Friday, May 17, 2019
To the Daisy
To the Daisy That Has Survived Even Though the Grounds Crew Mowed Down the School Land Lab Two Years Ago
Bloom!
No matter how low they mow you,
Bloom!
Show the world you won't be stopped:
Bloom!
Keep the memory of your former glory alive--
Bloom!
Send roots deep and runners long--
Bloom!
Bring joy to those who see your smiling face:
Bloom!
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Thursday, May 16, 2019
To the Sock in the Trash
To the Sock in the Trash
Just because you're worn out
doesn't mean you're a failure.
If it weren't for the holes in your sole and toe
how would we know
the measure of our steps,
the constant erosion
of time and motion?
You're not a failure, you're my hero.
You served from below:
gauging progress
never seeking promotion
the model of devotion.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Monday, April 29, 2019
Haikubes With Hem
my balance calls
I slowly return home
the glorious next
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Hem is sad to see Poetry Month drawing to a close. He'll miss stealing haikubes from the pile and batting them underneath the couch. And they are so fun to lay on while Mom is trying to choose just the right ones. But how come she can bat them around with her paws, but I get in trouble for the same thing, Hem wonders.
Sunday, April 28, 2019
The Key to Happiness: Some Food for Thought
Today's challenge: One randomly drawn prompt and one randomly drawn paint chip. |
The Key to Happiness: Some Food for Thought
You want everything to be plum perfect?
I'm here to tell you you're as likely to get a lemon
I'm here to tell you you're as likely to get a lemon
as you are a piece of cake.
You might be the big cheese,
and as cool as a cucumber,
but you'll still get your goose cooked now and then.
Take this with a grain of salt
or take this like candy from a baby --
the key to happiness is
not worth a hill of beans
unless the fruit of your labors
is a bowl of cherries
that you are willing
to share.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Saturday, April 27, 2019
Found
Found
Squirrels
nip the tips
off branches.
You can tell
because the cut
is slanted.
The size of oak's leaves
has doubled
in a week.
Some are cupped
(to receive sun?)
all are fuzzy.
Look at the table.
This is how shade happens in spring:
suddenly.
©Mary Lee Hahn
Friday, April 26, 2019
A Lazy Symphony
A Lazy Symphony
so much depends
upon
a delicate spring
moment
languid with sweet
beauty
a lazy symphony of
flowers
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
This is another "cross-out" poem, an idea shared by Laura Shovan in her Nerdy Book Club Poetry Month FB event. I wrote one inspired by Emily Dickinson last Sunday. This one was inspired by William Carlos Williams' Red Wheelbarrow.
Thursday, April 25, 2019
And Then on Top of Everything Else
And Then on Top of Everything Else (a teacher's rant)
Let's set the stage--
the calendar page
hasn't turned to May
yet every single day
is filled to the brim
and you're drowning, can't swim,
got to keep the momentum
and don't even mention
paperwork
meetings
testing
talent show
field trip
author visit
summer reading.
On top of all that
(magnify the impact)
the impossible curse of your body:
you're sick.
(Pass the toddy.)
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
New Little Tree
We added a new member to our garden family on Earth Day. Welcome, Cranberry Viburnum! Nature's first green is sometimes red!
I accidentally left all my poetry tools at school, but luckily, there's Magnetic Poetry Online! Here's a haiku for our new little tree:
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Uncle Bob -- A Prose Poem
A jumble of memories |
Uncle Bob was not my uncle. He was my dad's cousin, but the closest thing to family we had. He also was not a cowboy, but if you saw his slow, bow-legged saunter, his cowboy hat, his blue jeans and western snap-fasten shirts, that's what you might think. You wouldn't know by looking that he was the canniest dry-land farmer in the Great Plains of Eastern Colorado. He was born and raised in the part of Colorado without mountain peaks and rich soil. His landscape was wide and flat and dry. Dirt roads with thistle in the ditches marked the edges of native grassland pasture and wheat fields. Uncle Bob had a deep understanding of the land he farmed, never succumbing to "the grass is greener" mentality of irrigation. He was a dry-land farmer whose harvest depended on the land and the weather. There were good years with enough moisture, and plenty of years with dust devils and tumbleweeds before the rain came...or didn't come. In the summer, many a cumulonimbus cloud appeared on the horizon, only to take its rain elsewhere, but perhaps also its hail. A winter blizzard was a mixed blessing of wind that carried topsoil away and brought moisture that did or didn't cover the fields to nourish the winter wheat. Uncle Bob secured his success by collaborating with the land and the climate, but he allied with another of the vast natural resources of Eastern Colorado for his final venture -- harvesting the wind with graceful lines of enormous turbines.
