As summer winds down and we begin
the month of September, autumn migrations – heralds of cooler
air and bright colors – begin in my corner of the world. Many years ago, back
in the days when I was active in the haiku community, I wrote a poem about
migrating geese, which later became the title poem of a haiku collection. The
poem was honored with a first place Henderson Award in 1984, and the book won
the first place Merit Book Award for 1987.
migrating geese –
once there was so much
to say
I haven’t thought of the poem or the
book in years, but I did yesterday when a flock of geese, apparently in a
pattern of early migration, flew above my back yard just as dusk began to
settle. I thought then about that little poem and how it linked the seasonal
migration of geese (nature) to the way a relationship had changed (human nature). It occurred to me that there are times in all of our lives when we find
ourselves in a process of migration (not merely physical migration, but
movement from one spiritual place to another, from one emotional place to
another, from one relationship to another).
I hope the idea of “migration” will capture your imagination this week. Think about it: birds and animals migrate; people migrate; migration
is a way of marking time; migration is about journeying; migration is about
change; migration is a state of mind. This week, let's write about a personal migration – your movement from one place to another
(emotional, spiritual, actual).
1. Begin with a freewrite and
then look over what you’ve written to see which ideas you can work into a
poem.
2. Try to incorporate some nature imagery.
3. Compare yourself (or something in your life) to a flock of migrating birds or to a single migrating bird.
4. Write a persona poem from the perspective of a migrating bird, butterfly, or animal.
5. Try using “What The Wild Geese Know" as a title or theme.
6. If you like haiku, try
writing a migration haiku. Click Here for Info on Haiku.
7. If writing about a personal “migration” doesn’t come together for you, write about a bird, butterfly, or animal migration. (You might even try an immigration poem.)
Most importantly, think about the rich potential in migration for metaphor, imagery, and figurative language; go beyond the obvious; give your poem room to discover what lies behind its conscious subject – "migrate" beyond your poem's surface content to create layers of meaning!
Examples: