25 May 2016

Record of meeting 25 May 2016

Farewell to May and poetry

The writers

Wendy, Cath, Helene, Diane, Juan

The Words of the day

Linger – loiter

Ambulant – walking      

Apoplectic – furious, cranky

Apathy – couldn’t care less

Pugnacious – aggressive, belligerent


Writing from words of the day

The elite group of five writers took the words of the day and pugnaciously created the following stories – Wet or dry – Helene, Status Quo – Cath, I woke at 6 am – Juan, Government debate – Diane and  Dressed as a clown – Wendy.

Reading of homework

Four writers read out wonderful homework -
 Helene – My male ancestors, Wendy – I wish I was a woman from the male perspective, Diane – How many mistakes 
and Juan – A newly made mother.



Exercise

We took the phrase “I can’t put my finger on it” and wrote

Helene – My finger went red, Wendy – pimple on my spine, Diane – A dream, Juan – Who cares and Cath – the word wont come.

Homework


What would you do if you won $1,000.  

Write as a poem or 
on the winter comedy theme for June.  

18 May 2016

Record of meeting 18 May 2016

May - Many more poems

The writers

Wendy, Juan, Helene, Cath, Lynn, Elizabeth

The words of the day

Cosset = to pamper
Abstruse = hard to understand
Erratic = unpredictable, irregular
Memory = recalled or kept in mind
Phalanx = closely grouped mass of people
Aberration = to deviate from the norm

Writing from words of the day

The writers used memory to turn the words of the day into a range of erratic stories - The gym instructor, The favoured child, Regaining consciousness, 
The only boy, A wall, and A long time ago

Reading of homework

Four writers read their homework as follows - Juan – I wish I had stayed silent, Elizabeth - An unusual Taxi in Barcelona and Helene – Mr Faux Pas

Exercise 1 - The view from the window

We wrote poems describing the view from a widow. Helene – many windows, Wendy – I stand on my chair, Juan – My face and memories, Elizabeth – Gazing outside, Lynn – the tattered lace curtains 

 and from Cath – two impressive poems Autumn too soon and Play in the sun.
Exercise 2 – Sunday afternoon

The writers captured Sunday afternoon feeling in the following poems

Helene – I want to wake up, Wendy – We can swear, Juan – A glorious day, Elizabeth – What to do, Lynn – Smoke curls and Cath – Children run.

Homework


Write a poem from the perspective of your opposite gender 

11 May 2016

Record of meeting 11 May 2016


 More May poetry

The writers

 Juan, Marg, Helene, Terry, Cath, Roslyn, Cath, Di with a quick visit from David C

The words of the day

Garrulous – talkative

Magnitude – importance

Disintegrate – fall apart

Faux pas – a social blunder

Specious – plausible

Nexus – a tie, connection, link

Contrariwise – on the other hand

Pontificate – express opinion in a pompous and dogmatic way

Writing from words of the day

The writers did not disintegrate with the magnitude of the task and created a range of stories as follows; Roslyn – The meeting, Marg – Heard everywhere, Cath – It had begun, Di – People in power, Helene – Political characters, Terry – an argument and Juan – Love and hope.

Reading of homework


Using the bush theme the writers read out the following homework poems and stories - Marg - The kangaroo and billy tea, Roslyn – Blue mountains 5 short poems, Juan – A dry country, Terry – A trip away, Helene – Bush life and Di – A wobbly walk way.

Readings

Terry read out Clancy @the overflow based on the poem Clancy of the Overflow by A B Patterson.

Roslyn read out “The noble old tree” written by Juan

Haiku poetry

We explored Haiku poetry a traditional form of Japanese poetry consisting of 3 lines. The first and last lines have 5 syllables and the middle line 7 syllables. The lines rarely rhyme. This exercise kept us quiet working hard and counting.

Homework

A poem about a Faux pas 





04 May 2016

Record of meeting 4 May 2016

May is poetry month

The writers attending

Helene, Wendy, Juan, Elizabeth, Lynn, Elizabeth, Di and welcome to Marg

The words of the day

Hirsute – hairy 
Clock – timepiece
Spectrum – range, band
Perchance – by accident
Icon – sacred picture, etc
Flimflam – idle nonsense
Obdurate – stubborn, unyielding

Stories from words of the day

We took the words of the day and 
produced some hirsute flimflam iconic stories and poems - 
Harry the biker, Aurora borealis, 

The sneer, The janitor, Living in fear, 
Can you see this guy and The old man.

Reading of homework

Four writers read out homework as follows - Air an acrostic poem from Helene, Speed bump ahead from Wendy, Flying high & The orgy two poems from Juan and Collecting the eggs from Elizabeth.

