This story has been condensed from an earlier version. I’ve shortened it to share with some friends from Tweetspeak Poetry… 

A little over a year ago, a friend’s post about the nurturing quality of poetry sent me searching for my well-worn copy of “Poemcrazy”—the only book I’ve ever carried in my purse.

Several days after my friend’s post, another friend shared her video of tattered fabrics wafting on a Wyoming clothesline. I was mesmerized, and felt the ancient urge to make a poem.

I had given up writing poetry years ago. It wasn’t a popular genre and I wanted to be more widely read; to actually make a living doing what I love. However, to be visible takes strong writing. It takes a good sense of what people want. And what we want, I have become more convinced, is to be lost and then found. We want the battle, the blood, the burns, the scars, the resolution, the intimacies…the magic. For a writer to find that takes going deep.

I can’t plot my way to success. Though good plotting helps, I need magic. I need to be willing to burn on the page. Even when it’s not pretty, or popular, or read–I need poetry. And occasionally I need to be reminded of that.

Float Fires and Flag Dragons

Float Fires and Flag Dragons

FLOAT FIRES AND FLAG DRAGONS

wind shifts

fires float

and dragons curl

around the hearth

of secret aspirations;

recoiling

side-winding

snaking tattered verses

into

healing shadows;

breathing

Moya Katherine Maxted ©

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About Moya

moya@moya.studio

2 responses »

  1. Have always loved your poetry. It is pretty, and I am glad you have found it again. xo

  2. Moya's avatar Moya says:

    I’m glad you found it, too… thanks so much, dear one.

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