Guest Blogger: Poet Sage Cohen
April 3, 2009

Sage Cohen's New Book (Writer's Digest) April 20, 2009
Writing The Life Poetic:
An Invitation to Read and Write Poetry
.
by Sage Cohen
.
I’m so proud to introduce my first guest blogger Sage Cohen. Below you’ll find a teaser from Sage’s newest book; questions and answers about writing poetry and about her book; a writing exercise and a poem by Sage. I hope you enjoy this blog entry and Sage’s visit here as much as I will. Settle in with your coffee or tea, and read what Sage has to say…..
.
.
Excerpt from Writing the Life Poetic
.
Poetry does not survive the suburbs we make of our minds. It withers in the cage of constant accomplishment. Poetry needs the wilderness of solitude to call itself up out of the verdant ashes. It needs the darkness and the light to recognize its wholeness. How have you colonized your creativity and domesticated that wildflower of your imagination that once billowed in the wind? How will you recover your lost wilderness? No matter what work you do, what relationship you have, or how busy you are, inch-by-inch it can be done. You can have your suburbs and your wilderness. Your poetry depends on it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Q&A with Sage Cohen, Author of
Writing the Life Poetic:
An Invitation to Read and Write Poetry
a new book from Writer’s Digest Books
.
How does poetry make the world a better place to live?
.
I think poetry fills the gap left by the so-called objective truth that dominates our media, science and legislation. Many of us want to comprehend and communicate the complexity of human experience on a deeper, more soulful level. Poetry gives us a shared language that is more subtle, more human, and—at its best—more universally “true” than we are capable of achieving with just the facts.
.
How has integrating the reading and writing of poetry into your life impacted you?
.
I will risk sounding melodramatic in saying that poetry saved my life. I stumbled into a writing practice at an extremely vulnerable time in my early teenage years. Poetry gave me then, as it does today, a way of giving voice to feelings and ideas that felt too risky and complicated to speak out loud. There was a kind of alchemy in writing through such vulnerabilities…by welcoming them in language, I was able to transform the energies of fear, pain and loneliness into a kind of friendly camaraderie with myself. In a way, I wrote myself into a trust that I belonged in this world.
.
Do people need an advanced degree in creative writing in order to write poetry?
.
Absolutely not! Sure, poetry has its place in the classroom; but no one needs an advanced degree in creative writing to reap its rewards. What most people need is simply a proper initiation. I wrote Writing the Life Poetic to offer such an initiation. My goal was that everyone who reads it come away with a sense of how to tune into the world around them through a poetic lens. Once this way of perceiving is awakened, anything is possible!
.
Why did you write Writing the Life Poetic?
.
While working with writers for the past fifteen years, I have observed that even the most creative people fear that they don’t have what it takes to write and read poetry. I wrote Writing the Life Poetic to put poetry back into the hands of the people––not because they are aspiring to become the poet laureate of the United States––but because poetry is one of the great pleasures in life.”
.
Who is Writing the Life Poetic written for?
.
Practicing poets, aspiring poets, and teachers of writing in a variety of settings can use Writing the Life Poetic to write, read, and enjoy poems; it works equally well as a self-study companion or as a classroom guide. Both practical and inspirational, it will leave readers with a greater appreciation for the poetry they read and a greater sense of possibility for the poetry they write.
.
What sets Writing the Life Poetic apart from other poetry how-to books?
.
The craft of poetry has been well documented in a variety of books that offer a valuable service to serious writers striving to become competent poets. Now it’s time for a poetry book that does more than lecture from the front of the classroom. Writing the Life Poetic was written to be a contagiously fun adventure in writing. Through an entertaining mix of insights, exercises, expert guidance and encouragement, I hope to get readers excited about the possibilities of poetry––and engaged in a creative practice. Leonard Cohen says: “Poetry is just the evidence of life. If your life is burning well, poetry is just the ash.” My goal is that Writing the Life Poetic be the flame fueling the life well lived.
.
Is it true that your book and your baby were conceived and birthed at the same time? What did you learn from this process?
.
Yes, I often refer to my son Theo and Writing the Life Poetic as my multi-media twins! I found out I was pregnant with Theo about two months into the writing of the book and I was making final edits to the book in layout two weeks after he was born. It was fascinating to have two of the most potent creative processes I’ve ever experienced happening in tandem. What I learned is a great respect for the birthing journey; it is one that has completely rewritten me along the way.
.
