Awareness and Perception
New poetry this week by Alexandria Faithe and Donal Mahoney. Come: perceive and be aware.
Make every day a beautiful day.
Eye on Life Magazine is a Lifestyle and Literary Magazine. Enjoy articles on gardening, kitchen cooking, poetry, vintage decor, and more.
New poetry this week by Alexandria Faithe and Donal Mahoney. Come: perceive and be aware.
Poets write poetry because they must. Well, of course if they did not write poetry they wouldn't be poets ...
There's a phrase I never thought I'd write.
Read MoreIt finally hit me this
spring, when my wife became so wrapped up in Ikebana, the Japanese art
of flower arranging, that posies kept flying into the house as fast as
Japanese vases kept arriving from Japan. Previously, it's only been
gardening that has occupied her. I buy a lot of the plants but I stay
out of the garden.
Read MoreGraphic Artist and Photographer by day, avid actress and spoken word poet by night, Mariam has used her various creative outlets to fuel her writing since she was a little girl. Growing up in the United States before moving to Pakistan allowed her to see completely contrasting perspectives on life at an early age, and her writings reflect her unbiased and perceptive state of mind.
Read Mariam's poetry:
Robert Fabre has been writing poetry for over 30 years. You can read his poetry here.
Presenting the winners of the 2013 Eye On Life Poetry Contest! Following are the poets, and included with their stories are links to their winning poems and other work. Thank you for visiting. I know you will enjoy.
Read MoreChristopher Hivner writes from a small town in Pennsylvania surrounded by books and the echoes of music. He is neither famous nor infamous, goes by Chris but will answer to Christopher, Ragnar and depending on his mood, “hey you”. He has recently been published in The Siren’s Call, Driftwood Bay, Kalkion, Dead Snakes, The Camel Saloon and Underground Voices. A collection of short horror stories, “The Spaces Between Your Screams” was published in 2008. A chapbook of poetry, “The Silence Brushes My Cheek Like Glass” was published by Scars Publications and can be read for free at scars.tv
Read Christopher's prize-winning poetry:
Click here to read more of Christopher's poetry.
Since Emily was first introduced to poetry in high school through Robinson Jeffers she has developed her writing voice and she has tried to live alertly, so as to speak of actual life, not ideal life-- the concrete rather than the abstract. Her work is the result of personal experience and a product of its historic times. She feels lucky to have lived mostly in peace and wholeness.
The natural world is usually her model or framework. Emily’s theme is often the tension between nature and humanity, the understanding of man's machinations as reflected in the world. She finds herself returning consistently to the red desert world of the American West-- focusing on the particulars of rock and geological forces-- the silence of the landscape, the solitude of the observer. Emily tries to make the sensory life of the earth breathe through her poems by using highly concrete images.
Ideally, Emily wants her poetry to reflect the state that characterizes reality at a level that language cannot reach. Nature starts out from darkness and nothingness to ultimately reveal the loneliness of place and relationships. Poetry can illuminate the darkness of the gaps between humans. Listening to the land, we remove that darkness and know ourselves more clearly; or by reading poetry, since poetry should be experience distilled to a crystalline drop.
Emily understands that her task as poet is to concentrate on the natural images she observes closely and to capture the ideas that those images release to her.
Read Emily's prize-winning poetry:
Click here to read more of Emily's poetry.
Megan is a producer at a videogame studio by day and a writer by night. Her poetry has appeared in Awosting Alchemy, and The Poetic Pinup Revue. Originally from Massachusetts, she now lives in the Santa Cruz Mountains of California with her boyfriend, a four year-old cat who thinks she’s still a kitten, a kitten who thinks he’s a dog, and a free-range hen who is digging her way to China.
Read Megan's prize-winning poetry: