They are want; they are desire.
I don’t need to write poems. I want to write them.
It is the struggle inherent to desire that I find necessary.
Necessary to my poems. Necessary to being human.
I teach high school. I have a daughter, a family. Most days I don’t have time to work on writing. I write
poems during lunch or on planning. More often, little bits, a line or title,
will strike when I can’t write it down. I use my phone; if I’m driving, I
tell Siri to take a note. Some of what is recorded is unintelligible, hilarious:
“Birds on a typhoon of conversation taking place in
their Thailand.”
I can’t remember what this was supposed to say exactly. I
don’t think it would have turned into my greatest poem, but I tried, and I
continue to try. I sometimes repeat lines over and over again
trying to memorize them:
“There was no ceremony about you / only the slapping and
biting / of…”
The rest is gone, but it is a start.
I keep a notebook. There are months when I don’t write a
single word in it.
I read as much as I can.
This is about struggle. It is about want and desire.
I don’t need to write, but I want to.
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If you have time, return to a poem you started but didn't finish, for whatever reason.
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