#MentalHealthAwarenessWeek. 10th-16th May. Day One. This years theme is Nature. How has nature helped your, or other folks mental health? Have you made artworks or written unpublished/published work about it? Please DM me, or send a message via my WordPress site. The week: Monday: Find nature wherever you are. Tuesday: Using all your senses connect with nature. Wednesday: Get out into nature. Thursday: Bring nature to you. Friday: Exercise in nature. Saturday: Combine nature with creativity. Sunday: Protect Nature.

Mental Health Awareness 2021 poster

Day One. Find Nature Wherever You Are

(Originally published The Dawntreader, Indigo Dreams Publishing)

January sun on a rainy day

through slanted attic window made me pause,
as bundled laundry swaddled arms, held me fast.
Water slid down the glass, light wobbled, waved,
and inside me something hibernating uncurled,
just for a short time, and waved back.

-Maxine Rose Munro

DSCF0043

Photo by Paul Brookes

Overnight In A Hotel by Fokkina McDonnell

Escaping Summer 1Escaping Summer 2

Escaping Summer from Medusa’s Daughter by Jane Rosenberg LaForge

I sit half naked by a m juster

“I Sit Here Half-Naked” from “Wonder And Wrath” by A.M. Juster

Vassal Breath

From “No Man’s Land” by Kathryn Southworth (An account of the life of Ivor Gurney)

Petals Open Wide At

and quickly shiver in thunders grand growl
between patches of blue sky and welcome
heavy spit drums for worms wend to bowel
of beaked mam’s shopping for squawkful young.

A flit between skyspit to the calling
nest to feed ever open gobs hunger.
What good am I who wants my crass bawling,
who wants to listen to my grand thunder?

No am not alright, no I don’t want to
be here. Folk don’t want to hear my moans.
At least on my own I can lean into
gust, bury myself in my busy phone.

Nature interrupts myself with blown leaves,
loud birdsong, speaks of more than I believe.

-Paul Brookes

Bios and Link

-Maxine Rose Munro

writes in English and her native Shetlandic Scots. She is widely published in the UK and beyond, both in print and online. She runs First Steps in Poetry, which offers feedback to beginner poets. More here http://www.maxinerosemunro.com

-Fokkina McDonnell

Oversteps Books Ltd  published her debut collection Another life in 2016. Her second collection Nothing serious, nothing dangerous was published by Indigo Dreams Publishing Ltd in November 2019. Spring 2020 the pamphlet A Stolen Hour was published by Grey Hen Press.

She was one of five poets to receive a Northern Writers Award 2020 from New Writing North. The poetry entries were judged by Vahni Capildeo. The manuscript of Remembering / Disease has now been accepted for publication, with a release date of October 2022.

-Jane Rosenberg LaForge

writes poetry, fiction, and occasional essays from her home in New York. She has published four chapbooks of poetry and three full-length collections, the most recent being MEDUSA’S DAUGHTER from Animal Heart Press. Her novel, SISTERHOOD OF THE INFAMOUS from New Meridian Arts Press, was inspired by the life of her sister, a one-time punk rocker and prodigy in mathematics. She also is the author of the novel, THE HAWKMAN: A FAIRY TALE OF THE GREAT WAR (Amberjack Publishing 2018) and an experimental memoir,  AN UNSUITABLE PRINCESS (Jaded Ibis Press 2014). More information is at jane-rosenberg-laforge.com 

-Kathryn Southworth

was born in Blackpool, Lancashire, and now lives in Camden Town, London and Prinknash, Gloucestershire.  She is married with three surviving children and three grandchildren.

She has always written poetry but returned to it in earnest only after a long career as an academic in midlands universities. She was a founding fellow of the English Association, Head of English and Cultural Studies at the University of Wolverhampton and held senior management posts there and at Newman University and also worked for the Quality Assurance Agency. She has been a governor of the Camden and Islington Mental Health Trust and is currently a governor of Rose Bruford College of Drama and Theatre Arts.

