she is a wall at the forest’s edge an impenetrable bramble, untamed some say she’s invasive, an unruly hedge in fact she’s a rose of another sweet name
an impenetrable bramble, untamed greening each spring, flowering to buds in fact she’s a rose of another sweet name with drupelets sweet and ready to pluck
greening each spring, flowering to buds one must take care when venturing too close with drupelets sweet and ready to pluck her prickly cane stem’s a formidable foe
one must take care when venturing too close when fair rubis ursinus nips, she draws blood her prickly cane stem’s a formidable foe a favorite snack of deer folk and thrush
when fair rubis ursinus nips, she draws blood she is a wall at the forest’s edge a favorite snack of deer folk and thrush some say she’s invasive, an unruly hedge
~kat
NaPoWriMo2023 Challenge Day 17: Write a poem that contains the name of a specific variety of edible plant – preferably one that grows in your area. In the poem, try to make a specific comparison between some aspect of the plant’s lifespan and your own – or the life of someone close to you. Also, include at least one repeating phrase.
I chose to do a Pantoum ( see the rules below):
Stanza 1: ABAB 1 First line (A) 2 Second line (B) 3 Third line rhymes with first (A) 4 Fourth line rhymes with second (B)
Stanza 2: BCBC 5 Repeat the second line (B) 6 Sixth line (C) 7 Repeat the fourth line (B) 8 Eighth line rhymes with sixth (C)
Stanza 3: CDCD 9 Repeat the sixth line (C) 10 Tenth line (D) 11 Repeat the eighth line (C) 12 Twelfth line rhymes with the tenth (D)
Stanza 4: DADA 13 Repeat tenth line (D) 14 Fourteenth line rhymes with first (A) 15 Repeat twelfth line (D) 16 Repeat the first line (A)
if I were the least bit honest I would lie to you tell you everything is going to be okay that we will get through this you and me that one day we’ll look back and laugh at how silly it was for us to worry I would tell you this and more because it’s what you need to hear most right now but i’m not honest, not one bit the truth of the matter not that it matters is that I’m terrified this might not end well for you, for us… we just don’t need dishonesty when we’re hanging by a thread
~kat
NaPoWriMo2023 Challenge Day Sixteen: Today’s prompt is a poem of negation – yes (or maybe, no), I challenge you to write a poem that involves describing something in terms of what it is not, or not like.
Happy Sunday! I decided to give today’s Reverse time to simmer. When I started it a week ago it just didn’t seem ripe. And in the process of reviewing, I made a few tweaks here and there. Most notably yesterday’s limerick poem which was atrocious in form…where was my head? To save you the trouble of revisiting said disaster, I’ll leave the edited version for you here:
Uncle Ned
Old Uncle Ned, a likable guy was he An affable charmer, the cousins agreed He made the kids laugh For his jokes were quite daft Made us wonder what was in his tea!
At least now it is a proper limerick that actually follows the rules and rhymes!
And secondly, I added a line to my diatribe from Friday, “a brief moment, lost”. As if I didn’t rant enough, there was one more thought left unsaid. You know how that goes, when the floodgates open and you finally unload everything you’ve been holding onto. Then when you walk away there is just one more thing…that “I wish I would had said” moment, but it’s too late. Well, that’s the beauty of the written word. You can edit it. So if you will, indulge me this final word, my “and another thing”. I’m including the context as well to give it full due…
…I have learned to look them straight in the eyes, dare them to objectify me, to present my own ideas, and tell them it’s time to make their own damn coffee… and while they’re at it, bring me mine.
To say that the past several months have taken a toll would be an understatement. But much like the wonder years of being a “mother of 4 under the age of 4…how did I ever do it?”, and later a mother of 4 teenage daughters, I’m finding my stride as a full time official senior citizen, still working full time and now, caring for a spouse who is incapacitated from complications of a major emergency surgery in January. If nothing else I am a survivor. And much to my own surprise I still have plenty of spunk left in me. Life is such a gift! Through it all, I think I needed to be reminded of that.
