Drew Myron's Blog, page 50
August 20, 2014
Do you know the Oracle?
Don't you love the Bibliomancy Oracle?
It fits all my criteria for fun: simple, immediate, poetic.
Try it! Just focus on a question or concern, and click the magic green orb for your "divine message."Writer Reb Livingston is the creator of Bibliomancy Oracle, a site that offers over 2,500 prophecies divined from literature. She's also the author of the poetry-novel Bombyonder. Reb (short for rebel?) calls herself a writer without a genre, and I think the Oracle is uniquely inspired.
At Push Pull Books, I invite writers and artists to share their favorite books on a given theme. The latest edition features Reb and three favorite books on Oracles and Dreams.
Go ahead, get some divine inspiration, literary style.
August 14, 2014
Thankful Thursday: Chance & Cheer
Woman Ironing (Silhouette) by Edgar DegasAll week I collected cheery thoughts.
I am thankful for this, this and that. I adopted the simple satisfaction of one who lives lightly, writing: small bird, blue sky, watermelon.
You know, the kind of pollyanna blather that drives you crazy if you're feeling less than cheerful.
This morning, I was in iron mind: slow and firm. The world felt full of clamor, too many opinions and expectations, and I just wanted to fold towels and iron shirts. The mind and body reaches for order.
You can't rush an ironing job. Or, you can, but your wrinkles will reveal a hurried mind.
No one irons anymore. My nearest dry-cleaner, 25 miles to the north, has shut down, as has another shop 25 miles to the south. I'm pressing my shirts, knowing that no one within 50 miles is dressing smoothly. Don't worry, I don't iron my jeans. That's just weird.
I use spray starch. I like a crisp collar. It's probably bad for the ozone, but rumples are bad for my mental health.
Leaning into my task, I think of pressing on.
When I was a teenager, my uncle and I attempted suicide on the very same day. We weren't close and he lived worlds away, but for one day we were connected through our own desperate acts. One of us survived.
So much of life depends upon chance. And wrinkles. And a good balance of cheer.
Gratitude. Appreciation. Praise. Please join me for Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause to give thanks for people, places, and things in our lives. What are you thankful for today?
August 13, 2014
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August 10, 2014
Get Nourished
One of poetry’s gifts, for me,
is the nourishment of an inner life —
the outside brought in, rearranged,
and sent back out again.
— Shirley McPhillips
Poem Central: Word Journeys with Readers and Writers
Win this book! Free. No strings, spam, pressure, or prodding. I'll pay postage, and you'll get a great book.
To enter the drawing, simply click here and add your name and contact info in the blog comments section by Tuesday, August 12, 2014. I'll randomly (eyes closed!) choose a name from the entries. The winner will be announced on August 13, 2014.
Yes, it's that easy.
August 8, 2014
Thankful Thursday: Pressure
Sun Reader, by Ginny Hoyle
Some days everything comes together — idea, expectation, execution — and you say ahhhh.
This year, as a complement to the Denver County Fair poetry contest, I introduced Poems-Write-Now, an on-demand poetry booth. Thanks to the skill and enthusiasm of a team of poets, it worked just as imagined — and, well, actually, better!
Poets sat ready, pens poised and minds open as "customers" stopped by to give a topic and get a poem. A man wanted a poem about cats. A woman asked for a poem about chocolate. A brother and sister requested a poem about siblings. There were poems about kayaks, sunsets, freaks, geeks, insomnia, parades, pie (and pi — in the same poem!), and more.
Customers were asked to pay what they could, and 100% of proceeds went to a local literary organization (this year, Art from Ashes).
Poets wrote under pressure, composing full poems in under 15 minutes. While customers wandered away, poets went swiftly to work, drafting on-the-spot, quickly scratching out and into a full and finished piece, then copying the poem onto a clean sheet and stamping the poem with the official "Denver County Fair Poem" seal. The pressure, combined with spontaneous creativity, was exhilarating.
When the customer returned, the poet shared the poem aloud, and a powerful exchange occurred, a wonderful charge of expectation, surprise, and delight. So moved was one customer that she cried. Others were confounded. How did you do that, they asked. And how did you write so fast?
"I enjoyed the challenge and it turned out to be a lot of fun," said poet Ginny Hoyle, who was joined by a host of other poets — Kathryn Bass, Eduardo Gabrieloff, Hilary DePolo, Lynn Wagner, Dan Manzanares, and more — each working one to two hour shifts. "It’s just the kind of thing that can demonstrate that poetry is fun and alive and now."
