Dictionary for a Better World: The Author’s Note

Back before Covid when I was many pounds lighter and running 5 and 10 K races a couple of times a month, a friend and I crossed the finish line of the Atlanta Women’s 5K on a sunny April morning and drove directly to Krispy Kreme on Ponce de Leon Avenue to find the hot light on and the donuts ready to replenish all those calories we’d just burned.

We replaced our calories we’d burned off with donuts at the Krispy Kreme on Ponce

As we chatted over swirl-steaming hot coffee and fresh, warm donuts, we discussed the book we’d both been reading – The Boys in the Boat, by Daniel James Brown. We talked about the urge we’d felt to get in a boat and row, to feel what the character felt and understand a thing or two from the perspective of that seat in the boat, and how thrilling it would be to contact a local university with a rowing team and ask if there was a chance we could have an opportunity to take a quick lesson. We talked about how fortunate we were as readers to feel the spark to make an idea come to life – – how we had the power to feel our lives could be enriched by a book.

As high school English teachers in those days, we dreamed of offering Adventure Book Clubs, in which we would read a book and engage in an adventure inspired by the book. Our next dream was to hike part of the Appalachian Trail, which begins on Springer Mountain, a short drive from our town in rural Georgia, after reading A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson. Although neither of us has hiked the Appalachian Trail or rowed in a crew boat yet, we have offered an Adventure Book Club based on the book Finding Gobi, about the dog that ran alongside ultra-marathoner author Dion Leonard in the Gobi Desert. After reading the book with a small group of students, we invited an animal control officer and an animal rescue director to speak to our book club, and we took a behind-the-scenes tour of the local veterinarian’s office to ask questions about how they care for dogs. We found a text of interest and allowed it to spark new pathways of discovery for us – and we showed students the places that books could take us, modeling that same sense of lifelong learning that we hoped to instill in them as young readers.

That’s how I connected to this book and truly embraced their passion when the authors, on page 110 of the book, talked about how their idea for this book was born. They’d been in an airport in Michigan when their event was cancelled and had been talking in the airport about their plans for another book. Dictionary for a Better World came about because of the ideas of Irene Latham and Charles Waters – – and their work to make it happen (along with illustrator Mehrdokht Amini). They also shared how stepping outside their comfort zones with new forms of poetry helped them to appreciate new challenges along the way.

A book* with the power to change. Stepping outside of a comfort zone. An adventure hunt of looking for insights, allowing words and thoughts to spark personal growth. That’s all part of the journey that awaits in the next couple of months as I ponder the words and ideas waiting in this book. I am spending this week opening my mind and my heart to be changed. I express my thoughts on my blog and share my experiences, and welcome your sharing as well.

*During the months of August and September on days when I’m not participating in the Open Write at www.ethicalela.com, I will be writing in response to the pages of Dictionary for a Better World: Poems, Quotes, and Anecdotes from A to Z by Irene Latham and Charles Waters, illustrated by Mehrdokht Amini. The poems, poetic forms, narratives, quotes, and calls to action to make one small difference might be just the medicine my world or the whole world needs. I’ll be inviting insights in the form of an immersion into a 10-minute-a-day book study (just long enough to read the page, reflect, and connect). If you don’t have a copy of the book, you can order one here on Amazon. I invite you to join me in making August and September a time of deep personal book friendship. A few teachers will be following the blog and engaging in classroom readings and responses to the text. So come along! Let’s turn the pages into intentionally crafting beautiful change together.

Dictionary for a Better World Word Plan

I’ve been thinking about how to study a book to make a real difference, and for me, I think it’s association and application. That’s why for the months of August and September I’ve come up with a plan for celebrating each word in the book. This is my plan for devouring them:

