NaPoWriMo 2020 |
And now for our (optional) prompt, which also deals with metaphors! Forrest Gump famously said that “life is like a box of chocolates.” And there are any number of poems out there that compare or equate the speaker’s life with a specific object. (For example, this poem of Emily Dickinson’s). Today, however, I’d like to challenge you to write a self-portrait poem in which you make a specific action a metaphor for your life – one that typically isn’t done all that often, or only in specific circumstances. For example, bowling, or shopping for socks, or shoveling snow, or teaching a child to tie its shoes. My skin - as white as snow, laid out - freshly fallen, before the artist. He traces - with the blackest of night the design I carefully thought of, Wraith will be with me, til death do us part; water cascades down my rib, as cold as night- "have a look! See if this works!" In front of the mirror - eyes watching my soul, I smile and exclaim, happy tears of joy; art washes away from the soul the dust of everyday life. Water wiped away - much like tears, rubbing alcohol - clean canvas. Chaos is a friend of mine, machines whirl and whir; a pinch - take the pen to paper, filled with the breathings of my heart- deep breath in, deep breath out, a pinching so pleasurable. Out before me, the birds fly, music of the buzzing and whirring, gentle hands working the canvas; a temporary numbness, shock or excitement - maybe a bit of both. The design - dark as night- my magnum opus! The stain on fresh snow, my heart flutters. Your very flesh shall be a great poem, through trials and tribulations; til death do us part, Wraith, my first love, my first piece of ink on an ever filling canvas. |