A ReVerse Poem for Sunday, April 16, 2023
like a nightmare frozen in the sky is it ghosts, god, or me I hear how climactic we dare not want leaving no stained rock unturned I’m just kidding (but you’re thinking I’m not) I’m paying for the demons of your past In waves she sweeps me off my feet it’s on the internet stirring up words, uninspired let’s bring in the cows They lied to us you know. He made the kids laugh
~kat
A ReVerse poem (a practice I started many years ago) is a summary poem with a single line lifted from each entry of a collection of work over a particular timeframe and re-penned in chronological order as a new poem. Unlike a collaborative poem, the ReVerse features the words of one writer, providing a glimpse into their thoughts.
Old Uncle Ned, a likable fellow was he An affable charmer, the cousins agreed He made the kids laugh For his jokes were quite daft Made us wonder what was in his tea!
~kat
NaPoWriMo2023 Challenge Day Fifteen: think of a person – real or imagined – who has been held out to you as an example of how to be of live, but who you have always had doubts about. Write a poem that exaggerates the supposedly admirable qualities of the person in a way that exposes your doubts.
it was a brief moment in time an open window when we were convinced that girls could be smart and successful, that girls could be treated as equals, that their thoughts and opinions mattered, it hasn’t been long since girls could grow up and be anything they dreamed that they could be, and for a second we were assured that our bodies were our own, that our lives had value, gone were the days when we couldn’t vote, or own property, or drive, or choose how to spend our futures, free from the need to defer to our fathers and then to our husbands to get along in this world.
They lied to us you know. Let us taste freedom and a bit of equality (for less pay) and autonomy over own bodies, and the right to choose how to care for ourselves… they never intended for us to get comfortable, they didn’t like it when we started thinking for ourselves, when we stopped asking permission, when we called them out for not accepting that no means no, for expecting to be treated with respect.
I learned how to manage, like those before me, my mother, her mother, before the brief moment flashed, I learned to smile demurely, to avert my eyes when it was not my eyes they wanted to see, but my breasts, I learned that it was easier to make coffee in the boardroom, I learned how to suggest an idea and then applaud my male counterpart when he presented my idea as his, I learned how to juggle work, home, raising the children, I learned how to burn the candle at both ends without getting burned… I thought I was being a team player, thought I was doing what was expected of me, but there was no team.
It's not the life I hoped for you, my darling daughters, and it breaks my heart to watch that brief moment slip away. I didn’t raise you to be chattel I didn’t raise you to be less than.
Please believe me when I tell you that I didn’t lie when I told you that you can be whatever and whoever you dream to be…I still believe it is possible, and I intend to fight for you and your rights until my last breath…I have learned to look them straight in the eyes, dare them to objectify me, to present my own ideas, and tell them it’s time to make their own damn coffee… and while they’re at it, bring me mine.
~kat
NaPoWriMo2023 Challenge Day 14: Today, I challenge you to write a parody or satire based on a famous poem. It can be long or short, rhymed or not. But take a favorite (or unfavorite) poem of the past, and see if you can’t re-write it on humorous, mocking, or sharp-witted lines. You can use your poem to make fun of the original (in the vein of a parody), or turn the form and manner of the original into a vehicle for making points about something else (more of a satire – though the dividing lines get rather confused and thin at times).
Kind of on prompt…not satire, but definitely inspired by the amazing poem below by Gabriel Okara. Peace Y’all. Happy Friday!
Once Upon a Time by the Nigerian poet Gabriel Okara
Once upon a time, son, they used to laugh with their hearts and laugh with their eyes: but now they only laugh with their teeth, while their ice-block-cold eyes search behind my shadow. There was a time indeed they used to shake hands with their hearts: but that’s gone, son. Now they shake hands without hearts while their left hands search my empty pockets.
‘Feel at home!’ ‘Come again’: they say, and when I come again and feel at home, once, twice, there will be no thrice- for then I find doors shut on me.
So I have learned many things, son. I have learned to wear many faces like dresses – homeface, officeface, streetface, hostface, cocktailface, with all their conforming smiles like a fixed portrait smile.
And I have learned too to laugh with only my teeth and shake hands without my heart. I have also learned to say,’Goodbye’, when I mean ‘Good-riddance’: to say ‘Glad to meet you’, without being glad; and to say ‘It’s been nice talking to you’, after being bored.
So it is easier for you to find all the parts/chapters of my ongoing fiction series, I created a new page that lists all the links. You can check it out HERE!
Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Kat Myrman and Like Mercury Colliding with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.