DateNational EventWord
August 1National Respect for Parents DayRespect
2National Ice Cream Sandwich DayIntention
3National Georgia DayDiversity
4National Chocolate Chip Cookie DayExperiment
5National Work Like a Dog DayService
6National Play Outside DayNature
7National Friendship DayHate Epitaph
8National Happiness Happens DayReach
9National Book Lover’s DayPause
10National S’mores DayFuel
11Global Kinetic Sand DayVulnerable
12National Julienne Fries DayListen!
13International Left Hander’s DayXenial
14National Creamsicle DayDream
15National Lemon Meringue Pie DayTenacity
16National Tell a Joke DayLaughter
17National I Love My Feet DayUpstander
18National Ice Cream Pie Day Yes
19National Soft Ice Cream Day Acceptance
20Open Write at http://www.ethicalela.com
21Open Write
22Open Write
23Open Write
24Open Write
25National Kiss and Make Up DayForgiveness
26National Women’s Equality DayEquality
27National Just Because DayFreedom
28National Thoughtful DayMindfulness
29According to Hoyle DayNetiquette
30National Grief Awareness DayCompassion
31National Trail Mix DayExercise
September 1 No Rhyme Nor Reason DayZest
2National Lazy Mom’s DayShero
3National Bowling League DayTeam
4National Wildlife DayWonder
5National Cheese Pizza DayHumility
6National Read a Book DayEmpathy
7National Grateful Patient DayGratitude
8National School Picture DayAlly
9National Teddy Bear DayCourage
10National Swap Ideas DayOpen
11Patriot Day/National Day of Service & RemembranceHope
12National Just One Human Family DayBelonging
13National Celiac Disease Awareness DayQuestion
14National Live Creative DayCreate
15Greenpeace DayJustice
16National Play-Doh DayPeace
17Open Write at http://www.ethicalela.com
18Open Write
19Open Write AND National Talk Like a Pirate DayVoice
20Open Write
21Open Write
22Dear Diary DayEtymology of Progress
23Teal Talk DayDialogue
24Ansley Meyer’s Birthday- Abecedarian PoetryWorld of Better Words
25National Daughter’s DayLove
26Situational Awareness Day Extra Word: Safety
27National Day of ForgivenessRelease
28National Good Neighbor DayExtra Word: Neighbor
29Urban Wildlife Refuge Day Extra Word: Refuge
30National Love People DayKindness

During the months of August and September on days when I’m not participating in the Open Write at www.ethicalela.com, I will be writing in response to the pages of Dictionary for a Better World: Poems, Quotes, and Anecdotes from A to Z by Irene Latham and Charles Waters, illustrated by Mehrdokht Amini. The poems, poetic forms, narratives, quotes, and calls to action to make one small difference might be just the medicine my world or the whole world needs. I’ll be inviting insights in the form of an immersion into a 10-minute-a-day book study (just long enough to read the page, reflect, and connect). If you don’t have a copy of the book, you can order one here on Amazon. I invite you to join me in making August and September a time of deep personal book friendship. A few teachers will be following the blog and engaging in classroom readings and responses to the text. So come along! Let’s turn the pages into intentionally crafting beautiful change together.

Dictionary for a Better World – The Words

At the beginning of 2022, I made a series of blog posts on my choice of my One Little Word intended to sharpen my focus throughout the year as a challenge for personal growth. My word choice was Listen. You can read my OLW posts here, here, and here, which share the OLWs chosen – and the reasons – by friends and family as well.

Listen was selected to be like a little toy poodle with a pink collar and blingy-bougie leash, cleanly groomed, smelling of strawberry rosebud shampoo, daintily prancing all sure-footed, the kind you could take with confidence into a china shop, knowing there’d be no damages.

Words, like beams of sunlight, hold the power to illuminate truths

Instead, my word turned out a lot like that great dane in the movie The Ugly Dachshund that was secretly slipped into a litter of dachshunds as if no one would be the wiser, until the truth became clear. Listen is no strawberry poodle word – it follows me like a clumsily lumbering beast into fragile places that force me to take careful steps, assessing the catastrophic potential for any missteps.

Words are like that ~ like beams of sunlight through a dense canopy of trees ~ illuminating the dark places in random rays of light on the leaves, bringing awe and wonder to moments that may otherwise go unnoticed. Words have power to show, to guide, and to prompt change, understanding, and compassion in our lives. As I write through August and September, I’ll pause daily using Dictionary for a Better World: Poems, Quotes, and Anecdotes from A to Z by Irene Latham and Charles Waters and consider the power of words to shape my life, dedicating a day to each of these words and considering other words I might add to my own personal lexicon for change:

acceptance, ally, belonging, compassion, courage, create, dialogue, diversity, dream, empathy, equality, exercise, experiment, forgiveness, freedom, fuel, gratitude, hate, hope, humility, intention, justice, kindness, laughter, listen, love, mindfulness, nature, netiquette, open, pause, peace, question, reach, release, respect, service, shero, team, tenacity, upstander, voice, vulnerable, witness, wonder, xenial, yes, and zest.

