide and roadmap in your travels throughout life. Warm thoughts: "Whenever I feel sad and blue, and all my skies are gray, I read words from a wondrous book and drive my cares away." Ben Burrows. Warm Thoughts from the Little Home on the Prairie Over a Cup of Tea by Luetta G. Werner Published in the Marion Record December 5th, 1996.Download the Found Photo Freebie and cherish your memories of the past.Enjoy flipping through the Vintage Photo Book on your coffee table.I hope you enjoyed this podcast episode! Please follow along on this journey by going to visualbenedictions.com or following me on Instagram, Facebook, and Pinterest. You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, and Overcast. And don't forget to rate and review so more people can tune in! I'd greatly appreciate it.Till next time,Trina

Quintessential Listening: Poetry Online Radio
QLPOR Proudly Presents Sylvia "Ladi Di" Beverly and Special Guests

Quintessential Listening: Poetry Online Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2022 67:00


Sylvia Dianne Beverly is an Internationally acclaimed poet, presenting poetry in London, England, at the Lewisham Theater.  A collection of her work is housed at George Washington University's Gelman Library.   Ladi Di, as she is affectionally called is a proud member of  Poets on the Green Line, Poetry X Hunger, Poetry Poster Project and Voices of Woodlawn.  She celebrated the 40th Anniversary of Host Grace Cavalieri, reading on her show "The Poet and the Poem" at the Library of Congress Experience.  She is a founding member of the Anointed PENS (Poets Empowered to Nurture Souls)  Poetry Ministry, out of Ebenezer AME Church, an alum of Poets in Progress with Poet Laureate of District of Columbia, the late Dolores Kendrick.  She is author of two books (Forever In Your Eyes and Cooking Up South).  Recently her poetry appears in several International anthologies, Moonstone Press Anthology and part of Mike Maggio”s 30/30 Series for National Poetry month 2021 and 2022.  The late Dr. Maya Angelou is her hero. She is the proud Matriarch of her family.  Celebrating Black History 2018, she and her family received posthumously for her Dad, a  “Congressional Gold Medal” from the United States Marines.  She is a Poet of Excellence in Prince Georges County 2020.   syladydi@comcast.net.   Sylvia Beverly Facebook  Instagram @lovepoet13

