Sunday, April 19, 2015

Final Blog Post

I think that I have a grown a lot this semester. At the beginning of the term, I can honestly say that I had no idea what I was doing. The first poem assignment stressed me out so much that I only ended up writing a few words that had little meaning. Over the course of the semester, I have worked to incorporate magic and science into my work, as well as to "fill out the corners" of my phrases. The techniques that I have gained in this class will help me write poetry for any future class, as I feel that I have a solid foundation.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Last Blog Post

As LHSP comes to an end, it saddens me that I will probably never write poetry to this extent ever again. It has been a true pleasure being in this class surrounded by so many brilliant minds. My peers have demonstrated to me that their are so many different ways to write great poetry, rather it be Hanna's extremely intellectual poems where a dictionary has to be near, or Claire's down to earth style. Through the many poems we have read and analyzed, I have developed more of an appreciation toward the art of poetry. I feel that I grew more as a writer as well and am starting to resemble the deep analytic thoughts my high school English teacher had. After Monday's workshop, I was able to really think about what I want my own portfolio to be focused on and I tailored my poems to fit the theme. Thank you for a great semester.

Poem for 4/15

“Unpredictable”
Life’s too unpredictable,
like “bracetology” of Marchmadness.
I remember vibing to timeless jams ,
then being woken up in a sub.
Blue deep dark bellows,
seemed to fascinate this fellow,
the morning sun shined optimistically buttery.
Underground got jealous,
Killer earthquake said howdy.
Iggy stole the sound of hip-hop.
Yet she aint no rapper,
I’d rather swallow molded pasta
Before I watch her album go yellow
Somewhere in the jungle
There’s a monkey bout to rumble
Sad it won’t be a fair fight
Cuz a snake just ain’t right.
In the beginning I was king
Now I stand on my knees.
Stood tall like a God on a throne
Now helpless so I just roam.
My souls searching for a home
Grandfather always knew what to say.
Wait how did we get here?
I mean is March Madness fair?
Why damsel still in despair?
At an early age,
Grandpa lost most of his hair.
Somethings you can’t control,
When Life becomes ITunes on shuffle
From MJ to Kanye.
How does this poem
end, just like it begins

Life’s too unpredictable.

Poem for 4/15




Look at me now

Watch me annihilate the army ant,
Watch me beat the brains of the buffalo,
Watch me cuss out the cockatoo,
Watch me dream with the dolphin,
Watch me exceed the strength of an elephant,
Watch me feudalize the falcon,
Watch me grasp the neck of a giraffe,
Watch me harness the legs of the horse,
Watch me impart my wisdom on the ibis,
Watch me juggle with the jaguar,
Watch me kick the kangaroo,
Watch the lever the leopard,
Watch me mesmerize the marmalade monarch butterflies,
Watch me neglect the Nile crocodile,
Watch me ostracize the ostrich,
Watch me play with the panda,
Watch me quiver with the quail,
Watch me slaughter the snake,
Watch me torment the tarantula,
Watch me undermine the umbrella bird,
Watch me yell at the Yorkie,

Watch me zip by the zebra.

Monday, April 13, 2015

actual poem

Poem 2: To Cure a Headache

Take the hair of your closest neighbor
Without them knowing
Creeping and sulking in the background until silence returns
Put it in the dog’s bowl

Mix it with the spoon she left 
From that day at the park
The picnic with laughter and ants
Receiving the clock he made

Knock on the counter four times
Count backwards from eleven
Line up the edges and the corners 
Jump and scream when it doesn’t work

Line up the edges and the corners again
Yell and smack at your failure

Take the clock back in the picnic blanket
To the spot on the hill where she first used the spoon
Leave a trail of the hair you cut
From the bowl he calls his own
Cut your own hair
Buy your own dog bowl
Take a new blanket and spoon and clock
And suddenly night becomes day
The ache becomes numb again

Start over as needed


Sunday, April 12, 2015

Poem for 4/13

To Cure a Headache 

Take the hair of your closest neighbor 
and put it in the dog's bowl
Mix it with the spoon she left 
and the clock he made you
knock on the counter four times
count backwards from eleven
Line up the edges and the corners 
Feel the pain 
Jump and scream
Then all the hurt will leave
Relaxation will come 

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Poem for 4/13 Lamar (sorry for late post)

