NaPo 2025’s second day challenging prompt invited us to write a poem that directly addresses someone, has a made-up word, includes an odd or unusual simile, makes a statement of “fact,” and that includes something that seems out of place in time.
More Than Love
My dearest philologloth,
Are there worse places?
Is your prison like a happy place?
Your soul is good.
Unlike the dark life fiction
of your self-inflicted addiction.
Like a blade runner
missing for thirty years,
a gauntlet falls upon deaf earth.
Hearts grind to needless halts
when minds forget to remember
when my me died that September.
Come, my son
rise above it all
but not the love.
That tote we carry
full of all the good
and all the bad losses we’ve both had.
Love you, Dad.
Look both ways to discover the dark side of pleasure.
Mind the gaps for forgiveness and step carefully into whatever future you have left.
It was not so many years ago that I wrote my first poem; an exercise in rhyming couplets about Abilene, Texas. I wrote and posted it for the first day of the A to Z blogging and the National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo) online challenges, both of which started on April (first) Fools’ Day. Each poem worked dual duty for both challenges in alphabetical order, cuz that is what A to Z is about.
By the first of May of that year, I’d written twenty-nine more poems. I felt a certain amount of pride (yay, I did it) mixed with relief, and some embarrassment about my ignorance of poetry, poets, and verse in general. The next year I wrote separately for each challenge, using the NaPoWriMo prompts each day and I have done so since.
Almost immediately, I loved poetry and embarked on a self-directed program of adventure to learn all I could about the craft and art of poetry. What is it they say about when the pupil is ready?
Since that experience, with one surgical exception in 2018, every day I have thought about, read about, written, edited, and/or read some poetry. Although, I probably did think or talk about it on surgery day.
I’ve bought, read, and reread books about poetry by the likes of Packard, Oliver, Hoagland, and other masters. I have often devoted entire days to a somewhat tireless pursuit of forms and styles; to the art and craft of poetry writing. I learned about poets, which ones I liked and those I’m not yet ready for. I’ve read biographies of poets, and I know many histories and life experiences from the Bard (or Omar or more ancient versifiers) to contemporary characters and personal poet friends.
One day while discussing poetry with a friend we decided we could refer to ourselves as poets after we had written one hundred poems. I claim it now, however, it’s still a forced thing for me to say even after so many poems and, in her case, a published book of poetry. I’m working on a book, too. No promises. I still suffer from imposter syndrome sometimes.
How It Started
About this time last year, I committed to writing at least one poem each day. I call them daily poems (I’m so creative) to differentiate from others. They average slightly more than 100 words each, although some poems are much longer and a few are shorter, like those for Sammi’s weekender prompts which have specific word count requirements. Most are handwritten into one of three medium sized notebooks. Others live in my laptop.
I work on (edit, revise, correct, review) every poem I have written before I post it. Dailies are first drafts and nothing more until I go back and work them.
The experience of writing 365+ poems has taught me much more than I expected. Sometimes (rarely) the first draft is not so bad, but every poem needs work.
I like to think I am a better writer, and if I may claim it, an improved poet for it.
Finally (drum roll)
December’s poem titles were:
Closer
When You Go
Making My Bed
Trudy’s
Happy Days
The True Void
Barricade
Finding My Way
What I Miss
Poetry Comes
My Library
Dream Library
Friday 13th Fears
How I Want It
Cleaning Crew
Electric Romantic
Taste of Love
How Difficult the Challenge
Erect Buck
Twelve Ways to Twenty
The Desert Call
Hubris
Average Joe
Why Do They Die?
The Gentleman I Wished to Be
The Sled
Matters Matter
Old School Casual
Complex
What if it isn’t perfect?
Clinical VA
So, this is it. A year of poetry and 11 other end of month reports like this one. It’s a new year, new decade, and new poems yet to write, but 2019 and my 365-poems project are fait accompli.
Always look all ways. Seek the gaps and mind them well,
wherever you find them time will tell.