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month 2022 April 30th 2022

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2022 10:53


History of National Poetry Writing Month National Poetry Writing Month (also known as NaPoWriMo) is a creative writing project held annually in April in which participants attempt to write a poem each day for one month. NaPoWriMo coincides with the National Poetry Month in the United States of America and Canada. NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April. This website is owned and operated by Maureen Thorson, a poet living in Washington, DC. Inspired by NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month), she started writing a poem a day for the month of April back in 2003, posting the poems on her blog. When other people started writing poems for April, and posting them on their own blogs, Maureen linked to them. After a few years, so many people were doing NaPoWriMo that Maureen decided to launch an independent website for the project. My History with National Poetry Writing Month I started writing poetry in 1988 after I had been exposed to T.S. Elliot in my honors English class in high school. In 1992 I started reading my poetry publicly at Espesso Europia Coffee Shop in Abilene Tx while I was in the United States Air Force. This continued for many years when I ran my own poetry reading at Cannova's in Loves Park Illinois and attended the poetry slams at The green Mill in Chicago Illinois. While living in Rockford Illinois I published my first book of poetry Throwing Yourself at the Ground and Missing in 2007 followed by Postcards From Someone You Don't Know in 2008 Wisdom From the Sack in 2010 and Shaving Crop Circles In My Chest Hair in 2017. You can get copies of all of these books in my merch section. In 2009 I started participating in National Poetry Writing Month which became the basis for my book Wisdom From the Sack and Shaving Crop Circles in My Chest Hair. In 2020 I started publishing my podcast version of the challenge and those can be viewed here for 2020 and here for 2021. April 30th Poetry Prompt And now – our final (but still optional!) prompt. Today, I'd like to challenge you to write a cento. This is a poem that is made up of lines taken from other poems. If you'd like to dig into an in-depth example, here's John Ashbery's cento “The Dong with the Luminous Nose,” and here it is again, fully annotated to show where every line originated. A cento might seem like a complex undertaking – and one that requires you to have umpteen poetry books at your fingertips for reference – but you don't have to write a long one. And a good way to jump-start the process is to find an online curation of poems about a particular topic (or in a particular style), and then mine the poems for good lines to string together. You might look at the Poetry Foundation's collection of love poems, or its collection of poems by British romantic poets, or even its surprisingly expansive collection of poems about (American) football. April 30th Poem Not My Words  30 April 2022  1  Everybody knows that the boat is leaking  Everybody knows that the captain lied  Everybody got this broken feeling  Like their father or their dog just died  Everybody talking to their pockets  Everybody wants a box of chocolates  And a long stem rose  2  Those who have crossed      With direct eyes, to death's other Kingdom      Remember us-if at all-not as lost      Violent souls, but only      As the hollow men      The stuffed men.  3  Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight  Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,    2  Eyes I dare not meet in dreams      In death's dream kingdom      These do not appear:      There, the eyes are      Sunlight on a broken column      There, is a tree swinging      And voices are      In the wind's singing      More distant and more solemn      Than a fading star.  1  And everybody knows that the Plague is coming  Everybody knows that it's moving fast  Everybody knows that the naked man and woman  Are just a shining artifact of the past  2  Is it like this      In death's other kingdom      Waking alone      At the hour when we are      Trembling with tenderness      Lips that would kiss      Form prayers to broken stone.  3  though wise men at their end know dark is right,  Because their words had forked no lightning  2  In this last of meeting places      We grope together      And avoid speech      Gathered on this beach of the tumid river           Sightless, unless      The eyes reappear      As the perpetual star      Multifoliate rose  1  And everybody knows that it's now or never  Everybody knows that it's me or you  And everybody knows that you live forever  Ah, when you've done a line or two  3  Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,  And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,  2  Between the desire      And the spasm      Between the potency      And the existence      Between the essence      And the descent      Falls the Shadow  1  And everybody knows that you're in trouble  Everybody knows what you've been through  From the bloody cross on top of Calvary  To the beach of Malibu  3  And you, my father, there on the sad height,  Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.  2  In death's other kingdom      Waking alone      At the hour when we are      Trembling with tenderness      Lips that would kiss      Form prayers to broken stone.    1  Everybody knows the war is over  Everybody knows the good guys lost  Everybody knows the fight was fixed  The poor stay poor, the rich get rich  That's how it goes  3  Do not go gentle into that good night.  Rage, rage against the dying of the light.  2  This is the way the world ends      This is the way the world ends      This is the way the world ends      Not with a bang but a whimper.  Everybody Knows Leonard Cohen  The Hollow Men T.S. Elliot  Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night Dylan Thomas  Reaching Out To reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation. Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT Channel IG: @createartpodcast Twitter: @createartpod

