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How to Celebrate Valentine's Day on a Budget

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How to Celebrate Valentine's Day on a Budget

by jjmaughan

Expressing love and affection is what Valentine's Day is all about. It is now anyway. When times were good and wallets full it was easy to shower that special someone with expensive gifts. Now times are lean: the recession took a 20 billion dollar bite out of consumers' Valentine's Day budgets. This year spending lavishly on chocolates, trips, massages and flowers is out of the question, financially speaking.

We still wish to show those we love how special they are to us on Valentine's Day, but we need to do it without breaking the bank.…Keep reading

 

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For Valentine's: Contemporary Love Poems, Unrequited Love Poems & More


February 11, 2011


Poetry Jewelry



Love remains one of the most active muses in poetry, yet is one of the most heated, tempestuous, and downright difficult influences to work under. This Valentine's season, check out new poems on the topic of love and love's discontents by Mark Doty, Peter Gizzi, Matthea Harvey, Naomi Shihab Nye, and many others.

On the web at: www.poets.org/4love




<3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 

Love poems inspire more love—which inspires more love poems. Read this selection of verse on the theme of love in modern life.

My Heart by Kim Addonizio

To Dorothy by Marvin Bell

The Love-Hat Relationship by Aaron Belz

Hey You by Adrian Blevins

The Embrace by Mark Doty

The Kiss by Stephen Dunn

Rime Riche by Monica Ferrell

It Was Raining In Delft by Peter Gizzi

Long Distance II by Tony Harrison

When a Woman Loves a Man by David Lehman

Footprint on Your Heart by Gary Lenhart

The Ecstasy by Phillip Lopate

Fons by Pura López-Colomé

syntax by Maureen N. McLane

The Ear is an Organ Made for Love by E. Ethelbert Miller

San Antonio by Naomi Shihab Nye

corydon & alexis, redux by D.A. Powell

Epithalamium by Matthew Rohrer

The Meaning of Zero: A Love Poem by Amy Uyematsu



X?  O?  X?  O?  X?  O?

Love is too often followed by heartache, break-ups, or unrequited passion. Read up on the difficulty of love and how poets have dealt with it throughout the ages.

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop

Provisional by Catherine Bowman

When We Two Parted by George Gordon Byron

The Afternoon Sun by C.P. Cavafy

Chaos is the New Calm by Wyn Cooper

The Primer by Christina Davis

To Earthward by Robert Frost

Dear Miss Emily by James Galvin

Donal Óg by Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory

I May After Leaving You Walk Quickly or Even Run by Matthea Harvey

This Was Once a Love Poem by Jane Hirshfield

In Praise of Their Divorce by Tony Hoagland

Footprint on Your Heart by Gary Lenhart

The Vampire Bride [I am come—I am come!] by Henry Thomas Liddell

Family Reunion by Jeredith Merrin

Remember by Christina Rossetti

Apart (Les Séparés) by Louis Simpson

Heart's Needle by W.D. Snodgrass

A Book Of Music by Jack Spicer

The Aeneid, Book IV, [So, you traitor] by Virgil


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[Poetry Chaikhana] Wu Men (Hui-k'ai) - Ten thousand flowers in spring, the moon in autumn

Here's your Daily Poem from the Poetry Chaikhana --

 

Ten thousand flowers in spring, the moon in autumn

By Wu Men (Hui-k'ai)
(1183 - 1260)

English version by Stephen Mitchell

 

Ten thousand flowers in spring, the moon in autumn,
a cool breeze in summer, snow in winter.
If your mind isn't clouded by unnecessary things,
this is the best season of your life.

 

-- from The Enlightened Heart: An Anthology of Sacred Poetry, by Stephen Mitchell

Amazon.com


/ Photo by Richard Cocks /

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Thought for the Day:

Whittle yourself down
to the question at your core.
Let that empty ache
lead you to ecstasy!

============

Here's your Daily Music selection --


Shmuel Ruzbahan

River of Truth

Listen - Purchase

More Music Selections

 

Hi Omss -

There are two primary collections of koans in Zen/Chan Buddhism: the Blue Cliff Records, and the Wu Men Kuan, also known as the Mumonkan. The Mumonkan, first published in 1228, consists of 48 koans compiled by Wu Men Hui-k'ai with his commentary and poetic verse.

Wu Men (also called Mumon) was a head monk of the Lung-hsiang monastery in China.

--

The flowers say it, the moon, the breeze, the snow. Each time we pause to notice the living world around us it blesses us and says-- May your mind be unclouded, and may every season be the best season of your life!

Ivan

 

Share Your Thoughts on today's poem or my commentary...

 

 


/ Photo by vistamommy /

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Ivan M. Granger's original poetry, stories and commentaries are Copyright © 2002 - 2011 by Ivan M. Granger.
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