Whew! It has been a busy time at school and at home so I am behind in my posts! Sorry! For each of the three Fridays we had in school in April I planned a school-wide poetry activity as part of the Poetry Box Project. The first Friday was the unveiling of the box and I had the kids try their hand at writing a “Never Poem” using alliteration. Like: “I would never wear big, borrowed, blue and burgandy bloomers!” They were great fun and the students wrote some hilarious poems!
On the second Friday, I based the activity around Kenn Nesbitt’s poem “I Bought a Pet Banana”. While searching for activity ideas, I happened across Kenn’s website; www.poetry4kids.com . (be sure and check it out) He suggested to have kids write their own poems about having a pet apple. I loved the idea AND Kenn has a poem beginning in the Poetry Box, so it seemed perfect to do a Pet Apple Activity. The students were each given an apple and crafting supplies and the magic began! We soon had a cafeteria full of unique “pet apples”. The children then were challenged to write their own Pet Apple Poems and write they did! It is amazing what they can come up with! I decided to try my hand at it as well, and this is what resulted:
I Bought A Pet Apple
I bought a small pet apple
He was round and red,
I tried to sit him on my lap
But he rolled off instead.
He wobbled and he rolled
Across the wooden floor,
And then my small pet apple
Went right out the back door.
I tried to lasso him
To make him come to a stop,
But he fell into the pool
With a flip, a flap, a flop.
I’m taking my small pet apple
Back to the pet store
The water made him mushy
All the way to his apple core.
~Cindy Wilkins
It’s funny how we lose ourselves in “adult life”. I had journals full of poems I wrote in my teens and twenties and then between family, work, and other committments that part of me disappeared, until now that is! Who would have thought that an apple could inspire my poet’s soul to reappear? All too often I think, we believe that we don’t deserve or have time to pursue the things we love. Maybe we yearn to paint, take photographs, carve wood, run a marathon, or write poetry but we tell ourselves that everyone and everything else needs to come first. Before we know it, our passions have been pushed so far aside that they seem out of reach. This experience of being a Poetry Box Ambassador has prompted me to look at things differently and what I now see is that we are all created with our own unique set of passions. Passions that are designed to define and fulfill us. While we may travel through life completing all the required tasks set before us, we are missing out on the best part of the trip. Think back to when you were younger. What did you love to do and think about? What inspired you? I think it is vital that we rediscover that part of us to truly live a long, happy, healthy life. You know what they say….”An apple a day keeps the doctor away” or in my case….an apple poem. I plan to continue to get reaquainted with the poet in me. I hope you too, will take the time for yourself to rediscover the you that YOU are truly meant to be.