“The hard part about following your purpose is the distraction everyone pulls you toward.” Kimbal Musk
The past calendar year I planned to finish a book I’ve worked on for a long, long, long, time. 10 years since the first draft. That didn’t happen. Then I decided maybe I can get another, less complicated one I’ve worked on finished by the end of March of this year. Well, unless I ignore life, that isn’t happening. But sometimes those distractions either can’t be helped, unless you are a heartless and selfish individual. Sometimes you just need to accept them and see how to work around them because those distractions can turn into the everyday part of your life.
Use the above links to discover the various interpretations of the word of the week. Don’t limit yourself to the first one that comes to mind. Expand your thinking.
A new form of poetry for us to try. Yes, the Décima Challenge has come to an end after 100 weeks.
Now we have the Sijo, a Korean form believed to have first been used in the fourteenth century. It is similar in structure to various Japanese forms such as Haiku. As with many forms of poetry, the Sijo became a preferred poetry form of the yangban or ruling class as well as royalty. They were written in Chinese and were originally short songs set to music. The focus of the Sijo is usually nature and contemplation. We’ll try that to begin with.
You should use the word in the title of this post as your inspiration as either a theme of the Sijo or in the poem itself.
There are:
- Three Lines
- 14-16 syllables per line
- A total of 44-46 syllables for the entire poem.
To know how many syllables in a particular word try HowManySyllables.com.
- The first line of the Sijo usually sets the theme.
- The second line elaborates on the first line.
- The third line brings the poem matter to a close.
The setting can be nature, a favorite season, or some event of your day. Something, as I mentioned above that can be contemplative in nature.
Within each of the three lines there is usually a pause. You can hear it in the example below. The bold sections are the parts after the pause, or at least as I read/hear them. Reading your Sijo out loud will help with using the correct form.
The following example is considered the oldest Sijo in existence,
The spring breeze melted snow on the hills then quickly disappeared.
I wish I could borrow it briefly to blow over my hair
And melt away the aging frost forming now about my ears.
If I’m counting right there are 15 syllables per line. I think that would be a good target but the pattern is up to you, as per the generally held thoughts on the matter.
As with all of the challenges that have been hosted here be sure to;
- Copy and past your URL into the comments below so other poets can visit and read your
- You can also put the link of this challenge in your post to let your followers know where to go if they want to participate. This is called a Pingback. This is not mandatory to join in or to put your post link in the comments. Click HERE to find out how to do a Pingback.
- Reblogging is great as well.
[…] PART OF RONOVANWRITE’S WEEKLY SIJO CHALLENGE. […]
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You took me back my childhood with this prompt Ron 💜
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[…] Wednesday Sijo Poetry 03.29.2023 – Sijo #55 ~ Distraction ~ […]
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[…] This https://ronovanwrites.com/2023/03/29/ronovan-writes-sijo-wednesday-poetry-challenge-55-use-distracti… […]
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Dis-Tractions
Some might view inopportune interludes as detrimental,
events that throw them off course, as if their life was a train:
Life is a sailboat at sea, each wave a welcome distraction.
http://www.engleson.ca
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[…] https://ronovanwrites.com/2023/03/29/ronovan-writes-sijo-wednesday-poetry-challenge-55-use-distracti… […]
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I seem to be on a “not enough time” theme! Here is my response-
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[…] This is my response to Ronovan Writes Sijo Challenge #55: Distraction. […]
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[…] NaPoWriMo day 4, it’s another Tuesday-evening sijo! This week’s theme was […]
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[…] Ronovan Writes Sijo ~ […]
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