
| From Relections on the Teche, Margaret writes: Poetry Friday is hosting today by Susan at Chicken Spaghetti. Susan Thomsen posted a prompt from David Lehman to use the last line of Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself as a first line to a new poem. “I stop somewhere waiting for you.” You can read her poem and link to other’s through the Poetry Friday responses. I was reading an article yesterday about the results of not using a phone ( I suppose this also means things on the phone like media, news and social media) for 12 years. The results weren’t as dramatic as one might expect. No overall sense of peace or clarity of mind on a particular subject. No particular desire to go back to nature or develop a long hidden skill. But they did talk about taking 40 minutes to watch the wind blow the grasses, and finding time to become bored. It turns out that when our mind is bored (or perhaps rested, unburdened, unoccupied) it allows our brain to explore areas and ideas that it has no time for when on a schedule. This is often when creativity sparks or ideas turn into innovations. People have said that ideas come to them on long walks, in a hot shower or right before falling asleep. Allowing more time for that brain rest allows for opportunities for new ideas. So when I had a moment of quiet, and plopped in the lounge chair to find something on TV, I stopped and thought, what if I don’t fill my head with someone else’s story. And reading Margaret’s post, I was inspired to write to that prompt instead of channel surfing. So here is my spontaneous attempt at a poem. I stop somewhere, waiting for you but the snow is coming down so hard that I am distracted. The snowflakes, like dancing children join hands to perform ballets in the sky. I can almost hear them laughing or is that me as I spin beneath the white confetti my arms spread wide, my hair, flying with abandon from my hatless head. It is only when my eyelashes hang heavy and wet and my nose tweaks with cold that I stop and reach for your hand, comforted to feel it’s warmth in mine as we tramp through the crystal drifts home. |



