MAY LESSONS (Lessons 5 - 8 Plus Bonus Assignment) -READY FOR PARTICIPANTS |
WELCOME TO LESSONS 5-8 BASIC DIRECTIONS FOR THIS SERIES OF LESSONS This series of lessons deals more with content or brainstorming for ideas. These topics will work whether you are into poetry or prose. 1. Unlike Lessons 1-4, you don't have to write the poem 3-4 times unless it just helps you or you want other people's opinions on which way looks best. (If you wish for opinions, put that on your piece somewhere or label each format 1, 2, 3 etc so reviewers can tell you which they liked best. If you chose to show just one method, I would love to hear at the end what you learned. (ie. I tried it centered but it didn't look right so I did it left aligned.) 2. If you wrote a long one and then shortened it, leave your first draft lower on the screen with a note stating it was your first draft. I'm always interested in seeing how a poem evolves. It would be good for others also. I have done one long poem and then turned it into three separate ones that I think ended up better than the original. 3. If you did not do any of Lessons 1-4, I would recommend at least trying one of them in order to practice with visual effects of your poem such as spacing, centering or not, dividing lines at different points to accent different words, and for getting an idea of irony, compare/contrast, questioning, and simile/ metaphor, as they could be useful for the following lessons. Doing something in Lessons 1-4 is not mandatory, just suggested. Here is an excellent list of forms if you do wish to use a specific poetic form. Thank you Kansaspoet for giving me permission to do a link to your site and thank you Bianca for allowing Kansaspoet to keep your wonderful list of over 100 poetic forms safe for you while you were away.
******************************************************************************************* LESSON 5 (AUTO)BIOGRAPHICAL/EXPERIENTIAL LESSONS LEARNED, WISDOM SHARED Many poems we run across deal with someone's experiences, background, hopes and dreams, fears, and emotions. Sometimes we come across poems written by someone who did not experience the event but who describe it so closely that it makes us cry or truly feel emotions as if we wrote the poem ourselves. Contrary to popular belief, it is not false advertising to write a poem about abuse if you yourself have never been abused. It is called empathy-trying to understand what others are going through. Therefore, when I wrote Autobiographical, I put AUTO in parentheses. Don't feel like you need to dredge up something you are not ready to talk about. Writing can be free therapy, yes, but I don't want to distress you here. You can try to share wisdom you think someone else would want to share or write about experiences of someone else, not necessarily yourself. Write a poem (or prose if you insist) about one (or more if you choose) of the following prompts within this category. 1. Write a poem giving an apology or forgiveness (or even refusal to apologize or forgive) about mistakes you or someone else made that effected yourself or someone else. This can be written as a letter or conversation with a child or parent, spouse, grandparent, or friend but in poetry. 2. Write wise words to your child/a child as if you might not be there to tell them later or you just wish them to read the letter at an important time in their lives. Imagine giving this letter to them to open when they have a child of their own, or when they get married or even when they go off to college. Give them the love and advice you wish you had (or maybe you had) when you embarked on those memorable events or milestones in your life. 3. Write a public service announcement or awareness speech (in poetry form) to the leader of your government or society in general, giving wise words about how things need to change or how we can all make a difference if we listen to your words. Think lyrics to a song, a speech at a war rally (for, against, or in support of troops, etc), or even, with Earth Day coming up, write about conservation, respect for the Earth, how we can make a difference. 4. Come up with your own prompt that fits this topic of imparting wisdom to others by either what you know others have experienced or what you have experienced. Post your entry with Lesson # 5 in the title somewhere. Remember to post your entry in the Message Forum. Hope you have fun with this one. ****************************************************************************************** ****************************************************************************************** {b}LESSON 6 STORYTELLING IN POETRY Some of our favorite children's stories and fairy tales are put to poetry form and tell stories about a character. Many times they give a lesson, warning, or example but isn't that what storytellers do also. They have some reason for telling the story and a specific audience in mind. Try your hand at writing such a story in poetry form. 1. Tell a story using the following elements: Character or characters Beginning, middle and end Time frame (be it an hour or a lifetime) Twist at the end, something unexpected 2.This can be any genre or could be free form. Limericks, other children's poetry, elegies, odes, and ballads tell stories and have specific forms. 3. Show, don't tell. Okay, I know it's story TELLing. But, instead of saying someone was nervous, say how they twisted the edge of their shirt or kept looking at their watch, or say they were wringing their hands instead of saying they were nervous or they refused to make eye contact rather than that they were lying. Get my drift. 4. Let us know who you feel your audience might be or for whom your poem is written. (Who is your reader?) See the link immediately before Lesson 5 for a link to an excellent list of poetic forms if you need wish to do a specific form. It is not required but poetry calls for more organization than free form allows. Again, HAVE FUN. This is a learning experience, not a contest. You gets points for participating but that's as far as it goes. You can do it!! Can't wait to read your entries. ********************************************************************************* ********************************************************************************* LESSON 7 OBSERVATION AKA-"Walking a mile in someone elses shoes" How often do we sit in a restaurant and people-watch. Imagine yourself sitting in a decent restaurant, cloth tablecloths but paper napkins. Candles but no roses on the tables. You are waiting for a friend to arrive and you've ordered yourself a cup of coffee. FICTIONAL SITUATION: You look to your right. You see a mother, father, and