My decision-making process could not be more cliche
March 25, 2008 4:16 pm PoetryDespite having turned down the opportunity to do it ten days ago, I found myself thinking about NaPoWriMo all morning.
I am now resorting to the pros and cons list.
Pros
- I have produced only three new poems since January, and two of them were stinkers. One was so bad I could not show it to anyone in draft form.
- My grad school advisor has challenged me to write three new poems for my next packet, which I will send in April 2.
- Emma wanted to revive our awesome, secret NaPo blog, which was great fun to work on because we had awesome characters.
- Clearly the exercise works– almost half of my graduate thesis will be poems that were first drafted in a poem-a-day grind.
- Our October grind group has grown and grown, and though people come and go in 29-to-31-day increments, I expect that April will have a healthy number of poem-a-day-ers.
Cons
- I’ve struggled to keep up with commitments the last couple months, and with various trips to doctors and some sick days, I’ve been having what I would consider my roughest semester thus far in grad school.
- Ladybug hates it when I could be spending time with her and I’m obsessing over a deadline for a poem that I know won’t be very good anyhow.
- I can’t get too focused on new work while I have so much revision to be done for my thesis. And the poems which need the most revision are ones that came from the October and November grinds.

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March 25th, 2008 at 7:20 pm
I am similarly pondering the WriMoOsity. I had just about decided there was no way I could ever do it … and yet. And yet.
What if we made a pact that it was absolutely okay if we broke out the monostitch, the couplet, or the haiku from time to time? Because those are, as your publishing company proves, important forms. And let’s not forget one-word poems, like “tundra.” Or what if we made a pact that it was absolutely okay if we occasionally did a two-line collaborative poem? Nice Hat, Thanks.
Plus, since our blog is SECRET, it’s totally fine.
Come to the restaurant, Ross. The salad bar awaits.
You can use that as your first poem.