
It’s the 26th of April*, and the 2021 Kidlitosphere Progressive Poem is down to its last few days. I’m excited to be a part of the effort this year, and it’s been great to watch this grow as the days and weeks have gone by. Thank you, Margaret Simon of Reflections on the Teche, for your organizational efforts!
The poem started back on the 1st of April and has progressed through 25 poets so far (the list is in the sidebar). Its last stop was with Shari Daniels at Islands of My Soul, and she left me with two lines from which to choose. In her blog post, she gave some insight into her thinking as she wrote them: “This poem is nearing the end, with a possible one stanza left and perhaps a closing line that leaves the reader lingering in wonderment. So, this last stanza feels like it must take a bend or pivot in some way.”
I certainly agree! Here’s the poem so far, with the two choices she’s giving me at the end.
I’m a case of kindness – come and catch me if you can!
Easily contagious – sharing smiles is my plan.
I’ll spread my joy both far and wide
As a force of nature, I’ll be undenied.
Words like, “how can I help?” will bloom in the street.
A new girl alone on the playground – let’s meet, let’s meet!
We can jump-skip together in a double-dutch round.
Over, under, jump and wonder, touch the ground.
Friends can be found when you open a door.
Side by side, let’s walk through, there’s a world to explore.
We’ll hike through a forest of towering trees.
Find a stream we can follow while we bask in the breeze.
Pull off our shoes and socks, dip our toes in the icy spring water
When you’re with friends, there’s no have to or oughter.
What could we make with leaves and litter
Let’s find pine needles, turn into vine knitters.
We’ll lie on our backs and find shapes in the sky.
We giggle together: See the bird! Now we fly?
Inspired by nature, our imaginations soar.
Follow that humpback! Here, take an oar.
Ahh! Here comes a wave — let’s hold on tight,
splashing and laughing, let’s play until night!
When the Milky Way sparkles, and the moon’s overhead,
we make a pretend campfire and tell stories we’ve read.
Here are the two choices she’s written:
You tell me yours, and I’ll tell you mine.
and
Some stories are true and some myths of our time.
I’m going with her second choice! Here is her line with the two that I’ve written.
Some stories are true and some myths of our time.
Now let’s write our own — maybe prose, maybe rhyme!
or
Some stories are true and some myths of our time.
I love all of them, but my favorite ones rhyme!
I’m excited to see where Rebecca Newman takes this stanza, and how the poem comes to an end — just four more days!
* As I understand things from her website, Rebecca is actually bringing her 26th of April to an end down under in Australia as mine is just getting started in north Alabama. I know, I know . . . she still has the same 24 hours, but I’m publishing this early to give her some daylight before it’s her 27th!
Tim, I like how you transformed the second choice Shari presented into a lingering thought with choice one. The second choice is more specific. Can’t wait to see what follows and how the poem develops as we approach the end.
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Carol, it’s been neat to see this come together. I’m looking forward to the finished product!
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Wonderful choices – glad there’s so much thoughtfulness & creativity here amongst you final line writers! (And very kind of you to keep global time changes in mind as you hand off…) – Can’t wait to see how this ends!
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Thanks, Robyn! I’m looking forward to seeing the final poem as well. 🙂
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Ending the poem through sharing stories makes friendships stronger, don’t they? I like both lines, Tim. It’s such fun to read the poem in all the happy actions that have happened.
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Thanks, Linda. This has been so much fun, and–as you said–the “happy action” is fantastic!
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Thanks, Tim! I love both your offerings … and thanks for the thinking space with all the time zone differences. 🙂
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You’re welcome, Rebecca! I really enjoy the two lines you came up with and can’t wait to see how this ends up. The time zone thing was a little tricky, so I was happy to give you the evening before to see what you had to work with. {smile}
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Yes, Tim! They both sound great. Nice to see this poem progressing with so much grace!
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Thanks!
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Oh, how kind you were, taking an early mark for the West Coast Aussie. And two great lines at that. The poem is wending its way to a satisfying conclusion.
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Thanks, Kathryn! I’m loving the way this is going, and can’t wait to see how it ends.
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Yes! Let’s write our own–I like where you’ve taken the poem!
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Thanks, Janice!
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