This week’s prompt is: chocolate! Oh sweet, oh bitter chocolate! You can describe what it feels like to eat chocolate, what it does for your well-being (or figure), you could go into history and write about how important chocolate was a few hundred years ago. You could write about people you are somehow connect … Continue reading
This week’s prompt: giving thanks! … yeah, but not the traditional poem about what you are thankful for (you can write that, too, if you want). Rather, write a poem about where you feel under appreciated! What do you do for people, where are you their strength, their pillar of hope, of smiles, of getting … Continue reading
This week’s prompt: a visual prompt Happy Writing!
This week’s prompt: traveling at the speed of your soul After traveling, have you ever felt the need to lie down on the ground and wait for your soul to catch up? It happens to me every time I fly home from Europe. Usually these flights are daytime flights, you leave at noon local time … Continue reading
This week’s prompt: Write about your Neighborhood Write about what you observe every day … or what stands out the most about your neighborhood… what is special. If you look out a particular window of your home (your bedroom, the kitchen, the patio door…) what do you see? Why do you live there? Do you … Continue reading
This week’s prompt: Love Made Visible What does love made visible look like to you? How do you show love? How would you like to be shown that you are loved? If one object or image could encapsulate Love for you, what would it be? Is how you show love different from person to … Continue reading
October would not be complete without a poem about Halloween. You could write a scary poem, a list poem about all the things you hate about this so-called holiday, or anything you choose. Happy writing!
Today’s prompt is a poetic form called the cento, which is Latin for “patchwork.” This poetic form is made up of lines from poems by other poets. Though poets often borrow lines from other writers and mix them in with their own, a true cento is composed entirely of lines from other sources. You may … Continue reading