Creatrix and Contributors

Creatrix of OctPoWriMo - Morgan Dragonwillow:



A writing poetry excursion at Lake Lanier, Ga.
I began writing poetry in school though I don't remember what age. At some point I set it and all of my creativity aside thinking I wasn't capable.

At 33 years old it caused me great anxiety to even try to color in a coloring book. I didn't realize it was perfectionism stopping me. I couldn't even garden for fear that I would plant the vegetables in the wrong place. I know how it feels to have a deep passion for creating but thinking it is impossible. After many years of working and healing, it feels wonderful to be creating almost every day.

In 2012 I immersed myself in all things writing and that included poetry. Within a few months after NaPoWriMo, I decided I wanted another poetry month and created OctPoWriMo for those of us that wanted to dive into poetry further. We've been going strong ever since.

I truly believe there are no rules to poetry, only playing with your words until you breathe life into them.

I am happy to say that I completed and indie published my first book, Dancing within Shadow: A Poetic Journey on Amazon in March of 2013 and Wild Woman Waking (photos by Tui Snider) in February 2014.

You can find me on Facebook  Twitter and Instagram with other poets and writers sharing our poetry/writing and chit chatting.

I have a passion to stir the imagination for poets/writers and creatives alike.

You can also find out what I am up to currently on my blog Morgan Dragonwillow Playing with Words.  I look forward to sharing this Poetry journey with you!



Contributors:

Amy Phelps McGrath at Poetry, Prose, Art, and Creativity:



I have always been a bit “out there” in the sense that I was always making up stories and pretending when I was growing up. I began exploring poetry when I was in high school, even publishing in our school literary magazine. My first love and creative outlet, however, was dance. 



I began college as a dance major, but during my sophomore year, my left knee decided that I needed a career change. I ended up with enough credits for a dance minor, but I majored in (gasp!) mathematics and became a high school math teacher. My creative outlet shifted at that time to community theater where I performed in several different theaters.

After my two children were born, I lost my creative way for awhile. I was busy juggling caring for my boys, planning lessons, grading papers. I didn’t think I had time for anything else.

Several years ago, I attended the North Carolina Center for the Advancement of Teaching and took a seminar called “Reading and Writing By The Sea”. This lit my creative fire and turned me down a path toward writing more and daring myself to seek opportunities for publication.

Recently, I’ve participated in the past 2 NaPoWriMo events and managed to complete a poem every day both times. I’ve also attempted NaNoWriMo several times and “won” for the first time last year. You can find my poetry and art at Poetry, Prose, Art, and Creativity.  I am really excited about sharing some of my creativity resources and inspiring YOU to write more poetry!

Julie Jordan Scott:


Julie Jordan Scott
I fell in love with words while floating in my mother’s womb. Before I knew how to read I was dictating my thoughts to my mother and painstakingly copying them with my crayons onto construction paper. How I wish I had some of those papers today!
I created my first chapbook at age 13 which I gave to my grandmother as a Christmas Gift. She asked my mother, “Have you ever read Julie’s poetry? It’s very good!” It was all confessional poetry then, dealing with my father’s alcoholism, my wobbly family relationships, my siblings and the trials of being an awkward teen who refused to cry or show too much emotion – it was against the family rules – and instead through my emotion into words, my faithful suitor.
Poetry has always been there when time got rough.
Even better, poetry has become not just a place to throw words when I am feeling emotional, it has become a place to practice craft. It is a place to improve my prose. It has become a way to make new friends. It has become something I am known for in my community. 
I have participated in many Poetry Writing Challenges, I even helped lead one a couple National Poetry Writing Months ago.
I am a performance poet as well. This means I perform in poetry slams, the occasional poetry concert and random open mics. In fact, poetry got me into my acting career which has spanned many theater stages, a couple music videos and some independent films. 
Poetry, to me, is like breath is to life.
I become more content the more I practice and the more I weave words.
It is like my “friend” Robert Frost tells us, “I have never started a poem whose end I knew. Writing the poem is discovering.”
I am beyond words thrilled to be a part of the OctPoWriMo adventure in poetry writing discovery with you!
My poetry may be found at Poetry From Julie Jordan Scott as well as in several anthologies and the occasional greeting card. I also teach writing programs in the community and virtually through Writing Camp With Julie Jordan Scott . Check us out and like us on Facebook!



