
i want to write a poem for my mom for mothers day or just have someone give me one.. it would mean alot to herr soo please helpp me, it can be a deep poem or whateverr
There’s one thing you can be sure of: your mother will value anything "you" write far above anything you "give" her that came from someone else…without a doubt. So, if you want to write a poem, here’s some guidance: first of all, don’t try to make all the lines rhyme…if you feel the need to rhyme, just rhyme the last two…that will be enough. Also, you need to talk from the heart, not your head. Don’t tell her things she already knows, create images that she understands..for example…look at these two sets of lines and see if you can see which is better:
I love you and I always have
you are the best mom in the
entire world and you mean
more to me than anything
or
I think of you when I smell cookies
I cry when I see pictures of you holding me
I hear your voice just before I fall asleep
I almost see you waiting by the door each
time I come home late
See the difference? The second set presents images that will make tears come to her eyes…good tears, because these are the images she "wants" you to have..she wants you to think of her even when she’s not there…to miss her…and those images say more about love than saying love a thousand times. So write about a dozen lines and put a rhymed couplet at the end if you feel the need for "some" rhyme…something like:
Maybe I never told you this before
But you’re the one I’ll always adore
…or something along those lines…it will make the rest of the poem sound like it rhymed…even though it didn’t.
…start writing

March 10th, 2010 at 8:05 pm
There’s one thing you can be sure of: your mother will value anything "you" write far above anything you "give" her that came from someone else…without a doubt. So, if you want to write a poem, here’s some guidance: first of all, don’t try to make all the lines rhyme…if you feel the need to rhyme, just rhyme the last two…that will be enough. Also, you need to talk from the heart, not your head. Don’t tell her things she already knows, create images that she understands..for example…look at these two sets of lines and see if you can see which is better:
I love you and I always have
you are the best mom in the
entire world and you mean
more to me than anything
or
I think of you when I smell cookies
I cry when I see pictures of you holding me
I hear your voice just before I fall asleep
I almost see you waiting by the door each
time I come home late
See the difference? The second set presents images that will make tears come to her eyes…good tears, because these are the images she "wants" you to have..she wants you to think of her even when she’s not there…to miss her…and those images say more about love than saying love a thousand times. So write about a dozen lines and put a rhymed couplet at the end if you feel the need for "some" rhyme…something like:
Maybe I never told you this before
But you’re the one I’ll always adore
…or something along those lines…it will make the rest of the poem sound like it rhymed…even though it didn’t.
…start writing
References :
Editor, New Poets Press