Another poem about writing, the concentration it demands ... and the distractions which intrude, especially if the writing is being done in an attic room -- er, studio -- and the squirrels are playing games overhead.
Before we had our maple trees trimmed, our roof seemed to be a favorite gathering spot for those rascals.
It sounded like they were having squirrel conventions up there, or the Squirrel Olympics, maybe even doing some line dancing, although I couldn't hear the music, just those little feet, back and forth, back and forth ... back and forth ...
Oh, there were moments of quiet ... I suppose while they were choosing up sides again ... plotting their next moves. During these suspenseful moments I could get a few words written. Then the commotion resumed.
As I recall, my first draft, instead of talking about "teeny-tiny feet," said something about "obnoxious little feet," but I mellowed a bit after that.
In the quiet that followed the trimming of those overhanging limbs, I guess mellowing was to be expected.
Oh, and I purposely kept the lines short ... in order to underscore the tension of writing under such pressure.
The poem:
LET THEM TRY
Squirrels go
trickling across
my green roof
while I write,
trying to break
my concentration.
Hah! Let them
try. I am so
focused not even
booming thunder
could faze me;
certainly not
this constant
pitter-patter,
pitter-patter,
pitter-patter,
pit of their
teeny-tiny feet.
© 2001
(originally published in St. Anthony Messenger)
Today's word: pitter-patter
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