Welcome Back!
AGENDA:
1. Review Course Criteria/Morning Reflection: Suli Breaks
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-eVF_G_p-Y
Quickwrite: Your thoughts and post a comment
2. Read Why I Write and Write Your Own Why I Write Letter to Your Self
Date: October 10, 2011
Summary:
 Prize-winning international poet, translator, and essayist Jane 
Hirshfield's poetry speaks to the central issues of human existence: 
desire and loss, impermanence and beauty, and the many dimensions of our
 connection with others. She tells NWP why she writes.
Why do I write?
I
 write because to write a new sentence, let alone a new poem, is to 
cross the threshold into both a larger existence and a profound mystery.
 A thought was not there, then it is. An image, a story, an idea about 
what it is to be human, did not exist, then it does. With every new 
poem, an emotion new to the heart, to the world, speaks itself into 
being. Any new metaphor is a telescope, a canoe in rapids, an MRI 
machine. And like that MRI machine, sometimes its looking is accompanied
 by an awful banging. To write can be frightening as well as magnetic. 
You don't know what will happen when you throw open your windows and 
doors.
To write a new sentence, let alone a new poem, is to cross the threshold into both a larger existence and a profound mystery.
Why
 write? You might as well ask a fish, why swim, ask an apple tree, why 
make apples? The eye wants to look, the ear wants to hear, the heart 
wants to feel more than it thought it could bear...
The
 writer, when she or he cannot write, is a person outside the gates of 
her own being. Not long ago, I stood like that for months, disbarred 
from myself. Then, one sentence arrived; another. And I? I was a woman 
in love. For that also is what writing is. Every sentence that comes for
 a writer when actually writing—however imperfect, however 
inadequate—every sentence is a love poem to this world and to our good 
luck at being here, alive, in it.
RELATED ARTICLES ON NWP.ORG
- Why I Write: A Celebration of the National Day on Writing
- Poet Laureate Kay Ryan: Poet as Teacher, Teacher as Poet
- Billy Collins: A `Reader's Poet' Reads at NWP's 2009 Annual Meeting
4. Natalie Goldberg's "Test 1"
HW: For Wednesday, read to pg. 48 in MUDBOUND!