In my mind, it is night. I stand in the dusty yard where I played as a child, rusty tractors along the fence, the Milky Way a bright smear across the impossibly dark sky. Uncle Bob is in it all -- land, sky, and wind.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Not Giant...Yet
I count baby oak leaves among the cutest of spring's babies. It's hard to imagine that these fragile fingertip-length leaves will be bigger than my whole hand by the middle of June. And the photosynthetic glucose factory inside each one of them...don't even get me started on that miracle.
There's a new Rhino in town, a watering can rhino, and she helped me write a haiku for the baby oak leaves.
your glorious life
grand, gorgeous -- so not giant
sweet home for my heart
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Sunday, April 21, 2019
To Make a Forest
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Flickr Creative Commons Photo |
To Make a Forest, After Emily Dickinson
To make a forest it takes one spring and eternity,
The delicate goddess of this spring mist and one enormous eternity.
Plus moments.
The sweet moments alone will do,
If eternity is few.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
This is a "cross-out" poem, an idea shared by Laura Shovan in her Nerdy Book Club Poetry Month FB event.
It is also a magnetic poetry poem. Thank goodness FOREST was right on top in the box!
Saturday, April 20, 2019
Happy Birthday, Franki!
For Franki, On Her Birthday
You are an unspoken blessing to the teaching profession.
Your advocacy is a not-so-silent promise that all voices will be heard.
I know you are reluctant to accept the trophy of our accolades,
but where would we be without your impossible-to-ignore drumbeat of excellence?
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Friday, April 19, 2019
Springtime Alarm Clock
Springtime Alarm Clock
Supposedly, time is a gentle songbird,
but someone forgot to tell
the robin outside my window
in the predawn darkness
who is singing jazz riffs
that would make Charlie Parker proud.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Here is my metaphor:
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And here is Charlie Parker, who I chose randomly, but just learned is Charles ("Bird") Parker.
Thursday, April 18, 2019
After the Fire
After the Fire
The images of smoke and ash
spread from screen to screen around the globe.
As the loss of an ancient cultural treasure was mourned
by those who had experienced the holiness there
and by those who now would not,
a pair of girls enjoying a sunny recess in Ohio
searched the soccer field
for four-leaf clover,
eventually finding seven lucky clusters.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
Pluck
The classroom stuffed animals wanted to get in on the Haikube scene. Why should Hem and Rhino have all the fun? On the left is the hamster from Laura Shovan's book The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary, in the middle is a camel one of my Egyptian students gave me, and on the right is Grumpy Bird. They watched last week while their small humans took the Language Arts state test, and the classroom is now ready (all math charts hidden or removed) for the Math portion of the state test. They know how hard their small humans have been working, and they wanted to write a poem to encourage them.
realize sweet grace
you hold dynamic marvel
you have pluck enough
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Tuesday, April 16, 2019
Monday, April 15, 2019
Poetry is a Burning Blessing
Poetry is a Burning Blessing
your pen -- the matchstick;
ideas -- tinder, kindling, fuel;
poetry -- the fire
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Sunday, April 14, 2019
Playing With Poetry -- With FIRST Graders!
I Went to the Mexican Store
I saw
rainbow vegetables.
But
the best part was
a pepper
reading a book!
©1st Grade, 2019
Holy Moly! First graders at the end of the day on Friday still have SO much energy and SO much creativity! Hats off to all the first grade teachers in the world!
We were writing a 15 Words or Less poem and we had WAY too many words. One little girl took out four boring words ("green, purple, and striped") and replaced them with one juicy one -- "rainbow." Brilliant! You have to look closely at the top right corner of the picture to see the pepper reading a book. It's a green pepper in the corner of a cardboard box, but when you see it through first grade eyes, it sure is a pepper reading a book!
Saturday, April 13, 2019
Playing With Poetry -- With MORE Second Graders!
Pink Piglets in a Pen
You think I'm dirty.
I DO love
rolling in mud
but
I bathe in hay.
©2nd Grade, 2019
Another great group of young poets, and look at all we packed into that poem! Alliteration! Rhyme! Juicy word choices!
Friday, April 12, 2019
Playing With Poetry...With Second Graders!
The second grade team at my school has invited me to visit their classes as the "Visiting Poet" for their Poetry Month poetry writing unit. So. Much. Fun!
Yesterday, after I elaborated on what a poet actually does (lots of reading, lots of rewriting) and where I get my ideas (everywhere), we wrote a 15 Words Or Less poem together.
