Folgen
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Many people say they have fear of old age, not death or dying. But my role model is the woman who wasn't afraid of open heart surgery—or loneliness—or lazy brain. This poem has danced off the page and has its own chorus and a subterranean tune.
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Scottish super-poet reads "Gravity" and talks about poems, people, and his future old age. Recorded November 2019 and still as fresh as a purple thistle head.
About Michael Pedersen: The Scottish Poetry LibraryNeu! Reekie!Kim Hill interviews Michael Pedersen
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Fehlende Folgen?
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A young poet reads a poem to an old poet. An old poet learns about eating green apples with chili, and a new snack is invented. You can read the original poem on my blog.
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In a storm of regrets or negative thoughts, when you feel broken or haunted, a poem can help you to mend. That's informal poetic therapy. Today Kintsugi by Janis Freegard and When Befriending Ghosts by Siobhan Harvey are poetic therapy for me. Which poems do you turn to? I'm Rachel McAlpine, 81, a New Zealand poet.
Kintsugi by Janis FreegardYou will break and break and keep breaking until you’re on the floorWondering whether you can ever rise. (You can.)
You’ll break until you feel you may never be whole again.(You will be.)
But you’ll be altered. Now is the time for kintsugi,the Japanese art of repairing with gold, mending the cracks
in smashed ceramics to make something more beautiful.You’ll reassemble yourself and use gold to seal the fissures.
You’ll be better than before. Don’t stay damaged —That’s no use to anyone. Don’t give yourself more pity than you need.
As soon as you’re ready, heal. (On second thoughts,You may never be ready. Do it anyway.)
Trust me when I say: it’s going to be better. Trust me when I say:This isn’t your fault. This shouldn’t have happened.
But it has and you couldn’t have stopped it. Make surewhatever happens next is good. Really good.
Prepare your lacquer pot,Mix in the gold.
Janis Freegard's Weblog
If Befriending Ghosts Siobhan HarveyIf they are the legacy left in lost codeIf they are the beginning of broken soul
If they are the bitter end of loveIf they are the sour taste of rejection
If they are the other side of the storyIf they are the curses cast into oblivion
If they are the chemical rendering of lightIf they are the sky at the point of breaking
If they are a house troubled by occupantsIf they are a dwelling upon difficult territory
If they are my crying out of painIf they are my tearing open old wounds
If they are my looking deep insideIf they are my viscera, blood and bile
I will give them oxygen and timeI will give them fuel and flame
I will raise them to ruin, to wreckI will raise them as lovers, as pets
I will wear them up like a leashI will wear them down to a dust
I will be their armour, their second skinI will be their padded cell, their asylum
Siobhan Harvey
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Today I'm reading a few poems that I wrote for particular friends or relatives—not love poems, just a message of delight or affection. Have you ever written a poem like that—and given it to them? That's pretty special for both the poet and the receiver.
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Wonder what children think about hell, careers and catastrophes? Sit back and listen to three poems with some insights into their private worries.
Theology of hellI was worried. I was sevenand Daddy (as we called him then)was tucking me into bed.I was worried about hell.I wasn’t sure how bad you had to be.
So I asked him, “When I diewill I go to heaven orto hell?” Not a chatterboxhe thought before he answered.We always could see him thinkingwith his eyeballs and his mouth.
He said, “I don’t believe in hellfor God is a loving God.But if there is a hell, I’m surethat only a very very fewwould go to hell, and only after doingsomething very very bad.”
“Like what?” I pushed.Again he pondered. Then he said,“Like killing a person on purposeand never feeling sorry.”He was a vicar, and he knew.
He kissed me goodnightand left me healed.I knew for sure and certainI would never killa person, not on purposeand if I did, I would be sorry—so I wouldn’t go to hell.
Vocational GuidanceYou have to say something when they askand they always ask.But I haven’t decided yet.
I might be an anthropologistor I might be a lady with a nail polish shopor I might be both, and in my spare time
I might be a ballerina.When I get tired of being a ballerinaI will have a baby called Hannah
and she will be my friend.But I can’t have two friends called Hannahso I will give my baby Hannah
to my other friend, Layla.Actually I won’t get tiredof being a ballerina.
Elsie's Scale of TerriblenessHaving no one to play with is four out of tenif it’s only a single day.A sunburn on your bones is an eight.Dropping your lunch in the dirt is a five.A zombie attack is about a nineA ten would be if my dog died(that would make me very sad)or if all the humans of the worldgot destructed by the God of Mudbut Granny dying would only bea five, because she’s old.
All poems are from How To Be Old, for sale at any New Zealand book store (if not, they'll order it) or buy direct from The Cuba Press.
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After 2020, we may need help to achieve a happy new year. Sit back and listen to 3 poems about happiness that might help you to find it or notice it squatting in your life.
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It's not easy making new friends but when old friends move or die or cut contact with you. Two poems with some ideas that might help at those times.
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A poem about my mother's elaborate plan to end her life at 70 by throwing herself down a crevasse in the Franz Josef Glacier or Fox Glacier. I can't remember which. End of life choice is complicated and personal. Her own choice was purely imaginary when she was young.
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Take a few minutes off and let me read to you. Today, I’ll read some tiny little poems that I call fortune cookies. They are feather light. Maybe one of them is about your own life. You’ll know it when you hear it. The poems are from How To Be Old published by The Cuba Press.