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The Original Scrapbook
When I was young, I collected poems. I wrote them down neatly and carefully, often cramping my hands in the effort to write page after page without error. I read poetry anthologies, and "Complete Works Of ", and small chapbooks, putting a bookmark at the poems I wanted to remember, and somehow (I can't explain my devotion) writing most of them down. I soon had a binder full. I would read and re-read the contents of this binder as the years went by, find more poems, and fill more binders. It was like creating a personal poetry anthology.
I don't know how the idea of making a scrapbook first came to me, I was in my mid teens at the time, and it seemed entirely natural to want to pair poems with images. I enjoyed the process of matching the feeling of one with the other; it was always a challenge was to find the right image. I can tell you that many, many old copies of The National Geographic were dissected and turned to less-than-journalistic purposes in my hands. NG was my major resource, with it's human interest and landscape photography. I would have loved to use images of paintings, but my father's art books were sacrosanct (as they should be) - and there was no such thing as art journals in the second-hand shops where I lived. I was limited, but limitation sharpens appetite, and I kept on collecting both images and poems.
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For years - till today, in fact. I've left off cutting up old magazines, but I've never stopped collecting poems. The thing is, a good poem, or good poetry, has been like an extra eye or a telescope or a microscope or even a kaleidoscope or a piece of music a drumbeat a rhythm a current a pulse - the voice of a friend or my heart or God or nature or a teacher - the sound of someone who knows me, or whom I know or who speaks with my voice the thoughts I did not know I had till I heard them said, or who speaks truths I had missed when I blinked, or who showed me what was always there that I never noticed. Poetry has been invaluable on all levels and has been an essential part of my enjoyment of life. Everything is poetry! Life is poetry. Which is as ridiculous a statement as I can imagine, but what I mean is, poetry, good poetry, is an expression of truth that is supercharged with meaning. I could just as well say "Life is meaningful."
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A few years ago I showed a friend of few pages from my scrapbooks, something I almost never do. (I don't talk about poetry. Who talks about poetry? I mean, in regular life?) I trusted she would be kind, we have very similar taste in books, and I knew she read poetry. I wasn't wrong. She said, "I wish you could send me one of these every day." We began exchanging poems, and I began thinking that the internet was a big place, full of poems and art...
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And here we are. This is my online poetry scrapbook. It's the strangest thing, to be back at this after all these years. I can now collect poetry and talk about it as much as I want, no one has to pay me any mind. And the best part is, I am finding more poetry than ever, and the intersection between poetry and image/art is only getting more interesting, just like the intersection between all the arts. Poetry is music and movement and sound and image and form - ! Yes, well, it only wants an outlet. This is mine.
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