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My heart is so full. This Poetry Friday community is a wonder of the modern world. We've been at this (some of us) since 2006. That's more than 120 roundups, countless comments, and, recently, an upwelling of friendly challenges and exchanges.
Which brings me to the Winter Poem Swap, offered and organized by Tabatha (The Opposite of Indifference).
My heart is so full. There was much joy in digging into another's blog for inspiration, then creating a poem/gift combo that was just right for her.
And then I got my gift from Linda Mitchell (A Word Edgewise), and my heart ran over. Linda wrote not one, but FOUR poems all stemming from my November Poetry Friday post in which I "poemized" the words of Seth Godin. She took the theme of "maps" and ran with it, writing a response to that Seth Godin post, a found haiku from Ted Kooser's "Map of the World" (which was shared that same week by Little Willow), a ditty written at an AASL workshop, and, my favorite, an echo to Jane Yolen's "Always A Poem." Accompanying the poems was a hand-decorated map-themed clipboard that is going to school with me to remind me to keep the compass of my heart set to the True North of friendship, creativity, thoughtfulness, and joy that Linda's gift exemplifies.
An Always Poem
Again winter follows fall,
stick arms of trees wave
furiously, turning our clocks.
Again a freeze follows fall,
crystals bloom in weak light
leaving a mess of our map.
Again stillness follows fall,
we seek direction,
home at every compass point.
Again dark follows fall.
A chair, a fire, story warms
despite a season that strips bare.
Again follows
fall, a winter.
by Linda Mitchell, ©2017
Diane has this week's Poetry Friday roundup at Random Noodling.
May 18 is still available on the Jan-June 2018 Roundup Schedule. Thanks to all who have taken a slot!
I'm only halfway through commenting on last week's roundup, but I vow to complete that round before beginning this week's! While we're on the subject of not keeping up, I am on track with #haikuforhealing on Twitter, but I still need to fancy up a week's worth over at Poetrepository.
On the subject of commenting: I've tried to figure out what's causing your comments to disappear. The best I can tell is that for some reason, our blog continues to load long after you arrive at the page and even though everything appears to have loaded. If you stop the loading, I think that will prevent the comment drops. I think. Those of you who have re-commented multiple times, thanks for persevering.