Poetry Challenge #81-I’m Feeling List-Less

According to Psychology Today, Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s “Let me count the ways”…wasn’t just pie-eyed, moonstruck rambling. It was good old-fashioned self care.

Make it stand out

According to Robert R. Kraft, PH.D in

“10 Benefits of Making a List

Lists “help memory and focus our daily lives.”

HOW?????

1. Lists document what we ordinarily forget.
2. Help us remember across context.
3. Act as a retrieval cue for other items.
4. The linear layout of a list is friendly to our serial processing.
...and the list goes on!
— "10 Benefits to Making a List" by Robert R Kraft, PH.D.

List from Life Without Pants blog—add it to your list!

Poetry Challenge #81

Make a List

List making is not a new concept in organizing, in procrastinating, or in poetry.

Soooooo many poems are list poems: The Bill of Rights, Barrett’s “Sonnet 43,” Billy Collins’ “Bread and Knife,” Shel Silverstein’s “Eighteen Flavors” to name a few.

In a list poem, you can list things you like (animals, colors, kinds of cars, playground games), signs of a season, tasks you have to do, items in a category, or what you’re going to do today.

Today, try you pen at a list poem.

Begin with your plans for the day today. Or start with a list inspired by one of the ideas above.

Once you have your list, play with the order.

Choose better words that sound the same (maybe rhyme, or use alliteration).

Can you make the poem sound like it has an ending? 

Set the timer for 7 minutes.

Start writing!

Don’t think about it too much; just do it.

*Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 3200-ish days ago. We now take turns creating our own prompts to share with you. If you join us in the 7-Minute Poetry Challenge let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

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Poetry Challenge #80-Scribbles