Week 6-15-2014
Since this is my first post-retirement entry, I’ve decided to focus on my family–I’d have never made it without them. So the FSW for this week is a poem by my own beloved daughter, Bethany Grace. Enjoy!
Sole Searching
I stepped in love;
it ruined my day.
sticky as gum,
dirty as dung.
Not to worry! I threw that heart away.
–Bethany Malmgren
Week 8-20-2013
One of the things I love about some teenage writers is that they find very witty, pithy ways to say true things. I have three short poems to illustrate. All three of these were written in 1986, my first year at Clemens.
Hand-me-downs
Innocence you’re born with
Like a newly formed rose.
Corruption you grow into
Like your sibling’s clothes.
–Terri Hanson
A Lesson on Springs
The more work that is forced on a spring,
And the more pressure it is forced to bear,
The more it becomes a wild and playful thing
When it’s set free, so take care.
–Robert Walterbach
Why I Don’t Want to Leave My Girl
I’ve been beaten,
Kicked, cheated, swindled,
Cussed and laughed at,
Taken advantage of,
And made penniless
But
The reason
Why I don’t want to leave my girl
Is that I want to
See what is
Going to happen next.
–Jose Fragoso
Week 8–4‑2013
I have chosen a poem written by my former student and good friend, Lauren (Schulze) Rollins. I like the poem because I know how busy Lauren is so I understand the inspiration–and also because it expresses beautifully how I feel about the school year approaching. Oh yeah, and the snow imagery is nice because it’s so freaking hot outside!
I want so badly to live in a snow globe
Where everybody is just
F
R
O
Z
E
N
In one spot for eternity
Smiling the brightest smiles
Oblivious to the world outside
And watching snow flakes slowly float down to the ground
In lazy criss-cross patterns
With no place to go- only to exist
With the twang and jilt of little music boxes
Playing the sweetest song
Playing ever slower
And for that moment I am drawn in
Mesmerized
Until there is no more snow left to fall and music has gone silent
I want so badly to freeze my life just as it is right now
With only you and me in it
Instead of this rushed life set to someone else’s time schedule
Meeting someone else’s greedy demands
–Lauren Rollins
Week 7-28-2013
I only taught Lexy Castriotta for less than one semester in Creative Writing because she moved away. She was bright and witty and fun. She also had the best perspective on being a military brat and moving a lot of anyone i ever taught, and I have taught lots of military brats. Here it is:
Chapter one: First Days and Great Expectations;
She was the new girl in town; she had it all figured out.
Being a military brat, I move constantly and never having been to one school for more than two years has taught me a few lessons.
Lesson number one: having an attitude with the teacher does not impress people, it makes you look stupid.
Lesson number two: Keep your mouth shut except when you’re smiling. People don’t like loud mouths so keep a little bit of you to yourself and they will want to know more.Lesson number three: Be patient. Just because you feel like you have nobody for a week or a couple of months doesn’t mean you won’t find some really great friends later on. This brings me to;
Lesson number four: Don’t settle for friends so easily. People are crazy and if you are the new kid at the school no one is likely to tell you who the stalker kids are and the stalker kids will seek to have a clean start with you. I have learned this the hard way many times.
Lesson number five: The sad truth is relationships end once you move. I have found that after awhile all the chit chat your old friends have you can keep up with but why would they care about the new names you bring up. Old friendships even really really fond ones come to a disappointing halt after you move no matter how many plans you make to drive a thousand miles for each other.
Lesson number six: Look forward not backward. Its natural to be upset the first few months at a new place but keeping your head wrapped around how good it used to be just gets you nowhere.
Lesson number seven: Live day by day. Carpe Diem. Whatever. In a life where you’re never sure how long you’ll be anywhere looking at the big picture is depressing. If you take relationships day by day (which never works if the other person involved knows you are moving because they aren’t and they DO see the big picture) and enjoy the moments you’re living now, you will have a much happier life
Lesson number eight: Sometimes it’s okay to eat in the library. Lunch will always be the most stressful period after you move for awhile until you make friends. It’s okay if you have to eat by yourself or befriend a teacher or two until you are comfortable.
Lesson number nine: Expect nothing. Don’t set yourself up for disappointment but don’t be overly cynical too. Go in to the school like it’s just another day and see if it surprises you.
