Wednesday, April 9, 2025

The 2025 Kidlitosphere Progressive Poem is here!

Everyone talks about how traveling back in time and doing something small, like killing a butterfly, can drastically change the present, but no one talks about how doing something small today, like planting a tree, can drastically change the future.
~ r/showerthoughts on reddit


Hello, dears! I was hoping to have my blog moved by now, but as you can see, my schedule was off, haha!

Irene Latham began the Progressive Poem and hosted it from 2012-2019. If you would like to see poems from those years the early archives are Here. Margaret Simon took over in 2020. Her archives Here.

The rules are simple:

* The poem passes from blog to blog 
* Each poet-blogger adds a line. 
* The poem is for children. 
* Other than that, anything goes.
* Each blogger will copy the previous line exactly as written (unless permission from the previous poet is obtained) and add their line, offering commentary on their process if they wish.



So I have the next line of this year's Progressive Poem. Our first stanza was a-b-c-b, and the next was a-b-b-b, but I don't need to worry about that because I'm just the "a" and nobody rhymes with me so I can end in "orange" if I want to. (Which is good, as you will see, although there's always "weasels.")

I wanted a little action, moving us into what happens next, but I only have 6-8 syllables to do it! I figured out something though... We're about to take advantage of being in a gorgeous garden, together!

Here is the 2025 poem so far:

Open an April window
let sunlight paint the air
stippling every dogwood
dappling daffodils with flair

Race to the garden
where woodpeckers drum
as hummingbirds thrum
in the blossoming Sweetgum.



I'm starting the next stanza with:

Sing as you set up the easels

********************

Coming up next: Marcie with line 10!


April 1 Linda Mitchell at A Word Edgewise
April 2 Tricia at The Miss Rumphius Effect
April 3 Robyn at Life on the Deckle Edge
April 4 Donna Smith at Mainely Write
April 5 Denise at https://mrsdkrebs.edublogs.org/
April 6 Buffy at http://www.buffysilverman.com/blog
April 7 Jone at https://www.jonerushmacculloch.com/
April 8 Janice Scully at Salt City Verse
April 9 Tabatha at https://tabathayeatts.blogspot.com/
April 10 Marcie at Marcie Flinchum Atkins
April 11 Rose at Imagine the Possibilities | Rose’s Blog
April 12 Fran Haley at Lit Bits and Pieces
April 13 Cathy Stenquist
April 14 Janet Fagel at Mainly Write
April 15 Carol Varsalona at Beyond LiteracyLink
April 16 Amy Ludwig VanDerwater at The Poem Farm
April 17 Kim Johnson at Common Threads
April 18 Margaret at Reflections on the Teche
April 19 Ramona at Pleasures from the Page
April 20 Mary Lee at A(nother) Year of Reading
April 21 Tanita at {fiction instead of lies}
April 22 Patricia Franz 
April 23 Ruth at There’s No Such Thing as a Godforsaken Town
April 24 Linda Kulp Trout at http://lindakulptrout.blogspot.com
April 25 Heidi Mordhorst at My Juicy Little Universe
April 26 Michelle Kogan at: https://moreart4all.wordpress.com/
April 27 Linda Baie at Teacher Dance
April 28 Pamela Ross at Words in Flight
April 29 Diane Davis at Starting Again in Poetry
April 30 April Halprin Wayland at Teaching Authors


Wednesday, April 2, 2025

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Hi folks! Happy National Poetry Month!

I generally have a plan for National Poetry Month (last year I wrote poems inspired by short stories), but this year I'm still not sure what I'm doing. I've decided to give myself a break and I'm going to wait until next week to figure it out.

Yesterday, I was trying to accomplish two things that after hours and hours still were not working. One of them was related to my new blog. (I'm trying to move this blog to Wordpress.) I think this will be the last post I put here, other than one that tells you where to go instead. The other thing was related to a birthday.

So that was really frustrating, but in the background, I could see Cory Booker uplifting us with a feat of strength. Physical, intellectual, and moral strength. After being disappointed by so many people and their incompetence, cowardice, and cruelty, it was like a balm for the spirit. Thank you, Cory Booker.

I'm still trying to make this blog migration happen (and birthday event!) and then I'll be back with deets.

Hugs to all!
T.

P.S. I didn't realize I missed this song until I heard it today: Typical by Mutemath. The video is worth a watch, too. (They learned how to do things backward, like sing, in order to film it.)

Monday, March 31, 2025

There's a whole lot of rhythm going 'round

We need the funk,
Gotta have that funk
~Parliament



For Music Monday, old skool funk R&B from DJ Demetrius:



For something more serious:

Twenty Lessons (from On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder), read by John Lithgow

Thursday, March 27, 2025

If you can't fly, then run

And I noticed my new best friend—
by now we were holding hands—had a potted plant poking out of her bag,
some medicinal thing, with green furry leaves. Such an old country tradi-
tion. Always carry a plant. Always stay rooted to somewhere.
~Naomi Shihab Nye



Happy Poetry Friday! Are you ready for National Poetry Month? I'm not, but I hope to get my act together soon. I'll be away next Friday but I'll schedule something. Today, we have a poem that is based on a true story about children striving to become Olympians.

