Poetry challenge from Kip Wilson – write a poem that replaces lyrics with a popular or well-known song:
Kip Wilson’s poetry challenge: Write a poem about a school memory – good or bad.
Wondrous whiffs of wisteria
Waft through windows
Wonder awaits!
Who’s wary?
Wordsmiths work in a worriless island wilderness
Watching watercraft and wherries
Whispers of waves
Whirlpools of wisdom
Warm-hearted wicks
Wonderful weather!
WRINKLES!
Wretched world of warfare
Withers away welfare
Wild-eyed awakening!
Who wins?
Wards worry in windowless war-zone walls
Wielding white flags and wishes
Writing of wounded
Whirlwinds of woe
Wayward whelks
Williwaw!
WHY?
-Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Kip Wilson: write a poem using ten words you highlight from any news article, to make something not so happy something happy.
The New Yorker – April 29, 2019
Dept. of Shoe Leather, “Hideous,” p. 21
Yellow rain slicker
Red stripes
Aviator sunglasses
Slicked-back hair
Scronched
Pummelled
Plane-sized
Pretzels
upon
sunglasses
pretzels
rain slicker
“The Red Wheelbarrow”
Poetry challenge from Kip Wilson – write a poem about a historical figure with whom you’ve always been fascinated.
Poetry Challenge from Kip Wilson: Create a poem using book spines as the lines in the poem.
The Yellow Envelope
contains The Secret –
Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister
Three Days Missing
After The Funeral,
Eat
Pray
Love
as you are Learning To Walk In The Dark
there is A Hope in the Unseen
when you feel Alone
may you find Peace Like A River
Remember Me Always
i’ll be Where The Heart Is
-Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Anna Roseboro – use instrumental music from a wedding to inspire a poem about a wedding you have attended.
Marriage of an Island Bride and a Funny Farm Groom
Happily Ever After came for her at 41
Matchmakers took what had for two folks come undone
Believed the perfect pairing that neither of them thought
Until a shattered window made clear what at first was not
A Gordon Lightfoot concert and a flattened trinket ring
Led to a proposal on a City Park swing
Two families both delighted at the coming wedding day
Plans took quirky twists and turns each step of the way
A mail-order wedding dress and gold spray-painted shoes
A sight-unseen wedding band gave juicy shocking news
“Lullaby” by Bond played as the bride strode down the aisle
White tulips standing straight at first, then kneeling afterwhile
Three preachers there to tie the knot with stories, vows, and prayer
Reminding all that love eases the burdens that we bear
Pronouncement, then a sudden change of script – surprise!
The ears could hear, but faces showed confusion in the eyes
Tradition thrown aside because it didn’t quite work for us –
We chose instead recessing to Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus!
Still Amen and Hallelujah strong
– Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Anna Roseboro – write a Lazy Sonnet, one word per line, 14 lines in the scheme of ABAB CDCD EFEF GG ending with a rhyming couplet.
I tried for one word – – but still have too much baggage for that one-word sonnet suitcase. I also failed in my Lazy Sonnet because I added an extra set of rhymes to make it GHGH II at the ending.
Teas, Please
Pau d’arco
Chamomile Calm
Matcha Mango
Lemon Balm
Red Rooibos
Honey Yuzu
Pink Hibiscus
Oolong Voodoo
Ceylon Jasmine
Mint Darjeeling
Rose Mandarin
Honey Ginseng
Earl Gray
Pu-erh Spice
Yerba Mate
Bombay Chai
More Teas
Pretty Please
-Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Anna Roseboro – Write a poem of transliteration using a piece of prose and converting it into a poem.
This poem was taken from a lengthy journal entry about ways that books throughout my life have shaped me. I took the early years of my life as my focus in order to keep the poem short – the journal entry is too long and rambling to share here, but this is my poem:
Books Shaped Me
I was blessed to be born to readers and writers.
Bedtime stories and early books shaped me.
I learned from “A Day in the Jungle” in the Bedtime Story Book that friends make us stronger.
I learned from “At the Seaside” in A Child’s Garden of Verses that the tide erases sandcastles.
I learned from Childcraft Poems and Rhymes that purple cows need friends.
I learned from “A Visit from St. Nicholas” that visions of sugarplums should keep dancing in my head.
I learned from Nancy Drew that life is a mystery.
I learned from the Boxcar children that families don’t always work out.
I learned from A Taste of Blackberries that people we love die.
I learned from the Bible that I’ll see those people again.
-Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Anna J. Roseboro – write a Pantoum poem
about a memorable event in your life.
Appointment
Racing home for your last breath
Choosing your burial plot at Christ Church Cemetery
Dodging traffic on Frederica Road
Sprinting to your bedside, car still running
Choosing your burial plot
Deciding – historic section or new?
Sprinting to your bedside
Expecting an angel to fly
Deciding – which section?
Asking for a sign the choice was right
Expecting an angel
Rejoicing your suffering was over
Asking for a sign
Dodging traffic
Rejoicing
Racing home
-Kim Johnson
Poetry challenge from Sarah J. Donovan – write a poem about a breakup
experience that you have had.
Fractured
You barged in
with your Old Testament
fire and brimstone theological ideas
No women in leadership!
Bring sinners before the church!
Change your ways or leave!
Your sermons
are not preached from the heart
but downloaded and read word for word
with mispronunciations
You keep your wife at home
barefoot
bare-faced
walled off
homeschooling your children
who do not belong with the others
You barged in as a coach
to supervise your son’s homeschool PE requirements
game interactions with less than perfect sinning public school seven-year-olds
I didn’t leave God or my church family
I left a poisoned Kool-Aid preacher
and moved along
to a church
where varied interpretations are valued
women are wanted
sinners are loved
with the same mercy and grace that Jesus showed
-Kim Johnson










RESCUED
Once I looked inside
All the darkness that you could not hide
I found you fear noises
Saw you shun strangers
Learned you love living
Knew you’d need nurture
Once I reached inside
I found a friend who’ll remain by my side.
-Kim Johnson