• I have never written under a strict time limit, never written in a group setting, and I have never before volunteered to be the first to read. I did all of these firsts yesterday, in the back corner of Literati, alongside seven others and Ms. Gray. For two hours, we owned the space where we got to know each other and, perhaps, ourselves a little better.

    She had us warm up with writing out two truths and a lie, where I used levity as armor, making light of the too-much tequila still wreaking havoc from the night before. She then walked us through a guided reflection where we wrote a list of details about 1-2 significant moments in our lives that shaped how we see the world.

    This workshop was called “Unlocking Your Creative Voice: A Journey Through Poetry With Mary Gray,” and I found the exercise a creative way to approach the idea of finding one’s voice. It could have felt like a confrontation, the existential hobgoblin sitting in the shadows of the mind – waiting for an unguarded moment of reflection. What Ms. Gray did was set us on a safe path, where we could find our voice within the context of a personal paradigm shift. And doing so in list form kept us at a distance when we could have easily gotten lost in the current of those memories.

    Of course, my concept of change and reality is full of semantic u-turns and dark alleys, but I didn’t shoo those thoughts away. I just directed them toward newer reflections. Graduation, that event which was both the culmination of years and the prologue for what is yet to come. I have been thinking a lot recently about the root of why I hold myself back from all these things I could want. I hardly dared to imagine, let alone actualize, anything that might have led to a true current where the unfamiliar depths of passion could get the better of me. There have been exceptions when my intuition could not be ignored with its “do or die” kind of flair/re, but mostly I chose to list lazily along the bank.

    However, I am beginning to understand that stability can be a crutch, that wanting to live calmly can be an excuse for ignoring opportunity. I have lived the consequences of risk, more than vicariously, and seen how far the little fruit of such labors could be stretched. I don’t want to live that life, but neither do I want to live in the shallows. If what I feel with a pen in my hand is even a fraction of what Mom felt with a mic in hers, I know it can lead to a sense of fulfillment that could make this incarnation one for the books. But to devote myself, to do what she could not-or would not-what might that cost? How do I keep moving toward a more realized version of myself when I have been nearly petrified between a fear of failure and a fear of success?

    So, ten minutes of that tangential thinking, then we listened and read two poems: “Ego Tripping” by Nikki Giovanni and “Black Girl Magic” by Mahogany L. Browne. Mary asked for our impressions and guided us to consider how the different devices, such as metaphor, allusion, repetition, hyperbole, and distinctive tones (notable for their power in these pieces) influenced our interpretations, as well as how listening and not just reading helped us create deeper connections with the authors. It certainly made me more thoughtful about how I read. As it turns out, methodically is not always the best choice, especially when chewing over the words causes you to lose their rhythm. Reading in silence can impede the reader’s progress toward understanding the author’s intention. Listening offers the reader insight into how the words are meant to be weighed. The intention of diction, for example. The use of vernacular syntax is best-received aurally, especially for an unfamiliar ear; it may sound abnormal when you are reading to yourself, but natural when the author is reading to you.

    She then gave us about 20 minutes to make something out of our reflection with consideration to the devices she noted in the samples. I may have cheated a little by starting with an idea I had written down a couple of days before, but I am calling it a win because I managed to have something applicable grow from that root within the time limit.

    Have you ever noticed how nostalgia never gets old
    It's never out of fashion
    always found among friends
    among strangers, it's common ground

    Graduation was nostalgic
    as it happened
    novel, yet familiar
    the faces of strangers
    yours, beaming
    from the shore of well-wishers
    while we cast off
    our caps, 1200 black and bedazzled
    memories free-floating
    on the brink of "what's next?"
    a familiar fear
    gilded and embossed
    now hangs above my head

    This will probably become something else, but I’m rather proud of the sprout and just want to enjoy it as it is for now. I am grateful to Mary for being such a kind and empathetic host. People came because they wanted to write – some didn’t know where to start, some didn’t know how to begin again – but everyone wanted to connect and she made that part seem as easy as breathing. I am also grateful to my fellow Literati Co-Op members for their constant encouragement. Optimism is not my natural state, but their buoyancy is catching. ;)

  • I am changing up my "odd thoughts" and turning them into "first drafts". What better way to view the metamorphosis? Maybe it will be a Luna Moth, or maybe a Mud Dauber. My penchant for wordy mouthfuls will certainly do me in, but at least I can share how I make them more digestible. ...Not the best metaphoric segue, so it's a good thing this isn't a recipe blog.
    
    Perpetual Liminality (1st Edit)
    
    Stuck smells 
           of earth
    notes of 
           stagnation
    subtle 
    hints of 
            budding 
            resentment
    
    Stuck proofs
            like sourdough
    subsists
    	on itself
    endowed
    famine
    	ferments 
    	to rise
    
    Stuck begets
    	constance
    affixed
    	hesitance
    hints of
    fear
    	abstain
    	change
    
    
    Original Instagram Story:
    I think one of the worst feelings may be the feeling of being stuck.
    Stuck between hope & fear...
    Stuck between the known & unknown...
    Stuck between complacence & contentment...
    Stuck in ambivalence...
    Stuck in idleness...
    Stuck in industry...
    I fear failure almost as much as I fear success
    and every deathday puts me back into place
    Like a record made to break
    I think one of the worst feelings is feeling broken and on repeat.
  • Poetic Dissent
    Watch out for clichés
    he said, warning banal crime
    rousing metered sin.

    Porcelain Bowling
    Little did he know
    my pen is a loosed cannon
    in a candy store.

    Jarring Paradox
    The canned worms rusted
    Pandora’s expired hope
    think outside the box.

    Ode to the Cliche
    Oy veh, frayed cliché
    rest ye weary turns of phrase
    threadbare wit, lament.

  • I used to walk through late January
    streets of grey snow
    waist-high and pockmarked
    like a snow cone sucked dry - frigid and flavorless
    to the midwestern bodega
    for a 50-cent scoop
    blueberry wafflecone - in a cup.
    Ice cream is just better when it's cold.
    And that's as far as I got with nostalgia-flavored ice cream.

    I used to live in a town called Port Clinton in Ohio. Walleye Capital of the World - right on Lake Erie. Mom and I hopped around a lot, but there was one spot we called home that came furnished with a lot of character. The entire building used to be an old brothel, or so I was told, which later was broken up into a few apartments. Think turret meets silo - tiny bedrooms with lofty ceilings (perfect for trapping unreachable heat in a lake-effect winter).

    We lived on the second story accessible (why is it an "i" rather than an "a"?) either through what I would call a "stair hall," which was very dark and very steep, or by way of the back courtyard and fire escape. Both included a cat walk that overlooked the roofs of neighboring buildings. Who remembers how hard-lined phones would sometimes cross-talk? An entertaining pass time in that building, haunted by walls that saw far too much for their liking...

    Any who, it was right in the middle of the single strip of downtown, which is probably where my joy for wandering shops and alleyways began. There was a popcorn shop where you could try out every flavor before they kicked you out, and across the street was a convenient store with a tiny ice cream parlor in the back. In the Summer, I would buy Pringles and walk around town, but I always preferred ice cream in the cold months. I really couldn't tell you why, but it may have something to do with not wanting to make a mess. I still don't like eating from a cone, and in the winter the ice cream melts much more slowly.

    How do you like your ice cream?