The Ditch Kids of the Maui Sugar Company
by Derek Otsuji

Barred from swimming pools the hot summer long
but loving the delicious cold on our skins,
we dove in ditches dug to irrigate
the same fields where our fathers slogged, under
the supervising eye of a white sun winking
on the blades of their machetes. Of course
there were barbed fences to keep us from ditches,
just as there were codes that banned us from pools
sealed behind an elite sports club’s gleaming
walls, a taboo, like a shiny thing, asking
to be smashed.
Released from sluice gates,
the sloshing water, brown as our arms,
ran down the channels, as we dipped and stroked,
like salmon driven upstream, the russeting
current sliding off flexed shoulder blades
in silted robes as we reached speeds that broke
all barriers and in our homegrown upstart way,
always the outside chance, the dark horse’s surge,
we sugar ditch kids, turning laps like verses
of an olympian ode, plowed that narrow lane
to victory and were crowned aquatic kings.

************************

* The title of the post comes from a quote from Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: “If you can't fly then run, if you can't run then walk, if you can't walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.” I thought that was appropriate since the "ditch kids" found a way to keep swimming, and we all need to figure out our own ways to move forward.

* Fighting Back: A Citizen’s Guide to Resistance Ordinary people have more power than they know.

* National Bail Fund Network

* Poetry as a path to recovery for children in Ukraine



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Marcie Flinchum Atkins has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Marcie!

Terra Mariana

Creating a new country from scratch has given Estonia the license to imagine what a country could be.
~Taavet Hinrikus


Having a peaceful Art Thursday with photos of Estonia:

Võipere village
Iifar

Letipea peninsula
Kalev Vask

Noctilucent clouds, Kuresoo bog, Soomaa National Park
Martin Koitmäe

Ruhnu church from 1643–44
Metsavend

Osmussaar
Tõnis Saadre


Monday, March 24, 2025

Heroic

I don't know how it is, but the Germans are amazed at me and I am amazed at them for finding anything to be amazed about.
~Frederic Chopin


Happy Music Monday! Heroic Polonaise (1842) by Frédéric Chopin today, performed by the Berlin Pro Musica Symphony Orchestra.


Info about the piece from 10 Pieces of Classical Music About Freedom by Emily E. Hogstad:
No sooner had [Polish composer Chopin] left for Vienna... than Warsaw broke out into armed conflict.

The November Uprising in Warsaw lasted from November 1830 until October 1831...

The Poles fought their occupiers, the Russians, but were ultimately crushed.

Chopin was devastated when he heard about the outcome. He wrote in his journal, “Oh God! … You are there, and yet you do not take vengeance!”

...He began incorporating polonaises – a dance form that originated in Poland – into his piano music.

He also began dating Paris-based authoress George Sand, who backed the Polish cause in her writings. After he wrote the Heroic Polonaise, she drew a direct line between the Polonaise and other countries’ fights for freedom and self-determination, writing, “The inspiration! The force! The vigour! There is no doubt that such a spirit must be present in the [1848] French Revolution. From now on, this Polonaise should be a symbol, a heroic symbol.”



Saturday, March 22, 2025

A reminder


French MEP Raphaël Glucksmann responding to the White House press secretary’s attack after Glucksmann suggested France should reclaim the Statue of Liberty:

“Dear Americans, since the White House press secretary is attacking me today, I wanted to tell you this:

Our two peoples are intimately linked by history, by the blood we shed, and by our shared passion for freedom—symbolized by the Statue of Liberty, which France gifted to honor your glorious Revolution.

As the press secretary for this shameful administration said: without your nation, France would have ‘spoken German.’ In my case, it goes further: I would simply not be here if Americans hadn’t landed on our beaches in Normandy.

Our gratitude to these heroes and their sacrifices is eternal. But the America of these heroes fought against tyrants, it did not flatter them. It was the enemy of fascism, not the friend of Putin.

It helped the resistance, not attacked Zelensky. It celebrated science, not fired researchers for using banned words. It welcomed the persecuted, not targeted them. It was far—so far—from what your current president does, says, and embodies.

This America—faithful to the words inscribed on the Statue of Liberty, your America—is worth so much more than betrayal. More than the abandonment of Ukraine and Europe. More than xenophobia and obscurantism.

We in Europe love this nation to which we owe so much. And we know it will rise again. You will rise again. We are counting on you.

And that is why I said in a rally: if your government despises everything the Statue of Liberty symbolizes, we could symbolically reclaim it. It was a wake-up call.

No one, of course, will come and steal the Statue of Liberty. The statue is yours. But what it embodies belongs to all of us. And if your government no longer cares for the free world, we will take up the torch here in Europe.

Until we meet again in the fight for freedom and dignity, we will be the continuators of our shared history and the protectors of our greatest treasure: not copper and steel, but the freedom it represents.”

****************

A poem I wrote last year:

FIRST, THE ARM WITH THE TORCH WAS BUILT

In 1865 when the Union held,
in his mind's eye
Edouard de Laboulaye
spotted the light of a beacon
in the hand of a woman
all the way from France

what greater gift
what better friend
than one who calls forth
the truest self
again and again?