Showing posts with label poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poem. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2022

Try an Object-Inspired-Advice Poem


Spring Bulbs Peeking Up!
Photo by Amy LV



Students - I have this little basket pot of spring bulbs growing in my study window, and each hour they seem to peek up just a bit more. When the sun was shining so prettily on them the other day, I just had to take their picture. Later, I decided to write this small poem inspired by the bulbs. Remember this, you can always take or sketch pictures for someday-writing-inspiration. You need not always sit down and think of an idea on the spot. Like squirrels gathering acorns for winter, we can prepare ourselves for our writing times by filling our cheeks with thoughts, impressions, and wonderings.

Today's poem gives a little bit of advice and a hope for the reader. And it was inspired by the needs of a plant. This has me wondering what other things in and around me might hvae advice or hopes tucked inside of them. Maybe this old chair wants to tell people to be sure to make time to rest. And perhaps my warm socks and sturdy boots would advise me to stop and think about the places I have been. Or maybe they would tell me to keep going, keep seeking. It is possible they would wish me good journeys.

If you are looking for something to try this week, consider choosing an object or animal or natural living thing to inspire you. Look around you right now. Make a list of the most interesting or inspiring things that catch your eye at this moment (looking out of the window or into your mind's eye is allowed of course!) 

Now, sketch (or photograph if you wish) this thing. Listen to it and to yourself, "What advice or hope would this object or animal offer to me?" Make a list if you wish, thinking about these questions:
  • What advice would this object give to me?
  • What hope might this object have for people?
  • If this could talk, what might it teach me?
  • What does things object want me to know and understand?
Allow what you learn to find its way to the page and to your own object-inspired-advice-poem. You may choose to write this poem in your own voice as I did, or you may choose to write it in the voice of the object or animal itself. If I had done this, I might have written something like, I am a plant./I need these things...

Elisabeth is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at Unexpected Intersections with a lovely acrostic that flows so naturally from line to line. If you are mostly familiar with acrostic poems that stop severely at the end of each line, do not miss her words about F-E-B-R-U-A-R-Y. Please know that all are welcome each Friday as folks share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship.

We have a lot of snow where I live, but I will still tilt my face up to the sky for a bit today. I wish you sun rays on your face as well.

xo,
Amy

Afternoon Update: The bulbs are blooming! The bulbs are blooming! Just LOOK at these tiny irises.

Blooming Bulbs
Photo by Amy LV

Spring Close Up
Photo by Amy LV

Please share a comment below if you wish. 

Friday, January 21, 2022

Last Night, This Morning, Long Ago...

 

Painting
by Amy LV



Students - My reading life has been full of magic these days, books about enchantments and magic, time travel and odd connections. And I have watched the movie ENCANTO twice. So one might say that I have one half of my heart in the real world and one half of my heart in the world of the unknown. Today's poem came from that mystery-place.

Like many, my life during COVID has been a bit of a challenge, and I lost my regular writing schedule. Well, the truth is that when I write less, I am less happy. So now, I am back to writing a few pages each morning and spending real time paying attention to the bits of my life as possible writing ideas. Today's poem was a true surprise to me, a surprise I believe I was given because I am back at my desk, back in the ink and paper world.

This poem is about seeing something but not really seeing it. And now I am thinking about you, about things you might not really see but do see in your creative mind and soul and heart. Consider trying a poem that begins, "Last night..." or "This morning..." or "Long ago..." and just invent what it is that may have happened at that time. You are allowed to make it all true, or all fiction, or a blend of both. Because, you see, it will be your poem or story. So you choose, no questions needed. And if you like, you may include a pinch (or a truckload) of magic! 

Don't forget: crossing out is a healthy part of writing. Making those scribbles and big slash lines can be a joyful and physical part of a writer's life. So....I am hereby calling such pages "Messy Happy Drafts." 

Messy Happy Draft for "Surprise" - Page 1
by Amy LV

Messy Happy Draft for "Surprise" - Page 2
by Amy LV

Tabatha is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at The Opposite of Indifference with all kinds of puzzle goodness, from quote to book to story to poem! Please know that all are welcome each Friday as folks share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship.

May your path be sprinkled with surprises, in your days and on your pages.

xo,
Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish. 

