August wasn’t a total bust, writing-wise, but I didn’t set any records. I’ve decided it was a fallow period in which my brain rested from writing, though I did a fair amount of reading and tending to domestic matters.
September doesn’t belong to any special writing category that I know of, probably because it’s when a lot of people go back to school. But it is a 30-day month, and thus ripe for some kind of writing challenge. Indeed, a quick search turned up a boatload of September writing challenge prompts, as well as a number of generic 30-day writing challenges that fit.
In the spirit of those challenges, I’ve decided I want to write something each day this month, just to keep myself going. Work and family have demanded a lot of time of late, so I am composing in my head during small, stolen moments and trying to commit the results to memory until I can record them.
Here are the first three days’ efforts, followed by a photo from the garden.
(Sep 1)
This day has been too many
weeks long; this morning
I thought of a poem,
but now it’s gone.
(Sep 2)
Of time and timing
I have lost five poems
for every poem I’ve written
because they came to me
at inopportune moments.
(Sep 3)
Tired and frustrated,
I pen short poems that feel
like haiku but aren’t:
a new American form?
…
And now, the promised garden photo:
