Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Day 29 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 103


Hello, everyone! My poem today is #103 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #468, including last year's Stafford Challenge poem count).

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a pocket poem.”

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “[C]ompare your everyday present life with your past self, using specific details to conjure aspects of your past and present in the reader’s mind."


Combining both prompts, as usual. I hope tomorrow I can finish the whole month combining all the prompts.

My Pocket Poem

Tomorrow is “Poem in Your Pocket Day.”
The last pocket poem I wrote
was 14 years ago. My life was so different
then. I was married, but a couple of months
from moving out. Like many Aprils
before, I was also having bad hay fever . . .
springtime, so much pollen in the air.
Those days were notoriously unhappy.

But today, thanks to allergy shots,
I’m free from hay fever. More important,
the biggest change of all is, I’ve met
the love of my life. Renee and I
have had a happy couple of years.
Blissful years. That’s our sweet pocket!

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

And here is Alan's pocket poem, combining both prompts in an unusual fashion.

The Watch Pocket

Naive university freshman,
grandparents’ first-generation student,
living away from home for the first time,
you decided to use a pocket watch
your parents had given you for fun.
It was louder than you realized,
and, during an in-class examination,
your professor said to put it away,
and you wore a wristwatch from that time on.
You flattened your nasal intonation
by speaking from your chest almost like hums,
and you made fewer one-syllable words
shift tone and pitch midway through. I don’t know
where that watch is now; when I get tired, though,
that tone shift returns with a worn tenor,
and my watch pocket holds two guitar picks,
and I teach literature about the folks
we learned to hold inside long years ago.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Photo Source

Don't you think that's actually a self-portrait? Very interesting way to fulfill the past-and-present life prompt.


Thanks for coming by the blog, everyone. See you again tomorrow?


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Day 28 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 102


Hello, everyone! My poem today is #102 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #467, including last year's Stafford Challenge poem count).

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For the fourth and final Two-for-Tuesday prompt:  1) Write a love poem, and/or . . . 2) Write an anti-love poem.”

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “Today, try writing a poem [with] three sentences, six lines: statement, question, conclusion."


Combining all three prompts . . . a very small space to get all this in.

True Love

She to him: I love you
and I don’t love you.
He to her: is that true
or is that not true?
She to him: either/or;
He to her: both/and.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Alan very successfully combined all three prompts. Bravo!

The Haters Want Us to Love Them

They bought a warehouse,
replacing goods with people.
See how a bully calls foul
when he's called "bully"?
He insists on love
when all we want is justice.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Photo Source


Thanks for coming by the blog, everyone. See you again tomorrow?


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Monday, April 27, 2026

Day 27 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 101


Greetings, friends! My poem today is #101 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #466, including last year's Stafford Challenge poem count).

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a fan poem.”

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: write a “poem in which all the verses contain the same number of lines (whether couplets, triplets, quatrains, etc.) and in which you give the reader instructions of some kind."


Combining prompts again ... had good luck with that this month so far. Rhymed couplets and some mentions of "fan."

Adventures in Dentistry

I walked into the dentist’s office this morning
with no ideas about today’s poem. None brewing,

even simmering slightly. As the hygienist was
scaling — scrape scrape — I began to realize

I have more than a few stories about dentistry.
(How do you rhyme that? Palmistry? Fancy-free?)

When I was in the Army, I was in the dentist’s chair
and went “Ow!” while he was drilling. With a glare

he growled, “If it hurts that much, I’ll just pull it.”
I gotta say, I didn’t make any more noise. Just took it.

Not a fan of that chairside manner. When they pulled
my wisdom teeth, they gave me IV Valium. The oral

surgeon was doing whatever (I wasn’t knocked out)
with all sorts of crunching, grinding, and other loud

sounds, but I couldn’t care. I was floating somewhere
near the ceiling, a peaceful summer cloud, not a care

in the world. At some point, he said, “Okay, you
are done.” I remember being baffled. “Did you do

something?” When I was three or four, my dad
took me with him to the dentist for whatever odd

reason, and I ended up having to sit in the treatment
room while the dentist was pulling a tooth. He couldn’t

extract it and actually put his foot on my dad’s chest!
That’s my nightmare memory about visiting the dentist.

A lovely memory about dentists centers on a hygienist,
actually. In my late 20s, after an appointment, I asked

the hygienist out and she said yes. Paula,
rodeo rider, art history major in college.

She became my girlfriend, and I recall
wondering how someone could fall

for a patient after scaling their teeth!
Still a fan of Paula, a beautiful redhead.

So what’s the moral of this long poem?
Next time you’re in the dentist chair, don’t

obsess on the scraping and whirring.
Just let your mind drift over everything!

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Photo Source

Alan's poem takes on the perspective of an English professor reading student essays; there's a mention of characters from James Joyce's short story "The Dead."

The Five-Paragraph Essay Must Die

These twenty-somethings
enrolled in any
upper-division
literature class
should all know better

than to follow that
familiar pattern
of tell them what you’ll
tell them, tell them, tell
them what you’ve told them.