Friday, January 14, 2022

Gather Family Stories & Go

 

My Great Grandmother's Headstone
Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, NY




Students - I spend lots of time thinking about today and tomorrow and yesterday. But lately, I find myself thinking about many yesterdays ago. My mother is writing her parents' and grandparents' stories, and I love reading these echoes of our past and thinking about how they may have changed me without me even knowing it. She is doing this through Storyworth, an online service that helps you print a book, one story at a time, all throughout the year. Last year she wrote her own life stories, and this year she is writing memories about her/our ancestors.

My Mom's First Book
Storyworth

My mom has given me permission to share her story about her Grandma Katherine. Enjoy this delightful step back in time:

MY WONDERFUL PATERNAL GRANDMOTHER
by Deborah Ludwig, January 11, 2022

   Katherine Moeser Dreyer was my dad’s mom.  She was an amazing person in so many ways and had such a wonderful impact on my early life.  My mom was ill a lot as I was growing up and I lived at Grandma and Grandpa Dreyers for much of the time.  Grandma came from Germany when she was a little girl with her two older sisters Minnie and Margaret.  The three girls had been orphaned and the family felt they would have a better life in Rochester, New York living with an uncle who operated a successful butcher shop.  She learned English and was able to go back and forth in her conversations in both languages.  She stuck to German when I was around, especially while discussing family gossip.
     Grandma was an excellent cook.  I sat in that large kitchen watching her and her sister Minnie get everything ready for her wonderful vegetable soup.  Minnie and her husband Fred lived with my grandparents in their half of the double side by side home they owned.  My grandma did most of the work in those days as my grandfather William had fallen off the stairs of a bus and had a hard time getting around.  He was a clothing cutter for Hickey Freeman in Rochester before his accident.  Grandma was known for her special dinners of sauerbraten, red cabbage, and potato pancakes.  Her baking was amazing.  Every Saturday my dad and I stopped at their home on Hobart Street and picked up a home-made fruit kuchen which can never be duplicated. They always had fruit all over the top and my favorite was cherry.  Dad and I would go in to the house around noon on Saturday and pick up his shirts all cleaned and ironed.  My mother stopped doing his work shirts when he said his mother did them better.  Grandma and grandpa would be watching The Big Top Circus show on their black and white tv.,  Grandpa smoking his cigar.
      When they celebrated their 50th anniversary, I was too young to attend the party and sat at the top of the stairs watching all the celebrations.  Grandma hated to be called Kate and I have a vase she got on this occasion that said Bill and Kate.  I am sure she hated it.  Years later it broke, but I was able to find someone to fix it and still treasure it today.
   Grandma had a gorgeous garden full of huge daises, poppies ,  and so many other lovely plants.  She was so proud of it and I spent many a day in that garden and on their front porch, dreaming and reading as a kid tends to do.    
  When I was really little, I would walk two blocks with her to the grocery store, and then she would buy me a piece of furniture for my doll house.  Those days were really special.
    She used to stoke the furnace in the basement with coal and even lost her engagement ring doing that.  My Uncle Fred had a secret cabinet in that basement with either wine or liquor which was totally off limits to me.  Once I even got to witness the coal delivery and to me it was exciting to watch that coal come down the chute.
   I knew my grandma was getting older when I had to thread her needle for her as she said her eyes weren’t so good anymore.  She was beautiful with waist length long white hair and when she let it down to brush it, I thought she was amazing. I would sit near that claw foot tub and watch her let it cascade.
     Grandma had a tiny parlor with the most beautiful glass swan filled with red water to tell the humidity.  I would perch on the formal sofa or chair and watch it by the hour.  This was the fancy room as the dining room was more like the family rooms of today.
      I can still see her on her knees lacing my grandfather’s high button shoes which were even old-fashioned for the 1950’s.   She was the life and breath of this family.   The picture of the little girl hanging in her bedroom still stays with me as this was the room I always slept in.
     When I was 10 years old, my mother came into my room in the morning and told me grandma had died.  She was 78 and had washed and ironed all her curtains that day.  I missed her so much and it was the end of a very special time in my life.