Lucky me, I got to be both participating poet and patron of poetry. Here's a poem made-just-for-me, written by Ginny Hoyle, in response to the topic "sun":
Sun Reader
To read the sun is to mark
the course of days. To know
the sun by its angle of repose is to be a creature
of the high plains.
This much she knows. She needs that bright heat
sun that sinks and stirs the blood. She lies
in the light, her hungry mind shielded
by a spine, buried under the covers of
a hardbound book that takes off like
a redtailed hawk, soaring over fields
of daisies fringed in white.
— Ginny Hoyle
Aug 3 2014
This poem is such a perfect fit that I think Ginny, whom I'd never met, is an unusually intuitive poet.
On this Thankful Thursday, I am energized and thankful for poets and pressure, and people who make poems and people who want poems.
Gratitude. Appreciation. Praise. Please join me for Thankful Thursday, a weekly pause to give thanks for people, places, and things in our lives. What are you thankful for today?
August 2, 2014
Outsiders are the real insiders
We're pumping up the poetry at the Denver County Fair.
Find me here, in the swirl of three days of crazy. This wacky Wonka-like event has been called the "craziest county fair in America," offering human hamster-balls, unicorn rides, robot opera, and zombies, along with pies, pickles and, yes, poems!
Look for the poets — the tame outsiders of the literary world — at the Poetry Performance where contest winners will share their poems, and at Poems-Write-Now, where poets are penning on-the-spot poems.
Find me here, somewhere between the Cannabis Cabaret and the Miss County Fair Drag Queen Contest.
At the Denver County Fair, outsiders are the real insiders.
July 26, 2014
The less you know
Diane Arbus, 1967. Photo by Roz Kelly.
I'm standing among secrets at the Carnegie Museum of Art.
"A photograph is a secret about a secret," said photographer Diane Arbus, whose work is on display. "The more it tells you the less you know."
It's a gallery of stark truth. The famed photographer is noted for black-and-white photographs of "deviant and marginal people (dwarfs, giants, transgender people, nudists, circus performers) or of people whose normality seems ugly or surreal."
Arbus believed that a camera could be "a little bit cold, a little bit harsh" but its scrutiny revealed the truth; the difference between what people wanted others to see and what they really did see — the flaws."
Writing, I'm thinking, is much the same. We are veiled and we are exposed. We control the "story" and yet we have no control. Art is in the balance. Or, even better, art is in the imbalance.
"If one is writing well, one is totally exposed," said Kay Ryan, former U.S. Poet Laureate, in the Paris Review. "But at the same time, one has to feel thoroughly masked or protected."
I like secrets, knowing, keeping, storing the mystery deep. One of my favorite poems is A Secret Life by Stephen Dunn:
A Secret Life
Why you need to have one
is not much more mysterious than
why you don't say what you think
at the birth of an ugly baby . . .
When I am writing, I am a cocoon of secrets. I am both masked and revealed. Aren't we all? And isn't that the delicious draw of creating anything at all?
July 21, 2014
On this & that, and how are you?
On Dinner
The pantry is empty, again, and as I'm shopping, again, I realize much of my life is spent buying family packs of pork chops. And there's just two of us. And I don't really like pork chops.
On Swimming
It's been years since I was surrounded by jumping, squealing, swimsuited children with bird-like bones and rounded bellies, and at the pool I remember how much I like water. But it’s never easy, the strokes, the breathing. So much thinking. I like to float, the water sloshes in my ears and hushes my thinking away.
On Getting Through
A man we know hung himself.
“It’s so sad,” says my husband.
“Yes,” I say. “You just never know what people are going through. But what could we do even if we had known?”
“Save him,” he says, plainly.
We're sitting outside and a full moon burns low.
“I don’t think it works that way,” I answer. “Sometimes you can’t change the pull of sadness.”
We've said so much we are afraid to say anything more so we sit together with the heaviness of truth.
On Dreams
No one wants to hear your dreams. Don’t share them and never, ever, in detail. That said, I’m having vivid dreams. It leaves me exhausted, as if I’ve spent the night working through a whole day. And my god, don't I do enough of this in my waking hours?
On God
I’m writing long letters to God. My calls went unanswered, desperation settled in, and I grabbed a pen. Maybe he thinks me cheeky, wordy, whiny. Letters are best, because even if he did call I couldn't tell which voice is his or mine, and which is the one I want to hear.
