Tag: Poetry

  • In Search of Truth and Beauty | The Birthing of Spring

    In Search of Truth and Beauty | The Birthing of Spring

    BY JONI TAKANIKOS
    March 22, 2017

    It’s hard not to be hopeful in spring. It feels like the season where hope is born. Spring is the season of such continual change. It seems the least static of all the seasons. It is easier to stay truly present, watching new lives gaze at the world with force and fascination. Witnessing this presence allows us to reignite the places in ourselves that may have grown stagnant, frozen, or hidden away in the hibernating nature of winter.

    What bulbs of color and bloom lie within our psyches ready to break through onto the spring field? Let’s go easy on ourselves in these beginning days of spring. Rather than rushing too hastily forward, let’s take our time to nourish these new shoots. Spring rain can be the perfect musical accompaniment for reading, writing poetry, or simply gazing out the window.

    Before the spring is half over, we will find ourselves dreaming of summer. This is a well-ordered menu of our inner and outer nature. Winter dreams of spring, spring dreams of summer, summer dreams of fall, and fall dreams of winter. During these transitions and beginnings, we have the opportunity to fully taste the season upon us, to revel in every daffodil and budding tree, to walk slowly in the warm spring sun, no longer hurried by the colder temperatures of winter. We will ponder what has been gestating within us this winter and finally give birth to its new form. There is also the “driving six white horses” renewal energy of this season. We might start to tackle our to-do lists with joy instead of the weight of obligation. Cleaning out closets in winter is a much different experience than in the exuberance of spring.

    I was born in winter and both of my children were born in spring. I really can’t help my fascination for the dreams of spring in winter and the birth of those dreams in the glorious spring.

    Max, Jasmine, and Bear, born in spring (Photo by Joni Takanikos)

    Spring Fields
    for Max

    You, my son of early spring
    shining so bright,
    Lighting up every field near and far,
    the star of Venus speaks your language,
    symbols of art flow like water over
    and around you.
    The early spring in you
    Lives forever, and its nature floods my heart
    whenever I think of you.

    Ireland in spring of 2011 (Photo by Joni Takanikos)

    Royal Heart
    for Jasmine

    The throne was yours
    Always—Before you
    could sit—you reached
    for the sky—your eyes
    grounded by the heaven
    in my heart—this cord
    from me to you is golden
    and light—shimmering—a triangle
    of dawn floating through the sky.

    Your kite untethered now,
    Soaring through the sky of
    your own heaven—grounded in the
    womb of your own bright heart,
    The full lotus of you unfolding,
    Surrounded always by the light
    from my heart.

    Joni Takanikos gave birth to two amazing children; a girl in May of 1980 and a boy in March of 1991. They give her heart wings through every season of every year.

    __________________

    Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. You may link to this story. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • In Search of Truth and Beauty || Yes We Can!

    In Search of Truth and Beauty || Yes We Can!

    BY JONI TAKANIKOS
    January 23, 2017

    Rise and Dream a better Dream … for the earth and all her people

    Support and nurture inclusion,
    Stand strong in our convictions
    Of equality and choice.
    Lead with courage and compassion,
    Loving ourselves enough to stay
    Awake and fearless.

    March across, through and around
    Boundaries created from hate, fear, judgment and privilege,
    Untying the knots that have kept us
    Bound and silent for too long.

    Love this powerful, beautiful and bountiful earth
    more than material gain.
    Meet hunger and need with the currency of
    Love, Compassion and Bounty for all,
    Inspired by the First Stewards of these lands
    Standing strong at Standing Rock.

    Joni Takanikos

    Whidbey Islanders ijoining the march in Seattle (Photo by Gina Burja-Simpson)
    Participants in the Langley Women’s March (Photo by David Welton)
    Participants in the Langley Women’s March (Photo by David Welton)
    A participant in the Langley Women’s March (Photo by David Welton)

    This Sky

    Where we live
    Is no place to lose
    Our wings
    So love, love
    Love.

    Hafiz

    Keeping our vision and hope along the road. (Photo by Gina Burja-Simpson)

    Joni Takanikos considers herself first and foremost a poet; she is always attempting to distill the essence of Truth and Beauty through the pathways of her heart.

    __________________

    The views, opinions, and positions expressed by Whidbey Life Magazine bloggers, as well as those of the people who comment on their blog posts, are theirs alone and do not necessarily reflect the views, opinions, or positions of Whidbey Life Magazine. 

