But this week, the poetry muse has come to visit. On Tuesday, I scheduled a follow up mammogram and ultrasound for Friday, March 29. I thought, hmm, Good Friday and a mammogram--all sorts of mortification of the flesh interesting juxtapositions there. Sure, there's the potential for sacrilegious connections, which makes the possible poem even more tempting.
This morning, I had a line come to me as I tried to thread my needle: "She tried to starve herself slender, like a needle." I looked up the Margaret Atwood poem to make sure I wasn't stealing: "you fit into me / like a hook into an eye / a fish hook / an open eye." Nope, that's not the direction I was heading. I envy the brevity of Atwood's poem--something to keep in mind for future experiments.
Let me record some ideas.
Other ways of writing that line:
Like a needle, she tried to starve herself--nope.
She tried to starve herself slender as a needle. I like this version best.
As I sew today, let me be thinking about where this poem wants to go:
--There's an eye on one end of the needle, a sharp point on the other.
--The needle observes. From the vantage point of the sewing basket, the needle sees all.
--If you drop a needle, you may not be able to see it. But it can still jab you, and maybe leave you hobbled.
--I had a favorite needle once. I used it to make several quilts. It had a slight bow--and eventually, it broke in two.
--You can get a variety of needles in a pack that costs just a few dollars. If you're lucky, one will have an eye you can thread without your magnifying glass.
--How can something so slender come in a variety of thicknesses?
--Threading the needle--getting the right balance, especially in a difficult situation.
--If a needle goes dull, it can be sharpened. Most people don't know that. Most people don't have a favorite needle that they are desperate to save.
--The needle keeps company with a variety of _____, but it keeps its own counsel. Colorful fabrics, colorful thread, the needle silver and solitary.
--Even if you sweep the floor, you might miss the needle (miss in the meaning of not finding it, miss in the meaning of longing for it).
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