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Vivé Griffith

Writer | Educator | Narrative Medicine Facilitator

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"Coping" by Audre Lorde

It rained and rained and rained. And I chose this poem to capture it and for the little boys wondering at all the water.

“A young boy
in my garden
is bailing out water
from his flower patch”
— Quote Source
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Sunday 05.23.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Da Capo" by Jane Hirshfield

There comes a time at the end of every academic year when the body and spirit are spent and it is time to begin again. And to make soup. That time for me was this week, and this is the poem I turned to.

“Returning home, slice carrots, onions, celery.
Glaze them in oil before adding
the lentils, water, and herbs.”
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Sunday 05.16.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"To Paula in Late Spring" by W.S. Merwin

Does it get any more beautiful than this?

“Let me imagine that we will come again
when we want to and it will be spring”
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Sunday 05.09.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"The Good Life" by Tracy K. Smith

It was the week we had our first dinner guests, the world slowly opening up post vaccination. They were the same friends we had our final dinner party with just before the pandemic lockdown. A coming full circle. A version of the good life. And it made me think of another, earlier good life, one like the one described in this poem.

“...and it makes me nostalgic
For the years I lived on coffee and bread
Hungry all the time”
— Quote Source
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Sunday 05.02.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"I Stop Writing the Poem" by Tess Gallagher

A postcard with this poem on it has been tacked above. my spice shelf for more years than I can count. I love it for its simplicity and for its quiet celebration of womanhood and for how gently it contains deep loss. I came to know Tess Gallagher’s work through my love of her husband Raymond Carver’s work. When I was 26 years old I sent Gallagher a postcard expressing my love for Carver’s work and how it encouraged me to be a writer. And to my amazement, she wrote back. Among what she said was “Brava.”

“Nothing can stop
our tenderness”
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Sunday 04.25.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"A Small, Needful Fact" by Ross Gay

William Carlos Williams famously wrote, “It is difficult / to get the news from poems / yet men die miserably every day / for lack / of what is found there.” As I choose a poem each week for the box, I consider where poetry intersects with the news, where the concerns of the immediate moment meet the perpetual concerns of the human condition.

A verdict may come this week in the trial of the police officer who killed George Floyd with a knee to his neck. More black men have been killed by police since the trial began. Demonstrators against policy brutality take to the streets across the country. There remains so much work to be done. And there is this tender and devastating poem by Ross Gay to offer as reminder.

“...like making it easier
for us to breathe”
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Sunday 04.18.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"A Small Moment" by Cornelius Eady

How often does a poem include the very date of the week it will be posted? And how, when you find one, do you resist? On the day I planned to post this, into my Facebook feed came a request for cheesy bread in Austin. I sent the post writer a suggestion for a Brazilian cheese bread sold at the farmer’s market. And I sent them this poem.

“It’s
April 14th. Spring, with five to ten
Degrees to go.”
Spring spring spring spring spring

Spring spring spring spring spring

Sunday 04.11.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"April" by Linda Pastan

The spring poems continue, as the garden greens and flowers pop up from plants that not long ago were brown and dejected. Which, of course, is why we love spring.

“I know what time and weather
will do to every leaf.”
Only, sadly, I forgot to snap the pic this week, so the poem sits in the dim light of my desk.

Only, sadly, I forgot to snap the pic this week, so the poem sits in the dim light of my desk.

Sunday 04.04.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Instructions on Not Giving Up" by Ada Limón

For several Sundays in a row, I’ve pulled this poem from its folder, itchy to put in the box. Bold and colorful and greedy with life, it’s everything spring offers. Little more than a month ago, yards across Austin were devastated by the worst winter storm in many decades. It seemed impossible that the plants would sprout again. But so much has seemed impossible in these months of pandemic and strife. Limón’s poem doesn’t deny “the mess of us, the hurt, the empty,” but it doesn’t deny the reasons to celebrate amid it all either—beginning with new leaves.

“...it’s the greening of the trees
that really gets to me”
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Sunday 03.28.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"A Purification" by Wendell Berry

As I’ve gathered and saved poems to someday tuck into the poetry box, I’ve noticed it may be spring that elicits the most poems, or at least the most poems that remind us to revel and praise. For the start of this Spring 2021, I turn to Wendell Berry. A friend told me about making a fire to burn the old as spring arrived. Berry offers the parallel option: to dig a trench. Either way, our gazes turn toward what’s new.

“And then upon the gathered refuse
of mind and body, I close the trench,
folding shut again the dark”
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Sunday 03.21.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Ode to Drinking Water from My Hands" by Ross Gay

Truly, I just love Ross Gay. I love his sense of celebration and wonder. I love his connection to the world of gardens. I love how accessible his poems are while also saying important things. I love how wholeheartedly he laughs in every interview I hear with him. If space allowed, I would post his odes, one by one, for everyone to read. I began with this one.