    __________________

    To read more WLM stories and blogs, click here. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. You may link to this story. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Magically Real || How About a Poem?

    Magically Real || How About a Poem?

    BY STEPHANIE BARBÉ HAMMER
    January 18, 2017

    Friends – I was talking to my t’ai chi teacher Lynne last week, and she told me that she usually didn’t “like” poetry, but she liked mine because I wrote about things like dishwashers.

    I hear this all the time. Not the dishwasher part. I mean the part where people say they “don’t like poetry.” They tend to make this statement in an ashamed and embarrassed way (Lynne didn’t, but then, you have to remember that she is very Zen and enlightened). When most folks make this confession, they say it like they might be admitting “I don’t like broccoli,” meaning “I know it’s good for me, and it’s wrong for me not to like it, but it doesn’t taste good!”

    In my humble opinion poems ought to taste good. That means be interesting, accessible, and somehow nourish us. Art — even the most provocative, controversial art — nourishes us in some way, even if it’s by challenging us to do the right thing. A poem can be tangy and surprising. It can be sad and scary. But the vitamins have to be there.

    Last Sunday night at the Writers Workshoppe in Port Townsend, my friend, poet Gary Lilley read a sad poem by Harlem Renaissance poet Claude McKay. Here it is:

    Claude McKay
    Poet Claude McKay

    If we must die, let it not be like hogs
    Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot,
    While round us bark the mad and hungry dogs,
    Making their mock at our accursèd lot.
    If we must die, O let us nobly die,
    So that our precious blood may not be shed
    In vain; then even the monsters we defy
    Shall be constrained to honor us though dead!
    O kinsmen! we must meet the common foe!
    Though far outnumbered let us show us brave,
    And for their thousand blows deal one death-blow!
    What though before us lies the open grave?
    Like men we’ll face the murderous, cowardly pack,
    Pressed to the wall, dying, but fighting back!

    If you want to get technical, McKay’s poem is a sonnet. It’s got 14 lines, 3 quatrains, and a concluding couplet. In other words, he’s using a fancy Renaissance poetic form beloved by poets like Shakespeare. This was a gutsy thing for him to do, as a black poet writing in 1919.

    It’s great, isn’t it?

    In honor of Martin Luther King, and in honor of any person you admire and love and miss, how about writing a poem yourself?

    Your poem can be in a form, if you want to get fancy, or you can just write in something called free verse. That means, that you put the line breaks where you want them.

    That’s the way Walt Whitman wrote. Here’s a piece from a quite famous poem of his:

    Walt Whitman
    Poet Walt Whitman

    Lo, body and soul — this land,
    My own Manhattan with spires, and the sparkling and hurrying tides, and the ships,
    The varied and ample land, the South and the North in the light, Ohio’s shores and flashing Missouri,
    And ever the far-spreading prairies cover’d with grass and corn.

    Lo, the most excellent sun so calm and haughty,
    The violet and purple morn with just-felt breezes,
    The gentle soft-born measureless light,
    The miracle spreading bathing all, the fulfill’d noon,
    The coming eve delicious, the welcome night and the stars,
    Over my cities shining all, enveloping man and land.

    Whitman is writing a type of poem called an elegy, and these are poems about people who have died and whom we admire and miss. Walt Whitman’s “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d” is an elegy for President Lincoln, but as you can see from just this snippet, the poem opens up to become a poem about America as a whole. Elegies expand in that way — using the occasion of one person’s death to envision a bigger, deeper picture.

    Your poem can be about something very small too.

    Here’s a poem I wrote about my niece’s cat, which she recently had to put down.

    It was just a little life
    So small that many of us
    Never met this sleek
    Creature of Halloween dreams.
    The last time I saw her she was
    Watching you tumble — her
    Giant human sibling — her tail curlingly
    Alert in taut minuscule physicality
    As
    She followed every move of
    your exercise routine
    Aptly named “animal.” It’s amazing how much
    Intensity can be generated in the
    Gaze of one so miniature but
    There it is — the smallest life
    Garners     gives so much
    Power.

    I’ve shared three very serious poems, because we’re living in a serious time, but you can write about whatever you want.

    Think you can’t do it? Wrong! We all have it in us to make poems. We are hardwired to make word-art because we’ve been making it since we first started using words. Every culture has poems. So that means we all can make them.

