Monthly Archives: February 2013

Playgrounds and Poetry

“If you are a dreamer come in
If you are a dreamer a wisher a liar
A hoper a pray-er a magic-bean-buyer
If youre a pretender come sit by my fire
For we have some flax golden tales to spin
Come in!
Come in!”
-Shel Silverstein

My parents still have my Vincy the Vacuum story from the second grade framed in their house. It is an alliterative tale of an alien from Venus, with the shape of the household appliance, traveling to Earth, Vermont to be exact. This is where it begins finding our voice… silly or sensitive or sassy or sarcastic or soulful. I remember my teacher commending my story to my parents as it displayed amongst the other stories for open house. This was my first cherished experience with writing.

The playground where I work is a luxury and is one of the largest outdoor play yards, I have seen at a daycare center. The children can explore, investigate, create and imagine in the natural world. I simply love this piece about my workplace and savor the outdoor world with the children. The playground is another playful place of peace where I gather insight, dialogue and experiences through the eyes of a child. Through the interaction with these little humans, at the wise old age of two and three, I share my learning as they share theirs. I take advantage of the outside environment to be one of them… running, pretending, creating and laughing. They are now at my favorite age where language is rapidly growing and they are starting to understand the concept of rhyming. One three year old boy eagerly states to me, “Hey, Amy. Socks, clocks and blocks rhyme.”

Riddles and rhymes are favorites in our classroom. We often read the stories and poems of Shel Silverstein, Dr Seuss and Douglas Florian. We have a visiting poet come to our center to enhance literacy and writing in the form of poetry each year with 3-5 year olds through reading and creating their own classroom poetry. Other poets writings, throughout the history of poetry,  are a source of inspiration , as in any work of art, artists look to their predecessors to gather a form and thought to use as a guide…to serve as framework, to surpass, or even as a little appreciative of their work. Playgrounds and poets are two other sources of my inspiration for writing and poetry. Inspirations can arrive in the form of people, places and things; anything you can possibly imagine in the infinite playground… the universe.

Playfully,

Amy

 

One Poetry Path

Walking through the cemetery has become a ritual, a tradition for me… a place of inspiration for stories, pictures, and poetry. I grab pieces that the cemetery gives me… thoughts, images, a certain depth… and if you blink you’ll miss your chance. During silent steps,  walking through a yard of graves, taking it all in… the peaceful life of the cemetery. Even through the decay, nature still grows, life still lingers.

The cemetery holds stories unknown and spirits flow, their energy becomes the symmetry of the cemetery… the circle of life. Can you feel it? The cemetery,  it becomes alive as you take in the senses all around. Many call the cemetery creepy, dreary or dark. I say a peaceful playground and I’m not disturbing the peace when I visit. And as much in life, it is all in the interpretation and trying a variety of lenses…

Playfully,

Amy

Here are some photographs I captured during my cemetery journeys last Spring and Autumn for inspiration:

Cemetery Sunscape

358

Depth of Reflection

228

The Goblin Tree

308

Stone Arch Sky

  210

Cemeteries in my soul appear louder than before, shining under luminescent stars, closer… closer you say but then fall away, reflections of the dark waters, scream as loud as the shadow sitting on the wallowing writer’s grave, hold me tight as if you had been holding me forever, look ito my eyes as if you had seen me before in a lost soul’s dream, sense my soul… whispered under breaths of the moon bright

Poem by Amy L. DuVall Clark written September 2010©