mermaidcamp

mermaidcamp

Keeping current in wellness, in and out of the water

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Memory and Poetry

March 24, 2015 3 Comments

shrimp plant

shrimp plant

 

Our memories are not accurate, but serve as a guide to learning more about what might have happened. We fill in the blanks with what we are told or what is presumably common knowledge when we think about the past. This was never so clear to me as when a group of my elementary school friends recalled our childhood together after 50 years. Most of us remembered different versions of the past, with a few striking exceptions. The most hated teacher was remembered in her worst aspects. None of us could recall her being nice at all during the entire 5th grade year. The memories had become more like cartoons than real events, with only a few details sparking us to bring up related stories.  The only event we all vividly recalled exactly the same was an incident involving a girl who spewed vomit out of her nose. In the third grade this made a very big impression on all of us.  I believe the intense olfactory element of the memory is what made it so specific.  We laughed about it, but this was the most memorable shared experience we had from our time in elementary school.  She was not present, but she was the center of attention for a while.

Good and romantic memories may be built on delusion or on fables that are repeated and slightly altered by each person who tells them.  We recall certain details and omit others to patch together a self-fulfilling story of cause and effect. Our dreams and pastimes create  frameworks for the past to become a fairy tale, and our self-image a sport.  Time changes our perspective and buries much of the unpleasant reality under a blanket of foggy forgetfulness.  We are all in the same memory soup in this sense.  None of us is a reliable witness to anything we experienced in the past.  Some choose to highlight the suffering, and others feature past success or accomplishment as the anchor to the ship of self-definition.  The overriding emotions blur the facts, and that is all perfectly normal.

I remember writing poems and songs when I was very young.  I have no examples of any of it, but I am sure I was prolific.  I sent poems to magazines for publication.  I saved my rejection letters because I was into my role as a poet.  I played piano and clarinet when I was very young, but switched to baritone ukulele, then later guitar for my role as teen folk singer.  My first job in life was as a singer and a costumer when I was 17 years old.  I traveled to North Carolina for the summer theater gig my high school choir director had helped me land.  My mother and aunt drove me across Tennessee, stopping at the Grand Ole Opry to see a show.  Minnie Pearl was on stage…memorable Minnie. I arrived in Cherokee, North Carolina in high spirits because I was working and living away from my parents.  It was my high dive into the deep end, and I was thrilled. “Where am I going with this?”, you may wonder, gentle reader.

I am returning to some kind of remembered roots in this blog for the month of April, 2015.  I will participate in #NaPoWriMo and create 30 poems in 30 days right here.  I have been enjoying a period of study and immersion into poems and poets, and now will boldly commit to the creative task of being a poet all next month. I have done enough creative ventures in my life to know that there are many different tastes, and therefore room for all kinds of art.  After April I will resume my matter of fact writing style.  I hope my poetic posting will please you. For me it is a big stretch beyond my present boundaries, and that is why I want to do it.  If you send rejection letters I will be perfectly understanding.   By publishing I am already moving beyond my childhood limits.  I believe it is good to find a new high dive into the deep end from time to time.

yucca

yucca

#ROW80 Nourishing Harvest

March 22, 2015 9 Comments

ROW80

ROW80

On this last check in to #ROW80 I am taking stock of the bountiful benefits I harvested from this program.  I tried it on a lark in order to revive my dead tumblr blog and work on poetry.  Results have surpassed my wildest imagination even though I did not fully complete every goal I set at the start.  There is the goal, and then there is the spirit of the goal.  I am pleased to have established:

  • an almost daily poetry writing practice, with emphasis on trying new things
  • a weekly trip to the U of A Poetry Center for inspiration
  • listening and reading a wide variety of poems from all sources
  • making use of exercise time to hear poetry podcasts and ponder
  • following and reading poets on tumblr

For me this means I am primed and ready for #NaPoWriMo in April.  Taking the plunge into poetry during National Poetry Month is a pleasure.  There are poems everywhere, tweeting across the universe at lightening speed, during the month of April.  You don’t need to write them to enjoy reading the participants’ creations.  If you follow the hashtag #NaPoWriMo you may be inspired to contribute. Last year PBS wrote a group poem on twitter which turned out to be very good.  I can’t wait to see what creative events might be in store this year.  I find the energy and the generosity of #ROW80 to be similar to the poetry month program.  Maybe some of my colleagues from here will migrate, or just pop in to enjoy.  It is a non judgmental, creative canvass with major potential for fun.

March happens to be National Nutrition Month, which has made me think about the metaphor of feeding the body and feeding the soul.  We need to ingest calories to stay alive, but there are other qualities to nourishment.  A home-grown lovingly prepared meal has extra positive energy and support that cannot be found at a drive through window.  Joyful play and movement bring circulation to the blood as well as to the senses.  We do not live by bread alone.  The similarities I see between delicious healthy food and a carefully crafted poem may not be obvious. They are both nourishing to the spirit, and necessary to life. I plan to write some cooking and eating poems in April as I expand my repertoire.  Thank you all very much for sharing these 80 days with me.

I will end with a nourishing metaphor by William Shakespeare in his Sonnet 75:

So are you to my thoughts as food to life,
Or as sweet-seasoned showers are to the ground;
And for the peace of you I hold such strife
As ‘twixt a miser and his wealth is found.
Now proud as an enjoyer, and anon
Doubting the filching age will steal his treasure;
Now counting best to be with you alone,
Then bettered that the world may see my pleasure;
Sometimes all full with feasting on your sight,
And by and by clean starvèd for a look;
Possessing or pursuing no delight
Save what is had, or must from you be took.
Thus do I pine and surfeit day by day,
Or gluttoning on all, or all away.