Exploring Poetry of Presence II: Prompts to Deepen Your Writing Practice: Exploring Poetry of Presence, #2
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About this ebook
What might happen when you show up to the moment with a pen in your hand? This companion book to Poetry of Presence II: More Mindfulness Poems is a guide for writing poetry as a mindfulness practice. It features eighty-eight thoughtful invitations to help you explore how you meet the world, even when (or especially when) it isn't easy to be present.
"If you long to walk more deeply into the wilderness of poetry, I can't think of a more masterful and generous guide than poet Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer. In this companion edition, Rosemerry takes you by the hand and leads you to closer intimacy with not only poetry, but with all of life." —Julia Fehrenbacher, poet and author of Staying in Love
"Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer has always been a wise and gentle guide, leading us into deeper presence with her luminous poems. Yet what she has crafted here, as a companion to an already soul-nourishing anthology, is nothing short of a sacred text that will lift you up, and keep you company on the whole human journey—from joy to loss and back to the joy of full aliveness again." —James Crews, author of Kindness Will Save the World
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Exploring Poetry of Presence II - Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer
EXPLORING POETRY OF PRESENCE II
PROMPTS TO DEEPEN YOUR WRITING PRACTICE
ROSEMERRY WAHTOLA TROMMER
Foreword by
PHYLLIS COLE-DAI & RUBY R. WILSON
BACK PORCH PRODUCTIONS LLC
This is copyrighted material. Except in the case of brief quotations, we respectfully ask that you not reproduce or share it without prior written permission.
for Mom
NOTE TO THE READER
The twin intentions of this companion guidebook are to enrich your experience of Poetry of Presence II and to deepen your writing of poetry as a mindfulness practice. The book extends eighty-eight invitations to write while drawing upon every poem in the anthology at least once.
All page numbers in the text refer to Poetry of Presence II, which you will want to have at hand. Sources for quotations beyond the anthology appear are noted.
May your exploration of poetry take you where you’ve never been.
CONTENTS
Foreword
Introduction
Paying Attention
Finding Our Starting Place
How to Meet a Day
Quietude
Acceptance
How We Care for Each Other (& Ourselves)
Feeling into Compassion
How We Might Come Together
Connecting with the Natural World
What Really Matters
Growing Into Ourselves
Meeting Mortality
Being Present with a Loved One’s Absence
Finding Purpose in Our Work in the World
Finding Beauty & Fullness Amidst Heartbreak
How Gratefulness Changes the World
Learning More about Generosity
Taking Care of the World
How We Might Meet Each Other
Learning to See (Re-See) Ourselves & Each Other
Entering the Big Conversation
How We Might Bridge the Disconnect
Imagine Peace, Create Positive Change
Meeting the Pain of the World
Honoring the Body
Met with Surprise Delight
Exploring Kindness
Remembering the Pandemic
When Everyone Finds Their Way Back Together
About the Author
Selected Books
Bouquet of Gratefulnesses
FOREWORD
Happy warning: This book is likely to transform your life.
Poetry can do that, you know. Reading it. Writing it. Sharing it.
So can the wise guidance of a gifted poet like Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer.
If this book happens to be your introduction to the Word Woman, be aware: once she has entered your door, you’ll want her to stay. She gets the power of words. She gets the joy of joining heart to pen, pen to page, page to breath, breath to world. She gets how engagement with poetry can be an intensely spiritual, as well as literary, practice.
Like Gloria Heffernan, who created a marvelous volume to companion your exploration of the original Poetry of Presence, Rosemerry has provided a living text to facilitate your poetry reading and writing. All you have to do now is show up.
Phyllis Cole-Dai & Ruby R. Wilson
Editors, Poetry of Presence II
INTRODUCTION
Consider this an invitation to join the big conversation—the conversation happening across cultures, across continents, across centuries—in which every poem ever written contributes to our understanding of this question: What does it mean to be alive?
In this book, we’re specifically conversing with the poems in Poetry of Presence II: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems, poems the editors chose for their ability to crack open the tough stuff and spill out the light.
You’ll want to have that book on hand to use this book. The editors, Ruby R. Wilson and Phyllis Cole-Dai, selected poems that invite us to practice mindfulness smack dab in the middle of our busy lives where we have hungry babies to feed, groceries to buy, a day’s labor to perform, bills to pay, illnesses to endure, relationships to repair, injustices to remedy . . .
¹
Beyond choosing poems that bring mindfulness into daily life, they also selected poems that delve into varieties of suffering: woundedness, illness, loss, and death; prejudice, bigotry, injustice; violence and war.
In other words, in this book we’re going to converse with poems that ask us to meet things we’d sometimes prefer to shy away from.
I’m grateful that Phyllis and Ruby brought the mindfulness conversation into the melee of daily life and global struggles. This is a conversation I want to be a part of—you, too?
Four Ways to Write Poems
(or Other Kinds of Writing)
Inspired by Poetry of Presence II
There are many ways to converse with these poems.
Choose any line in any poem that stands out to you. Write it down. Begin there. Credit the original poet in your own poem by adding a line below your title that says, with a line by (_____)
and then naming their poem in quotation marks. You can also choose to credit them with an epigraph, as Christen Careaga does in Forgiveness
(91).
Write a response to the poet, a poem in the form of a letter, that argues or agrees with their poem.
Write a cento
that takes lines from different poems. Cut them apart and weave them together in new ways. At the end of the poem, cite your source material in a gloss
—basically, a list of footnotes. But a gloss is more than scholarly citing. As poet Gloria Heffernan writes, it is a compilation of gratitude . . . a roadmap back to a special place.
²
Use this book’s invitations to write, all of them inspired by the poems in Poetry of Presence II. Start at the beginning or flip around. If the prompts don’t work for you, change them! Do what rises in you to do.
Writing as a Mindfulness Practice
This book is more than an invitation to write poems. It’s a chance to explore writing as a mindfulness practice. The invitations to write are less oriented toward producing something good and more oriented toward sparking curiosity about process and how you connect with the world. What happens when you show up to the moment with a pen in your hand?
But isn’t the point to write something good?
I hope not.
In my experience, when I sit down to write something good, I shut down. I get critical, frustrated and stuck—pretty much the opposite of mindfulness. But! Imagine a writing practice in which we become increasingly accepting, compassionate and open.
It’s possible. I realized this back in 2006 when I began writing a poem every day, a practice that sustains and nourishes me still. To be honest, mindfulness was not my original goal. I just wanted to write good poems. Very quickly I realized I couldn’t write a masterpiece
every day. But if writing good poems wasn’t the point, what was?
Writing anything can change the way we meet the world, but this may be especially true when we write poetry. First, it can change how we move through a day. Perhaps you have noticed this, too—how knowing you will write a poem makes you more open to the world around you as you look for inspiration. In those first months, even years, of daily poeming, I was grateful for the ways I was always looking for the poems. It made me pay attention more to everything—both what was happening around me and what was happening inside me.
Second, writing poems can help us realize we have the power to frame things—and to reframe them, and to reframe them again. Here’s an example. One night I wrote a poem about how I was a vase, and I was becoming a bigger and bigger vase to