This lyric extolls mystical warnings much like those that laced my childhood. “Mother” here refers both to bloodmother and to the Earth. "Remedio: San Antonio" is one of many remedies that work as cairns throughout "Susto" (Spanish for mystical fright). Said remedies work also to celebrate the Latinx healing art that is curanderismo. I grew up hunting for roots and plants with medicinal powers with my mother and maternal grandfather. Tommy Archuleta on "Susto" |
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Write with Poetry Daily This April, to celebrate National Poetry Month, we'll share popular writing prompts from our What Sparks Poetry series, starting tomorrow. Write along with us! |
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"Short Conversations with Poets: Brenda Hillman" "I’ve written extensively about my impatience with folks treating poetic fragment as if it were new. What I think my version of it brings is a merging of lyric intimacy, spiritual intuition, natural and constructed surfaces, especially in a time of ecological peril. Another thought is that people treat poetic interruptions as if they were an exception, but, in fact, most people think most of the time in partial sentences, and poets like Niedecker or Guest learn to polish the fragment." via MCSWEENEY'S |
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