Archive for April 12th, 2010

April 12, 2010

NaPoWriMo #12: Things I Learned from Surgery

Things I Learned from Surgery

My leg read A-S-K, after
all my questions were answered.
Purple felt tip letters telegraphed:
This is your last chance. This
is when you escape.
Instead I let them
mark me like a side of beef, claim
my incision points. Before they wheeled me
into an antiseptic room, I knew
exactly where they would open me, what stitch
they would use to close me up.
Knowing was not the same as experiencing
the procedure, not the same as watching
my husband wonder, “What part will they leave
for me?” Knowing never prevented me
from entering that room, feeling my leg dissolve
into a novacaine numb. It never stopped
the panic when I woke up
after my lost hours, immersed in pain
so permanent it felt like a poem
I would never stop writing.

***

12 poems down, 18 poems to go

( 7 on prompt, 5 off prompt)

(11 posted, 1 unposted)

Ah, revision. How I hate you.  According to my records, this is the third full draft of this poem. This doesn’t include the multiple drafting stages before I consider a draft “done.” I am sick of this poem, but I think it’s finally getting on the right track.

After meeting with my writing group last night, they reviewed my chapbook manuscript draft and encouraged me to take another stab at this poem. To them, it still felt too narrative and didn’t center on a specific image. I hesitated and thought that maybe I would just cut the poem from the manuscript.

Then, I read today’s NaPoWriMo prompt from Carolee Sherwood, which encouraged us to make up (and translate) a secret code. This poem started with a secret message on my leg, left by my surgeon’s initials. (Surgeons initial you prior to a procedure, to make sure that they operate on the right body part. Both my surgeon, whose initials really are A.S.K., and my anesthesiologist initialed my leg before my surgery.)  Using that secret code as the base, I then thought about what the code was trying to tell me.

I’m hoping that this is the last draft of this poem, for now. Like a good kid, I’m going to check in with my writer’s group and see what they think of it.

April 12, 2010

Resource Planning, Week 15: Monday, April 12-Sunday, April 18

Creative Goals for the Week:

  • Revise chapbook manuscript (Due Tuesday)
  • Proofread a clean copy of the chapbook manuscript (Due Wednesday)
  • Submit chapbook manuscript (Due Thursday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Monday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Tuesday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Wednesday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Thursday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Friday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Saturday)
  • Write and post 1 poem (Due Sunday)

***

In addition to my NaPoWriMo responsibilities, I have to finish my (almost done) chapbook manuscript, so that I can submit it to the qarrtsiluni chapbook contest.  Luckily, I have put in the majority of the work on my manuscript throughout the winter, so I feel like I am ready to reach this goal.

April 12, 2010

Resource Tracking, Week 14: Monday, April 5-Sunday, April 11

Creative Goals for the Week

  • Send chapbook manuscript to writer’s group – Finished 4/5/2010
  • Create 1 art journal page – Unfinished
  • Write and post 1 poem – Finished 4/5/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem – Finished 4/6/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem – Finished 4/7/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem – Finished 4/8/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem – Finished 4/9/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem -Finished 4/10/2010
  • Write and post 1 poem – Written, not posted 4/11/2010

***

I enjoy seeing all of that green lettering saying “Finished” on my creative goal list.

The nice thing about NaPoWriMo is that it removes excuses.  Just like committing to an exercise plan, when I commit to a writing plan, I prove that I have time to write poems every day. I may not sustain this kind of output past April, but I can remind myself that I am capable of writing daily.  After April, I have no excuse for not meeting my creative goals.

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