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month 2022 April 29th 2022

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 7:07


History of National Poetry Writing Month National Poetry Writing Month (also known as NaPoWriMo) is a creative writing project held annually in April in which participants attempt to write a poem each day for one month. NaPoWriMo coincides with the National Poetry Month in the United States of America and Canada. NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April. This website is owned and operated by Maureen Thorson, a poet living in Washington, DC. Inspired by NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month), she started writing a poem a day for the month of April back in 2003, posting the poems on her blog. When other people started writing poems for April, and posting them on their own blogs, Maureen linked to them. After a few years, so many people were doing NaPoWriMo that Maureen decided to launch an independent website for the project. My History with National Poetry Writing Month I started writing poetry in 1988 after I had been exposed to T.S. Elliot in my honors English class in high school. In 1992 I started reading my poetry publicly at Espesso Europia Coffee Shop in Abilene Tx while I was in the United States Air Force. This continued for many years when I ran my own poetry reading at Cannova's in Loves Park Illinois and attended the poetry slams at The green Mill in Chicago Illinois. While living in Rockford Illinois I published my first book of poetry Throwing Yourself at the Ground and Missing in 2007 followed by Postcards From Someone You Don't Know in 2008 Wisdom From the Sack in 2010 and Shaving Crop Circles In My Chest Hair in 2017. You can get copies of all of these books in my merch section. In 2009 I started participating in National Poetry Writing Month which became the basis for my book Wisdom From the Sack and Shaving Crop Circles in My Chest Hair. In 2020 I started publishing my podcast version of the challenge and those can be viewed here for 2020 and here for 2021. April 29th Poetry Prompt And here's our prompt (optional, as always). In certain versions of the classic fairytale Sleeping Beauty, various fairies or witches are invited to a princess's christening, and bring her gifts. One fairy/witch, however, is not invited, and in revenge for the insult, lays a curse on the princess. Today, I'd like to challenge you to write a poem in which you muse on the gifts you received at birth — whether they are actual presents, like a teddy bear, or talents – like a good singing voice – or circumstances – like a kind older brother, as well as a “curse” you've lived with (your grandmother's insistence on giving you a new and completely creepy porcelain doll for every birthday, a bad singing voice, etc.). I hope you find this to be an inspiring avenue for poetic and self-exploration. April 29th Poem He Must be Born with It  29 April 2022  As I stand in the back of the room  Fiending for another smoke  I feel every emotion coming from the poets  Some of them are younger than my socks  Others share their experiences that I have no reference to  Yet I come back week after week  Like they say to do in the meetings  Where we just share our first names  I've always been able to empathize with most anyone  So much so I take on their struggle  Without being asked  Or wanted  Because I've felt since day 1  That I have to be the sacrificial lamb  Fending for myself  With parents who would rather drink  Than take care of their children  I stand outside, alone  Flicking ashes to the ground  Field stripping the butts  And the young poets come up to me  Asking how they did  Asking if I heard their latest piece  Quizzing me on their content  Giving them the wisdom that has been bestowed on me  Through years of searching  And I pass along to them the torch  Freshly lit with their energy and inquisitiveness  Praying they have a better life than what I was given  Knowing the predators that lurk just around the corner  I try to protect them and provide them  With an example of what I have done that works  And what I have done that doesn't  This is all I can give the next generations  The benefit of my experience  It's a precious gift that I wish I had been given  Or that I would have been open enough to receive  My spirit will be following up after I release these earthly bonds  I expect to see  A better world than what was left to me  Reaching Out To reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation. Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT Channel IG: @createartpodcast Twitter: @createartpod

Create Art Podcast
National Poetry Writing Month 2022 April 28th 2022

Create Art Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 6:32


History of National Poetry Writing Month National Poetry Writing Month (also known as NaPoWriMo) is a creative writing project held annually in April in which participants attempt to write a poem each day for one month. NaPoWriMo coincides with the National Poetry Month in the United States of America and Canada. NaPoWriMo, or National Poetry Writing Month, is an annual project in which participating poets attempt to write a poem a day for the month of April. This website is owned and operated by Maureen Thorson, a poet living in Washington, DC. Inspired by NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month), she started writing a poem a day for the month of April back in 2003, posting the poems on her blog. When other people started writing poems for April, and posting them on their own blogs, Maureen linked to them. After a few years, so many people were doing NaPoWriMo that Maureen decided to launch an independent website for the project. My History with National Poetry Writing Month I started writing poetry in 1988 after I had been exposed to T.S. Elliot in my honors English class in high school. In 1992 I started reading my poetry publicly at Espesso Europia Coffee Shop in Abilene Tx while I was in the United States Air Force. This continued for many years when I ran my own poetry reading at Cannova's in Loves Park Illinois and attended the poetry slams at The green Mill in Chicago Illinois. While living in Rockford Illinois I published my first book of poetry Throwing Yourself at the Ground and Missing in 2007 followed by Postcards From Someone You Don't Know in 2008 Wisdom From the Sack in 2010 and Shaving Crop Circles In My Chest Hair in 2017. You can get copies of all of these books in my merch section. In 2009 I started participating in National Poetry Writing Month which became the basis for my book Wisdom From the Sack and Shaving Crop Circles in My Chest Hair. In 2020 I started publishing my podcast version of the challenge and those can be viewed here for 2020 and here for 2021. April 28th Poetry Prompt Today's (optional) prompt is to write a concrete poem. Like acrostic poems, concrete poems are a favorite for grade-school writing assignments, so this may not be your first time at the concrete-poem rodeo. In brief, a concrete poem is one in which the lines are shaped in a way that mimics the topic of the poem. For example, May Swenson's poem “Women” mimics curves, reinforcing the poem's references to motion, rocking horses, and even the shape of a woman's body. George Starbuck's “Sonnet in the Shape of a Potted Christmas Tree” is – you guessed it – a sonnet in the shape of a potted Christmas tree. Your concrete poem could be complexly-shaped, but relatively simple strategies can also be “concrete” —  like a poem involving a staircase where the length of the lines grows or shrinks over time, like an ascending (or descending) set of stairs. April 28th Poem Mug of Life  28 April 2022  Before everyone wakes up to start their day  You, my black pot of gold, spit and bubble and  Steam you way into my ears, I can smell your  Vapors as they waft from room to room and permeate   Each and every room in our house, I love the bitter  Feeling you give as you pour over my tongue washing  Away the dryness of the night's restorative dreams  The heft of a full mug of this elixir opens my eyes  And provides me comfort when I get ready for life  Sipping away mindlessly and feeling the energy fill me  Warmth of the liquid makes me smile, my kids know  Not to ask too much of me before I drain the  First cup of watery bitter love in my mug, quiet  Listening to the sounds of the birds and the rustle  Of the rabbits in the backyard is how I start my day   Reaching Out To reach out to me, email timothy@createartpodcast.com I would love to hear about your journey and what you are working on. If you would like to be on the show or have me discuss a topic that is giving you trouble write in and let's start that conversation. Email: timothy@createartpodcast.com YouTube Channel: Create Art Podcast YT Channel IG: @createartpodcast Twitter: @createartpod

