In 1993, in response to a poem in Stories I Ain’t Told Nobody Yet, George Ella Lyon experimented with a “where-I’m-from” list, which he turned
into a poem, and eventually into an exercise for other writers. His exercise
has been used as a writing prompt in schools and other places. When I came
across it a few months ago, I decided I wanted to write my own version*:
Where I’m From
I am from rocking chairs,
from Dr. Pepper
and Dodger baseball.
I’m from Looney Tunes and
volcanic kitchen experiments,
pie for breakfast, and Capture the Flag.
From sipping hot chocolate from a thermos
at the Rose Parade (I always burned my mouth);
pomegranates whose jeweled seeds stained my fingers, and
chocolate chip cookies with no nuts.
I am from the green house on the corner
where I practiced volleyball serves against the garage and
stayed up too late listening to music in my yellow room.
I am from oak trees
and peonies
and the irrigation ditch behind Grandma’s house
where I collected rocks and staged swimming races
for frogs
in the snow-melted water.
I am from matching, homemade
mother/daughter dresses,
from card games
(“You can’t play with the grown-ups if you cry when you
lose”),
writing poems in church,
pretending to be a horse galloping
through fields.
I am from Pedro and Pokey, Taffy and
Mitzi, Honey Bunny and Tiger Boots
and Buster, the bunny
we found in the library parking lot.
I’m from the time I harnessed our cat with an apron
to help me put my toys away;
from the night no one asked me to dance
(I cried the entire next day).
I’m from trips to Taco Bell in Anita’s VW Bug,
and singing Devo’s “Whip It” on the courts at tennis
practice.
I’m from Mrs. T and Dr. Mac and
The Outcasts of Poker
Flat.
I am from Sacramento, California,
from Lakewood,
and Cottonwood, from
Brandon and
Lithia, Florida,
land of beaches and Spanish moss and Rays baseball and
Disney.
I am from the box in the closet
hiding captured pieces of myself, the photo albums
Writing “Where I’m From” is lots of fun, and can be done
over and over again, as poem or prose, and each time the author will uncover
some forgotten piece of him or herself. If you want to try it yourself, you can
find a template to get you started here and another example of it here.
So I have one question for you: where are you from?
I don’t know about you, but I’m ready for summer. Maybe not
the hot, sticky part, but certainly the no-alarm-clock or school-schedule
aspects. Even though I work at home and for myself, summertime always seems a
little more laid back and relaxed. I know summer doesn’t technically start
until June 21, but it’s summer here already, especially in my mind. Here are a
few things I’m doing to savor the simple pleasures and everyday adventures of summer:
Compiling a summer reading list.
Tweaking my weekly schedule to allow for more
reading-on-a-chaise and baseball-game-watching time.
Changing the slipcover on the couch from winter to summer.
Finding someplace indoors to get a cardio workout. Probably
won’t be walking our fitness trail much until October!
Scheduling a pedicure.
Checking our hurricane supplies (Tropical Storm Andrea
drenched us yesterday).
Plotting a weekend getaway to the beach with another family.
Looking for a day game in the Tampa Bay Rays schedule.
There’s something so decadent about going to a baseball game in the middle of
the week during work hours!
What about you? Do you find you have a more laid-back state of mind during the summer months? Do you do anything special or different during summer? Please share.
The poet and novelist Marge Piercy has a gift for writing
about nature. In this poem, springtime has a nearly overwhelming and contagious
energy, capturing the action-filled drama of spring. [Introduction by Ted
Kooser.]