Day18 Glo/NaPoWriMo: Time To Focus On These Five Answers
The prompt requests a poem that provides five answers to the same question -- without identifying the question being answered. What fun! I think you'll guess right away. Happy reading.
The prompt requests a poem that provides five answers to the same question -- without identifying the question being answered. What fun! I think you'll guess right away. Happy reading.
Day17 Prompt: think about dogs you have known, seen, or heard about, and then use them as a springboard into wherever they take you. This one reminded me of the town priest.
Here's to my personal commitment to NaPoWriMo2022. This Easter weekend, again off prompt. Hope you like what I have for you. And if you celebrate Easter, Happy Easter, dear friends. xoxo
What would we find if we stopped pointing fingers? I'll tell you: we'd find we're all good at our core. So why don't we? Foolhardy to ignore this.
The Prompt: write a poem that takes the form of the opening scene of the movie of your life. Wow, a first for me! What fun. I hope you enjoy it.
This is another one for Ukraine. And I thank Vika Muse, @get.muse on #instagram for the lovely visual art. Let's spread more hope by tapping into the right frequency.
Getting to the heart of things. Yesterday, we wrote about a very large thing. Today we're asked to invert our inspiration, write about a very small thing. I wrote about one that makes a big difference...
A heart so serene and yet volatile-- reproach the moon and weather conditions (gasp! or is it the other way around?); ... let's protect our oceans.
It lives inside, and when you f i n d it, it makes you love yourself better.
Day9 prompt requires we write in a specific form – the nonet! A syllabic poetry form with nine lines. The first line has nine syllables, the second eight, and so on until you get to the last line, which has just one. Mine includes acrostic. Hope you enjoy it.
For Day8 we're asked to name our alter-ego, describe him/her in detail, and then to write in our alter-ego’s voice. Hope you like what I penned for you today.
I am the narrator/widow and Medea from Euripides’ most powerful & best-known play, Medea, is the remarkable and ruthless revenger. Enjoy.