As Truckee considers how to build on its identity as a Cultural and Historical District, I've found guidance in California Poet Laureate Lee Herrick's statewide poetry project. In his project, he asks all Californians to explore
their relationship to place as a door into seeing themselves in new ways with the
world around us. He invites us to write a poem that describes about the communities we live within. This project empowers
the variety of voices in California through writing. In Lee Herrick’s words:
“Each of us has a unique experience and relationship with
California. It is a place of bounty and innovation, opportunity and progress,
as well as difficulty and violence, challenges and areas of need. Poetry can be
a bridge to personal and societal change. It can show us new ways of seeing
ourselves and the world around us. Poetry can illuminate and inspire. Poetry is
a way of expressing and imagining the ideas inside of us. I believe there is
poetry in everyone. I believe poetry is everywhere in this great state.
With this in mind, in partnership with the California Arts Council, I am pleased to launch a statewide poetry writing project, Our
California. Our California invites all Californians to write a
poem about their town, city, or "their" state. What do you love about
it? What joys does it bring? What would you change about it? How could it be
improved?
I hope you will consider joining the chorus of
Californians writing about our state. Our California is open to all
Californians: all ages, all poetry experience levels, documented or not, free
or not. We want to hear your unique voice.”
The statewide project invites all Californians to
write a poem about their state and share it on the Poet Laureate’s website. No
matter the writer’s age, origin, gender, or background, all are invited to
submit their work to the project. The goals of Our California are:
- To
encourage Californians to write poetry, to think about their communities,
and to realize that their voice is important.
- To
inspire Californians to write poetry that uplifts all people through
awareness of social justice or civic engagement.
- To
elevate poetry writing as a way to explore one's creativity and
relationship to place.
Here is how to participate:
Write a poem (any form, up to 50 lines) about your town,
city, or state. Consider these prompts (or write something completely
different!):
Prompt 1: Write a poem about your town, your city, or
“your” California. What do you love about it? What joy do you find there? You
may also include what you don't love about it and what you would change. What
do you envision or hope for?
Prompt 2: Write a poem about a memory or experience rooted in your town, city,
or state. What makes the experience unique to the location?
Tips from Lee:
1. Avoid clichés or aphorisms.
2. Use unique, specific details and imagery.
3. Be true to yourself and your ideas.
4. Have fun!
This project is inspired by LeeHerrick’s poem “My California.”
My California by Lee Herrick
Here, an olive votive keeps the sunset lit,
the Korean twenty-somethings talk about hyphens,
graduate school and good pot. A group of four at a
window
table in Carpinteria discuss the quality of wines in
Napa Valley versus Lodi.
Here, in my California, the streets remember the
Chicano
poet whose songs still bank off Fresno's beer soaked
gutters
and almond trees in partial blossom. Here, in my
California
we fish out long noodles from the pho with such
accuracy
you'd know we'd done this before. In Fresno, the
bullets
tire of themselves and begin to pray five times a day.
In Fresno, we hope for less of the police state and
more of a state of grace.
In my California, you can watch the sun go down
like in your California, on the ledge of the pregnant
twenty-second century, the one with a bounty of
peaches and grapes,
red onions and the good salsa, wine and chapchae.
Here, in my California, paperbacks are free,
farmer's markets are twenty four hours a day and
always packed, the trees and water have no nails in
them,
the priests eat well, the homeless eat well.
Here, in my California, everywhere is Chinatown,
everywhere is K-Town, everywhere is Armeniatown,
everywhere a Little Italy. Less confederacy.
No internment in the Valley.
Better history texts for the juniors.
In my California, free sounds and free touch.
Free questions, free
answers.
Free songs from parents and poets, those
hopeful bodies of light.
Lee Herrick, "My California" from Gardening
Secrets of the Dead. Copyright © 2012 by Lee Herrick, published by WordTech
Communications LLC. Reprinted by permission of Lee Herrick.