Greetings, Poetry People, and happy hotter-than-July! I'm grateful to those who have been supporting my efforts over at Substack, intermittent as they have been, and this post is linked there. Comment where you will!
It's the First Friday of the month and the Inklings--6 of us--are responding to yet another of Audrey Gidman's daily prompts from June 5, at Catherine's request:
Read “Digging” by Seamus Heaney. (Really, do!) Think about something that has been handed down to you—from a parent, a grandparent, an elder in your life—that feels alive in you now. Think of how it is the same and think of how it has transformed in you. Notice how, for Heaney, it’s gardening and writing—two kinds of digging, but still the digging continues through the generations. Write a poem that digs into what was handed down to you and examines what you carry now.
I was eager for this opportunity to consider whether it's a thing handed down--something concrete--or a skill, a tendency, a characteristic strength or weakness that I wanted to write about. I offer you not the first and surely not the last of my poems about accompanying my parents as they age.
At the end of July, that will change when everyone comes here to Silver Spring for a weekend of writing and writing-related hijinks! It's a nice grand finale to the summer, because after that, Fiona and I will be all-hands-on-deck getting our house ready for renters before the Great Relocation to Brighton, England for the coming school year. (We have landing places but still no flat of our own organized, so if you know anyone in Brighton we can connect with--for any purposes--do tell!) This is also exciting, but there are challenges; viz. the poem above. I don't believe I need to say any more than that--there are enough readers of *my juicy little universe* in the same generational boat who know exactly what I mean.
See how the rest of us dug the "Digging" prompt below, and thanks to Michelle at More Art 4 All for hosting us today!
Catherine @Reading to the Core
Molly Hogan @ Nix the Comfort Zone
Linda Mitchell @ A Word Edgewise
Mary Lee @ A(nother) Year of Reading
Margaret Simon @ Reflections on the Teche
Brilliant revisions. The turn works, by which I mean it breaks my heart and makes tears jump into my eyes. And then that ending. Oof.
ReplyDeleteWonderful and painfully rich poem Heidi, and how perfectly well that last line fits. I’m there with you in many areas, my mom still living in her own apartment is turning 93 this year.
ReplyDeleteHow exciting your fall trip sounds, what an adventure… and wonderful that the inklings will all gather too, 😊 enjoy and thanks!