Exercise - Superstition

We used the word Superstition to create an acrostic poem with three word sentences. The writers created a range of excellent poems on the topics; Send in witches – Helene, So much stress – Diane, Afraid of the dark – Elizabeth, Sexy hairy person, - Marg, So my mum – Lynn, Superstition is good – Juan and Silly me mum - Wendy.

Exercise - Terrible two

The writers created a two year old character and wrote about her thoughts and ideas.

Helene – the PMs grand daughter; Wendy – My brother Naughty boy; Juan – Its my own bum; Lynn – I’m not happy; Marg – I am brown; Elizabeth – One day I will be big and Diane – I take no notice.

Exercise 3 - Initials

We took the initials of our names to write a poem or story either about ourselves or another topic.

Helene – Live another life, Diane – Elegant Elli, Elizabeth – Sue, Marg – flying high, Lynn – Art and learning, Juan – Just the people I want to talk to and Feeling great & Wendy – Why aren’t I six feet tall?

Homework


Write a bush poem

27 April 2016

Record of meeting 27 April 2016


Good bye war and conflict and hello to poetry for the month of May 2016
The writers

Helene, Terry, Roslyn, Di, Juan,

The words of the day

Ersatz – synthetic

Chimera – fabled monster
Chimera

Amuck – rush about in frenzy

Bolt – rush away without control

Innocent – not guilty of a crime or offence

Reading stories from words of the day

The small group of elite writers bolted in to create the following synthetic masterpieces - Roslyn - The children, Terry – many meanings, Helene – blood stained monster, Diane – The bull in the rodeo and Juan – John was a POW.

Reading of homework

Four writers read their sometimes emotional homework as follows - Roslyn – My father, Terry – Letter from Private Jones, Helene – One beautiful Anzac Day and Juan - What is ANZAC day?

Exercise


The elite group whiled away the afternoon with discussion covering many and varied topics.

Homework

  1. Write an Acrostic poem using a favourite word or the Alphabet  
     or
  2. Write any type of poem









20 April 2016

Record of meeting 20 April 2016

April the month of war and conflict

The writers

Wendy, Juan, Helene, Cath, Roslyn, Elizabeth, Pauline, Terry

The words of the day

Feign – to pretend
Feint – a sham attack or blow
Extrapolate – infer what will happen
Frenemy - An enemy disguised as a friend
Foretoken – sign of something to come
Imbroglio – complicated situation or plot
Sturts Desert Pea
Harbinger – to announce your approach
Clianthus – a plant bearing scarlet flowers eg desert pea

Stories from words of the day

The writers extrapolated from the words of the day and created the following stories - Growing plants, The tree before me, Dr Pimms, Henry 5th, Caitlin and Sarah, Domestic violence, Willy Nilly; and Deadly Nightshade.
 
Deadly nightshade flower
Reading of homework

Six of the writers read out homework as follows - Terry - The enemy within, Pauline – Being naive, Ros – Gonzo the hound, Juan – Know your enemy, Helene – Friend or Frenemy and Elizabeth – In the drought.


Exercise

We participated in a progressive write on the topic of Autumn with some interesting stories emerging.

Homework

What Anzac day means - use this topic to stimulate your creativity 





13 April 2016

Record of meeting 13 April 2016


The writers

Wendy, Pauline, Roslyn, Helene, Di, Lynn, Helene, Leonie & David C

The words of the day

Drivel = senseless             

Copious = abundant
Feckless = irresponsible
Eminent = distinguished
Prognosticate = predict
Minatory = threatening
Juxtaposition = side by side
Footloose = free to go and travel about
Treaty = agreement, settlement, pact, deal, accord, contract, pledge

Writing from words of the day

The writers took the drivel that were the words of the day and wrote the following feckless stories - Arrogance, Power in politics, The parents, I don’t care, The professor, The indulgent professor, How I love travel, The lecturers and I like it.

Reading of homework


Six writers diligently wrote on the homework topic - David C – Dirty unwashed youth; Helene – The tea towel wars; Leonie - behind closed doors; Pauline – tales from the war in London; Ros - Foxy loxy; and Lyn – A true story.
 

Recommendation reading by Leonie

The article Quidnovi: why war? By Einstein and Freud

War words exercise

Lyn supervised us writing a journalist piece using the following words -

Attack, battlefield, counteroffensive, defend, exploitation, ferocious, guerrilla, death, suffering, hero, infiltrate, liberate, marauding, neutralise, orders, pre emptive, quell, reprisal, terrorise, uniform

The writers created a range of convincing journalistic pieces - Helene - Marauding dog attack, Wendy - Death of a child, Pauline - Battle at the card tables, Ros – The fight of the cakes, Lynn – The Broken Hill under 6 team, David C – Political Warriors, Elizabeth - In school uniforms with stones and dirt.

Homework


Write about the enemy