Thursday, April 21, 2011

How to Write a Poem



In order to grow as a writer, you've got to be willing to risk it all every time you sit down to write. You've got to be open and brave and curious. Whenever I'm asked, "When did you become a poet?" I'm always tempted to ask, "When did you stop?"

We're all born poets. We all enjoy the sounds of language. Every new parent knows that. We're all born with the need to "sound our barbaric yawp over the roofs of the world" as Whitman would have it.

Poetry is a natural part of our lives. It's not just something we have to memorize and recite in front of the class. Losing ourselves in a poem is one of the best ways of finding out who we are. The act of writing brings us to that point of discovery, of discovering on the page something we didn't know we knew until we wrote it.

Don't let reality cloud your imagination. Look up at the sky and find once again those long-tailed dragons and sailing ships. Wake up to the world as though you are seeing it each day for the first time. Find the wonder. Question the way things are. Imagine new choices. Write from the child in you.

Style isn't how you write. It's how you do not write like anyone else. You don't need a degree to be a writer. It doesn't take teachers or textbooks to show you how. One learns how to write by writing. There is no other way.


©Charles Ghigna

3 comments:

  1. So true. I'm hosting a poetry challenge on my blog and there's a couple of ladies that have been sharing a poem pretty much ever day. One didn't consider herself a writer at all, and yet she writes beautiful poetry. Ya' just have to write. Nice post. :)

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