If you haven’t read this book, you can order one here on Amazon. I invite you to join me in making August and September a time of deep personal book friendship, sharing insights on the words and the response opportunities that the authors create in the book.

My book choice for deep reflection and personal response throughout August and September

Nobody Knows The Spuds I’ve Seen

singing potatoes

jazz and blues, loaded with cheese

eyes peeled for troubles

Singing Potatoes

*Nonsense Poetry, a Haiku inspired by the word Laughter from Dictionary for a Better World: Poems, Quotes, and Anecdotes from A to Z by Irene Latham and Charles Waters, illustrated by Mehrdokht Amini (2020, Carolrhoda Books).

During the months of August and September on days when I’m not participating in the Open Write at www.ethicalela.com, I will be writing in response to the pages of Dictionary for a Better World. The poems, poetic forms, narratives, quotes, and calls to action to make one small difference might be just the medicine the world needs. I’ll be offering insights in the form of an immersion into a 10-minute-a-day book study (just long enough to read the page, reflect, and connect). If you don’t have a copy of the book, you can order one here on Amazon. I invite you to join in and make August and September a time of deep personal book friendship by responding to the book. A few teachers, upon hearing my plan for the book study, will be following the blog and engaging in classroom readings and responses to text. So come along! Let’s turn the pages into intentionally crafting beautiful change together.

Order your copy on Amazon today and join me during August and September for a series of quick daily book studies, featuring different words each day!

To Write

I need a compelling

a thinkplace of dwelling

inspirations a’ swelling

***

I need a word fountain

a languagey mountain

for meanings a’ countin’

***

I need a blank page

such wild thoughts to cage

and time to engage

***

I need my three Schnoodles

spoiled schnauzery-poodles

curled-up love noodles

***

I need a soul-flame

a passionate aim

such wild thoughts to tame

***
I need glitt’ry toenails

to color the details

blue Curacao cocktails

A Better-Fragranced World

She throws a little weight

on her smoking-gunshot paw,

stops to smell the flowers

of a better-fragranced world!

Kasa ~ she’s home.

Kasa, a newly-rescued Brittany

Special thanks to Mo Daley at Open Write for introducing us to this form of poetry called gogyoshi this week.

July’s Open Write with Mo Daley

Gogyoshi

Mo Daley is our host at http://www.ethicalela.com today for the Open Write. Gogyoshi poems have a short, simple structure with 2 rules – a title and five lines.
In 2009, my daughter begged me to bring home a puppy from a cardboard box at the post office. She believed they were German Shepherds. But they turned out to be something better. They were farm dogs. We named her Tia, but she took up with a family who had other dogs at the time and only comes to check on us rarely now, as she can barely walk and has trouble seeing and hearing. She found her way back yesterday and visited for awhile during the storm when no one was home anywhere else. Something tells me she came to say goodbye and to thank us for rescuing her from a box to a farm.

Tia

Tia the Traitor in a Thunderstorm

she chose another family on the farm
that puppy from a cardboard box who
came back home in the storm
so old and weak now that I had to
drive her back around the corner

July’s Open Write with Jennifer Guyor Jowett – Summertime Poems

Larkspurs

Jennifer Jowett has rocked the prompts this week at http://www.ethicalela.com! Today’s prompt comes at the eleventh hour of my summer vacation, as I return on contract this morning. What a great way to relive a childhood summer before heading back. I love poems that bring pleasant memories. Oh, to go back to St. Simons in the 1970s…..

St. Simons (1970s)

summer festival
in Neptune Park
ferris wheel thrills
laughter, squeals
people at ease
a different era

1970s hippie leather
bracelet – I picked my
birth flowers
larkspur of happiness
water lily of innocence 
and my name, all caps
watched them imprint
(larkspur)    K   I   M  (waterlily)
fastened it, rode off flip-flopped
in shorts and halter top

to the rocks by the pier
for the fireworks
back when girls could
ride banana seat bikes

with flourescent wheel spikes together alone
long hair blowing in the island breeze
and no one worried

snow cones at the ballpark
after the game
I was a Pirate, left field
burgundy jersey, white letters

208 Martin Street
Slip and Slide
and trampoline
lush carpet of St. Augustine
barefoot cartwheels
climbing tree swings
  
vacation on Fernandina Beach
at the fish camp  (fish fries and hush puppies!)
echoes of a sulfury shower house
vented window slats rolled open
reading Pippi Longstocking by flashlight

oh, carefree summertime….
happy place in the heart of childhood
return and stay forever