February Blues
A busy month, some thoughts on reading, writing, and editing, plus a couple of poems from another project

Hello, friends. I’m a little behind with my writing and editing this week. In case you haven’t been playing along, The February Poetry Adventure has been going on and I’ve been trying to keep up with it. I did great until just a few days ago when I started running low on poetry. You know when you make a batch of cookies and you have just a little bit of dough left - not enough to make a whole other cookie, but too much to just stick onto one of the ones on the baking sheet? That’s how I’m feeling. I haven’t got enough poetry left to make a whole cookie. Huge thanks to
for hosting such a lovely, productive, supportive adventure. But that muffled sound you hear is me crying “UNCLE!”I’ve also been keeping up with the weekly posts over at The Public Domain Poetry Project, trying to set a good example with a new poem each week. I think all of this would have been entirely manageable had it not been for a crazy spell at work. We’ve been undergoing a data migration and training on new library software. I’ve been working more shifts than usual, in addition to extra days of training. February has been quite a month, full of snow and ice, cold temperatures and busyness.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how I’m using my time, as a writer, as a reader, as an editor of my own work. I love sharing poems here on Substack, and I intend to continue doing so. But if I’m going to keep producing poems I feel good about sharing here, I’ve got to devote more time to reading and editing. Reading refills my tank, editing is how the twenty or so poem attempts from The February Poetry Adventure become real poems.
My plan is to post here when I’ve got something I’m excited for you to read. Maybe that’s weekly, but sometimes it may be less. I’m trying to establish a rhythm that lets me devote time to what feels the most fruitful each week. Maybe I need to spend a week reading other poets who approach things differently than I do. Maybe I need to focus on editing, or pulling together a group of poems for a submission.
What I have for you this week are a couple of the poems I’ve written in The Public Domain Poetry Project. If you’re not familiar, I started the project in January as way to rev our creative engines in the new year. We’ve taken a poem in the public domain (Edna St. Vincent Millay’s, “Travel”) and we’ve used a line each week as a poetry prompt.
We’ve reached week eight, meaning we’ve written in response to eight of the twelve lines in the poem. We’ve got four more lines/weeks to go, and I’d love it if you’d join us. You really can jump in or out at any point, respond to past prompts any time you like. No rules.
Below are a couple of poems I’ve written since we started. I’m including the line they were written in response to, and a link back to the original post.
Week 1: The railroad track is miles away
Here I simply used the line as the first line of the new poem.
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Cacophony by Moonlight
The railroad track is miles away
so I know the sound I hear
is not a train, not the pulsing
grind of wheels on track,
not the moaning squeal
of metal kissing metal
that kindles sparks for free
The sea is near, yet on this placid night
I cannot lay blame
on its tidal head
for this pounding crash,
this surging hiss
Tonight the sea is but a whisper,
holding its breath,
playing softly on its shore
I cannot shake my fist from the stoop
at the truck rumbling
up and down this street,
metal seams creaking over bumps,
breaks whining
like an anxious hound
For the streetlights pool
on empty pavement,
the quiet cars sleeping
in rows along the granite curb
So this pulsing, crashing, whining din
is of my own design
It is the product
of the words,
the wishes,
the worries
in this head,
that live each in their place
when it sits upright
upon my shoulders
Yet once I lay it down
upon my pillow
they slide from their nooks,
rubbing round each other
like a cat through ankles
bouncing forward and back
over and under
until the small chamber
of my skull echoes
with their sound
Then slowly, and with mercy,
they come to rest again
in new company and fall
silent in the quiet night
Week 2: And the day is loud with voices speaking
This week I used each word in the line as the first word in a line of my poem
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Memory
And when I tell you that she cannot remember,
cannot meet you there in the middle,
The thing you must know and hold in your palm,
the thing you must tell yourself each
Day, is that memory is a country lost in time,
walled off by mountains, its border
Is closed to all travelers; if she cannot go, you
cannot go, and the mountains grow taller each day
Loud may be the call of the past as you stand
on the shore looking for sails on the horizon, yet
With her transmissions cut, her visas revoked, she cannot
board any vessel and you cannot sail alone
Voices are like water running through a sieve,
and spiraling down a drain, and you will find you are
Speaking to one who no longer knows her mother tongue
and looks at you like a visitor from another world
There’s a lot going on these days. How are you all doing? Are you finding time to write? Read? Edit? Are you taking some time off? How do you divide your time between the different aspects of your creative life? Do you have a schedule? Do you stick to it? I’d love to hear about all of this in the comments
Thanks so much for being here
I loved the second poem, Tara!
I'm not really a schedule person. I read voraciously all the time, but not systematically. I bounce back and forth among a bunch of books and often lose track of a book for a while and forget I'm even reading it. I squeeze writing into the odd spaces of my day and I'm not systematic about editing at all. Though I do edit older pieces regularly, I can't tell you that there's any rhyme or reason to the way I go about it. This week I've been focusing on editing an old poem and then writing accompanying text for a post about it and that derailed me from much writing of new poems. But I think I wrote a poem for about a quarter of the February Poetry Adventure prompts and I think I've at least attempted something for most of the Public Domain Poetry Project prompts. And that feels like major success to me. I know going into challenges like these that I'm not going to write every day because life will get in the way. I never expect to write to every prompt, but even the ones I don't write about might end up in a poem at some later date. And I appreciate so much the writing in community aspect and reading other people's poems. It's nice when writing doesn't feel like such a solitary endeavor.