Yes, I currently have a very much scaled back life at the moment. I recently broke my right ankle, and am in recovery mode, having been told by the surgeon who operated on my ankle, to stick to zero weight bearing. This means I currently am spending most of my time resting my ankle, with it up high, to reduce swelling, and increase healing (I hope).
I could have been using this scaled back time to work on a larger writing project, but my brain and inclination are not heading in that direction, I’m feeling much more interested in poetry right now, so that’s where my writing is going. That and blog posts, such as this one. Oh, and some thoughts about Stoicism and how it can apply to life situations.
That is being kept to myself at the moment, with notes on my laptop that are definitely not for publication as they are, and not for quite some time later, anyway. They may appear in part in a much longer non-fiction tome, sometime.
Anyway, scaled back poetry interests me – I love Haiku and Senryu, the Tanka as well, and I have recently found (online), a scaled back version of writing sonnets. I love sonnets, a mere fourteen lines, in particular rhyming schemes, and beautiful thoughts can be expressed. This new (to me) form though has only one syllable per line, though if maintains the sonnets 14 line needs, as well as the rhyming scheme.
I wrote more about this on a previous blog post, here, If you wish to look more closely into this sonnet form, called the Monosyllabic Sonnet, visit the blog post. I write about sonnets in general and this form in particular, with an example.
I wrote a new piece of text today, based on something in this room, something that happens often in this room, the one I have been spending so much time in, as I work on recovering from my accidental fall and consequent broken bones. I have presented the words I wrote, again in a one word and syllable per line, and I think it looks and reads quite well. I could be delusional, who knows, and at the moment, amusing myself is my main desire …
So here it is, an new thing that may or may not be a poem, which I will call “My Obs”. The term “obs” loomed large in my life when I was in three different hospitals recently, with my obs being taken by nurses often during both the day, and through the night too. Their role is to make sure I’m OK, taking my pulse, heart rate, temperature, and oxygen levels (or I think that’s what they were doing).
Anyway, as a writer and poet, my observations are my ever ready sources of writing material, so I’d be a fool not to use them! and here is today’s “My Obs” poem, my first ever, THE first ever:
To my dog, Missy
Dear
friend,
your
sleep
sounds
don’t
seem
too
bad
but
please,
if
you
must
snore,
shh
keep
it
down
low,
please?
Good
girl.
^-^
\
o
sent up a prayer for completely healing! 🙂
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Thank you Wendi, I’m spending time writing more, which is always a good thing.
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🙂
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I’m really sorry to hear about your broken ankle, Carolyn! That sounds awful and painful. I wish you a speedy recovery, friend and fellow writer!
One syllable sonnets??? This would be a challenge I would be reluctant to take on and ultimately consider impossible. But here you are, and here it is, proving me wrong. 🙂 Well done! I enjoyed it immensely.
-Beth
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Hi Beth, The ankle is an irritating thing, but now that the initial problem has been dealt with by medical people, there is little pain now. I’m resting a lot, and now feel ready to move into a more active time, but slowly, and paying attention to my body … Having this enforces time of stillness has been useful in terms of my writing, and I’m able to spend more time in just following thoughts and trying them out … I can’t rush out to go shopping, can’t go outside to do some gardening, I’m inside, thinking, healing, writing, poeting!
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nicely done, Carolyn: yes, snores can be disruptive whether from humans or our animal friends; your poem captures it well — thefre is love amidst the annoyance 🙂
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Missy is a very good dog, I’m so happy that she has accepted the members in the writing group, who are now coming to my place every fortnight, and going to the P/A Hotel as usual the other week. once I can drive it will go back to every week at the P/A again, but I don’t know how long that will take.
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hope you’re back to your normal self soon, Carolyn 🙂
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Thanks John, that time is still some weeks or months away still. I can hobble around the house, with a mobility aid, and can go outside, and travel a (very) short distance, but that’s it at the moment.
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