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You are here: Home / The Arts / The end of poetry

The end of poetry

November 30, 2012 by Jessica Leave a Comment

The repetition of the word “work” bothered me today when I observed my daughter at her Montessori daycare. My older son went to Waldorf school, and even if the two approaches share an appreciation for real-world duties and chores, Waldorf education comes from the perspective that childhood is for play, exploration, unfolding. Not for doing things a certain way, as though there is a right way.

Well, at least that’s how I understand it. And I like the Waldorf way, but my daughter seems very comfortable with a Montessori approach. And as far as day cares go, especially day cares 1.5 miles from my home, this place is lovely. And the teachers are loving. They really like my daughter. That goes a long way. So does the fact that they serve healthy snacks and have a nice yard with a garden and a calm environment without blinking and buzzing toys.

But I still didn’t love the “Find your next work,” suggestion from my daughter’s teacher to the children. I walked into the other part of the home to see if anyone was playing in there. And there, in the middle of the room, stood a giant, gorgeous amaryllis in full flower.

It took my breath away.

I thought about the work chart on which each child was assigned a day to water the bulb. I thought about the “work” activities of polishing metal, washing windows. The teachers said that, once my daughter was shown all the work tasks, she began to come into the room and just do them, without asking, without guidance, and with the longest attention span of any of the children. “She is so focused,” said the teacher.

Apparently, work makes my daughter happy. We should all be so lucky.

So many of the jobs in this day care space have to do in some way with creating beauty. Or order. Or order in order to see through to beauty.

As I worked tonight not on a poem for my last day of this blogging month but on a novel, a project I didn’t ask for or expect to undertake, but one that is so clearly necessary for my soul, I thought about work as what you get to do if you’re lucky.

It’s not non-play, it’s not drudgery. It’s what you focus on, what deserves your attention, and what gives back to you in some way — satisfaction, product, or maybe just money.

I have said I love writing poems every day this month and yet I’ve grown tired of it and am ready for it to end. The same thing happens on a day I get to be fully with my kids.

Parenting is work and yields a person. Sometimes we don’t give it our full attention, and we don’t like what we get. But we are privileged to have the opportunity.

It would serve me well to appreciate what I focus on and let it unfold in all its beauty.

The flower in the middle of the room

It requires water and light
to bloom
It does not require you to notice
that it is resplendent
but why would you not?

————

After casting aside my poetry hat for far too long, my NaBloPoMo plan is to write a poem — and to take and post a photo — every day in November, spending less than half an hour on both. The hope is to drill down, to focus, to look for and create beauty.

Previous Posts (I am missing one somewhere, because I have written every day, dammit, but I don’t know what link I’ve missed here!)

Day 1: Eleven One

Day 2: Shoreline

Day 3: Damage

Day 4: On Parenting and Sunrises

Day 5: When will we?

Day 6: Voting Line

Day 7: What I want my children to learn from me

Day 8: Haiku

Day 9: Reminders

Day 10: Routine

Day 11: Lux Esto, in moderation

Day 12: Family Photo Shoot at (nearly) 4o

Day 13: Siblings

Day 14: Point of View

Day 15: Background

Day 16: Greener Grass

Day 17: Journey

Day 18: From two to twelve

Day 19: Baggage

Day 20: Mothering, now and later

Day 21: Expectations

Day 22: Sibling dreams

Day 23: Blank canvas

Day 24: Closing in on December

Day 25: Everything we need to know we forget before kindergarten

Day 26: Nothing but the moon

Day 27: Balance

Day 28: Nourishment

Day 29: Being old is not a crime

Filed Under: The Arts, Uncategorized Tagged With: beauty, childcare, education, family, Montessori, NaBloPoMo, poetry, priorities, Waldorf education, work

Previous Post: « There goes the neighborhood
Next Post: What I learned from a month of poetry »

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Welcome to Crunchy-Chewy Mama, where the wilderness meets the sidewalk. Around here, I do my best to live as healthfully as possible. But compromises abound.

I also publish the resource blog Mindful Healthy Life of Metro DC. To learn about my writing and appearances and for details about the writing, editing and consulting services I offer, visit JessicaClaireHaney.com.

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