I think those were the only lessons I could take from my experiences. Moving always always sucks, (unless you’re leaving a school where everyone hates you) but staying positive helps a lot. I think that moving all the time has given me major senioritis and a bad case of commitment phobia but I’m happy with the person I’ve become because of all the changes I endure; and I wouldn’t have it any other way.–Lexy Castriotta
Week 7-21-2013
I always advise my Creative Writing students to avoid writing rhyming poetry unless they absolutely must. This is because most rhyming poetry sucks (sad, but true). I would say that somewhere between 30 to 50% of my students usually ignore my advice and write rhyming poetry anyway. Every once in a while I get a gem. Eun’s was a gem. Check it out. (I’m including a picture of the page because it is pretty…the poem follows.)
– Forever –
Spring is the time when flowers first bloom
Oh, what a sight to see
And the birds sing their song at the break of dawn
While resting upon a tree
But they won’t be there
When the hot sun glares
Nothing’s forever…
The bright, bright sun shimmers her rays
Down to the deep blue ocean
And everyone’s restless, all sitting around
Making no effort of motion
But these will be gone
Because autumn will come
Nothing’s forever…
The crisp dry leaves fall from the trees
Gently without a sound
And the cool autumn rain which cleans the air
Faithfully drops down
We all wish they would stay
But winter’s on its way
Nothing’s forever…
The first sight of frost cheers all hearts
From everyone young and old
And the blinding white snow, a gift from heaven
Will slowly turn everything cold
But even these can’t last
For everything must pass
Nothing’s forever…
That’s how our love ended
Like the change of the seasons
We knew it would happen
Didn’t need any reasons
So wipe those tears
And have no sorrow
Things always come back
If you wait ‘til tomorrow
It’s a continuing cycle
Which will never end
And the smile will be back
On your face again
So Maybe…
Some things are forever
–Eun Tremain
Week 7-14-2013
I have two poems off of one page from the 1996 Quixote. One is by Wendy Mayes and the other by Tracie Robinson. I remember Tracie quite well–she was in my daughter’s grade (class of ’97), I taught her in Freshmen English (and Creative Writing, I think), and she was quiet and brilliant and thoughtful. Both my daughter and I have tried to find her through Facebook without any luck. I don’t remember Wendy Mayes at all. I vaguely remember a girl named Wendy Hayes, so perhaps it is a typo. I chose the poems because the first is a wise meditation on Kindness, and the second on Discernment.
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WWeek 7–7‑2013
The FSW for this week is a poem called “The Stranger” by Brittney Ireland. I chose this poem because as I was leafing through old Quixotes, I really liked it, and also because Brittney played tennis for me for four years, and I didn’t remember her writing anything. But this poem is funny and actually pretty sensuous (see related photograph at Photo of the Week).
–dm
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Week 6-30-2013
One of the reasons I selected this poem this week is because I’ve never seen or heard from the girl who wrote it since she walked out of my classroom. Her name is Allyson Helms, and she is one of the finest poets that I got to teach. She was a Featured Poet in the 1994 edition of the Quixote, and she had seven poems typed out on two pages, no artwork, just her words. They’re all quite good—I chose this one because it’s my favorite at the moment (but that could change). Oh yeah, she also has a brother named Jeremy Helms. I couldn’t find either of them on a Facebook search…but they probably weren’t Facebook kind of people. If anyone who reads this happens to know what’s become of her, fill me in—or tell her I was thinking about her and admiring her work.
–dm
CHILD AND THE FIREFLY
Found beauty;
tried to shelter it
behind curled fingers,
peeking in,
watch it move
stir with life
glow of spirit,
and hold tightly-
“keeping it safe”-
selfish child,
grasping on and
destroying life with
clenched palms,
mind says
stupid bug, why’d he die,
but you killed it,
only wanted your
eyes to see, thus
it is only powder
in your cupped hands,
wipe them off,
catch another-
learn nothing and grow older,
always shelter beauty,
and forever wipe dirty hands.
–Allyson Helm
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Okay, I am really excited about this feature, the Former Student Writing of the Week, on my website. Most of the things I plan to post here, I confess, I am jealous of, because I wish I had written them. You are also going to understand why my very favorite class to teach was always Creative Writing. I’ve thought a lot about what should be the very first post, and I think my decision is pretty cool. The irony is that I never taught this kid, but his poem has appeared in practically every edition of the Quixote (Samuel Clemens High School literary magazine) that we ever produced. This kid was in the Creative Writing class that my predecessor, Trish Thompson, taught. The way I heard the story, he wrote this poem and then he died, in a car crash or something. I’m not making light of it—I don’t know because I never knew him and it was a long time ago. They decided to use his poem as the first page of the Quixote, and we decided to keep doing that. If anyone who reads this has any knowledge of Brian Grandstaff, please pass it on to me. I am very curious. I hope you enjoy his poem.
–dm