We’ve been inviting people to write and share their own poems in honor of National Poetry Month. And we’re learning that, for some of you, isolation is stirring long-dormant creative impulses. Here are just a few things you’ve told us, in your poetry emails:

  • “I’ve never written a haiku in my life before this and I’m turning 63 on Friday.”
  • “Reading the first round of poems pushed me to submit.”
  • “The only poetry I have written has been sporadic and only for myself. I never shared it with anyone else until now.”
  • “It took me out of myself to write a bit of silliness at a time when I was going crazy, so thank you!”
  • “I have been battling mental illness for some time now, and I can honestly say that expressing my feelings in this form is one of the most beneficial things that I have done for my mental health. Never thought to do it until now.”

Last week we shared poems responding to our first prompt: “What a Difference a Month Makes.” This week, we offered a new prompt: “Answer a question you wish someone would ask you right now. (And make that question the title of your poem.)”

Thanks to everyone who wrote in. We’ve published a few of our favorite entries below. But favorites are subjective, and we really hate choosing, so for the full effect you’re going to want to browse through this collection of the 170+ poems we received. And here’s a kid-friendly collection that sorts out adult themes, like death and violence.

Here’s your final poetry prompt, to take us through the end of April: Lessons learned.

Big lessons, small ones, societal ones, personal ones. Share your “lessons learned” poem on Twitter/Instagram using #PAUSEpoetry or email [email protected]. We may share your poem on the air or online.


“How ‘bout a play date?

Words I’m desperate to hear.

I miss my old life.”

-Dashiell Cornell, 11 years old


What could New York have done to keep you from leaving?

a rent freeze first of all

been living in here long enough

for my child by this City to be in

junior high school, explaining how

the price of everything went up

living made breathing hard

the cost of artmaking cannot be

traced by DOL algorithms who can’t

fathom why we’d cast our lives out

like wet market nets selling an
animal of ours to make a living

i was already beyond means

an artist’s life cannot be writ

as one clean, safe, social, secure

guarantee of survival when there’s

no work to keep close to dreams

and debts not one would believe

so very long, for now, New York

no asking me to where i’m going

it’s not here...so why’s it matter

-Alanna Blair in Astoria, Queens (until 4/30/2020)


When did time start to slip?

I am at a loss

couldn’t tell you where

to press the pushpin into the map.

Where it would fall,

its place in the trajectory.

Couldn't name the day

of the week. I know

the date I last took the train,

last crossed the East River,

last time I sat

next to a person closer than 6 feet.

Our Conversation not muffled by fabric.

Fabric is what I think of first.

The perfect thread count.

The cradle of cashmere.

The full body warmth of a hug

from a dear friend

that radiates out from the core,

like the first sip of a manhattan

on a bar stool somewhere south of 14th Street.

I am at a loss to recall

the anticipation of touch,

like the moment when you raise

your head out of the bath water,

the sound of the ocean in a shell,

unexpected warmth of a candle

from inches above. I can't do it justice

but I'm slowly leaning in

for a first kiss. The charge in the air

on a spring evening, just before

the wind picks up and all at once torrents.

-Derek Warker in Crown Heights, Brooklyn


How do you feel about your husband going back to work?

Well… since you asked

I feel like he has made a life and death decision to go back to work.

His decision…

and possibly

my life

(his life too, but you asked about me!)

Like many Americans

We have been staying at home

Binge-watching shows on cable television ‘till all hours

Acutely aware of the sirens going by

Wondering about the passengers inside

and hoping they will be OK

Going out masked and gloved, only to get groceries

Or to drop the clothes off to the laundromat

(and once or twice to see our grandson in the park!)

My husband has been hinting about going back to work for over a week now

expressing his concern about the rent and other bills

I understand his need to provide

To take care of things

To keep us afloat

Like many Americans

We are one pay check away from being homeless

Unable to save anything or to own anything

Staying at home is a luxury we can ill afford

Besides, he has used

his sick leave

and his vacation pay

to shelter in place

Now what?

The time has come to go back

Intellectually, I understand why he wants to

why he must

But there is more to it than just money

There is a bigger issue here

that speaks to the character of the man

You see, my husband is a Boy Scout!

Case in point:

Before the tsunami of layoffs in 2008 and 2009

he was working on Wall Street

He had been there for 33 years

and was there when the World Trade Center Towers

came down

Almost immediately,

Mayor Giuliani wanted New York City

to get up on its feet

dust itself off

and get back to work

The bosses couldn’t make him go

but then again, they didn’t have to

Without hesitation he volunteered

to go back down there!

To go Ground Zero and help get the New York Stock Exchange

—or at least the company he worked for—

up on its feet and running

Now, he is an “essential worker” of a different sort

He is a United States Postal Worker

He feels a sense of duty to deliver the mail

to the citizens whom he serves

in this new Ground Zero called Coronavirus

"Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night

stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds."

Oh, he is all about that!

And I love him for it

But he is also sixty-five

and African American

and has an underlying health concern

I would think that should be enough

to continue to keep him home

and

US

Safe

So how do I feel about my husband going back to work, you ask?

Proud, yes

but cautious…

I claim my right to live and tell the tale!

-Yvette Heyliger in Harlem