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poetry month: the inscrutable future

For today’s prompt, write a future poem. The future is a never ending well of worry for some. Others harbor a great deal of optimism. Still others see a mixture of awesome flying cars and terrifying robot overlords. Regardless of your outlook, I hope there’s a poem in your very near future. — Robert Lee Brewer, Writer’s Digest


Right now it feels as if
the future will never arrive.
The days drag on
inside our homes
as we social distance
and shelter in place,
as we stay home
to flatten the curve.

Yet it also seems
as if we are hurtling into it
— thoroughly unprepared —
day after day
as the news firehose spews
and the numbers pile up
and we struggle to make sense of it all
when it’s impossible to put into context
because these are times like we’ve never seen.

So then how can we even imagine
whatever future follows
these unprecedented events
we can’t even believe we’re living through
while we are in fact living through them?

The future advances upon us
every moment
and in the same breath
we welcome it with the hope of relief
and we dread what new horror it might bring.

When this is over
— whatever that even means —
what does that future hold?

It comes. Fast or slow, it comes.
And we will meet it.


tags: aprpad, poetry month, pandemicpoetry, poetry, future, time warp, time
Wednesday 04.08.20
Posted by Susan Ward
 

no pomp, but circumstance

For today’s prompt, take the phrase “Complete (blank),” replace the blank with a word or phrase, make the new phrase the title of your poem, and then write your poem. Possible titles include: “Complete Best Day I Ever Had,” “Complete Guide to Writing Poems,” “Completely Wrong Way,” and “Completed Set.” — Robert Lee Brewer, Writer’s Digest

Completely incomplete

It’s five or six weeks
until high school graduation,
Class of 2019.

I can’t help but think about —
even dwell on —
what Rader is supposed to be doing right now.

Senior project would be complete.
College applications, complete.
Cap and gown order. Graduation announcements. Summer plans.

First week of June
is the last time we will know
with any confidence
what Rader would have been doing,
if he were still here.

Five or six weeks.
Soon.
Complete.


tags: aprpad, poetry, high school, graduation, Class of 2019, future, grief
Wednesday 04.24.19
Posted by Susan Ward