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Court And
Capture Ideas by Mona Hodgson If you don't already have a
poetry notebook, now’s the time to start one. Carry it with you and record
images, sounds, smells, phrases, descriptions, emotions—any snippets of ideas.
Though the conditions for growth may not be right at the moment, looking
through your notebook at a later time may spark new ideas that eventually lead
to completed poems. A sensitive spirit can find poetry wherever he or she looks, listens, smells, tastes, and feels. Subjects for poems are seen through the eyes of joy, grief, victory, loss, triumph, failure, fear, faith .... You get the idea. Ideas sprout and can be harvested from our everyday life and living. Let's look at some of the garden centers that carry the seeds for our poems. Personal Experiences Answering
a few questions can plant new seeds for poetic expression. Ø
What is the make-up of
your family? Ø
Are you married, single,
widowed, divorced? Ø
Do you have teenagers,
married children, handicapped children, preschoolers, grandchildren? List
the particulars of your current and past family situations and experiences. The
subject matter itself may suggest a market. Is your topic appropriate for
a single-parenting magazine? A magazine
for senior adults? A magazine for teenagers? Here's
one of my poems written from my empty nest experience. A CURRENT ALL HER OWN Realigning her too spacious nest, the sparrow sifts molting shed in her offsprings’ adolescence. Memories lifted by changing currents drift to the surface. With her breath caught in a warning warble, she watched her young test their wings. One by one the fledglings fluttered to the nest’s edge. Looking out, looking back, looking up, each one flapped wings she had once groomed. Where would the current take them? Would they soar? Would they find their way? Like the down they left behind, questions swirled about her. Fanning her own feathers long forgotten, the sparrow perches at the nest’s edge. Looking out, she flutters, flaps the wings her fledglings groomed, and soars on changing currents. MH Knowledge Again, making a list can germinate poem and market ideas. Ø
What do you know about? Ø
What is your profession?
Ø
Your hobbies? Ø
Your activities? Ø
What ministries are you
involved in? Include the aspects,
attitudes, perks, and challenges involved. Might your topic and slant be
appropriate for a trade, computer, ministry magazine or newsletter? Relationships Think about the people in your life and list your various relationships. Ø
Family (include
immediate, extended, and distant relatives) Ø
Friends Ø
Co-workers Ø
Neighbors Highlight five of the most
compelling ones and see they might seed poem ideas. After journaling about the
experience of a teenage girl who spent a year and a half with us, I mingled it
with the memory of my own experience and wrote Ritual, first
published in Campus Life magazine as Anticipation. RITUAL Phone-sitting,
prying mirrors, incessant primping, sweating palms, lumping throats, silence, simultaneous chatter - a first date. MH Observations In an article for Writers'
Digest John Brady wrote, "Ideas are in the air. If you are a
writer, you see and find them everywhere." Look around you. What do you see? A photograph, a butterfly, a road sign, a tennis shoe, a leash? What captured your attention? Focus on that one thing or
creature and have some creative fun brainstorming. Write down any words or phrases
that come to mind in association with that object. Let the ideas flow. No
editing during this inventive phase of writing. After watching tumbleweeds
scurry across the highway, I parked my Jeep on the side of the road and made
this list: golden, brittle, stickery, thorny, prickly, bristly, scurry,
transient, racing, asphalt, dodging cars, blazing a trail, and chasing
each-other. Here's how I put it together. TUMBLEWEEDS Stickery, tangled tumbleweeds pursue one another,
blaze a trail,
tumbling toward who knows
where. MH Even if you don't write a
poem immediately, you've captured the moment on paper or on a voice recorder. Spiritual Life Many of my poems come out of
my relationship and experiences with God. Here’s an example of one of mine,
first published in Decision Magazine. BREAKTHROUGH
God breaks through chaos, cries, chatter not with fiery condemnation or condescending concern but with a whisper – I care. I love you. Come away, spend time with me. Replacing chaos with gentleness, cries with comfort, chatter with communion He speaks peace. MH Conversations Hearing about your child's
day at school, your wife's workday, or your friend's struggle with weight loss
can provide you with material. Airports, malls, restaurants, parks,
beauty shops, and zoos are great places to listen to people and take notes
(discreetly, of course). Also, consider your own conversations as a source for
poem ideas. Walls, first printed in Living with
Teenager, came out of an argument in which I participated. WALLS In anger’s fury, harsh words stack like a concrete mass. Communication cowers behind the forbidding wall of my pride.
MH Media Don’t overlook an idea planted
by a newspaper headline, an article or advertisement, a newscast, a radio
program or commercial, a talk show, or a situation comedy. Take a closer look the next
time you see a hummingbird stake out its feeder. Pay more attention the next
time you hear a child pour her heart out to her Cocker Spaniel puppy. Be aware
the next time you feel, smell, taste, touch, see, hear--anything. Contemporary poet Patti Polk‑Hudson said, "Discovering praise and splendor of life, no matter now small it may appear on the surface, is the gateway to writing priceless poetry." |