    Personally, I find making poems energizing, exciting, therapeutic, and deep. I’m a terrible cook but I like cooking with words. I learn something about myself and what I believe when I make a poem. And then when I’m finished, I have this snack that I share with other people if I want. I do that sometimes. But sometimes I just keep it for myself. Not all broccoli is meant to be shared.

    So, I’d like to invite you to write a poem today.

    I think it will taste good to you. And perhaps it will nourish someone else too.

    Stephanie Barbé Hammer is a published novelist and poet. She is working on a how-to-write-Magical-Realism book, and she is dedicating her blog “Magically Real” to reading seminal 18th century writers who influenced the founding fathers and other key American figures.  You can follow her on Twitter or her blog

    __________________

    To read more WLM stories and blogs, click here. Have a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. You may link to this story. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • Stefanie Freele || ‘Whidbey Writes’ July 2016

    Stefanie Freele || ‘Whidbey Writes’ July 2016

    July 6, 2016

    Congratulations to Stefanie Freele, our “Whidbey Writes” featured writer for July. We’re pleased to be able to share her poem, “Listen, Boy Of Belligerence,” with you.

    The purpose of “Whidbey Writes” is to encourage writers with a Whidbey connection to submit short fiction and poetry for publication in Whidbey Life Magazine, thereby giving our readers an opportunity to enjoy these creative writings. Throughout 2015 and the beginning of 2016, Whidbey Writes has published monthly selections of short fiction and poetry online. The most popular of these entries were also published in the Fall/Winter 2015 and Spring/Summer 2016 print editions of Whidbey Life Magazine.

    We publish the original work of selected winners at the beginning of each month as part of Whidbey Writes. Thanks to volunteer editors Heather Anderson, Mureall Hebert and Chris Spencer, who review submissions throughout the year and pass on the work they enjoy most to Whidbey Life Magazine for publication online and in print.

    To find out more about Whidbey Writes and the submission criteria, visit the Whidbey Writes Submission page. To see previously selected writings, visit the Whidbey Writes page here. 

    ___________________________

    Listen, Boy Of Belligerence
    By Stefanie Freele

    Those words will stay forever. You don’t see them
    stretched across an elderly forearm
    interrupted by Coumadin bruises and scars
    caused by decades of hard work

    You see wisdom, displayed along your limb
    and clear glass rightness, to remind you
    rules can kiss your all-knowing ass.
    Here you stand, fancying rape-filled anarchy,

    enlightened, believing in the anti-government
    lawlessness, disorder, confusion
    and hatred. Crime is meaningless to you.
    A regular devotee of Bad

    where public attention equals praise.
    Notice, no one congratulates you
    on your choice of noun to assault
    the unsuspecting gazer or

    studiers of sub-human oddities
    who make a point of proving their theories
    by searching for people like you, rule-breakers,
    the beings who refuse absorption

    while the remainder of vine-covered
    butterfly-dotted, serpent-raveled
    bodies agree with a tat, they too
    stand aside, leaving you to embrace your words.

    Stefanie Freele is the author of two short story collections, “Feeding Strays,” with Lost Horse Press and “Surrounded by Water,” with Press 53. Stefanie’s published and forthcoming work can be found in Witness, Glimmer Train, Mid-American Review, Chattahoochee Review. She is a graduate of NILA. 

    __________________

    CLICK HERE to read more WLM stories and blogsHave a great story idea? Let us know at info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

  • In Search of Truth and Beauty | The Nature of Stuff

    In Search of Truth and Beauty | The Nature of Stuff

    BY JONI TAKANIKOS
    Jan. 28, 2015

    I will be the first to admit how much I love my possessions, my beloved treasures that hold beauty and memory. They reside in two places at once, past and present, straddling the worlds both visible and unseen.

    Emerald Isle
    Emerald Isle

    To prepare for a three-month sabbatical to Ireland in 2011, I gave away many of my possessions. For those treasured items I could not part with, I found a few friends willing to store a few boxes. When I returned home from my sabbatical, my life had been changed profoundly; I wanted to follow that thread of change. Part of my new journey seemed to include the need to be unencumbered by nothing more than a few suitcases.

    I inhabited my beautiful island home by house-sitting for friends. This allowed me to have periods of travel: back to Ireland for two months, California for six weeks, Costa Rica for a month, the Netherlands and France for a short stay. Grand adventures, indeed! As a house-sitter I was surrounded by other peoples’ things, and that gave me a chance to reflect on “stuff” I had no personal history with. I have always loved looking at curios of all sorts, and it was lovely to explore my friends’ collections of objet d’art, books, paintings and photos.

