Friday, June 10, 2016

Rosemary Nissen-Wade #10: The Measure of Commitment


The Measure of Commitment

How you spend your days is how you spend your life
– slightly misquoted from Annie Dillard

How young I was, only seven, when I vowed to myself, 
'You will be a poet!' I already was, but I meant I would always
spend my life on poetry, even when I grew up. It would be my life.

'Your little poems,' my elders said, and trotted me out to recite them –
days not so much of glory as embarrassment. Then they put it to me:
'Is that what you want to be? But darling, you can't BE a poet like that.
How will you earn money? You will have to do it like a nice hobby.'

You perhaps did not know, dear parents, the word 'vocation'. Not
spend my life in poetry? Impossible! My jobs were my necessary hobbies.
'Your occupation?' I was asked. 'Poet,' I wrote, defiantly. Now, I don't even have to.
Life is, first, poetry: it's 'what I do' – daily and lifelong, my glorious commitment.


Written in response to the prompt 'Commitment' from Poets United's Midweek Motif 
– in the form of a first word acrostic.

4 comments:

  1. So clever! I didn't even notice it was an acrostic until I saw your tag at the bottom - the mark of a successful form poem!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes, absolutely, I agree with Rachael. I love the final phrase. "...daily and lifelong, my glorious commitment," True vocation. How wonderful.

    ReplyDelete
  3. You have certainly fulfilled that promise to yourself Rosemary and I agree with Efi.

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.