#21 Forest Park

This year, I'm going to spend 31 days writing about places.  In my profession, I talk about place-based writing quite a bit.  I frame it like this when I share:  We believe in the power of including spaces in the process of writing.  Place-based writing is the concept that the place where we write may influence our thinking, impacting the writer’s perspective, engagement, ownership, and/or purpose.  I'm really jazzed up, thinking about where I will spend time as a writer in 31 different spaces this month and how I can use each post to share a little slice of my day. 

Today,  Forest Park.

This morning, we're making a big weekend breakfast and then taking the dogs to Forest Park.  This park is an absolute gem in St. Louis, and the weather is finally gorgeous.  This is kind of a cheat, but I wrote this beautiful poem in Forest Park (which contains the St. Louis Zoo) a while back.  I believe it is a lovely example of place-based writing, so I'm sharing with today's post.

The Nature of Writing

a Grey-winged Trumpeter saw me today
through a metal mesh weaved cage
He saw me
fantasizing mutual respect
only a moment of silent observation
while the White-headed Buffalo Weaver floated from cage end to cage end

I watched a Galapagos Tortoise
devour a cantaloupe 
including the rind
His pudgy tongue seemingly cumbersome
a family nearby lounged on the enclosure’s edge throwing phrases 
“made in the shade”
#happy

the African Sacred Ibis;  a pillar in River’s Edge
a name deserving of veneration and wonder
yet, no gawkers 
reading tells me His story
of magical arts and writing systems
Thoth: Ibis-headed man, judging the dead
yet, he doesn’t see me

words begin to form in my head
I was surrounded by grandiose
that only reminded me of the small replicas I keep
the Capybara: my guinea pig
the wall of bamboo: my tiny jar on the record shelf
the Bush Dog: my fuzzy Luna spooning me in the dark cracks of night
the same plant that I’m certain Lowe’s has told me is suited for a pot and minimal sunlight

I find a quiet corner to write
in the shadow of wings and a second skin of Missouri humidity
and contemplate
“Just when is a line crossed?”
until a woman with the voice of Harvey Fierstein asks about the bathroom

and the moment is lost…

Taken at Forest Park during some dog walking adventure


Comments

  1. One writing project I'd really like to tackle is writing in a different place every day for 31 days (even if I need 31 weeks to do it with one outing a week.) The details and rich description in your poem make me feel like I'm right there!

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  2. I love the connections you make between what you see and what you keep at home. Thanks for sharing this place with us.

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