Poetry Project — January, 2021

It’s a new year (pretty grateful about that) and my Poetry Sisters and I have a new plan.
(Lucky for us it includes Zoom-writing together once a month — yay for poetic companionship!)

As usual, we’ve chosen a prompt-per-month. (We’ll try to remember to share them with you in case you want to write along!) For January, we went to Merriam-Webster’s Time Traveler to discover which words were first seen in print the year we were born. Those words were then the fodder for our poems!

I was intrigued by how many of the words for my year were hyphenated or compound so I used LOTS of them. In fact, every word in this poem except the bolded ones were first seen in print in 1967, just like me! It’s very different from the kind of poem I’d usually write but who cares? It was fun.

Born In 1967

The Original
Flower Child
Self Professed
Honey Bell

Born Of
Low Tech
Slow Pitch
Yada Yada

Steps Into
Full Bore
First World
Ego Trip

Makes It Through
Whacked Out
Crack Back
Hissy Fit

PAUSE
Re Format

Still Here
Mono Hull
Micro Quake
She Crab

That’s Me

Now, please go enjoy the others, here:
Tricia
Laura
Tanita
Kelly
Sara
Andi

And go check out Poetry Friday with Jan at Bookseed Studio.

OH!! And if you want to write along with us next month, here’s the plan: Roll a set of metaphor dice and write a poem inspired by your metaphor. If you don’t have the dice, try the online version here. Then, post your poem on Feb 26 (and share on Twitter as #PoetryPals).

Stay safe and well — Liz

6 Responses to “Poetry Project — January, 2021”

  1. Tricia Stohr-Hunt

    Can I say how much I love that we all took such different approaches to finding our way and writing our poems? I love how different they all are. I love that you chose words to describe you! That never would have occurred to me. When I got to the Born Of stanza I was reminded of the poem “Where I’m From” by George Ella Lyon.
    This is lovely, just like you.

  2. tanita♥

    Oh, you made it work!! You made the compound word thing really sing. I had a ton of those but it just didn’t work for me as easily, so I pitched it.

    The two words two-stepping along make this both a dance and an urgent description. Rather than spinning faster and faster, though, it spins until it’s dressed and ready – like Wonder Woman with her outfit – and resolves into “that’s me,” and I love it.

  3. Andi

    You made this really sing! I love the rhythm of all those compound words and phrases. This was really fun!

  4. Laura Purdie Salas

    Liz, I love this! You’re right…very different from your usual style, and yet captures something of you in it. That first stanza wows me. Honey bell is so close to honey chile, and it captures your southern warmth.

  5. Sara Lewis Holmes

    Trying again, honey bell….I love how you’ve structured this, and the whole staccato rhythm of a life condensed. Even the pause is genius. But most of all, I love seeing how you see yourself, with humor and grace.