Daily Nourishment for May 6, 2024: Trying to Create Another World

Daily Nourishment Read Time: 50 seconds
Pause/Prompt/Practice Time: 12 minutes


“Poetry became a private place that I was hugely drawn to, where I could let my daydreams—and my pain—come in completely disguised. I knew from the moment I started writing that I never wanted to be writing about my life. That wasn’t the inclination. I was always trying to create another world.” - James Tate

Pause.

Do a few rounds of a breath prayer/meditation using a word that represents something you want to receive during the inhale (peace, rest, freedom, etc.) and a word that represents something you want to let go of during the exhale (anxiety, busyness, oppression, etc.).

 

Prompt.

Read “At the Clothesline” by James Tate. Then read it again.

 

Practice.

Set a timer for eight minutes and take notes on the poem and/or the statements and questions below.

—What feelings does the poem stir in you?
—What images, ideas, objects, or art make you happy and break your heart?
—Write about laundry. The good, the bad, the not-so-bad.

If you like, use what you wrote to begin a new poem, story, essay, or letter to a friend.

Want More?
Here’s an excerpt from The Paris Review:

INTERVIEWER
So for you tragedy and comedy are not separate?

TATE
No, not at all. They’re in the same theater, on the same stage. That’s true of the best poems. You can’t tell where they are going to go. One can start with tragedy and end with comedy, or the other way around.

INTERVIEWER
There is such a strong belief that tragedy is a higher form, that comedy is a low, temporary distraction, and that great literature must be solemn. What is the subversive quality in humor that everyone is worried about?

TATE
I don’t know. Most people don’t have a sense of humor in the first place. So if they find themselves laughing at the end of an experience, they are almost distrustful of themselves—like, what happened to me? Today, for instance, on the tragedy side we could easily be talking about the hideous effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, or we could be talking about the Iraq war. But we can go out tonight and hear a great jazz band. We could spend a night with friends, laughing and drinking and toasting and saying how wonderful life is. Simultaneously, we all know that we’re enshrouded in tragedy, lies, and all kinds of evil. Torture, for God’s sake! And heaps of evil beyond what we can contemplate, and yet life is wonderful for those of us who haven’t been directly affected. So we walk around balancing the two all the time. I, for one, am not giving in. I am not going to walk around in tears all day long. I still want to have a good day if I can.

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Upcoming Workshops & Gatherings:
—The May Co-Writing Schedule is live. Learn more here.

—SDW Members: Sunday Conversations are happening every Sunday through May 12th from 6:15-7 p.m. CT.


Today’s Daily Nourishment was provided by Charlotte Donlon.

*Please help us protect our intellectual property, our creative process, and the integrity of our work. Spiritual Direction for Writers® Daily Nourishment is covered under the Spiritual Direction for Writers® trademark. You are welcome to share this link with others, but any other use (written or spoken) is prohibited without written permission from Charlotte Donlon.


 
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Daily Nourishment for May 7, 2024: Let Water Open Your Imagination and Soul

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Daily Nourishment for May 5, 2024: Even Problems Have Energy