Advice to 30/ 30 Poets
Keep an open knife on your desk,
look at the blade once an hour.
I could stab someone, or myself,
or someone could stab me.
A reminder of the end, the knife
is a cliché for your mortality,
you’re stuck on the point of the blade.
Time is running out, do you feel it?
Eat ice cream, break a glass.
We’re polite to one another
because we know how bad it really is.
Wear feathers and hats.
If your well runneth dry and it‘s written down, it‘s gone.
Formalization in a digital format is lame.
Write on paper and let it pile up around you
like loving arms or a voice in your ear,
drop-shoulder calm. Live your poetic
morality dream in a tactile sense.
When it’s written down it’s gone.
At the end, place your 30 days in a plastic bag
and bury them until they‘re gone. After that,
once in while, not every day, write a poem
in the sand with a stick.
Take a photo of your sand poem.
Tell your poet friends if they want help
to give me a call, my whole life is a poem.
I go into the gas station talking poetry.
That's how I pay for my gas.
This final 30/ 30 poem is dedicated to Nick, my poetry coach.
1 comment:
While I love all your poems, I especially love your latest Solstice, about a garden with a death fixation. Love your husband, Ray A. March honestly
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