Do you know any of your family's old stories? If so, consider keeping a page in your notebook to list the ones you remember. You can also ask questions of your parents and grandparents and aunts and uncles, questions like:
  • What was school like when you were my age?
  • What was your favorite toy?
  • Can you tell me about a special memory you hae of time with one of your grandparents?
  • How did our family members settle in the cities where they lived?
  • Will you please tell me something about your great grandparents?
  • What is this object? (Find something in your house that looks old.) What is its story?
Once you have a story that particulary interests you, you can ask more questions about it:
  • Is there anything else you can add to what yo told me?
  • Do you remember anything else about that?
  • Are there any photographs or objects that I can see connected to this?
  • Is there anyone else I can ask to learn more?
Try taking one story or memory that you have learned about your family and writing it as a poem. You might, as I did, choose to take a lesson from the story. You'll notice that my poem tells the story first, and then it tells what I take away from it. 

Or, you might choose to simply tell the story. If you are uncertain of a particular detail, you may choose to invent it. For example, I do not know for sure that my great grandmother and her sisters held hands on the boat, but I sure imagine that they must have. How scary it must have been for them...

Our family histories are part of us, and I am looking forward to learning more. Who are these people in these photographs? How I wish I could speak to them today.

Mary Lee is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at A(nother) Year of Reading with a wise poem titled "What the Pomegranate Knows." Please know that all are welcome each Friday as folks share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship.

I wish you fascination in your story-collecting journey.

xo,
Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish. 

Friday, October 29, 2021

Many Colors in One

 

Gray Boy Tuck
Photo by Amy LV



Students - One thing that's true about color is that there is not just ONE red or ONE yellow or ONE gray...there are many. And this is true of our cat Tuck. He is every gray of the gray rainbow, and in today's poem, I try to list a few of those grays. 

A color can be an emotion or a sound or a feeling or a sight, and I know that I can think of many more grays for Tuck. When I do, I might come back and revise this poem. I do plan to keep listing more grays in my notebook. I think I will take myself on a gray treasure hunt through my life this week.

Endings are interesting for writers. At first this poem just ended with "rainstorm in May," but I wanted to add a touch of surprise, a touch of humor...and truth. Tuck has some gorgeous green eyes nestled in all of his gray fur.

I encourage you to try this exploration of color in writing. Choose one color and list as many KINDS of that color as you can stretch yourself to think of. You may come up with some expected ones (green as grass) but try to come up with some that maybe no one has thought of before. Then, see if you are interested in using your list...or even one kind of color from your list and grow a writing idea or piece of art from it.

Here is my favorite book about particular colors. It is out of print now, but if you can find it at the library, do!


And here are a few more photographs of this very snuggly boy. I wish that you could reach through your computer screen to pet him. (And so does he!)

Tuck at Work
Photo by Amy LV

Sleeping Stripes
Photo by Amy LV

Baby Tuck
Photo by Hope or Amy LV?

Linda is hosting today's Poetry Friday roundup at TeacherDance with the delights of Halloween and a poem about a carved pumpkin I would like to meet...Jill O'Lantern! Please know that all are welcome each Friday as folks share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship.


Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Book Birthday for a Maker Book!

Happy Book Birthday to Us!

March 27, 2018

Today is the book birthday of WITH MY HANDS: POEMS ABOUT MAKING THINGS, with poems by me and illustrations by Lou Fancher and Steve Johnson.  You can watch the trailer, made with the hands of the talented Travis Carlson, below.


WITH MY HANDS Book Trailer

I could not be happier to share this book as I have loved making things with my own hands ever since I was a little girl.  Truth be told, I am never happier than when I am knitting, baking, carving a rubber stamp, drawing, or otherwise creating.  If you visit The Poem Farm regularly, you know this.

Just yesterday, I collected two big bags full of pinecones from my father's front yard.  What to make with these?  I do not know yet, but something.

Pinecones!
Photo by Amy LV

I dedicated this book to our daughter Georgia, a person who makes so many good things, and illustrators Lou and Steve dedicated it to Nick.

With My Hands Dedications

This collection of poems is all about all kinds of making....everything from soap carvings to cookies!  It is a celebration of the joy that comes from creating.  School Library Journal says, "This is art about art."  Below you can see one of the interior spreads; the poem grew from my real memory of carving a soap whale in second grade...one of my favorite projects ever!

Click to Enlarge

You can read more about WITH MY HANDS at my website HERE or at the following blogs: 


Take a peek at how Lou and Steve illustrated this book HERE, where they explain the process of creating illustration you see above.

Much gratitude to Dinah Stevenson of Clarion, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.  She is the wonderful editor of this book as well as my first book, FOREST HAS A SONG. I am so grateful to her as well as to Emma Gordon who is handling publicity for this book.  And hugs and kisses to my amazing agent, Elizabeth Harding, once again.