Our prompt was a picture of tire tracks in snow.
Our first draft was too long, so I shared my sneaky trick of using one of the lines as the title to reduce the word count.
We wound up with this:
Today Might Be a Snow Day
The cars
make diagonal tracks
in the sparkly snow
from
dusk to dawn.
©2nd Grade, 2019
It seemed ludicrous to be writing about a snow day when the temperatures here in Ohio hit the 80s today for the first time this season, but I know our friends in Denver and the upper midwest are dealing with Winter Storm Wesley, which will likely downgrade to lots of rain for us in the coming days.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Haiku for Hem
Hem didn't come running when I dumped the Haikubes tonight, so Rhino and I worked alone. Our haiku might not seem very flattering, but it's the honest truth. Hem is a rescue cat, and we're pretty sure he was taken too soon from his mother, causing him to miss out on some important early socialization lessons. He plays REALLY rough. He's ruthless. His favorite games involve trying to bite your hand when you pet him, biting your pants leg, and jumping human shoulder-height (after getting those wild tiger eyes) to try to bite the hand you are holding out. One of his nicknames is Mr. Bitey. Hem is a strikingly beautiful cat, but he's drawn blood from both of us many times, resulting in us calling him worse than simply a jerk. He is, however, quite the Daddy's Boy, and he is always able to charm his way back onto AJ's lap.
wild tiger eyes
wicked gleeful biting jerk
charm peace with the man
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Tuesday, April 9, 2019
Promise and Power
Like the green of spring,
poetry is a promise
unspoken, yet heard.
(And on the flip side,
power is a glorified mirror.
Enough said.)
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Monday, April 8, 2019
Light, Peace, Joy
Light, Peace, Joy
Yes, light is a peace of joy.
And so is the single daffodil at the base of the oak.
Yes, light is a piece of joy.
Sun streaming through the blinds onto the kitchen table.
In piece, we dazzle.
In peace, we glow.
Joy.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
(Prompt provided by one of my students.)
Sunday, April 7, 2019
Blessings and Curses
Last Friday, I put out the poetry tools I've been using for this year's NPM challenge and let my students test drive them.
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Magnetic Poetry |
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Paint Chip Poetry |
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Haikubes |
They didn't have time to draft full poems...all except this guy, who asked for permission not to switch stations so he could finish a poem, which turned out to be a heart-wrenching tribute to his mother on the theme of "appreciate what you've got while you've got it."
Other blessings I received as I played alongside them were snippets of poetry they gave me permission to borrow. Yesterday's metaphor was created by our class' member of the school dodgeball team. The competition was last night (they wound up holding onto their championship for the third year in a row) and he was thinking more literally about curveballs than I was! I have a line of magnetic poetry to work from for tomorrow's poem, and today's poem started at the paint chip table. A quiet sweetie showed her spunky side by pairing these:
That got me going on curses. I made a few of my own while we played, and then this morning, I took a page from my students' PLAYbook and dumped out all the paint chip cards on the kitchen table to find more.
I jotted them in my notebook, then went to my Merriam-Webster app and jotted down all the synonyms for CURSE.
Malediction Incantation
I curse you
with cheese puffs in your eyes!
May there be a muddy puddle pox
on your blue suede shoes!
I bestow a hex of sticky nectar
in your genie lamp!
A plague on your bright ideas --
may they slip away like quicksilver!
May your bull's-eye be blighted by
tumbleweeds
and your starship be scourged by
rust!
Your happy ending? May it be jinxed
by an unforeseen
deep
end.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Saturday, April 6, 2019
Memory Throws a Last-Minute Curveball
Memory Throws a Last-Minute Curveball
your name, the punchline,
why I'm standing in this room --
all veer out of reach
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
Friday, April 5, 2019
Haikubes with Hem (and Rhino)
Rhino wanted in on the act this time. But just like the last times, the minute I dumped the Haikubes on the carpet, Hem came at a gallop.
He and Rhino worked amiably to help me pick out my cubes.
Almost ready!
I found a poem that's a wish for sleep tonight. I made the mistake of drinking a cup of hot tea after school yesterday, and I woke up with a busy brain at 2:00 AM. I read for an hour, then only dozed until the alarm went off just before 5:00. Please come, honest sleep. Bring me grace!
Thursday, April 4, 2019
Up
UP
The optimism of cream --
rising.
The power of frog legs --
leaping.
The cheer of sunny sides --
inspiring.
©Mary Lee Hahn, 2019
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