She has published poetry and reviews in several magazines and anthologies and reads at a number of London poetry venues, including the Poetry Café and Torriano Meeting House. The literary canon informs her writing, as does her Catholic faith, surreptitiously.

-A.M. Juster

(@amjuster on Twitter) tenth book of original poetry is Wonder and Wrath (Paul Dry Books 2020). His work has appeared in Poetry, The Hudson Review and The Paris Review, and he is the only three-time winner of the Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award.

“Magic” by Christina Strigas: A Poetry Reading

Christina Strigas's avatarChristina Strigas

I am so thrilled to share with you one of my poems, “Magic” from Love &Metaxa. There are 104 poems in this poetry book.

Please click on link to watch on YouTube, and if you want to subscribe to my channel, please do so! I will try to post more poetry readings and other fun elements about writing.

Thank you so much for watching.

View original post

Blurb for LOVE & METAXA

Christina Strigas's avatarChristina Strigas

Hannah VanderHart wrote me this wonderful blurb for Love & Metaxa. Hannah VanderHart lives in Durham, North Carolina. She holds an MFA in poetry from George Mason University and an MA in English from Georgetown, where she worked with Carolyn Forché at the Lannan Center for Poetics and Social Practice. In 2019, she received her PhD in English from Duke University and defended the dissertationGender and Collaboration in Seventeenth-Century English Poetry. Her poetry, reviews, and essays have appeared inPoetry Daily,The Boston Globe,Kenyon Review,American Poetry Review.

She is the author of the poetry chapbookHands like Birds(Ethel Zine Press,2019) and the poetry collectionWhat Pecan Light(forthcoming fromBull City Press, Spring 2021). Her works-in-progress include the poetry collectionLarksand the essay collectionConfederate Monument Removal. Hannah is the reviews editor atEcoTheo Review

View original post 156 more words

Review of ‘This Kilt of Many Colours’ by David Bleiman

Nigel Kent's avatarNigel Kent - Poet and Reviewer

The clue to the subject of David Bleiman’s debut collection is in the title, This Kilt of Many Colours, (Dempsey and Windle, 2021) for this remarkable, thought-provoking pamphlet explores the complexities of identity – the many elements and influences that make us who we are symbolised in the weave of the tartan.

For Bleiman, identity is influenced by a number of factors. One of these factors is history. Though we may know little about our ancestors’ past, he suggests we can feel an inexplicable connection with them. He asks in El impacto del olvido ‘Why, when the black-bearded guide/sings the song of a Jewish girl in Ladino/and the tongues of every foreign sailor who used her in those days in Salonika, why do I start to cry?’ Though he has no personal connection with the events in the song other than shared ancestry, the words elicit a deep ‘yearning’…

View original post 911 more words

Another Last Word — Cliff Yates

Here’s my new collection, Another Last Word, a chapbook published by The Red Ceilings Press. A limited edition of 40 numbered copies. Thanks to Mark Cobley. ‘I never thought you were going to start making poetry out of your own hopelessness’ – Gillian Yates ‘I laughed out loud as well as now and then wincing. […]

Another Last Word — Cliff Yates

On the Grit — The smell of water

Moors Are a stage for the performance of heaven. The audience is incidental. A chess-world of top-heavy Kings and Queens Circling in stilted majesty tremble the bog-cotton Under the sweep of their robes. Ted Hughes Pretty much at the top of my post-lockdown visit list was a trip to visit Jenny Twigg and her Daughter […]

On the Grit — The smell of water

Her eyes became a wound — The Feathered Sleep

If there were a river it would run straight through your bones Calcifying you to ash This branding, is the moon’s doing She split you at birth, you sing two songs Stir yourself then … before this dissolve reinforces despair In time we shall join you, there in your undoing, where you began and ended,…