Well, now, God damn it,
Gabriel Conroy
has just realized
his wife, Gretta, has
not loved him as much

as a youth she’s known
as a girl, who’s died
in part of knowing
he will not live hers.
But these enrollees

submit chickenshit
formulaic gobs
of labels, Goddamned
generalities,
and dead, cold, safe hearts.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Alan is combining both prompts here: the fan aspect is covered by the speaker not being a fan, quite strongly, of the five-paragraph essay; the NaPoWriMo prompt is satisfied by the poem being in quintains, so that all the stanzas have the same number of lines: five. And clearly the poem is instructional in an entertaining fashion. It's also quite clever that the poem rails against the five-paragraph essay format but uses five-line stanzas.


Thanks for coming by the blog, everyone. See you again tomorrow?


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Sunday, April 26, 2026

Day 26 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 100


Hello, friends! My poem today is #100 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #465, including last year's Stafford Challenge poem count). So that's 100 poems since January 17, William Stafford's birthday.

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, take the phrase 'Last (blank),' replace the blank with a new word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then, write your poem.”

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: “Today, we challenge you to write your own ars poetica, giving the reader some insight into what keeps you writing poetry, or what you think poetry should do.” The term "ars poetica" is Latin for "the art of poetry."

Combining prompts as usual. A little background: my term as Iowa Poet Laureate is ending on April 30. It has been a great run.

The Last Ars Poetica

            —curtal sonnet

At least my last as Poet Laureate
of Iowa. My main message has been
to champion light poetry. Often
poets can look down upon, denigrate
light poetry as weak, something to shun.
As if somehow, it’s not good to have fun

with poems. Poets are too serious
sometimes. Light poems can be genuine
and profound. For example, satire and
parody: play plus outrage, furious.
            Weight with sparkle . . . write on.

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Turns out Alan and I both wrote a "last ars poetica." So he is also combining the prompts.

Last Ars Poetica of the
2025-2026 Academic Year


Because last fall semester saw
two colleagues urged to walk away
from their lives' work because each made
in public comments of offense,
because selective boundaries
between a private life and job,
regardless of its level, blue-
or white-, professional or day-,
an academic or a pope,
some words get targeted, yet words
intended never to deceive
remain reliable when thoughts,
emotions, gestures do not
always serve in public, far
too vulnerable, we are all
too vulnerable, so let me
delay exposure for a while
and take some private time
to offer explanations to
myself, as best as I can say
how I might understand the truth
that might be factual or truth
as I distill it from experience
outside the hard, invasive, cold,
unceasing blast of monetized,
manipulated messages
intended to entrap my time,
my hard-earned life, my hard-worn love,
this intimate, spontaneous,
authentic urge to share at last
a testament of loving truth.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Alan, great close . . . "a testament of loving truth." What more can we do?


Thanks for coming by the blog, everyone. See you again tomorrow?


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   



Saturday, April 25, 2026

Day 25 ... NaPoWriMo / Poem-a-Day 2026 / Stafford 99


Hello, friends! My poem today is #99 in this year's Stafford Challenge (and #464, including last year's Stafford Challenge poem count).

Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt: Write a “poem in which you use at least three metaphors for a single thing, include an exclamation, ruminate on the definition of a word, and come back in the closing line to the image or idea with which you opened the poem.”

Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a remix poem. Pick a poem you wrote earlier this month and re-create it in a new way. Maybe you take a sonnet and turn it into free verse, or a haiku. Maybe your free verse can be turned into a triolet or villanelle. Or you can mash up multiple poems into a new creation. ”


Today I'm remixing yesterday's poem, the first half, subtitled "Spring Riddle." And following the NaPoWriMo prompt pretty much to the letter.

Midnight Riddle

            —curtal sonnet

A skin-winged blackbird that isn’t a bird.
A winter-long sleeper that’s not a bear
but lives in caves. Under starry night skies,
invisible singer that can’t be heard.
Three inches long, a foot wide. In your hair
she’d make you scream, “Help!” Mating ecstasies

in autumn, delayed fertilization
in spring. Delayed? What could that mean? In her
the sperm is stored, then she is fertilized
during first flight after hibernation.
            Little Brown Bat . . . wondrous!

—Draft by Vince Gotera    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Little Brown Bat (Photo Source)


Today, Alan is remixing “Not Bug but Function” from Day 9. And bringing in elements of the NaPoWriMo prompt.

Document

If I document my list,

            Not ally but deceiver,
            not enabler but manipulator,
            not dealmaker but conceder,
            not liberator but jailer,
            not savior but abuser,
            not leader but invader,
            not king but parasite,

I might call it my finest worksong
while I witness this world leader pretend
not to bring the end of the world as we know it.
“Welcome to the Occupation!”
I call with sadness to the one I love
as we gaze into the fireplace,
my list of concerns like exhuming McCarthy,
although I don’t believe we’ve brought him back
so much as disinterred his underground machinations,
and we have been too green to realize it.

—Draft by Thomas Alan Holmes    [Do not copy or quote . . . thanks.]

Alan, great remix. What do you think about this revision and also mine above? Please comment below on that.


Thanks for coming by the blog, everyone. See you again tomorrow?


Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks!

Ingat, everyone.   






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