Slice of Life Post for April 11, 2023 by Barb Edler
Last Thursday, I competed at the state level poetry slam which was part of a Poetry Palooza event that began with the slam and ended with a lunch and poet panel discussion. My sister and niece attended the slam which was at Franklin Middle School event center in Des Moines. It was a lovely auditorium, but a bit warm. All the slam poets were amazing with many sharing poems about being transexual or other sensitive and political themes. I was the second to last to perform in the first round out of twelve performers. Overall, I appreciated the experience, and although I like to perform my poetry, I’d say I am not exactly a spoken word poet.
The awkward part about the slam competition was that my niece and sister were convinced I was number four in the first round because they were taking score. Anyway, I think I did beat the poet that went first, but he got cheated in his scores and ended up placing second overall. In fact, the three performers who placed first, second, and third were the same three I competed against in Iowa City to get to the final competition. I placed second at that slam.

The winner will compete in June in Des Moines at the NFSPS National Convention. She is seated on the left. Kelsey Bigelow is front and center and organized the event. Kelsey is a ray of sunshine and a fantastic performing poet. Hannah, Charlie Hall is on the right. He is phenomenal. The poets’ scores were 0.1 points apart from each other. Personally, I would have liked to have seen Hannah win because he thought my scores were too low. We bonded at the first event, and he’s only 18.
Although I did not make it into the second round, I did receive lots of compliments from various strangers at the events held on Friday evening and on Saturday which I very much appreciated. A former colleague and community member from Keokuk were also at the event so that was rather surprising, and they were both very generous with giving me some wonderful supportive comments about my poetry and performances.
Glenda Funk was also extremely helpful and so thoughtful, offering to meet with me via zoom to listen to me prepare. Based on her comments, I revised one of the poems which I’m sharing today and that I performed at an open mic on Friday night.
The Burning Field my childhood summers were slices of happy every morning sky diving with my neighborhood friends into medieval forests of fling green we were daring jeweled in clover leaf chains our free spirits totally teal soared above meadowsweet mists and a wide open field a field two boys accidentally burned spying the furious flames from my brother’s bedroom window I shouted fire, fire we thought it was such a travesty but that field came back more gloriously green I remember the tree house next to the field in the place we called blue city because of the violets that grew there trying to prove my courage I leapt from the small wooden perch face planted on the ground below howled all the way home I remember the woods behind blue city where we always roamed unafraid of the unknown when life was an endless adventure of pineapple delights and glistening moonlight my world was a honey haven until the day my best friend’s boyfriend tried to rape me tn the woods where we roamed the woods that always felt like a second home I can still feel his crushing weight groping hands my disbelief sunshine days surrendered to shadowy shock burned with shame and self-loathing unable to speak a silence grew weaved a tangled web of confusion how could I tell my mother trapped in a hospital bed how could I tell my best friend who thought she loved him I didn’t know how to traverse a burning field of flames fearing the fire ready to sear me but in my dreams I burn the pain rise back gloriously green I fly with joy from my perch land softly like a clever bird sing with glee full-throated warbling off-key remembering a time when I was fearless unafraid of fields of fire violet ice or the summer shadows that still haunt me
The whole weekend was such a delight. I listened to amazing poet laureates and attended two workshops. One was about writing to heal led by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg. She offers workshops especially for people who are suffering from cancer. Caryn is a two-time cancer survivor. This is the poem I wrote in her workshop. It’s just a draft.
I didn't expect to survive your death but here I am still standing not exactly upright but still breathing Did you know I see you everywhere in a road worker's wave a homeless person's face your spirit always walks beside me Forgive me for not letting go I write my rage, sorrow, disbelief in poems mostly hidden readers can't always digest the weight of grief perhaps you understand because you were a writer, too I want to honor your life it's my survival life line

On Saturday, the event ended with a panel discussion. Debra Marquart, Matt Mason, Caleb The Negro Artist Rainy, Ann McCracken, and Dawn Terpstra. (Dawn is the Iowa Poetry Association President and an Editor for the River Heron Review.) Let’s just say my weekend was full, and I was paloozaed.
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