Life in Poetry reading, writing, reflecting

Life in Poetry reading, writing, reflecting
April showers bring May flowers

Sunday 17 February 2019

⌗28 days challenge Feb.15th, BROKEN.




BROKEN

The night is darker than the most bottomless
pit. In the shadows, sleek lizards slide
over strewn rocks and worms dig into the earth.

No lights bother the surface or reaches the rim.
A stain of ink can swallow all colours.
The moon rises and catches the ghosts by surprise.

The trees' outlines stretch over the lawn.
The wooden barn is now distinct among the pebbles.
No one has stepped among the brambles in years.

The silence is streaked with the night owl's tune.
Lonely crickets chirp among slender prairie grass.
Ivy overgrown attacks the walls.

If nobody claims the farm, in a few years,
the roof will cave in and the door will stick open.
hinges dislodged.

All the childhood memories,
the quiet meals,
will be forgotten.



©susanbauryrouchard

⌗28 days challenge Feb.12 th, DANCE

The 28 days challenge is a writing exercise from Anita Ojeda. Write on a word a day and post it to your website/blog and also on the group page on Facebook.

if you would like to contribute please contact Anita at
https://anitaojeda.com/welcome-to-the-write-28-days-blogging-challenge/

Dance

Dance, hover, glide. Across the floor, slippered steps.
Arm-beats, soaring towards the sky like an eagle,  
fingers splayed, the tips of its feathers at the end of majestic wings.
Torso taut, strut. The strum of strings twitch my muscles.
They launch my limbs into a story, an opera all my own.
Hips hop, thrust from side to side, forwards; circle an imaginary globe.
I ride on a ray of golden light fallen on the tiles through the window.
On the terrace, my body skates on the breeze. 
I remember my dance-partners down the years: lovers, friends, 
my own flesh and blood. Emotions seep into the choregraphy: 
it shifts, it whips up fanciful turns. Lyrics trigger new adours. 
My voice grasps at fleeting words. I dive into song. 
My breath rises from the depth of my core, and fuels my fervour. 
My soul swoops into the music. I become whole and rise to a paroxysm. The sound flows into silence. I rest, spent.
©susanbauryrouchard

Tuesday 5 February 2019

⌗IWSG February 2019, Drawing and writing.




The question on the Insecure Writer's Support Group this month is

When you are not writing, what other creative outlets do you have ?


When I’m not writing and watching tennis, I like to draw in a notebook. It’s more like coloring actually. Patterns, Mandalas, Landscapes. When I travel, I like to draw what I see out of my window, on a train, from a hotel room. I use pencils. Sometimes I take photos while travelling and then try to reproduce them with a pencil and then paint. Books also inspire me and I paint pictures of the images that have appeared in my mind. I’m not a very good artist so sometimes I need to draw lines to position the elements in my painting. I am messy too.
In my writing my confidence grew by taking courses, giving and receiving feedback. So I suppose my next step in drawing and painting will be to take lessons. In school, I loved to draw maps and color in the different types of landscapes, geological features or natural ressources.
In my writing, I am also inspired by pictures or paintings. Finding the story behind the scenes, or inventing one.
I think all creative activities are inter-connected in some way. They feed each other.


If you would like to sign up to the Insecure Writers Support Group, go to this link :

http://www.insecurewriterssupportgroup.com/p/iwsg-sign-up.html



What I find pleasure in the most is the creative process. Getting my work out into the world is the drag: the competition out there, the disappointments. Discouragement is my worst enemy, perseverance my best friend and positive feedback from fellow writers, again, again and again. But it is just as rewarding to witness the success of others whom you’ve helped to improve.


An example of a sketch. Looking out of the window. B&B Stratford upon Avon. Virginia Lodge. Tim & Kate Wright, 12 Evesham Place.
On A Living Shakespeare Course at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. September 2013. Saw Hamlet, All's Well that Ends Well, As You Like It and Candide by Voltaire, adaptation by Mark Ravenhill.

And a painting inspired by Rama II by Arthur C. Clarke. Sorry, my scan is not big enough !
















Sunday 3 February 2019

My new blog

https://lifeinpoetry.home.blog/2019/02/03/frost

At the end of the Tunnel.

My heart is a feather. My spirit soars with
new endeavours. Liberated from any trials,
my children comfortably soothed into
their futures.

A second life for me, or a ninth.
Free to pursue the bliss of each day.
No longer encumbered by hefty obligations.
My work is done.

The foundations are sound. The edifice raised
brick by brick will not topple at a mere
gust of wind. We are tethered to weather
a storm.

Nothing short of a cyclone can sweep us 
away. A sound partnership cemented by
love has brought these years of joy.
The worst

of my dismay and dolour are behind.
The thrill is still beneath, graciously
awoken to carry me onwards until
the end.



©susanbauryrouchard

Saturday 19 January 2019

Frost

Crisp white morning. Frost coats the bushes,
the trees. Crunchy grass under foot.

The stars fade into the pale sky while the sun
creeps up over the rooftops. Later blue will

erupt as the beams warm the air. Robin Redbreast
and Master Greentit challenge each other to a crust

in front of the French windows. The chime is still
on the roof beam over the terrace, immobile.

Intricate patterns snake up the gate, ephemeral art
swept by the midday thaw. Droplets glisten on

the leaves of the evergreens. The mercury edges up
and stops, numb.

At teatime the light has ebbed away and the frost
sneaks back over the garden






©susanbauryrouchard

Christmas is over

The Christmas tree is sitting
in the garden. Some needles
shed on the living room floor,
in front of the fire.

The baubles came off reluctantly,
clinging onto the branches.
The Bavarian soldiers still hanging
proudly. The fairies' heads drooping.

All reconciled to their fate of being
stored away in their boxes.
The holiday season is discarded,
but not forgotten, still burning

comfortably in our hearts. Time
to make way for the New Year.
Fresh beginnings. The crocuses
are already snaking up from

the frosty blades. The daffodils 
stems are rising in defiance
of the cold bite. Everyday I watch
the scortching sun pound down

on the players in Australia. It thaws
my bones and frees my spirit. And
the pen runs away with the ink and
soaks the page with thoughts.





©susanbauryrouchard