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Arc of the Poet, Part 3: True Love

Arc of the Poet
Part 1: Life Poetry
Part 2: Tour de Force
Part 3: True Love
Part 4: Spinning Out
Part 5: Wake-Up Call
Part 6: Serious Dreams
Part 7: Home Stretch
Part 8: Feedback
Part 9: Dear Departures
Part 10: Good Poetry
Part 11: Rewrites
Part 12: Resistance
Part 13: Fame and Fortune
Part 14: Ramblings
Part 15: Being

Thank you very much for your interest in my education and exploits as a poet over the past 20 years. With Arc of the Poet, I’m aiming to share the most interesting highlights and lowlights as briefly, and as colorfully, as possible.

Even before 1990 had officially begun, I recall feeling anxious for it to be over. It truly was an endurance test for me, involving one marathon ordeal after another. I turned 23 that year, with no fanfare, and I took that as a sign of maturity. I also persevered in seizing my military and college experiences with the best of my thoughts and abilities, which I saw as evidence of my growing strength and confidence. By the time it ended, 1990 gave me a great deal in return for all my efforts.

Looking back now, 21 years later, I think my determination to forge my own career path as a freelance professional is the richest of many valuable life lessons I carried into 1990. For that reason, I now have extra appreciation for this poem I stopped to write back on December 30, 1989. Its final stanza puts that important mindset into clear perspective.

In The Distance

Through your vast and piled aspects,
on a blurred or focused day,
think of these few polished crystals
thence, politely, clear the way:

There’s a place for you in Oxford;
you’ll be welcomed at the gates;
you’ll have children ever-thankful
for your handling of their fates;

many pages pouring reverence
will abound upon your shelf;
you’ll have movies made about you
next to ones you’ve made yourself;

words of honor you have written,
such as Drake McCawber’s tale,
will run ‘cross the lips of mothers,
blazing children lovely trail;

but the most important keepsake
you should cherish on a day
owes to strength and faith from living
only in your chosen way.

Another idea I embraced during those days was that there’s no such thing as defeat, only education. In January, I set my sights on graduating in December with two B.A. degrees. In the course of earning the 33 upper-level college credits necessary to pull that off, I took on new duties with my Air Force Reserve unit, and worked as a freelance word processor and audiovisual stage-hand. All that work barely kept me above the poverty level, but my motivations were clear; since every choice was completely self-driven, I was determined to succeed.

Through all these experiences, I was being graded by instructors, supervisors in many industries, military officers, professionals stretching from the top to the bottom of the creative industry, and even editors and readers at my university’s newspaper. For the last 16 months before graduating, I wrote a weekly humor column entitled “Observations.” Looking over the journal I kept, I can see that one day in October, the editor in chief told me point blank: “I think some of what you write is shit.” I cut myself some slack, knowing how hard I had to work to write those columns, but took her criticism on the chin, and kept on learning and trying to improve.

Fortunately, a few key positive developments shaped up, too, and together with the unwavering support from my family, my good friend and roommate Jay Lerew, and many other close friends, that proved to be all I needed. My humor column helped me win a Scripps Howard Foundation Fellowship … but much more importantly, it also helped me win the heart of an amazing girl named Beth Ann Kiefert. Friends, I am very proud to say that the addition of this young lady into my life is the key ingredient in the joyous, rewarding life walk I’ve been enjoying ever since.

From June through August that year, Beth took off with a few friends to backpack across Europe. Ultimately, that period was intensely productive for me, as I maniacally threw myself into one duty or commitment after another, trying my best to stay busy until her return. I set goals to write a novella, a full-length screenplay, and a collection of my poetry specifically for children. Although none of those projects came together during those weeks, I did organize my poems chronologically, type them up and begin preparing a few submissions for local writing competitions.

By the time December was ending, I had collected my diplomas and my Honorable Air Force discharge, and started building a new life with the girl of my dreams. Suddenly, my next-level goals were coming within reach. At that magical moment in time, I saw literary recognition and success as one possible path to financial freedom, which I felt would allow me to read and write to my heart’s content. While I also had to recommit to the opportunities I could line-up as a freelance wage-earner, I began mounting serious efforts to get my creative writing into print. Guiding and supporting my ambitions was this beautiful, energetic, vivacious girl, who that year gave me the most prized of worldly possessions for keeps: true love.

Our Love-Long Cozy Fires

I looked all through a book of verse
but nowhere in its authors’ terse
elaborations did it grace
a rhyme I felt could fill this space.

Where once no words had seen the sun
I’ve thought to build a sprightly, fun,
and pointed piece with loving point:
To wound your heart — but then anoint

it — with a potion made from scratch,
the contents: all of me. A patch,
hand-sewn by all the powers that be
will heal your heart, and render “we.”

I hope a poem can make such mark —
can leap from page to fire such spark! —
for, should these markings do their work
your love for me will go berserk!

And nowhere, save within my grasp
e’er will your fancy think to pass.
My Beth, you’re all my heart desires …
here’s to our love-long cozy fires.

Author, communications consultant, publisher, and career guide Roger Darnell is principal of creative-industry PR firm, The Darnell Works Agency.