Showing posts with label Heart Poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart Poems. Show all posts

Friday, December 1, 2023

Let Your Heart Be Captured

Small White Pine
Photo by Amy LV

Students - Today I encourage you to find something that captures your heart! This small white pine in our front yard captured my heart yesterday, and so I took its picture as it bravely stood in our first snow of the season.

What to do? First, find something to capture your heart. You can do this by going for a little walk anywhere - inside or outside. What matters is the that you look. Look for something to love. Tuck this loved idea into a pocket of your heart, and bring it to your writing place. Then, think about why one of this captured your heart, and write about it. Somehow, today, the idea of quietly sharing breath with a small tree rose to my heart's surface.

Did you notice that I repeat many words in today's poem: snow, silent, quiet, small... Repeated words can provide comfort to readers. I know they do so for me.

Anastasia is the host of this week's Poetry Friday roundup at Small Poems with a poem about a first snow coinciding with her first poem sale. Each Friday, all are invited to share poems, poem books, poetry ideas, and friendship in this open and welcoming poetry community.

I wish you joy...and many heart-capturings...this December!

xo,

Amy

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Know that your comment will only appear after I approve it.
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Friday, September 16, 2016

Hearts, Heart Maps, & a New Georgia Heard Book!



Seeing Into Hearts
by Amy LV




Students - I wrote today's poem thinking about the many maps of many hearts that children and grownups have drawn over the past many years since Georgia Heard first suggested we do so.  As I considered this exercise and my own heart's table of contents, I imagined for a moment what it would be like if we could each just see inside each others' hearts, could know what others were carrying inside.

I got to thinking about my sister-in-law Suzi's e-mail tag line, how very true it is, how kind we might each be if we could only know the battles of others.  Since we cannot, we must trust that they are there.

In writing, one thing leads to another, and we must be open to this leading, this mystery.  Allow yourself to begin anywhere with your writing...and see where you end up.  The journey!  The journey!

I am so happy to welcome Georgia Heard, one of my own mentors, to The Poem Farm today. I was fortunate enough to first hear Georgia speak twenty-two years ago, and she lit a bright candle for poetry in my own heart.

Georgia Heard: Poet, Author, Teacher

I have learned lots from Georgia's books and talks throughout the years, and her new Heinemann book - HEART MAPS: HELPING STUDENTS CREATE AND CRAFT AUTHENTIC WRITING - is out just this week, so it's a perfect time to celebrate hearts!  


Georgia allowed me to ask her a few questions about this new book today, and Heinemann generously offered a set of two of her books: HEART MAPS and AWAKENING THE HEART to one commenter on today's post.  Much gratitude to both!

How did you begin working with heart maps as a way to spark writing?

I was a visiting writer in a school in Phoenix, Arizona and I began a heart-mapping project with third-graders. My goal was to inspire these young poets to write from their hearts – to show them that writing poems can give voice to our truest selves. I wrote about that experience of using heart maps to kindle writing in AWAKENING THE HEART: EXPLORING POETRY IN ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL. Since that time I’ve introduced heart mapping to hundreds of writers of all ages as a way not only to dig deep into ideas for writing poems but also to spark writing in many different genres.

How has your work with heart maps deepened through your years as a writing teacher?

I began with the idea of one heart map: map what you love and what you’ve stored in your heart.  Over time I realized that other kinds of heart maps could provide opportunities for students to discover not only poems but also stories, ideas they want to explore, and what they wonder about. In my new book, I introduce twenty types of heart maps that I hope will inspire writers to bring their passions to the page no matter what genre they’re writing in.

Would you be willing to share one of your own poems that grew from a heart map?

Poets find poems everywhere in the surprising nooks and crannies of the world. I wrote about finding poetry in the world, and in my heart, in this poem “Where I Find Poetry.”

Where I Find Poetry
by Georgia Heard

I open my eyes and what do I see?
Poetry spinning all around me!

In small ants trailing over the ground,
Bulldozing dry earth into cave and mound.
In a hundred grains of ocean sand,
that I cradle in the palm of my hand.

In a lullaby of April rain,
tapping softly on my window pane.

In trees dancing on a windy day,
when sky is wrinkled and elephant gray.

Poetry, poetry! Can be found 
in, out and all around.

But take a look inside your heart,
that’s where a poem truly likes to start.

One of the heart maps in the book is called WHERE I FIND POETRY HEART MAP where writers look closely at the world to find poetry in all of its surprising specificity and then write and draw on their heart maps. Here are two examples of student WHERE I FIND POETRY HEART MAPS:



Thank you again to Georgia...to these two young heart mappers...to Heinemann...to Suzi...and to everybody who stopped by today.

I wish each and every one of you very full hearts this week.  May your own hearts overflow with goodness, and may you have the eyes to see the burning candles in the hearts of others.  Please leave a comment on today's post (by midnight on Thursday, September 22) to be entered in the drawing for a set of two Georgia Heard books - the new HEART MAPS and the classic AWAKENING THE HEART.

Speaking of great giveaways, congratulations to Linda Mitchell of A Word Edgewise, winner of the five copies of YOU JUST WAIT from last week's post. Linda - please just send me a note to amy@amylv.com with your snail mail address, and the books will wing their way to you.  Thank you again to Janet and Sylvia of Pomelo Books for the generous gift!

In my other space, I am tickled to welcome fellow Poetry Friday blogger, writer, and teacher Kiesha Shepard to Sharing Our Notebooks.  Stop on over there, peek into her notebooks, leave a comment...and maybe, just maybe, thank you to Kiesha, you might win a Mary Oliver poetry book.

