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Writing Prompts: Best Advice You Never Got

8/29/2019

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Free Write Prompt

Tell me about the best advice you never got – meaning, the advice you wish someone had given you.  (OR) tell about the best advice you wish you had given to someone else.  Write for 10 minutes. Ready? Go!

Poem Prompt

Turn the [missing] advice into a kind, instructive poem to yourself, filled with redemption and hope and the love, or at least the advice you could have used.  (OR) You can be the speaker of the poem directed to someone else.  (OR) Someone you wish had told you so, could be the speaker. Write for 10-15 minutes.

Example Poems

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Image by Yannick Lepère
First Lesson by Philip Booth​
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A Father to His Son by Carl Sandburg
A father sees his son nearing manhood.
What shall he tell that son?
'Life is hard; be steel; be a rock.'
And this might stand him for the storms
and serve him for humdrum monotony
and guide him among sudden betrayals
and tighten him for slack moments.
'Life is a soft loam; be gentle; go easy.'
And this too might serve him.
Brutes have been gentled where lashes failed.
The growth of a frail flower in a path up
has sometimes shattered and split a rock.
A tough will counts. So does desire.
So does a rich soft wanting.
Without rich wanting nothing arrives.
Tell him too much money has killed men
and left them dead years before burial:
the quest of lucre beyond a few easy needs
has twisted good enough men
sometimes into dry thwarted worms.
Tell him time as a stuff can be wasted.
Tell him to be a fool every so often
and to have no shame over having been a fool
yet learning something out of every folly
hoping to repeat none of the cheap follies
thus arriving at intimate understanding
of a world numbering many fools.
Tell him to be alone often and get at himself
and above all tell himself no lies about himself
whatever the white lies and protective fronts
he may use against other people.
Tell him solitude is creative if he is strong
and the final decisions are made in silent rooms.
Tell him to be different from other people
if it comes natural and easy being different.
Let him have lazy days seeking his deeper motives.
Let him seek deep for where he is born natural.
Then he may understand Shakespeare
and the Wright brothers, Pasteur, Pavlov,
Michael Faraday and free imaginations
Bringing changes into a world resenting change.
He will be lonely enough
to have time for the work
he knows as his own.

Reflections

  • Find the right kind of [extended]metaphor for your multiple meanings.  For example "lesson" applies to the first swimming lesson, wherein one learns the float, learns to trust that extended arms and an arched back will hold you afloat in the water. It is the same calm one needs when "fear cramps your heart" and is therefore an important "first lesson" in life, as well.  The swimming metaphors of diving, thrashing in the water, swimming to your island, the dead man's float versus the survivor's float, aptly apply to the activity of swimming but also metaphorical advice for the conditions of one's life and how to "swim" and "survive" in the swimming/life journey.  
  • The fine details of the narrator reassuring the daughter, cupping the child's head in his/her own hands, encouraging the encompassing view of the sky and seagulls and looking up, not seizing and panicking and sinking.  The speaker in turn comforts, instructs the reader with "trust me" and the survivor's float and that the ocean, indeed the universe, will hold you in this faithful approach -- the wide open arms float -- to life's challenges.
​​

Something Extra

"Instructions for a Bad Day" by spoken word poet Shane Koyzcan
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Writing Prompts: I Killed for You

8/22/2019

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Free Write Prompt

Consider a fairy tale.  The archetypal characters, the faraway places, the journey plots are each ripe for plumbing the psyche.  Tell me about a favorite fairy tale.  What draws you to it? Are there any characters with which you identify?  Write for 10 min.  Go!

Poem Prompt

After your free-write, "flip the script" on the fairy tale and write a poem from the perspective of a different character in the fairy tale.  Allow a character who doesn't normally get to speak -- be heard!  Or report from the outside, in third person.  Write for 10-15 min. Go!

Example Poems

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Image by Couleur | Couleur
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Reflections:

  • How does the poem "flip the script" on the original fairytale?
  • What's the symbiotic interest between the two genres (fairytale/poem) in telling the story?
Try this in your poem
  • Instead of a new persona from within the tale, consider third person narrator/storyteller
  • As variations of fairy tales exist across multiple cultures, consider using native language and key cultural or geographical elements in your poem.
  • How has the world of the fairytale changed over time? How do the characters reflect on their experiences?

Something Extra

  • Fat is Not a Fairy Tale by Jane Yolen
  • Witch by Joseph Stanton​
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Writing Prompts: Taking Inventory

8/15/2019

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Free Write Prompt

Make a list of things. Take inventory of something—a cluttered room, the scars on your body, the 50 ways to leave your lover. Expand on any, or none.  Write more than one list or be devoted and see how far a single list takes you.  Write for 10 minutes. Ready? Go!

