Category Archives: Challenges and Writing Prompts

A Lifetime of Goodbyes

twins

My twins, Jennifer and Mindy. ❤

This poem is dedicated to my twin daughters who share a birthday today. I will never forget the 24+ hours of labor, their premature birth, where I was, how I felt. And I shall cherish every moment that time has given me with them since. There have been many little goodbyes…that moment they took their first breath, when they hopped happily onto the bus without looking back on their first day of school, when they learned to drive, and when they moved out to start a life of their own. A mother’s heart never forgets those moments.

The moment of that first goodbye
a mother’s heart never forgets
her heart remembers where and when
she heard her newborn baby’s cry
the first goodbye of many yet
a mother’s heart with each year grows
for mothers know that in the end
goodbyes are temporary woes.  

kat ~ 21 April 2016

For Jane Dougherty Writes Poetry Challenge…this week the San San. The repeating terms I chose are Mother, Goodbye and Heart. (See a description of the San San below.)

The san san has some things in common with the tritina, including repetition and rhyme. In particular, the san san repeats, three times, each of three terms or images. The eight lines rhyme in the pattern a-b-c-a-b-d-c-d.

 

 

 


April Poetry Month – A Poem a Day #19

Today I am looking at two forms, the Katouta and the Sedoka. The Katouta is a three-line unrhymed poem with a syllable count of 5/7/7 that is most often used to declare love for another. When you double a Katouta into a two stanza poem, it becomes a Sedoka. A Sedoka can be used to create a dialog or you can use each stanza to explore a topic from a different point of view.

glass

Photo from Pinterest

The Glass

A pessimist sees
a hypothetical glass,
moaning, it is half empty…

An optimist sees
promise in a glass half full
a reason to celebrate!

~kat – 19 April 2016


Orbs

DSCN0096

Photo Credit: Kat Myrman


Waterbending orbs…
Sun, vaporizing the dew
and Moon, shifting tides.

~kat – 18 April 2016

A Haiku for RonovanWrites Weekly Haiku Powtry Challenge. Prompt words this week are Sun & Moon. See other haiku HERE


What’s Your Pin?

  

Sewing Pins, ID PINs…
What do they have in common?
I don’t know…I’m stuck!

I use the same PIN
Then it’s only one number
For me to forget!

~kat – 18 April 2016

A few Haiku for TJ’s Household Haiku Challenge. The prompt is Pin. Read other Haiku HERE


April Poetry Month – A Poem a Day # 18

Today’s form come to us from Andrea Dietrich, who created the HexSonetta, a variation of the sonnet that blends elements of Italian and English traditional sonnet forms. Rather than the familiar iambic pentameter, ten syllable/five foot form, the HexSonetta is a trimeter employing an iambic rhythm using only six syllables/three feet. The “hex” stands for the syllable count of each line…six. Like a sonnet it has 14 lines divided into two stanzas. Additionally, there is a final couplet at the end, intended as a summary. Or you may even use the couplet for a “twist” from the theme.

Here are the rules of a HexSonetta:

Meter: Trimeter
Rhyme Scheme: a/b/b/a/a/b  c/d/d/c/c/d  e/e

Here is my take on the HexSonetta:

muse

Muse

She hovers in the mist
at dawn, to whisper her
sweet nothings in my ear
oh, I cannot resist
our secret morning trysts
her voice is bliss to hear.

And in our reverie
she fills my hollow head
with lovely words she’s read
on waves of tranquil seas,
the leaves of ancient trees
and tears of sorrow shed.

No poet can refuse
to entertain a Muse!

~ kat ~ 18 April 2016