Today's Poetry Friday roundup is over with Michelle at Today's Little Ditty.  Enjoy all of the poetry joy all week long!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Friday, February 13, 2015

Hearts - A Little List Poem of Love


Sock Heart
Photo by Amy LV


This poem 
is trying
to be
in a book.
xo, Amy




Students - Happy almost Valentine's Day! We call our little home Heart Rock Farm because we love finding rocks shaped like hearts in our creek.  Many people like to find hearts in the world: in petals, in clouds, in patterns on our pets' fur.  We can find hearts and we can make them ourselves.  Tomorrow is Valentine's Day. Don't you think it would be fun to leave little secret hearts around your home for the ones you love?  (Warning: the sock heart is tricky.  It took me a while!)

Today's poem is a list poem.  Each line is simply one more way to bring hearts into our lives.  Then, as with most list poems, you hear that change, that twist, that surprise at the end.  If I had simply ended the poem with another way to make a heart, the reader might not realize that the poem was finished. However, by breaking the pattern at the end of the poem, I make this clear.

Here are two more Valentine poems from The Poem Farm archives: "February 14" from 2011 and "February 13" from 2012.

In honor of Valentine's Day and love, today I would like to offer a recommendation and a giveaway of LEND A HAND: POEMS ABOUT GIVING written by John Frank and illustrated by London Ladd.  This is a book that reminds me of the many ways people are kind, and of the many ways I can be kind too.  You can read the Kirkus review of this wonderful book here.  I will draw one name from the commenters on today's post next Thursday, February 19 to be announced next Poetry Friday.  This person will win a copy of LEND A HAND.


Teachers and Other Adults - If you enjoy poetry and poetry books and poetry quotes and news, please know that I keep a Poem Farm Facebook Page as well. Over there, I share news about books and awards and poetry goodness that comes my way during the week.

This month over at my other online home, Sharing Our Notebooks, I could not more pleased to host Olga McLaren and her Grandmother Journals.  Please visit and comment on Olga's post to be entered into a book giveaway.

Cathy is hosting today's sweet Poetry Friday party over at Merely Day By Day. Pack up your heart, and head on over to join the roundup.

I wish you many surprise hearts today, tomorrow, all week long!

Please share a comment below if you wish.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Kindness: In Word and In Art (Poetry Peek!)

Boy with Healthy Heart Garden
by Amy LV




Students - Today's poem was inspired by Christine Bravo, a mom who went to her daughter's class to share a bit about kindness and to make a kindness craft. Her project made me think more about kindness and about how in order to be kind to others, we have to be kind to ourselves by thinking good thoughts and growing goodness inside of us.  In a busy life, this is not something that just happens.  I find that quiet time and writing time help me work on on the weedy parts of my heart.  When I am too busy, I can forget all about being kind, and this is not who I want to be.  Quiet heart gardening time is time well spent.

Today's poem is free verse; there is no pattern or rhyme scheme.  I hope to become better at writing these types of poems, and so you may be seeing more of them here.  One way to revise such a poem is by reading it out loud again and again to see if it feels right in your mouth and sounds good in the air.  I use SoundCloud (free) to help too, by recording and listening. 

One way to honor another person is to write a poem for him or her.  If you close your eyes and think about people who have done you large and small kindnesses, you will have many warm things to write about!

Today I am happy to welcome Christine Bravo as she shares a Poetry Peek with us.  For many people, including me, poetry helps us find our hearts, our beliefs, our understandings about people, life, and love. You can imagine how tickled I was, then, when Christine wrote to share how she and Melissa Allen brought kindness, poetry, and art to a first grade class.  Thank you, Christine, for making the time to share it with all of us, in word and picture.

Kindness Banners
Photo by Christine Bravo

My daughter attends first grade at the Southwest Charter School, a K-8 public charter school in Portland, Oregon with an emphasis on learning outside of the classroom by observing the natural world and becoming involved in the local community.  The school welcomes parent volunteers to contribute in the classroom, which I love.  It’s wonderful to be a part of the classroom community and to get to know the children and their families in this setting.

One of my favorite things to do in the classroom is to share stories, poems, and art projects.  In honor of Random Acts of Kindness Week (February 10 - February 16), a fellow parent* led a group of teachers and parent volunteers in creating kindness banners in five classrooms. Each child was asked to draw and paint words and pictures that they felt inspired kindness in themselves and in others.

Treat Others...
Photo by Christine Bravo

I knew that I wanted to introduce this beautiful art project with a poem, and I was thrilled to stumble upon The Poem Farm and the perfect poem to accompany our classroom project!  


From February 22, 2012 (revised a wee bit)



Amy’s poem, “Kindness” communicates, with a straightforward power and simplicity, that a simple act of kindness can inspire kindness in others.  It’s a beautiful message for any age.

Kindness Banner Close Up
Photo by Christine Bravo

Thank you, Amy, for this little gem!   The children’s colorful kindness banners now adorn the main hallway of our school and are such a wonderful reminder to all of us that acts of kindness, no matter how small, can have a positive and lasting impact on all of us.

Kindness Hallway
Photo by Christine Bravo

*Parent Melissa Allen is an artist, author, and blogger who generously shares her artistic talents and gifts with our school community and on her blog – Green Owl Art.  Click here for her kindness banner tutorial.

Kindness Banners Wave
Photo by Christine Bravo

Much gratitude to Christine, Melissa, and the first graders of Southwest Charter School for joining us here and spreading this beauty today.  I invite anyone who has a spark of Poetry Peek to share to simply get in touch, and I would love to host you here at The Poem Farm!

Please share a comment below if you wish.