I am writing a monthly column this year for The Writer Mama zine titled “The Articulate Conception” which chronicles my journey of becoming an author and a mom. Through the course of ten essays, I am exploring this double-whammy birth trajectory–from the twinkle in my eye to the bags under my eyes. The first column is available here:
.
http://thewritermama.wordpress.com/2009/01/20/the-articulate-conception-planting-seeds/
.
What makes a poem a poem?
.
This is one of my favorite questions! I’ve answered it in my book, but it’s a question that I’m answering anew every day. And that’s what I love about poetry. It’s a realm where invention is not limited entirely by definition; there is room enough for the endless possibilities of the human. Every time we try to draw a line around what a poem is, something spills over into the next frame, shifting the point of view and demanding new names: olive, token, flax, daffodil. A poem is all of these, or none of them, depending on the quality of light and how the blade in the next room stirs the night.
.
What do you think people’s greatest misperceptions are about poetry?
.
I think the three greatest stereotypes about the writing of poetry are:
.
1. That one has to be a starving artist or deeply miserable to write great poetry.
2. That reading and writing poetry are available only to an elite inner circle that shares secret, insider knowledge about the making of poems.
3. That poetry does not fund prosperity.
.
I hope very much that Writing the Life Poetic helps offer alternatives to some of these attitudes and perceptions.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Writing Prompt from Writing the Life Poetic Chapter 3,
“Start Where You Are“
.
Even the lives that appear ordinary on the surface are replete with unnamed wildernesses waiting to be unearthed. When you pay close attention and give voice to what you discover in your everyday life, you are inviting the untapped mysteries of your experience to the surface. The more you write, the more you will come to trust that your ordinary life is extraordinary enough to serve up an endless supply of poems. The following exercise can help you tap the poetry in your daily life.
Choose an activity you do regularly that is the absolutely most routine, unremarkable event of your day. (Mine would be doing dishes.) Write down the answers to these questions about it:
- Notice the physical feeling of this routine. Which muscles are involved? What kind of rhythm or tempo does it involve? Are you cold or hot, energized or depleted?
- How do you feel emotionally when you do this?
- What are the smells associated with this activity? (I use lavender soap, so my sink smells like a French garden.)
- What do you see when engaged in this routine? (I look out at the butterfly bush and magnolia tree in my back yard. I enjoy watching meals erased from plates and glasses.)
- Pay close attention to what you are thinking. What images and ideas bubble up as you do this activity?
- How does the time of day or weather or location (indoors vs. outdoors, your home vs. someone else’s home, summer breeze or snowfall) affect your experience?
Pick up a word, phrase or sentence you’ve written that feels most alive and follow it into the possibility of poem.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Finally, Sage shares a poem with us….
.
Leaving Buckhorn Springs
By Sage Cohen
The farmland was an orchestra,
its ochres holding a baritone below
the soft bells of farmhouses,
altos of shadowed hills,
violins grieving the late
afternoon light. When I saw
the horses, glazed over with rain,
the battered old motorcycle parked
beside them, I pulled my car over
and silenced it on the gravel.
The rain and I were diamonds
displacing appetite with mystery.
As the horses turned toward me,
the centuries poured through
their powerful necks and my body
was the drum receiving the pulse
of history. The skin between me
and the world became the rhythm
of the rain keeping time with the sky
and into the music walked
the smallest of the horses. We stood
for many measures considering
each other, his eyes the quarter notes
of my heart’s staccato. This symphony
of privacy and silence: this wildness
that the fence between us could not divide.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About Sage Cohen
.
Good morning, Kerri!
I was just browsing through the poetry section and,
thought this looked interesting, so in I stopped.
I would rather not call myself a poet at this time.
Never having had lessons in writing nor a scholarly
degree leaves me lacking in confidence, somewhat.
This is not a request for a critique, as a matter of
fact. If you are a writing teacher, and it looks
like you might be, I should be rather anxious about
having you take a look.
I’ve only recently arrived at wordpress. Sometimes
I read through a few in the poetry section and
leave a comment. It’s your turn today, so it seems.
I do like the poem above by Sage. Cool name! Mixing
sound with visuals is important to me2. I also am
partial to your green script. It’s lovely.
Very nice to meet you. Have a great day! Uncle Tree
http://me2watson.wordpress.com/
Hello Uncle Tree,
Unusual name, like Sage’s. Thank you for commenting on my blog. I write poetry, but don’t teach it. I teach Freelance Writing, and I do introduce poetry in those classes.Sometimes it opens a door that has been shut since grade school. That’s kind of cool. I read it in those classes- and simply reading poetry makes articles stand out, I believe, when you write. I don’t critique poetry. I’m working hard to allow it to happen, and only critique my own. Thanks again for commenting on Sage’s great work.