Speaking of working with one's hands, hats off to Adriana, owner and cookie artist at Mama Seuffert Sweets. Ordering from Adriana is my small way of enjoying a book birthday at home.  We have two cookies here, and I have sent some to others with my gratitude.

Cookie by the Amazing Adriana
Photo by Amy LV

You may win a copy of this book (to a resident of the United States) by commenting here by 11:59pm on Thursday, March 29.  I am also holding a giveaway on Instagram through tonight and one on Twitter for the next week!

Happy making...and thank you for celebrating this joyful year of books with me.  During the 2017-2018 school year, all four or these books were published: READ! READ! READ!, POEMS ARE TEACHERS, DREAMING OF YOU, and WITH MY HANDS.  I could not be more grateful.

xo,
Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

DREAMING OF YOU is Born!

Happy Book Birthday to Us!

March 6, 2018

I am so happy to share that today is the book birthday of DREAMING OF YOU, my new lullaby book illustrated by talented illustrator Aaron DeWitt.  We have each dedicated this book to people who dream.

DREAMING OF YOU Dedications

This is a rhyming bedtime book all about what animals dream about.  And what do they dream about?  You!

Here is one of the interior spreads...about robins.  Did you ever wonder about robin dreams?

Click to Enlarge

Below is the book trailer, if you'd like to take a peek.  


DREAMING OF YOU Book Trailer

Aaron was generous enough to write all about his process of illustrating this book.  If you'd like to read his words, you may do so at my website HERE.  There is more about the book including snips of reviews, HERE.

I feel very fortunate to have been paired with Aaron and to have worked with editors Rebecca Davis and Mary Colgan on the text of this book.  And I am so thankful to Kerry McManus at Boyds Mills Press for all of her marketing wisdom. A book takes a team.

We are grateful to people who have shared DREAMING OF YOU with corners of the world.  You can read a review at The Baby Bookworm if you wish.

You may also see my list of 10 Books about Falling Asleep with Animals at Pragmatic Mom.  There is a giveaway going on there for the next few weeks, so please enter if you wish!

And if you are a teacher or parent on Twitter, please know that we are holding a giveaway for this book, running through March 13.  This giveaway is only running on Twitter, and the information is below.  I can be found on Twitter @amylvpoemfarm.


I have been dreaming of this book for a few years, and now it is here!  Thank you for stopping by The Poem Farm and for being such good friends. I wish you all sweet dreams!

xoxo,
Amy

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

MyPoWriYe #31 - Page by Page by Page


Yesterday was the last day of NaPoWriMo 2010, a month where some of us out here wrote and posted a poem each day of April.  Well, I've decided to keep paddling my little writing canoe.  This is My Poem Writing Year, heretofore known as MyPoWriYe.

Please join my journey as I commit to writing and posting a children's poem each day for a year, beginning April 1, 2010 and ending April 1, 2011.  Perhaps it's appropriate that April Fool's Day begins and ends this voyage; we will see.  But the past month has been a gift, showing me Goethe spoke the truth, "Begin to weave, and God will give the thread." 

I trust that there will be many lousy and mediocre poems over the days, but each day there will be a poem.  Should our family experience illness or wilderness camping or satellite issues, some posts may be late.  But by April 1, 2011, there will be 365 fresh poems.

Teachers - you may wish to pop in occasionally with your classes as I often include a bit about where a poem comes from or something about process or even a writing technique.  You will also find links to fabulous resources on other well-researched poetry blogs and websites.  Should you teach a poetry unit or dip into poetry sometime this year, please drop by.  Many Poetry Fridays, I hope to highlight some of the beautiful poetry work happening in your classrooms, so please share.

So, here goes.  No promises.  No shame.  Just poems.  A game.

This one comes as a pure celebration of poetry.  As yesterday's guest at a Poem in Your Pocket party at Country Parkway Elementary in Williamsville, NY, I'm just feeling all poem-lovey.  This poem is dedicated to the students and teachers of Country Parkway, who had many many poems in their pockets!