“drifting while I drink
and drink and
my grandfather waters the flowers”
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Sunday 03.14.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Coconut" by Paul Hostovsky

I came across this charming poem somewhere unexpected and put it in the poetry box to remind us of joy. And I forgot to take its picture. The keys are from Courtney, who often knows just what a poem needs to accompany it.

“and what on earth
and where on earth
and this was happiness”
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Sunday 03.07.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"In Blackwater Woods" by Mary Oliver

To paraphrase a quote from elsewhere, Mary Oliver is always a good idea. As a difficult season moved toward its end, and I faced the ravaged remains of my garden after the freeze, I was drawn to this poem again. I read it at my father-in-law’s memorial service years ago, and I turn to it when I need to remember that letting things go is an essential part of being human.

“To live in this world
you must be able
to do three things:”
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Sunday 02.28.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Shoulders" by Naomi Shihab Nye

The week that passed between Valentine’s Day and today was one of the more dramatic of my life, as Austin faced five back-to-back winter storms and the longest prolonged freeze in its history. There are many lessons from this time, but one of them is that we need each other. Neighbors, friends, strangers. The government may have failed us this week, but we didn’t fail each other. We held each other up. This poem entered the box with gratitude for my community, those on my street and those farther away.

“He hears the hum of a boy’s dream
deep inside him.”
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Sunday 02.21.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"What I Didn't Know Before" by Ada Límon

A few years ago, my friend Zoë undertook a little guerrilla poetry project during National Poetry Month, leaving small copies of poems on tables and seats as she went about her day. This remarkable and surprising love poem by Ada Límon was one of them. I’ve held it to post on Valentine’s Day. Here in Austin we are amid the coldest cold snap in 30 years, the plants that were just starting to bloom bent and frozen, our yard a jumble of covers and blankets to try to salvage what we can. I thought perhaps I should make this week’s selection about winter instead of love, but I came back to this poem and placed it in the box edged with frost. Happy Valentine’s Day.

[Post updated 2/21 with extra pics of the poem in the weather. We are fine now. We are grateful.]

“A horse gives way
to another horse and suddenly there are
two horses, just like that.”
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Sunday 02.14.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Small Kindnesses" by Danusha Laméris

I don’t know much of Danusha Laméris’s work, but this poem keeps appearing along my path and I love it more each time I encounter it. It’s a poem so filled with pre-pandemic images that speaks so beautifully to what we need—and miss—in these pandemic times. Copies of it disappeared from the box quickly.

“We want to be handed our cup of coffee hot,
and to say thank you to the person handing it. To smile
at them and for them to smile back.”

Side note: I like how the poem ends with, “I like your hat” and the photo captured me in my red hat reflected in the box’s plexiglass.

Sunday 02.07.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"You Reading This, Be Ready" by William Stafford

This is the poem I read at the start of things and at the end of things. I first encountered it when I friend sent it to me as a postcard when Stafford’s collected poems, The Way It Is, was published. I still have the postcard, but I’ve now dropped the poem into syllabi and read it at the close of a yoga class. When a new Free Minds group gathered this January, the first free write I gave them for my creative writing unit began with the prompt, “Starting here, what do you want to remember?”

“Will you ever bring a better gift for the world
than the breathing respect you carry
wherever you go, right now?”
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Sunday 01.31.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Those Winter Sundays" by Robert Hayden

Imagine my dismay when I went to catch up on the blog and realized I let an entire week go by with Robert Hayden in the poetry box without taking a picture of it. And when I love “Those Winter Sundays” perhaps more than any other poem. I never skip it when I teach poetry. Its music is always with me. And the same week that I chose to put it in the poetry box, Theater of War offered an event focused on the poem, including a reading by then President-elect Joe Biden. I missed it. Alas. January was full of missed opportunities, but even still we are moving toward the light.

“What did I know, what did I know
of love’s austere and lonely offices?”
Sunday 01.24.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"The Hill We Climb" by Amanda Gorman

What can I say that hasn’t been said? She was glorious. She brought youthfulness and lyricism and musicality to the inauguration. She made people fall in love with poetry. We’ve waited a long time for her. And knowing she was coming, I held off until Wednesday with a new poem, and she delivered.

“For there is always light,
if only we’re brave enough to see it.
If only we’re brave enough to be it.”
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Wednesday 01.20.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 

"Try to Praise the Mutilated World" by Adam Zagajewski

It is the week after the attack at the U.S. Capitol, and many of us left 2020 hoping for better only to discover that 2021 had its own challenges in store. This poem, illustrated by Courtney Tucker, came to mind.

“Remember the moments when we were together
in a white room and the curtain fluttered.”
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Saturday 01.09.21
Posted by Vive Griffith
 
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