Friday, February 20, 2009

5 Senses Part 2

Hey all! I hope you had fun with your color poems! I want to stay on the 5 senses topic but try a different exercise.

To begin I want everyone to time yourself again for one minute and write down some words that come to your head (just like the exercise before.)

Today's exercise is going to be fun (I promise!) I want you to try and write a poem as if you were blind or deaf- or both. To do this, you might spend time with your eyes closed, or your ears covered, perceiving what's around you by smell and touch, reaching out and fumbling for the nearest object, then reacquainting yourself with its texture, its shape, its mystery.

Try walking around your room with your eyes closed, things that you though felt familiar may feel totally different when you can not see it. Sit outside and listen to the sounds around you, and imagine what you're hearing. While some of your senses are blocked it enables your other senses to grow stronger.

I asked my friends to be my guinea pigs in this exercise and video their experiences. This is my friend Ashley walking around our dorm doing the exercise.

My fellow blogger Aly, was so inspired by her turn in the exercise she wrote the poem entitled Blinded Thoughts.

Blinded Thoughts

uncertainty fuels my steps
as i slide across tiled floor
my hands graze cold brass
why not turn it?
something hanging - purses?
"ill have to borrow one of those sometime."
i think as i turn and make my way to the bed
soft down comforter
makes me want to lay down and sleep
then there's something strange... what is that?
i get my answer as some toy laughs at me.

i shuffle through the bathroom
is that a hula skirt hanging in Jen's shower?
i wish i was in Hawaii..

into the unknown: Ashley's room
lots of activities on P-Mo's desk.
that's not hair gel.

Ashley has a maraca.. wait no, pills?
papers on her wall
make me wonder what the signs say

i think i like it better in the light.

Best advice...do this with a friend so you don't get hurt (he he.) Have fun "see" what you discover! You never know what you'll come up with!

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

The 5 Senses

Good Morning all! Hope everyone's weekend was fantastic and we're in the "write" mind to write. To begin with I want everyone to start off with a quick exercise. Time yourself for one minute and just write down anything that come to mind. They could be objects, sentences, or even names. So, ready...set...GO!

Once you have compiled your list put it next to you and take a new sheet of paper. I like to write in a notebook but everyone has a different style in how they write. You should do this exercise every time you sit down to write. You don't have to used the words you wrote down, but hold on to them you never know when you can use them in another piece.

Today I want you to focus on your 5 senses; sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell. Pleasing the senses of the reader is the surest strategy for reaching the mind and the soul. We will be doing a few exercises dealing with the 5 senses but today I want you to focus mainly on color.

I wrote a poem entitled, Let Them Stain Her Face. It's a poem about my mother and her morning routine. I use many senses in my piece but also incorporate little spurts of color into the poem
to create a setting and a mood.

Let Them Stain Her Face

Steam rises to the top of the old black stove
creating brown semi-circles
adding to the mold building around the ran.
The whistle howls like a wolf in the night.
My mother enters through the open doorway, the overhang laced with twigs and berries.

Printed kitten flannel pants and her favorite Mets hoody,
curls dripping down her neck, still wet from the bath
trailing Banana Vanilla down the hallway.
Her socks, ice-skating over the beige tiled floor
racing against each other to the screeching black kettle.

In the cupboard she reaches for my Grandmothers; sugar bowl
all the way up to the top shelf, in between the pink Pepto-Bismol bottle and Tums.
She places it on the emerald marble countertop.
The opalescent crystals scattered, running from the boiling water.
My mother grabs a package of lavender tea and dips it in a green travel mug.

The scolding water sings from the mouth of the kettle
steam and lavender swirling together
her delicate hands creep towards the fridge pulling out the Organic Cow
some new crazy health product she bought
She pours the silky cream into the mug, creating rings of white and brown.

Cupping the mug in both hands she sleep walks towards the marble sink
she breathes in the aroma through her freshly powered nose
glances up out the window just in the nick of time.
She catches the first glimpses of sunbeams peeping their heads through the trees
staining her face a shade of Clementine.

So as you can see my poem incorporates sight, smell, sound and movement. I tried to use color to move the reader along and give the impression of a warm home and create vivid images.

In Edgar Allen Poe's work, The Masque of the Red Death, Poe uses color as a major focus point.

"There were seven--an imperial suite. In many palaces, however such suites form a long and straight vista, while the folding doors slide back nearly to the wall on either hand, so that the view of the whole extant is scarcely impeded. Here the case was very different; as might have been expected from the duke's love of the 'bizarre.' The apartments were so irregularly disposed that the vision embraced but little more than one at a time. There was a sharp turn at the right and left, in the middle of each wall, a tall and narrow Gothic window looked out upon a closed corridor of which pursued the windings of the suite. These windows were of stained glass whose color varied in accordance with the prevailing hue of the decorations of the chamber into which it opened. That at the easter extremity was hung, for example, in blue-- and vividly blue were its windows. The second chamber was purple in its ornaments and tapestries, and here the panes were purple. The third was green throughout, and so were the casements. The fourth was furnished and lighted with orange-- the fifth was white--the sixth with violet. The seventh apartment was closely shrouded in black velvet tapestries that hung all over the ceiling and down the walls, falling in heavy folds upon a carpet of the same material and hue. But in this chamber only, the color of the windows failed to correspond with the decorations. The panes were scarlet--a deep blood color."

The work continues to describe other details, but the details about the rooms themselves are so important to the success of the work. It gives the reader guidance in how to envision the setting and proceed with the story.

So now it's your turn. I have given you two examples of pieces that use color. So have fun, don't get frustrated. You don't have to finish it in one sitting. Work on it for a little bit, and then take a break. Read it, re-word it, just make it your own. But most importantly have fun with it! Good luck, happy writing!


Monday, February 9, 2009

Welcome To Write Away

Welcome Writers!

My name is Jen and I'm here to help you tap into your creative side. My blog will provide you with new and old poetry forms, writing exercises, and my own pers
onal writings. We will also examine certain techniques famous writers have used and why they work well. We'll look at certain works from Edgar Allen Poe, Emily Dickinson, Silva Plath and more!

As a Communications major and an English minor I have taken many classes that have improved my writing skills and strengthen my passion for writing in general in which I hope to pass onto you.
What I really want to help you accomplish is how to use your imagination and to re-find the child in all of us.

Feel free to comment on my work and also don't be afraid to post your own! It doesn't have to be limited to writing either, feel free to post art work and photos if that's your muse. If you want helpful tips about your work let me know, we'll work together to make your work the best it can be.

My best advice...don't get frustrated. Writing is a difficult skill and it takes time; you will work on a piece love it and then go back to it a few days later and rewrite the whole thing. That's why it's so important that you write regularly, keep reworking your drafts, and experiment with new techniques. A poem or short story will eventually shape itself, you just need to help push it in the right direction.

I'm excited to get started and hear feedback from you all! Good luck and good writing! Pick those pencils up and GO!