I welcome each of you to join as a follower of this blog.  For throughout April, I often wrote for those readers.  Somehow, knowing that a few people out there in the world were reading made me sit with a notebook and pen, even when sleepy.  Please just click "follow" on the right if you would like to come along for the ride.  Thank you to you who read this month...I am grateful for your kind comments and good thoughts too.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Friday, April 30, 2010

Poetry Friday & Poem #30 - Worm's Wish


First, a hearty "Thank you!" to Elaine over at Wild Rose Reader.  She has been drawing names for poetry books all month, and yesterday I won a copy of Every Second Something Happens, with poems selected by Christine San Jose and Bill Johnson and illustrated by Melanie Hall.  What a surprise!  If you leave a comment on Elaine's Poetry Friday post today at Wild Rose Reader, you will be eligible to win a copy of Laura Purdie Salas's book Stampede.

It is the last day of the month, and thus, the last day of NaPoWriMo and my poem-a-day-for-April.  Thank you to everyone who has been so helpful and supportive throughout the launch of this brand new little blog.  Tomorrow I will announce what's next here at The Poem Farm.

Today's poem is about worms.  Two days ago I learned that worms do not have eyes.  Of course, if I had thought about this, I would have already known that worms do not have eyes.  Have you ever seen a worm with eyes?  Anyway, this startled and upset me.  In fact, I kept on repeating, "Worms don't have eyes?  Worms don't have eyes?" until my family made me stop.  Anyway, this poem is for the worms.  Fishermen - do not feel guilty.  We've all gotta eat.


Teachers - if you are looking for a way to "spruce" up  your classroom (pun intended) see here what Mrs. Susan Kellner's class has brightening up their first grade classroom at Harold O. Brumsted Elementary in Holland, NY.  This tree was the cheeriest thing to come through my inbox in a long time.  Below you can read Susan's words about how you can have a poet-tree of your very own.

Poet-Tree
Photo by Susan Kellner

-->Here's how we did it: I typed up all of their poems and printed them out on colored card stock. They used scissors with different types of fun blades to cut them out so the edges were cool. Some of them cut the poems into shapes (a poem about a dog is in the shape of a dog, a fish poem is in a fish shape, etc.). Then they punched a hole in the top, and I taught them how to thread a rubber band through the hole so that it becomes a hanger. Then they hung them on the tree. They love the tree -- it is hard to keep them away from it. They are constantly getting distracted and stopping to read one poem or another. It was a super easy project except for typing up the poems! But now they are all typed up so that we can create a class book of poems, and I know some of the students will use them for their poems in the pocket tomorrow (I made more copies on regular paper).  

Poem in Your Pocket Day: We did have fun for Poem in Your Pocket Day! I spread out a bunch of poems for the students to choose from. Some had brought a poem from home. They gathered around the table reading them and choosing the ones they liked best. They begged me to be able to put a poem in each pocket -- and how could I say no? We spent a very busy and noisy morning reading poems to each other. Mine was my childhood favorite - "Mud" by Polly Chase Boyden.            

Thank you to Mrs. Kellner and her class for cheering all of us up this Poetry Friday.  

Today is indeed Poetry Friday.  You can find everything poetic today at Mary Ann's blog, Great Kid Books.  Head on over there for a complete roundup of this last day of National Poetry Month.  Please stop by tomorrow to see what's next here.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Poem #29 - Poem in Your Pocket?


Pocket Poem
Photo by Amy LV

Today is Poem in Your Pocket Day!  If you have not already done so, you may wish to find a poem you love and tuck it inside your pocket, pulling it out to share with friends throughout the day.  Or you may want to make extra copies and just give them out.

The poem I have in my pocket today is Kindness by Naomi Shihab Nye; this poem has changed me, and I am grateful to Naomi for her wisdom.  Our children's school has a grandparents' luncheon this morning, and I plan to leave a stack of copies of this poem somewhere in the building for people to find.

Yesterday, my friend Katie directed me to the International Digital Children's Library, an online library with a mission to provide free access to the best children's literature in the world.  Here you can find complete books in many many languages for reading at home or in school.

Sometimes I think about children learning to read, about what a miracle it is to suddenly understand all of those small squiggly lines and dots.  I can't remember not knowing how to read, but I do remember the early days of our children learning.  They'd point out letters in books and would call out the names of signs along the roadway.  Each new word was a victory, an entrance into the secret and beautiful world of language.


Tomorrow I am grateful to have the opportunity to spend a Poem in Your Pocket Day with the children of Country Parkway Elementary in Williamsville, NY.  For tomorrow (sigh) is the last day of National Poetry Month, the last Poetry Friday of April, and the last day of NaPoWriMo too. 