    Corner songs (photo by Joni Takanikos)
    Corner songs (photo by Joni Takanikos)

    I especially love the look of a shelf or table that has been lovingly curated. It becomes an altar for my eyes and heart to visit, and it allows me to lose track of my own wandering thoughts in a way that brings me back home to myself. I was with a friend at SAM many years ago and we were “lost” in an exhibit, a room full of cabinets of curios, carefully curated. As we silently made our way through the exhibit, gazing through the glass onto shelves that told story after story through the arrangement of the objects within, my friend turned to me and whispered, “This exhibit reminds me of your house.”

    I loved her comment and took it to heart. I have a fondness for putting things together, letting each curious object—whether a book, photo, rock or dozens of other possible things—be in relationship to each other, playing with space and proximity. Once I had some interesting metal noise makers from a New Year’s Eve party that found their way around different parts of the house and each spot in turn was enlivened by their silent promise of noise making.

    Curios in relationship (photo by Joni Takanikos)
    Curios in relationship (photo by Joni Takanikos)

    Most of my “stuff” at the present time occupies one small room. While I love most everything in my room, I exercise the need to fill a bag or two of stuff, even things I love, to drop off at Good Cheer or give to friends. This cycle needs to happen at least every couple of months. You see, I have wonderful friends who frequently give me lovely things that I need to incorporate into my room. Without this pruning of possessions, this careful curation of my “life exhibit,” I can start to feel crowded, heavy and dense, just like my room would. Perhaps this is why “sacred space” is often so spare. It makes room for contemplation.

    In my zeal to not become surrounded by stacks of old New Yorker magazines, lovely birthday cards containing proof of love and affection, and twenty sweaters instead of ten, I have donated or given away many things I may later even come to regret. But in the end this pruning back is necessary and must remain continuous throughout the year to deal with this growing thicket of “stuff.”

    Love, memory and dreams (photo by Joni Takanikos)
    Love, memory and dreams (photo by Joni Takanikos)

    My dearest friend, Virginia Burja Simpson, while discussing the dilemma of stuff, said, ” All I want to leave behind is a poem and a puff of pink smoke.” In that spirit, I offer you one poem on the subject (and admit I have more than a boxful of them).

    UNTITLED

    “It’s not the load, it’s how you carry it.”—Lena Horne

    I have carried a
    handful of letters
    for over thirty years.
    Full of pain, misery,
    despair and love.
    I keep them like
    sentries at the gate
    of The Trauma.

    They have migrated
    to different houses
    through the years
    but have stayed in the
    same nondescript
    brown and beige file box.
    They swim in the too-large
    box, but at least they have
    plenty of air to breathe.

    Right now they ride in
    the trunk of my car, traveling
    the island roads, and the
    potholes of my long driveway.
    These letters I cannot
    seem to let go of, although
    the paper will eventually crumble,
    the plastic file box may go on forever.

    -Joni Takanikos

    So, if you find you have stuff you are not using, why not donate it to a local charity like Good Cheer, Habitat for Humanity, Waif or Senior Thrift? And while I would not advocate a nomadic lifestyle for everyone, I suspect most of us could be better served by lightening our load.

    Now just imagine this blog ends in a puff of pink smoke.

    Joni Takanikos lives, writes, performs, teaches yoga and collects some lovely “stuff” right here on Whidbey Island.

    ________________

    CLICK HERE to read more entertaining and informative WLM stories and blogs.

    WLM stories and blogs are copyrighted and all rights are reserved. Linking is permitted. To request permission to use or reprint content from this site, email info@whidbeylifemagazine.org.

     

  • Duff ’n Stuff ─ Who knew poetry can make corporate leaders better at their jobs?

    Duff ’n Stuff ─ Who knew poetry can make corporate leaders better at their jobs?

    BY PATRICIA DUFF, Oct. 18, 2013

    Poetry can make you better at business.

    I did not know this, but it doesn’t surprise me.

    I read an article recently that talked about how high-pressured business leaders, who need to deal with the chaos in their extremely dynamic environments, can improve their ability to better conceptualize the world ­— and communicate it through presentations or writing — by reading poetry. Reading and writing poetry can exercise one’s capacity to communicate more clearly to others.

    Apparently, the creative capabilities spurred by poetry can help executives keep their organizations entrepreneurial, help them to glean imaginative solutions to problems, and to steer through problematic environments, when good ’ole, previously reliable data alone doesn’t help them.