Myth Matters
A Strange Feather: 10 Poems for perspective and peace of mind

Myth Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 22:27 Transcription Available


This is our second and final podcast in celebration of National Poetry month. I devote the April episodes to National Poetry month, to honor and recognize the shared origins of poetry, myth, and song. I also want to share some of the power of poetry. A poem, like a song or a story, can evoke a deep and necessary sense of the rightness of things. In his work titled The Relevance of the Beautiful,philosopher Hans Gadamer writes "[...] the experience of the beautiful, and particularly the beautiful in art, is the invocation of a potentially whole and holy order of things, wherever it may be found." Attention to beauty is one way to find the quiet eye in the middle of our collective storms. I need the perspective and peace of mind that communion with a poem offers. Maybe you do too.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/mythmatterspodcast)

Myth Matters
With the night falling we are saying thank you: 10 poems for National Poetry month

Myth Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 25:35 Transcription Available


"Let the beauty we love be what we do.There are hundreds of ways to kneel and kiss the ground."  --RumiIn the last podcast, "A Terrible Love of War, A Culture of Peace," I talked about the need to build a culture and societies that are so satisfying and compelling that we are unwilling to sacrifice them or our precious lives to the destruction and death brought by war. I imagine the time that we spend together here today with these poems, as an offering to such a culture.I hope these poems bring you some respite, inspiration, a deeper appreciation for the beauty in your life. Perhaps you'll find a new poet to investigate on your own.April is National Poetry month here in the United States.  Let's celebrate.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/mythmatterspodcast)

Black & Published
The Othered Point of View with Andy Rojas

Black & Published

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 45:20


On this episode of Black & Published, Nikesha kicks off National Poetry month with Andres "Andy" Rojas, author of the poetry collection, Third Winter in our Second Country. Andy was born in Cuba and came to the U.S. at age 13. He holds an MFA from the University of Florida and currently edits for Poetry Is Currency. By day he's a lawyer who works for the IRS.Episode Notes _________________________On this episode of Black & Published, Nikesha kicks off National Poetry month with Andres "Andy" Rojas, author of the poetry collection, Third Winter in our Second Country. Andy was born in Cuba and came to the U.S. at age 13. He holds an MFA from the University of Florida and currently edits for Poetry Is Currency. By day he's a lawyer who works for the IRS.During the conversation, Andy explains why he took a 10 year break from writing poetry. What brought him back to his first love and how writing is a way to give himself a sense of safety and home. He also discusses how he experiences otherness as white-presenting Cuban immigrant. Support the show (https://paypal.me/nikeshaelise)

Keystone Unplugged
National Poetry Writing Month

Keystone Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 8:36


Join Student Success Advisor, Bridget Blosser as she discusses Keystone student involvement in National Poetry Writing Month!