Poem Prompt

Using the ideas from your list(s), write a “list poem.”  Where does the list take the reader? How does the list comment on the objective world? What is the significance—of the list, of each item—by the end of the poem.  Write for 10-15 minutes.

Example Poems

  • Lying in a Hammock at William Duffy's Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota  by James Wright 
  • 99 Problems by Morgan Parker​ 
  • The Fish by Elizabeth Bishop 
REFLECTIONS
  • How is the idea of a list different in each poem?
  • What does the list reveal about the speaker, the conflict, the material world?
  • What is the tension between the ending and how the poem was developed?
TO TRY
  • Explore a "list making" style of your own
  • Making a list in the free write forces the writer toward imagery.  Work on provocative imagery. How can your imagery develop tone?
  • Play with the syntax of list making, writing complete thoughts, and the unique form of a poem.

Something Extra

  • Ode to the Yard Sale by Gary Soto
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Can you give another life to things you'll discard from you home by including them in a new original poem?  Do the things lying around your house, in and out of storage or boxes, tell a story--what story do they tell?  Share lines of your work or thoughts about Soto's poem in the comment section.

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Writing Prompts: What Work Is

8/8/2019

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A stunning tour of how wisdom is gained through work and words. Click on image to see video.

Free Write Prompt

Tell me how you learned what WORK is.  Write for 10 minutes.  Ready?  Go!

Be sure to view Mining Poems or Odes, featuring former shipyard welder who learns his thinking laboratory was always behind the welder's mask. 

Poem Prompt

Where is the most energy in your free write?  Write a poem exploring the ideas you’ve grown up with about work. How did the adults around you show you what work is? Consider how you have carried any part of these lessons into your own life – or into your creative work/ life. 
Adapted from Kim Moore's prompt for the Poetry School.

Example Poems

  • What Work Is by Philip Levine
  • The Expert by Arielle Greenberg

Something Extra

In the video, Mining Poems or Odes :
  • Characterize the relationship between Archie and Robert.  How is it similar or different from the men in "What Work Is" by Philip Levine?
  • What is poetry to Robert Fullerton?  What is it to you?
  • How is writing, work?
  • Which quotes | scenes from the video resonate with you most?
  • Which poems have you connected with this past month? 
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Click image to see the video.
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And When I Was Born

8/1/2019

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After an earthquake just before Game 3 of the 1989 World Series, Candlestick Park was evacuated and the series was put on hold for 10 days.(GETTY IMAGES)

Free Write Prompt

Think of an important date -- your birthday is a great start. Or a poignant event--a loss. Look up the date on Wikipedia to see what else happened that year.  Copy down 10-12 things that happened that year.  Then, pick one or two on which to focus.  Or, look for a pattern of events.  Free write anything you associate among these events, and say, your birth.  Write for 10 minutes. Ready? Go!

Poem Prompt

Use these events to write a poem about your personal history and who you are. What do the events say about you, if anything?  Are there any ironies about your personality and what happened in this year?  Write for 15 min.  (Adapted from Purdue University Writing Center)

Example Poems

  • ​San Fransisco, 1989: Cancelled World Series by Bruce Cohen
  • Anonymous Lyric by Connie Voisine
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Reflections

  • What effect is created when the poem's narrative focuses on personal intimate events (playing with plastic figurines) in the simultaneous context of another public event (the earthquake)?
  • Interesting patterns emerge in looking at the historical notable events: others born on the same day, deaths on the same date, political events, military events, social events.  With which will you align yourself? with which can you juxtapose yourself? ​
     Try this in your writing:
  • Interview other people in your life for more information about what was going on around you.
  • In this look back, explore a different persona or pov than yourself.
  • Can you imagine how the story would be different if you were born in a different place at the same time?
  • Toward the previous idea, change the language choice option on Wikipedia and search again.  Do other historical references emerge?
  • Focus on key events from year of birth and parallel them/or juxtapose them with similar events today--for example, the formation of the Black Panther Party in 1966 and your own involvement in protest marches in the present.
  • Look at the list of births and imagine greeting others in your poem.
  •  Look at deaths and imagine a farewell.
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    Christine curates the POETRY BONES blog and hosts the weekly live writing practice. Contact her with inquiries.

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copyright 2019 c.stiel all rights reserved. i earnestly try to attribute images, poems, and video to their creators.
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