    I’m so happy to hear that there is this glimmer of light slipping under the doors of corporate conference rooms. I have so many ideas for suggested readings of poets! How could anyone possibly narrow the field, when there are so many good poems to read and so many corporate executives to help? (I love poetry. My favorite moment of every weekday is at 3 p.m. when Garrison Keillor chooses a poem to read for the Writers Almanac on NPR.)

    Here’s one by Billy Collins that might be good for the harried executive:

    I Ask You

    Johannes Vermeer, The Milkmaid (1658–1660) (447x500)
    There is poetry in Johannes Vermeer’s “The Milkmaid,” painted between 1658 and 1660.

    It gives me time to think
    about all that is going on outside—
    leaves gathering in corners,
    lichen greening the high grey rocks,
    while over the dunes the world sails on,
    huge, ocean-going, history bubbling in its wake.

    But beyond this table
    there is nothing that I need,
    not even a job that would allow me to row to work,
    or a coffee-colored Aston Martin DB4
    with cracked green leather seats.

    No, it’s all here,
    the clear ovals of a glass of water,
    a small crate of oranges, a book on Stalin,
    not to mention the odd snarling fish
    in a frame on the wall,
    and the way these three candles—
    each a different height—
    are singing in perfect harmony.

    So forgive me
    if I lower my head now and listen
    to the short bass candle as he takes a solo
    while my heart
    thrums under my shirt—
    frog at the edge of a pond—
    and my thoughts fly off to a province
    made of one enormous sky
    and about a million empty branches.

    How about this one by Walt Whitman for that old sexist male exec?

    A Song of Joys

    O ripen’d joy of womanhood! O happiness at last!
    I am more than eighty years of age, I am the most venerable mother,
    How clear is my mind – how all people draw nigh to me!
    What attractions are these beyond any before? what bloom more
    than the bloom of youth?
    What beauty is this that descends upon me and rises out of me?

    Necessary to any clattering board room of corporate chaos is certainly Naomi Shihab Nye, who calls herself the “wandering poet” and puts words together in a way like nobody else. Here’s her take on the most appealing kind of fame.

    Lorinda's Hay Moon over Whidbey (500x381)
    Lorinda Kay’s photograph of the “Hay Moon” over Whidbey Island in July 2013 is a kind of poetry itself.

    Famous

    The river is famous to the fish.

    The loud voice is famous to silence,
    which knew it would inherit the earth
    before anybody said so.  

    The cat sleeping on the fence is famous to the birds
    watching him from the birdhouse.  

    The tear is famous, briefly, to the cheek.  

    The idea you carry close to your bosom
    is famous to your bosom.  

    The boot is famous to the earth,
    more famous than the dress shoe,
    which is famous only to floors.

    The bent photograph is famous to the one who carries it
    and not at all famous to the one who is pictured.  

    I want to be famous to shuffling men
    who smile while crossing streets,
    sticky children in grocery lines,
    famous as the one who smiled back. 

    I want to be famous in the way a pulley is famous,
    or a buttonhole, not because it did anything spectacular,
    but because it never forgot what it could do.

    High on my list of recommended reading for conflicted corporate leaders would be William Butler Yeats, whose poetry has often led me away from a certain chaos in my own mind to a place of light. It was Yeats who once remarked that ”poetry is born out of the quarrel with oneself.” I think he meant that writing poetry is one way to give yourself some clarity; to divine from your own mind what’s essential and important.

    Here’s a Yeats poem that might remind executive leaders that some things are more important than business; that how you love will be remembered, rather than all those deals you cut. Life is short, corporate dude.

    When You are Old

    Pablo Picasso Old Guitarist (417x500)
    Pablo Picasso’s “Old Guitarist” is a painting that, to me, is also poetry.

    How many loved your moments of glad grace,
    And loved your beauty with love false or true,
    But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you,
    And loved the sorrows of your changing face;

    And bending down beside the glowing bars,
    Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled
    And paced upon the mountains overhead
    And hid his face amid a crowd of stars.

    So, says the article, leaders and their colleagues might find themselves more hopeful and flush with purpose if they take some time to write and read poetry. They might even find their work infused with more surprise, meaning and beauty.

    The thought of corporate America sitting quietly reading Yeats or Nye is utterly satisfying to me and gives me some sort of fresh hope.

    From my most wishful heart,
    Patricia Duff