Tamara Woods from Pen Paper and Pad:

Tamara Woods was raised (fairly happily) in West Virginia, where she began writing poetry at the age of 12. Her first poetry collection is available at Sakura Publishing  and Amazon She has previous experience as a newspaper journalist, an event organizer, volunteer with AmeriCorps and VISTA, in addition to work with people with disabilities. 

She has used her writing background to capture emotions and moments in time for anthologies such as Empirical Magazine, her blog PenPaperPad, as a contributing writer for the online ‘zine Lefty Pop and writing articles as a full-time freelance writer writing articles as a full-time freelance writer. She is a hillbilly hermit in Honolulu living with her Mathmagician.


Previous Contributors:


Beverly Tan:


Beverly Tan is a filmmaker, social media strategist, poet, and all around unusual person. She loves the New York Rangers, drinking whiskey out of teacups, rock climbing, melancholy movies, and hanging out with her best friend Whiskey Jack the cat. 

My entire life, all I wanted to do was tell stories but I could never decide which mediums. Poetry became that form that was so incredibly simply but extremely complex at the same time. It was brevity full of emotion and life. Filmmaking was always the love of my life but poetry remained a piece of it. It danced in the shadows and spotlights of the cinematics. At it's core, the words were screamed onto the page, coming out as just the whispers of everything that I could possibly want. 

I took a class in college and really tuned in to making poetry as serious of an art form as filmmaking was. From that, sprang an outpouring of my soul which is coming soon in the form of my soon to be released ebook Water in a Wineglass. 
Water in a Wineglass explores emotions of life, it's my memoir of thing to be related to. It's a reflection of my contemporary style and a peek into my outlooks. It's the blood coming straight from my heart and metaphorically spilled across pages. 

Best accomplishment? Finding the beautiful marriage of my loves when I adapted one of my poems into a short film, then produced and directed it. The Last Line will hopefully be premiere this fall in film festivals. 

You can follow me on Twitter and Instagram @Beverlytanfilm 

Janet Parfitt at Mrs. Bongle:

My name is Janet Parfitt and I am a writer, a sister, a wife, a lover, a friend, a guitar player, a carer for my disabled husband, a pagan and a poet.

My mother, who's Irish, kickstarted my love of poetry by reading poems to me when I was young and helping me to memorise my favourites. I won a poetry competition organised by my school when I was eight years old.


I should mention the influence that song lyrics and music have had on me as well. I love being creative and am interested in music, art, writing and photography but poetry will always have a special place in my heart.




Nimue at Pages from My Mind:


I began writing six years back in response to a challenge by a friend to write a poem about him. Until then, I thought rhyming was poetry and for a long time I made myself slave to rhymes. while I did like the ideas I wrote about, I certainly hated the restrictions I had put on my own words. 

When I started blogging, poetry took on a whole new meaning, a completely amazing world of ideas, words and more awesome poets from every corner of the world. And that precisely is my inspiration all the while - to read , to read more, to be inspired from the idea, to write, to edit and maybe to present it to the right audience.


I write Poetry @ Pages of my mind. and my latest poetry goal is to write in my mother tongue Hindi as fluently as I do in English.  Last year, I published my first poem collection : Fragments on Amazon and it was such a learning experience.

This year I am looking forward to be better, be more creative and be free in this journey called OctPoWriMo.

I am no expert so I will be sharing just what I have observed and learned over the years from poets and readers like you.


Linda Roy at elleroy was here:

I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t writing something. Entries in my school girl diary, short stories, elaborate notes that I passed in high school classes, poetry and song lyrics.  As a musician, song lyrics and poetry have been closely entwined in my writing experience. After all, they are often one in the same. I write in a very free flowing style - no rules, very much stream of consciousness, with emphasis on scansion and rhythm.

I am co-songwriter, lead singer and rhythm guitarist of the Americana/UnCountry/Folk Rock band Jehova Waitresses. You can find our website at Jehova Waitresses and our Facebook page, and on Twitter.

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