Her eyes became a wound — The Feathered Sleep

Hearing the Words: ‘The Nightfishing’ by W.S. Graham

poetry owl's avatarPoetry Owl

Louise Glück, in her essay Invitation and Exclusion[1], argues for poetry that requires a listener or a reader rather than that which is merely overheard, contrasting Eliot, whose ‘cri du coeur craves a listener who becomes, by virtue of his absorption, [the poet’s] collaborator’ with Wallace Stevens: ‘Stevens’ meditative poems are not addressed outward; they are allowed to be overheard’.  Some readers regard the work of W.S. Graham, with its enduring preoccupation with language, as metapoetry, exclusive because it is concerned with the writing of poetry, rather than with the world.  This is very far from the truth as can be demonstrated from an analysis of The Nightfishing, pivotal in the poet’s career. Graham’s poem is about the sea, about the real sea, ‘a grey green sea, not a chocolate box sea’, a poem which he hoped would make ‘somebody seasick ( a good unliterary measurement)’;[2] it is…

View original post 2,081 more words

#DeafAwarenessWeek2021 poetry and artwork. Have you written unpublished/published about deafness? Have you made artworks about it? Having to wear two hearing aids myself I have a small awareness of the difficulties that happen. Please DM me, or send a message via my WordPress blog.

DAW2021

Cynghanedd for cover DAW SLWThe race to cynganeddu DAW SLW

 

Hearing like a Terminator poem SLW DAW

 

Dr Sara Louise Wheeler

has Waardenburg Syndrome Type 1, a genetic condition which affects her physical appearance as well as her hearing. She writes the column ‘O’r gororau’ (from the borders) for Barddas Welsh poetry magazine and her poetry, belles lettres and artwork has been published by Unique Poetry Journal, Dark Poets Club, Fahmidan Journal, Cloverleaf Zine, and 3am Magazine. Sara is currently writing an autobiographical bildungsroman opera called The Silver Princess, funded by Theatr Genedlaethol Cymru. Originally from Wrecsam in North East Wales, she now lives on the Wirral peninsula with her husband Peter and their pet tortoise Kahless.

 

*******

Excellent video from Taking Flight Theatre Company

Volunteer Work by Peter Thabit Jones

Arachne Press in their project “Stairs and Whispers”

created a whole series of poetry written in British Sign Language all available on Youtube. they have kindly allowed me to quote some examples:

Presented as part of Stairs and Whispers: D/deaf and Disabled Poets Write Back (Nine Arches Press, 2017, edited by Sandra Alland, Khairani Barokka & Daniel Sluman)

Find more BSL poetry here: BSL poetry – YouTube

Another useful link is to the British Sign Language Poetry Playlist by Kate Lovell: https://disabilityarts.online/playlist/british-sign-language-poetry/

other useful links:

https://deaffirefly.com/bsl-poetry/

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/disability-40670284

https://www.signbsl.com/sign/poem

http://www.bristol.ac.uk/media-library/sites/education/migrated/documents/iconicity.pdf

Ailbhe’s Tale by Lynn Buckle

Ailbhe’s Tale – National Centre for Writing

David Hackbridge Johnson on Andrew Duncan: A Barbarian Tripos

The High Window Review's avatarThe High Window

Andrew Duncan was born in Leeds, in 1956. He studied as a mediaevalist and started his writing career in punk ‘fanzines’. He has been publishing poetry since the late 1970s, serving as the editor of the magazine Angel Exhaust. Duncan worked as a labourer (in England and Germany) after leaving school, and subsequently as a project planner with a telecoms manufacturer (1978–87), and as a programmer for the Stock Exchange.

*****

duncan_big cropped

You can read listen to Andrew Duncan reading his poems here

*****

A Barbarian Tripos: – On Andrew Duncan
David Hackbridge Johnson

The alien cultures
punk fanzine of new vistas
mesh of a Chinese martial-arts movie
our modern mercantile mess.

This is not meant as a poem but is ‘found’ from the blurbs on the back covers of four Andrew Duncan poetry volumes. Not at all randomly culled. From these perceptive fragments it might be possible to make…

View original post 2,915 more words