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11 Feb
Hello Hello How are you? Yeah, good you? Twice in a lifetime she thinks a smile not quite formed Meeting eyes, they watch each other Are you seeing anyone? Cautiously a whisper comes, You don’t get that any more. And looks away Her smile warms And with sparkly eyes, …she stands It was really nice to see you. And walks away
6 Feb(was written on the 6
so many years, I hid away. uresponsible and free I farmed out the essential beneath a dome for 3. Nah— a dome of four., Me, I, her— and she Four worlds, one mind Parallel In time collective …are we.
5 Feb
There's this cafe I used to go to– I lived just down the road. With mismatched, gray and salmon tiles. For years, it felt like home. I left the suburb a while ago, thinking that it was best. The fence that borders our little home, surrounded by my ex. The yellow door that kept us safe, windows of painted glass. I walked through shattered glass.
10 feb
Free form: craft in relocation free verse and what I enjoy writing. Became dominant in the 20th century because poets want to move away from traditional style. traditional forms – (Shakespeare) – visible structure iambic pantameter, da-DUM da-Dum da-Dum syllable count predictable lines that often rhyme(ha funny) free verse isn't anything goes, It still has a rhythm created through emotions, breath, or thought. Emotional honesty over ornament. Psychological realism voice-over form used well : has an internal rhyme(and somtimes internal ryhme) uses line breaks purposefully, leans into Minimalism uses white space as a part of meaning. Used poorly, it can sound like chopped-up sentences with no internal music and random line breaks. In traditionalists or forming writing circles The style can be looked upon as a lack of training, a lack of depth, reliant on clichés. But free verse removes external constraint– which means you must create internal discipline yourself. so thus – free verse isn't the absence of craft, It's just relocated.
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February Fanfare Week 1!
First week done! Thank you everyone for jumping in, and a reminder that you can always start the challenge anytime if you'd like - just comment "I'm in" on the pinned post and start writing! Even a few sentences count. With that said, I'm gonna tag the people who've started thus far and their total days (from what I can see in the group itself, obvs if you write and don't post about it that's still excellent, I just can't see it :P). Starting with... Me! I'm at 3/28 so far. @Hannah Cardamone! 8/28, nicely done. @Kirsten Ivatts, at 4/28! @Kexxie Wolf, at 3/28! @Clare Naden, at 8/28! @Vera Sephora, @Jessica Huckabay, @Nesha W, and @Eliud Kimathi, who I can't see any explicit challenge posts by as of yet (which doesn't necessarily mean you haven't been writing, I know Jessica recently finished a 10k word challenge, for example). Don't be shy, though! Even posting a quick paragraph about an idea you had is enough for a day.
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