Suzanne Edison, MA, MFA

Poet • Educator

  • Suzanne Edison, MA, MFA
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Suzanne’s Blog

Thank you for visiting my blog! I write on many topics and your comments are always welcome.

February 9, 2016 By Suzanne

Guest Blogger at CAREGIFTED

images-1

I have the honor of being a guest blogger at CAREGIFTED‘s website. CAREGIFTED is an organization that “grants respite to long-term family caregivers, and works to greaten public recognition of their gifts to society, as well as of their historically unprecedented numbers.”

CAREGIFTED was founded by Heather McHugh, a nationally known poet and teacher, and the recipient of a MacArthur Genius grant. Please read more about how this organization came into being at their website. Providing a week’s all paid vacation to long term care providers is simply a radical and unique approach to helping families of profoundly disabled or chronically ill children.

I will be alternating my blog posts every other month with Jeneva Burroughs Stone, also a long term caregiver and writer. She blogs and writes about disability at Busily Seeking 2.0 and is currently writing a memoir.

This month’s blog post (coming out soon) at CAREGIFTED, features an interview I did with Kim Poston Miller, a mother of two children living with Juvenile Arthritis and the author of the book Living with Juvenile Arthritis: A Parent’s Guide. I hope you will take some time to peruse all of these sites for information about parenting kids with long term illness and about respite opportunities for caretakers.

Filed Under: other organizations

December 19, 2015 By Suzanne

Writing as a Righting Journey Workshop-March 2016

A writing workshop for parents who have children living

with chronic health issues

IMG_1208

SAVE THE DATE:

SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 2016

12 noon – 4 pm

Seattle, WA

contact me for more information: su************@****jm.org

Filed Under: events, workshops

November 28, 2015 By Suzanne

Inner/Outer Landscapes

inner-outer landscape

Yesterday afternoon and into evening, I sat writing, next to a window with a view to the Puget Sound and Olympic Mountains. I seemed able to sit there for a long period of time, every once in awhile glancing up from my computer to note the trajectory of the sun and the corresponding shadows. I felt the heat from the sun reflecting off the water, and its shimmer. I worked on several poems and was aware of time only as the colors of the sky changed from blue to yellow-green to a deep orange.

It is easy to find a writing rhythm when I retreat to a place removed from the city.  But I often take a walk in the city through a green-space or near a body of water when I come to an impasse in my writing and need new ideas.

Sometimes nature itself informs the words of my poems. I love the spiral patterns in a moon snail shell,moon snail shell

and the harmonic, Fibonacci sequence seen in sunflowers, or the eddies of water and sand.sand eddies

Nature’s effect on the brain and creativity has been the subject of research for a few years. Though many of us have understood intuitively the necessity and rewards of being outdoors, of hiking in the mountains or walking in a park or on a beach, we can now point to brain research that confirms this awareness. We might want this added information as we think about providing nature, or natural environments to people in the hospital. Or, knowing the way nature recharges our brains, lowering cortisol levels and stress, making it easier to learn, we can confirm the need for kids to be outside and around the natural world for some parts of their day. Richard Louv wrote about this 10 years ago in his book, Last Child in the Woods, and it is even more true today; we have a harder time disconnecting from our wired world.

Now, that you are finished reading, go for a walk!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: essays Tagged With: brain, health, nature, writing

November 2, 2015 By Suzanne

breathing

A poem from my chapbook The Moth Eaten World. Written in 2008, this poem seemed appropriate today after writing about Luck and Fortune. I realize how far I’ve come from this painful place, but I also recognize that writing this allowed me to keep moving spiritually to a more true place for myself. Please excuse the formatting, there shouldn’t be spaces between the couplet lines.

breathing

                                    after Robert Hass

 

I left God in her Temple when you got sick.

 

Foolish to utter that name, like lassoing clouds

wandering an indigo arc.

 

I praise instead sunflowers’ beneficent heads

their Fibonacci faces divining light, sing hymns

 

of beans, corn and all dirt shrouded

tubers begging us bend

 

as we sow, witness the parlay of earth-

worms, their castings, our gold.

 

I rant prayers to righteous communities of bees,

their fierce loyalty spinning alchemies day and night.

 

On the wild shore, where the sea breaks its back,

between foam and spray I walk splintered

 

like an armless starfish, waiting: for the turn

of tide, a waxing breath, my place among

 

the minyan of slack-jawed facing slack water.

Filed Under: poetry

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