Dialogue on Creative Writing and a potluck this coming Wednesday March 4 at Humainologie
- Arthur Clark
- Mar 1, 2020
- 2 min read
Last Wednesday’s dialogue topic, Setting Boundaries, was incredibly helpful to me personally at this time in my life. Many thanks to Zoe for that choice of topic and for facilitating.
For this coming Wednesday the topic is How Creative Writing Can Empower Us. Creative writing can save your life and enable you to save the life of someone else. A narrative poem by Charles Bukowski, appended below this message, illustrates the life-and-death potential of creative writing.
We’ll start at 6:00 PM on Wednesday March 4, at 1514 Seventh Street SW. To encourage your contributions, I’ll suggest three distinct options:
1. Read a poem or short piece of fiction from one of your own favorite authors.
2. Read a poem or short piece of fiction that you have written.
3. Tell us about your own experience with creative writing (perhaps how you’ve gotten past “writer’s block”) – or if you haven’t ever done any, tell us about that: What holds you back or what you would like to gain from doing it?
I’ll also suggest the following structure for the readings this Wednesday, our first time around: If the reading time for a poem or short story is less than 5 minutes, you can share it with us between 6:30 and 7:30 PM. At 7:30 PM, we’ll take a break and do an early checkout. After that, if you have a reading that is more than 5 minutes but less than 10 minutes, you can share it with us between 8:00 and 9:00 PM.
There will also be a potluck this coming Wednesday, so bring a healthy snack or dessert to contribute if you wish to do so.
Arthur
Here’s something by Bukowski:
to Jane Cooney Baker, died 1-22-62
and so you have gone
leaving me here
in a room with a torn shade
and Siegfried’s Idyll playing on a small red radio.
and you left so quickly
as suddenly as you had arrived
and as I wiped your face and lips
you opened the largest eyes I have yet to see
and said, “I might have known
it would be you,”
and you did recognize me
but not for long
and an old man of white thin legs
in the next bed
said, “I don’t want to die,”
and your blood came again
and I held it in the pail of my hands,
all that was left
of the nights, and the days too,
and the old man was still alive
but you were not
we are not.
and you went as you arrived,
you left me quickly,
you had left me so many times before
when I thought it would destroy me
but it did not
and you always returned.
now I have turned off the red radio
and somebody in the next apartment slams a door.
the indictment is final: I will not find you on the street
nor will the phone ring, and each moment will not
let me be in peace.
it is not enough that there are many deaths
and that this is not the first;
it is not enough that I may live many more days,
even perhaps, more years.
it is not enough.
the phone is like a dead animal that will
not speak. and when it speaks again it will
always be the wrong voice now.
I have waited before and you have always walked in through
the door. now you must wait for me.
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