On Writing
None of it is stellar. But that’s not the point. The point is to express, and in that act to feel less sad and alone, to find and hold the small points of light.
On Letters
Maybe we’re all writing letters to God. When we garden or hike or bike or sail. When we sing or paint or write. We want to be held, heard, healed. Everything then, every wax and ramble, every accounting and regret, is a sort of holding on.
Dear God. Dear Life. Dear Friend. I am here. How are you?
July 15, 2014
Poem Central: Win this book!
"The first important thing to understand about this book,” writes Shirley McPhillips, “is that it is based on my belief that poetry is not an academic subject but an art. And therefore it belongs where life is.”
And right away, I'm hooked. I'm in. I'm taking this train all the way to the station.
Billed as a place where people and poems meet, Poem Central: Word Journeys with Readers and Writers is true to its title. Packed with tips, techniques and practical tools, this book is a focused and valuable resource for poets, teachers, and poets-in-the-making.
Author-editor Shirley McPhillips is a seasoned teacher, speaker, writer, and poet laureate for Choice Literacy. Her path to poetry is road-tested and real, and she deftly combines solid structure, thorough research, and genuine encouragement.
Divided into three parts — weaving poetry into lives and classrooms, reading poems, and writing poems — Poem Central gathers a range of voices: professional poets, inspired teachers, known and unknown writers, artists, illustrators, musicians, editors, and students, who offer examples and samples of how poetry plays a part in their lives. This down-to-earth approach gives the book an encouraging and inclusive vibe. [Disclosure: I’m one of those "unknown writers." McPhillips found my poem, Instructions, exactly and asked for permission to include it in the book.]
This toothy and well-designed resource stands proudly with other gems in its genre — The Crafty Poet by Diane Lockward and Awakening the Heart by Georgia Heard, for example — and the book’s elaborate resources and reference sections lead to even more treasures.
Best of all, McPhillips speaks my language:
“One of poetry’s gift, for me, is the nourishment of an inner life — the outside brought in, rearranged, and sent back out again,” she writes. “It is a meeting place for the objects and activity of the outside world and the inner world of consciousness and imagination. Recognizing, attuning, reaching out, connecting, responding. This is the place for poetry; this is the attitude of poetry. This is how it shows us a way we might face life.”
Win this book!
To enter a drawing to win a Poem Central by Shirley McPhillips, simply add your name and contact info in the blog comments section by August 12, 2014. I'll randomly (eyes closed!) choose a name from the entries. The winner will be announced on August 13, 2014.
July 10, 2014
Thankful Thursday: Signs
Gratitude. Appreciation. Praise.
It's Thankful Thursday. Please join me in a weekly pause to express appreciation for people, places, things & more.
It's no secret that I'm in search of signs; Each day I read two horoscopes (strength in second opinions), and turn a simple phrase into pertinent message. I'm soft for mystery, meaning, serendipity.
During Summer Writing Adventure Camp last month, the youngsters and I stumbled into our "theme song," a tune sang at every street sign: Stop, look, what's that sound? Everybody look what's going down.
Thank you, Buffalo Springfield. Of course, none of the children had heard of the band, the song, or the war prompting the song.
To be true, I was first to belt it out, as an urgent plea to get the youngsters to, well, stop for traffic. But then the tune hung around as a call to pay attention to the world. Full disclosure: I was doing most of the singing, off-key, and frequently confusing "sound" for "sign."
You can imagine my delight, then, when we discovered an actual sign tucked into a wooded lot in the heart of Newport, Oregon's historic Nye Beach:
I love you, too.
So sweet and warm. So yes.
Like all good signs, there's a backstory. Artist Shannon Weber is "on a mission to change the world one love note at a time." Learn all about her project at http://www.loveyou2.org/
We stood staring at the sign in wonder. We took photos (it's generational, you know, to view life as a photo waiting for capture). We gawked and wondered: who? what? what more?
And then we discovered, beyond the sign, sculpture among weeds, art within bramble. This wasn't a neglected lot at all! How many times had we walked right past, never giving a second, deeper, look?
A simple sign, of just four words, changed our pace, perception, and day.
What are you thankful for today?
on a mission to change the world one love note at a time - See more at: http://www.loveyou2.org/about-me/#sth...
a San Francisco-based ephemeral artist on a mission to change the world one love note at a time. - See more at: http://www.loveyou2.org/about-me/#sth...
a San Francisco-based ephemeral artist on a mission to change the world one love note at a time. - See more at: http://www.loveyou2.org/about-me/#sth...