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

NaPoWriMo Poem #28 - Snail Mail




Students - do you ever wonder weird things like this?  When we play with words, daily expressions can crack us up, make us shake our heads, and think.  Why not try a weird-wonder poem today?

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Poem #27 & Commentary - Country Cats


This morning, my listener commentary, Country Cats, aired on our local NPR station, WBFO.   Here is a photo of our latest cat - Mini, a summer drop-off.  His story is in the commentary, but I thought it'd be good to write a poem about him too. 

 Mini
Photo by Amy LV


We do have our share of well-loved drop-off cats at this point, so please do not bring more.  However, if you'd like to be on our list of homes-who-need-cats for future surprises, please let me know.

This week, Tricia's Poetry Stretch at The Miss Rumphius Effect is about eggs.  I've posted two poems about eggs at her blog, based on our family's experiences with chickens.  You can post an eggy-poem at The Miss Rumphius Effect too...Tricia's sister hates eggs!

National Poem in Your Pocket Day is this Thursday, so if you have not yet chosen a poem to put in your pocket to share on this day, you might want to start looking.  Here at poets.org, you can find many ways to celebrate Poem in Your Pocket Day.  One way to keep poems coming to your online mailbox pocket is to subscribe to Garrison Keillor's The Writer's Almanac.

Now go find yourself a cat.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Monday, April 26, 2010

NaPoWriMo #26 - Poetry from Strangers


If you were on school vacation last week, I hope that you had a wonderful time.  You may not have known it was TV Turnoff Week; the NaPoWriMo poems here all focused on fun things to do instead of watching television.  This week's poems will once again be a mish-mash, but if you'd like to read what you missed, check out the right sidebar for a list and links.

Poems come from every corner of life.

Waiting in line at a convenience store last week, I found myself in front of a man talking with a young employee of the shop.  It was a halting conversation, and I overheard the older man say,  "You know, the other day I came across some old pictures of you.  You were such a little guy."

The younger man looked a bit awkward, and they talked about nothing-and-everything for a few moments before they shook hands as the older man said, "Well, see you soon sometime."

I looked at the man's face as the red-shirted teenager walked away, "That's my son,"  he told me.  "It's been five years since I've seen him."  He sighed and wiped a tear from his eye, "I used to change his diapers.  I'm here to buy hot dog rolls so I can see him at work."  The father shook his head.

For me, this was a rare glance inside of a stranger's soul and a deep wish to comfort that stranger's soul.  I said the only thing I could think to say, "You're right to be here.  Whatever happened before is in the past.  What you do now is important, it matters."

That boy may be angry forever.  Maybe he should be.  He may reject his father's overtures, and I may be completely wrong.  But I do believe in forgiveness and in hope and in the power of a child's love.  So this poem is for them, the father and son at Wilson Farms.


Everywhere and everyday, people live out loud around us.  If we watch and pay attention, we may hear poems in between their words and actions. 

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Poem #24 & TV Turnoff #6 - All Day Long


Here is a picture of our our home just a few days ago.

The Poem Farm 
(Heart Rock Farm)
Photo by Amy LV

If you look closely at the lower left part of this photo, you will see a whitish blob on the cellar doors.  It is Firepaw, one of our many drop-off cats, sunning on the warm metal.  Here is a close up of this gorgeous beast, named by our eldest daughter after one of the cats in Erin Hunter's Warriors series.

Firepaw Sunning
Photo by Amy LV

Today's TV Turnoff poem is in honor of spending more time with pets.  Sitting at my desk this evening, I had begun to write about cooking.  As I looked out the window, my ("I hate cats") husband picked up Firepaw for a secret snuggle, and the poem instantly changed direction.


Are you frequently annoyed by televisions blasting in public places?  Places like your bank, the mall, and restaurant bars?  Well, those annoyances are over.  You, too, can have a TV-B- Gone, a handy contraption attached to our keychains and available to all.  It's a universal remote, and you can just flick off those televisions wherever you find them.  Here's a review at Thingamababy.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Poem #22, TV Turnoff #4, & Earth Day

 
Earth Day Eve 2010
Photo by Amy LV


Neither you nor I should spend any more time in front of screens than is necessary today.  Mother Earth is waiting...

Tomorrow is Poetry Friday.  Please come back to learn about some delightful poetry CDs and also a few thoughts about how rituals of poetry can deepen our classrooms and our lives.

(Please click on COMMENTS below to share a thought.)