Last night, to while away the time and to dispel our anxiety over the current situation, my husband and I started to play around with altering real poems to reflect the world today. This turned out to be a great deal of fun. So I thought I’d share one of our joint efforts, and at the same time invite you to do the same.
So . . . challenge on! Find a poem (or part of a poem, or even the one I have used) and rewrite it to make it a reflection of some aspect of your current experience. It doesn’t have to be funny; it can be whatever you want it to be. It can also be a fun family activity. Please share your efforts with us all in the comments section below, for laughs, or tears, or whatever.
Here’s ours:
Original Poem
This is Just to Say
(1934)
by William Carlos Williams
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving
for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
Rewritten Version
This is Just to Say, 2020
I have used up
the tissues
that were by
the toilet
and which
you were probably
saving
for your turn
Forgive me
they were absorbent
so clean
and so soft
Debora M. Worth, LCSW, is a graduate of the Manhattan Institute for Psychoanalysis. She is faculty, supervisor, and training analyst at MIP, and served as co-director of the institute from 2007 to 2012. In addition, she is teaching and supervising faculty in the Child and Adolescent Training Program at the William Alanson White Institute. She is in private practice in New York City, working with adults, couples, children and adolescents.
To contribute to the special series on COVID-19, send blog posts of up to ~1,000 words (read full submission guidelines here) to Analysis Now blog co-editors Justine Duhr at justinetduhr@gmail.com and Robert Levin at rob@robertlevinlcsw.com.
If you enjoyed this post, we recommend:
Special Series on COVID-19 by Justine Duhr, MFA, and Robert Levin, LCSW
Thinking Analytically in the Time of COVID-19 by Sandra Green, LCSW
Minding COVID-19: Re-establishing Communication Through Mentalizing by Troy Becker, Psy.D.
How Can We Wake up From This Bad Dream? by Irina Simidchieva
An Elegy for My Office From a Psychoanalyst Working Remotely by Blair Casdin, LCSW
Psychoanalysis in the Time of Plague: This *Is* Psychoanalysis! by Veronica Csillag, LCSW
Uncommon Teletherapy Suggestions by Andrew Hartz, Ph.D.
13 Comments
Leave your reply.