Poetry Friday: May Has Always been a Favorite Month

apple tree buds in the spring
Apple Tree buds in the Spring of 2015 at our home in WI. Β© Carol Labuzzetta, 2015

With the close of National Poetry Month, I feel a sense of accomplishment. I was able to write a poem a day and match it to one of my photos. I posted those here, and to my Facebook Page, and some to Medium.com

Other writing accomplishments for April were having two boosted stories on Medium.com. Boosts are something the platform does when an editor or the administration feels your piece should be read by a wider audience. This resulted in my most successful month, monetarily, as a writer on Medium to date. It is something to be proud of.

What were my articles about? The first was about the disappearance of sea grass in our oceans. The second was an article about travel and miscarriage. As you can see, I like to write on a variety of topics.

I wrote and submitted a chapter proposal for a textbook. I will let you know more about that if it is accepted. I was asked to submit the proposal, and that was an opportunity I wanted to take advantage of.

Lastly, I attended a Highlights Foundation mini-webinar on writing Non-Fiction Picture Books. I’m not quite through the material yet, but one of the two presenters was very informative and professional in their style of presenting. I appreciated that after being somewhat disappointed with the first.

So, April was a busy month. I feel like I got some momentum back in my writing.

May will bring me outdoors more. My perennials are sprouting. My garden will need planting. My pots will need to be planted and placed around our deck.

The end of the month will bring travel again as my husband and I are going to Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks to hike. I’m especially excited about Yosemite!

May has always been a month of transition. When I taught at the college level, it was a time for finals and goodbyes. When I led my elementary school garden club, it was time to plant the butterfly garden with the students. I did that for 15 years, and although it took a lot of work, I miss it.

The landscape changes in May. In Northern Wisconsin, we go from brown to green. The Earth is waking up and bursting with new life. I’m looking forward to more sun, warmth, and longer days.

Aren’t you?

Home fruit orchard at our last house. Β© Carol Labuzzetta, 2015.

Mary Lee has the round-up this week at her blog, Another Year of Reading. Thanks for hosting, Mary Lee!

9 thoughts

  1. Great photos! Congrats on the “boosts”– it sounds like your mood has been boosted, too πŸ™‚ I’m not a warm-weather person, myself, but I do enjoy taking photos when everything is green!

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  2. Congratulations on your successful writing projects. I look forward to photos from your hiking trip.

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  3. Cheers to getting writing momentum back. I always lag in the late winter and feel like I’ll never be able to write another good thing again. May sunshine helps me perk back up. What beautiful poetry here!

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  4. Congratulations, Carol. Your successes cheer me this spring morning. You always put your heart and soul into your projects so others feel the bounty of what you share. The photos are lovely. “Love mixed with faith helps all thing prevail.” is a marvelous line that I am going to keep as a reminder to continue to believe.

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  5. Congrats on the boosts, Carol! I’ve had mixed results with the Highlights Foundation webinars. One (Laura Shovan’s) was absolutely excellent. Another was really unhelpful. Such a great organization, but I’m finding the quality of individual offerings varies WIDELY.

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