Categories
- About Harriet
- Open Door
- Craft Work
- Interviews
- Publishing
- Poetry News
- Criticism
- Obituaries
- Politics
- Best-Sellers
- From Poetry Magazine
- Foundation News
- Group Blog
Harriet
Contributors
Archive
Blogroll
BASKETBALL MEDITATION
Finding contemplative time in which the poem might find me, has been an issue my entire adulthood. Meditative and writing opportunities have come usually at the cost of sleep—given my ever-frantic urban lifestyle. But in the late 80s, I returned to the basketball of my high-school days—foul shot practice in the mornings or afternoons, occasionally joined by my husband—rarer, still, my youngest son. But basically, it is me, the hoop and sunrise. As the years have whizzed by, I find that I can take my basketball nearly anywhere. Rare is the city park that doesn’t have a court, easily accessible in early morning hours. A jogger may come by and nod hello, or someone walking their dog may applaud an effort. Invariably, I am alone except for the occasional college student. We stay within ourselves, immersed, and never speak—the sounds of distant traffic pierced by the thumps and grunts of our basketballs. When my body goes automatic, my mind is freed to wander, and when I go back to the car, still dripping, I find my notebook and discover what the poem has written.
2008-09-18
Posted in Group Blog, Uncategorized on Thursday, September 18th, 2008 by Wanda Coleman.


Comments (2)
Great homily about getting the poems out of us. Here’s another fun poetic basketball enthusiast from the 80s: http://tinyurl.com/anotherpoeticbb
Report this comment
On the other hand, rural life is painfully slow. Things grow slow. So I climb the staircase 70 times, two steps at a time. When I’m dripping, I like to sit and experience the endorphins. Urban or rural, though, it seems to me that getting your heart pounding helps center you, like this is my pace, no matter what’s happening outside, fast or slow, this is my poem.
Report this comment