teenage son. The mother goes to the ladies room. The father leans forward, voice low but strong, his index finger and middle finger aimed at his son obviously making a point. The boy is leaning back, arms crossed, looking at his shoelaces. ASK QUESTIONS: What is going on? Why did the dad wait until the mother left the table before he started in on the son? Did the mom leave momentarily (on purpose) to allow time for the dad to have this talk or is the dad taking this opportunity to say something he doesn't want his wife to hear? Or, is he allowing his son to save face by discussing something out of the mom's earshot? ANOTHER FICTIONAL SITUATION: At the table to your left, a couple sits, looking mildly uncomfortable. They are a little overdressed, perhaps trying to impress each other. The man is talking. He is fumbling with his knife. He has a pale space around his ring finger but no ring. The woman is listening intently, rubbing her finger on the top of her wine glass, sipping carefully, as if she wants to look like she isn't usually a drinker. QUESTIONS: First date after divorce? Maybe. Is he talking about his ex-wife? What is she thinking? How is she taking what he is saying? What if he is talking about his ex-wife being an alcoholic and she is afraid he will reject her because of her own little secret? INSTRUCTIONS FOR LESSON: 1. You can find material anywhere you go. Watch people for a few days and carry a small notebook. Try to imagine conversation, then pick one of the people in the scene and jot down a few ideas of how you think that person was feeling. 2. When you have a few observations, try your hand at describing the scene with a few sentences on your own just to get in that person's head. Please include this little summary if you would like. It might help the reader get into the scene before reading your piece. You don't have to write what you think they were saying, just try to describe your character's emotions by describing their behavior, body language (eye contact, posture, etc) and take a guess at what they were thinking. 3. Write your poem (or piece of some sort) and try to incorporate some of the body language, such as this example of a woman at dinner with her husband whom she suspects has been unfaithful: His eyes scanned the room as he professed his love for me. I knew instantly his love was meant for someone else I could not see. EXAMPLE IN MUSIC: If this is still confusing, read further. Maybe this will help clarify: I remember an R.E.M. music video from years ago to the song "Everybody Hurts". Take a look at the words and how the video showed how people in the cars were thinking. I just cut out about five paragraphs to make this shorter but I still think this is an excellent example. http://www.music-videos.duncans.tv/2006/rem-everybody-hurts You don't have to try something that depressing, though. You could also write from the perspective of a woman talking to or playing with her child and thinking how thankful she is that she has this child in her life. Watch a mother with her children. She is usually experiencing a mixture of wonder and exhaustion, not always in that order. THIS LESSON AS A LONG TERM DAILY PRACTICE METHOD: After this exercise, go the dollar store or book shop and find a small discrete little book you can keep with you, in your car or purse. When you are stopped in traffic, waiting for someone in a restaurant, or stuck in the waiting room of a doctors office, watch folks and jot down some ideas. You can find daily writing prompts everywhere if you look. Make it a habit and just save these notebooks. If your creative juices are hanging out in the desert, pull these out and enjoy the cool water of your portable oasis. (Okay, goofy analogy but you got the point, right). NOTE: To those patient enough to have gotten through exercise 7 without going blind or falling asleep, I offer an extra 100 points for everyone completing this assignment. WHY? I was quite verbose but I think everything needs to be included right now and I am not ready to edit it. AND I feel this exercise, more than any other I have done so far, will come the closest to helping you develop daily habits that will continue to serve you in your creative life, whether you do poetry, prose, screenwriting, songwriting, painting, acting and virtually any other creative art. So, you might want to print this lesson out and take it slowly. I am looking forward to seeing what is written. I will be trying this out also, because I am, like most, not great at sticking with daily routines such as writing every night for x number of hours or pages. And, I'm not the best at reading body language either so this won't be an easy task for me. SWPoet *************************************************************************************** If you've made it through lesson 7, I offer my sincerest applause! Here is short one to reward you and a wonderful little nugget of truth attached. *************************************************************************************** LESSON 8 DEEP THOUGHTS. http://www.101zenstories.com/ Take a look at some of the zen stories in the site above to get a feel for simple truths. I am Episcopalian not Buddhist, and this exercise will not be one of a "religious" nature so bear with me. My thought is this:if we look to the wisdom of other cultures, we will find quite a deep well of poetry and spirituality and perhaps some very good prompts for our writing. We may see that we are much less different than we are alike. For example, this particular zen story highlights what an "enlightened man" wrote certain passages in the bible. http://www.101zenstories.com/index.php?story=16 Once you check some random stories out, click onto this one below (#88) http://www.101zenstories.com/index.php?story=88 ASSIGNMENT: Try to write a few stanzas (different topics-not two stanzas of the same poem) in this Chinese poetry style. It is very simple and the directions are self explanatory. You can put these directly below rather than putting them on bitem but if you really like your entries, it might be nice to create an item so others can rate it. If you do this, you might want to cut and paste the link to #88 so others will see what form you are using. I look forward to seeing what you have created. SWPoet ********************************************************************************************* BONUS EXERCISE: PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER. WRITE ONE TERRIFIC POEM USING ONE OR MORE OF THE PREVIOUS EIGHT LESSONS AND LET OTHERS GUESS WHICH COMPONENTS YOU USED IN YOUR PIECE. WE NEED TO BE ABLE TO SPOT THESE FACETS OF POETRY IF WE WANT TO BE GOOD WRITERS AND REVIEWERS. |