Thursday, August 16, 2012

Poetry, Good For What Ails you . . .


I ran across an intriguing article the other day, called Poetry Changed the World, by Elaine Scarry. In the article, Scarry connects the development of civilization to the ability of literature to take us out of ourselves to "see something bigger, a different perspective," tracing the development of poetry and concurrent societal evolution, and speaking of poetry's "invitation to empathy, its reliance on deliberative thought, and its beauty."

I then found the article, A poem a day by William Sieghart, about a talk he gave promoting a new anthology, Winning Words, Inspiring Poems for Everyday Life. Actually, it was about what he did after the talk to illustrate his point. The short article is quite interesting. Here are a few excerpts:

... I’ve been battling with the challenge of making poetry appear more relevant to people in their everyday lives. Battling because there is no doubt that most people find poetry intimidating. ... 

Where have I heard that before?


... Following the talk I sat in the book tent with a couch beside me, offering to listen to people’s problems for ten minutes at a time and then prescribe them with the appropriate poem or poems for them to take away and inwardly digest or commit to memory as an alternative to a cocktail of pills or any other form of therapy currently in vogue.

... Nearly forty people had availed themselves of my poetry pharmacy. About a quarter of them had burst into tears with a complete stranger either in recounting their troubles or when I managed to prescribe appropriately and they found a poetic complicity for their troubles and at last felt understood.

white mortar and pestle with green herbs

... Suffice it to say it saddened me how, in a world of so much communication, supposedly made even easier by developments in technology, people seem as lonely and unsupported as ever.  But and it’s a big but, the right poem at the right time could provide immeasurable sustenance. The emails I have had since prove it.

... Poetry in the right time and place can be a far better mantra for that tricky business of living than many more expensive or fashionable alternatives. I urge you to spread the word and look out for my future poetry surgeries. The Doctor is in.
  
So see . . .
as we embrace poetry, allow it to enrich our own lives, and share our insights with others, we are also bringing badly needed medicine to an ailing world.


10 comments:

  1. It's so true. There are times when the right poem is like a salve, or a much-needed slap in the face.

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    1. What I find amazing is that his knowledge of poetry is so vast that he would have something for every situation. Did he pull his "prescriptions" from the top of his head or use a database? My memory is so terrible these days that I sometimes feel lucky to even remember my own name. My mom-in-law called it 'sometimers.' Sometimes I remember; sometimes I don't.

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  2. "... Poetry in the right time and place can be a far better mantra for that tricky business of living than many more expensive or fashionable alternatives. I urge you to spread the word and look out for my future poetry surgeries. The Doctor is in."

    So cheeky! So true! Thank you for sharing.

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    1. I feel that, in a small way, we're spreading that much needed medicine. Is this covered by the ACA?

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  3. "at last felt understood"

    I'll be the first to admit that I really struggle with poetry--making the time for it--having the patience to read it--trying to understand it. Even though I have a MA in literature and have written plenty of papers regarding poetry and poets it still eludes me. But there is something calming or curing about poetry--something that sneaks into the heart in a way that other types of literature can't seem to do. This is a beautiful post--how I wish that I could visit his book tent this afternoon.

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    1. I've been wanting to visit his book tent since I first read about it.

      I think that the way we are taught in school to regard poetry as something to be dissected and analyzed may be part of the problem so many people have with it. I can't remember off hand where I read it, but someone wrote that we don't look at fiction reading that way. We read to enjoy and everything else comes out of that.

      So once we let go of that analytical mindset we will be better able to find poetry we enjoy, and everything else follows from that.

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  4. That's fantastic! I'm a big supporter and follower of Frank Warren's Postsecret project, and this seems to have the same effect, but with poetry! Thanks for sharing.

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    1. I just checked out The Postsecret project. Reading some of those messages was really quite an experience. Thank you.

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