Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Birthday Wish

My birthday is coming up in about 10 days and I know what I want - a Royal manual typewriter!

The one I show here is a vintage one, but I want a new one - yes - Royal actually still makes one model of a manual typewriter.

My husband says, "why would you want something like that?" And it's true that anything I write on it would have to be taken to the computer and transcribed.

But I'm intrigued with the notion of "slow writing." Not producing things as fast as you can, but taking time to think about them. I already write a lot by hand - I just think it would be fun to go back to my roots when I first started writing seriously and manuals were the standard issue (yes, I'm that old - although I did have a little portable electric typewriter I took away to college.)

I also collect old typewriters, none of which would be in working order without some reconditioning. Why not just start with a brand new one? It even comes with a case. And I could pretend I was one of the writers I so admire from the past who packed up their typewriter and went off to war, or off to California, or off to a remote cabin somewhere and that little black typewriter in a case was the portal to magical things!

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

I want to Write about Yosemite

We've made our plans for the summer! We're heading out west again and this time going all the way to the west coast to visit Yosemite, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. After taking a break from traveling in the west all last year to give me a chance to build up my strength after two knee surgeries, it will feel wonderful to be back out there again among the mountains, canyons and waters of the National Parks.
I'm winding up the last of my essays and poems about traveling in the west and will include pieces about our trip this year to California.
 
Can't hardly wait - and it's coming along faster than I thought it would.
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

A Birthday Remembrance


A Birthday Remembrance

(Written April 8, 2013 in honor of my mother)
By Denise Kalin Tackett

 I visited two graveyards today.
I was thinking of the women in my family.
Theresa Ann, born March, 1950 and died at two weeks.
Delores May, born April, 1931 and died at seventy-nine.
Mother and daughter buried in separate graveyards,
three miles apart.

There are three women in my immediate family –
a devoted mother I knew for fifty-seven years,
a beloved daughter at the height of her youth
and determined to move away,
and an older sister I didn’t know at all.

Today, I think of the possibilities that are not to be:

Growing up with a sister to help blunt the blow
of all the masculinity of four brothers,
to pave the way with our parents,
to shoulder some of the weight of family.

A mother who lived to very old age,
a confidant, an advisor, a friend,
someone I could take care of,
who would finally let down her guard,
and let me be the strong one.

Spending days with my daughter,
fully grown and finally educated,
living nearby with her own family.
Friends at last, without having to be a role model,
but a friend who knows her better than any living soul.

If none of this can happen,
I must think on the future that could be.

I want to spend my remaining years,
playing the role of quirky, lovable family matriarch.
With a heart that holds both aching memories
and the joyful potential for the future.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Even Day Poems

 
 
 
For the last several years I have chosen one month out of the year to concentrate on writing poetry. This year I have chosen April, which is National Poetry Month, and will write a poem on every "even" day. I'm not a trained or educated poet and, in fact, one of the reasons I think I enjoy poetry is because I don't know enough about it to know how bad I am!
 
I ordered the poetry literary magazine shown above for my NightWriters group, courtesy of the Poetry Foundation, to give us some inspiration.  We are also going to have a Michigan poet, Alison Swan, come to the Box Factory to do a four-part (once a season) "poetry intensive" workshop. The first one is in May. All this should help me ready my own poems on the National Parks, which I plan to self-publish this fall. 
 
I enjoy doing "even day" poems no matter how bad they are because it makes me produce work on a regular basis and makes me pay accute attention to what's going on around me, so I'll have something to write about. Now, true, I usually end up writing about the weather and one or two poems about my cats, but at least I'm paying attention and not rushing through my days trying to get a long and endless list of tasks done that includes everything except being creative.