Outdated Grandpa
My grandpa didn’t want to believe,
He’d soon be outdated, when
Simply thrashing the three inch rusty nails,
With his grandfathers grandfathers initial engraved tack hammer would no longer be suffice. When the least of worries would be cross cutting the wrong colored wires of red, blue and yellow. Many of the skills he acquired by prehistoric Uncle Jack were now worth less than the two pennies he raved to rub together to provide buttermilk biscuits drenched in homemade maple syrup to feed the family of “We are Seven”.
tbh, if anything, most of his old ways are holding him back in today’s world.
He was taught to be stern, to not break or slightly bend. So he refuses to dispose that dreadful, longed antenna so called mobile device that can’t tweet, text, or tinder.
He’s the true definition of #tbt as he still thinks Facetime is yet another way for the government to spy on us. her
Grandma just forced him to get 4G and Wi-Fi so she can see her great-grandbabies more.
Grandpa still refuses to fly due to a Vietnam plane crash. He cranks up his Henry Ford signed truck, causing uproar from every environmentalist and their Facebook friends.
We’ve given up and I guess it’s ok that I know first graders who can make better prezi’s and take better selfies.
The theory has been proven,

You can’t teach an deep-rooted canine innovative tricks.   

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Poem for 4/13 Workshop (Hannah)

The Process of Decay

The process of decay must mirror
some behavior of the universe,

sidewalk chalk and dead snakes,
left in muggy air to get bloated and

gradually to decrease in amplitude
deteriorate or become impaired
have patterns reflected in other
processes. So does decay have
certain choice, then skip to a kitchen
just to reach for the bucket on top

of a fridge with no power: the pipes
have no water: thus a bucket

of fluid on an empty utility
the building to be destructed

first the power and water were
disconnected to prevent explosions

one could hypothetically meander
pondering “what sort would leave a

building so stable alone and un-purposed?”
choose to stay, not noticing the windows

had been pried off and trucked away.
then the siding stripped (maybe this is not

how to deconstruct a building)
to lose its characteristic quality,
strength, or excellence; do the ghosts of
snowpeople that shrunk to muddy shadows
haunt us? to be in a failing condition.
reflections of trees in puddles that evaporate.
A grandfather who was so magnetic his
watches lost their delicate accuracy.
The blackboards are only really clean for
the first few moments of a lecture, dead
sea creatures layering to be smeared
with eraser.  When a banana decays, the
most fragile or maybe vulnerable portions
get weathered away first, how a skeleton
is what we dig out of mass graves and
not just empty skin with all the insides

disappeared and recycled to become
matter in a wooden chair from IKEA

that took all day to assemble because
operating on only pictorial instructions

may leave you with too many screws
or an extra plank. Even this process

puts things together in an order that leads
to pieces made of pieces, like a skull

of a tyrannosaurus has several bones,
connecting to several in the neck,

wearing feathers and probably a great
deal more silly than given credit for by

action figures.  falling off from a prosperous
or thriving condition; progressive decline;
there is an order, a next
most reasonable choice to (de)construct

this building or banana: the living
of living may take another away

and it usually saves to buy in bulk.
So, after windows (I hope they are

taken to be reused and not shattered)
the condition of one who has thus fallen off
or declined. recycling costs energy
reusing costs a different energy,
but octopi living in less murky waters
thank the woman who drives the fronthoe
Not-A-Bulldozer for saving the windows
All the blackboards could be saved, if

anyone has use of them. what about the murals
that probably were not on the walls when you

consider the purpose of this building. Yet
the gradual decrease in the radioactivity
spontaneous transformation of a single atomic
nucleus/elementary particle into one or more
different nuclei/particles. I would like to think
that all buildings  get murals worthy of excising
a wall to be reinstalled. “So much depends upon”
whether they wanted to reuse the handles
from all the doors, and the hinges, light
switches. Decaying bananas become

seeds eventually, but maybe not banana seeds. I worry about the crushed frames.




Payton


20/20

If babies wore contact lenses, less people would procreate.  

Not because it would be a choking hazard, the flexible hydrogels slide down the throat like macaroni noodles, sit in the whistling stomach, wait more patiently than the squirming ant she grabbed off the kitchen tile while you were making breakfast.

More than the waste of money from each lens lost, when as she finally neared fingering contact to eyeball she was distracted, jerked to run her palms through the dog’s
lush golden forest, which ran out into the green prickling fur, irretrievable.   

Vanity would not be in jeopardy because babies have no desire to be hipster. None wear square Ray-Bans to complement their cup of coffee. They would burn the buds off the petal that is their little baby tongue.

Tearing fragile plastic wouldn’t be an issue, because as good as these small humans seem to be at destroying, their fat foam fingers couldn’t make the impact necessary for nails to rip the material. Babies can’t even use scissors.

The problem I foresee occurring is that babies will be able to see. I know whenever I wear my contacts, I am awake in the world. We aren’t ready for babies to be awake. She would know to be embarrassed when a rainbow-painted dodge ball half was used as the hair of her clown costume, she would know you were poor when their playpen was a cardboard box. She would laugh along when she sees her ponytail stick straight from the top of her head like the antenna of a radio. She would finger-paint what she saw in your eyes when she nearly cut off her own hands.

I find it hard to believe parents could take being loved more.