Sincerely Lindsey
 
    250 words, 140 characters, or 5 syllables? It doesn't matter how you slice or dice it; they all are limiting in their own respect. 
    
    First, I selected a quote from Anzaldua and set off to write a 250 word pierce of microfiction. I must say that being a very descriptive, some would say wordy, writer, I struggle with maximum word counts. I began with a set direction aiming for a simplistic and short way to say what I needed to say, yet my fingers told a much better complex and symbolic story. Within this assignment I grew as a writer by inserting color, adjusting tone, shifting tense, removing prepositions, utilizing thesaurus, and limiting words. 

    Next, I took this piece of microfiction entitled "Greyt Expectations" and used it to inspire a haiku. I must say that while I prefer the narrative form, the 3 stanza haiku did hold some weight as the words I selected were the windows of meaning taken from the microfiction. Some things I did learn, however, are that I should vary my word length and make my prepositions beefier, yet my verbs tend to be strong! 

    Then, in the same fashion that I wrote the first piece of microfiction based upon the Anzaldua readings, I explored my tweets and selected 2 of them that wouldn't normally coincide and enmeshed them into the same piece of microfiction. Since I started with my own style and voice, it was much easier to incorporate these outside quotes into my writing and make them flow. Within this piece alone, I took a risk writing the inner and outer thoughts of one character alone, all presenting a rather complex plot that I believe reader's can add their own experience.

    Finally, I took my microfiction that was inspired by my tweets and tried to create a found poem based upon the words I wished to emphasize. For this assignment, I tried the haiku once again and found that since the tweets were not cohesive thoughts, the poem, already limited by syllables, became limited in meaning. I feel this was stretching the heart of the writing beyond its intended purpose.

    Essentially, shifting genres forced me to think critically about each and every word I placed into my writing. Furthermore, I found myself saying if I only used this word, or if I only posted this thought. The biggest lesson I learned is that revisiting the same text at times may seem monotonous, yet it allows me to edit thngs that I wish to explore in hindsight of the first attempt!
 
The following haiku was inspired by the words of the piece of microfiction entitled “Greyt Expectations” in the previous post:

Seemingly Unobtainable

Dreaded perfection
Radiates expectations
As love disappears

Idealistic words
Filled with the weight of applause
Surrounds, entangles

Grey obligations
Repeated in the margins
Patience scribbled out

            This “found poem” was created using 13 of my personal tweets in the past month:

1. Some secrets are too good not to confess! (January 24)

2. While there is an exception to every rule, no story is free from argument or edit. ( January 25)

3. I miss the days where possibilities were only limited by your imagination (January 26)

4. How many emotions do you think the human heart experiences in any given day? (January 26)

5. "Put down you guard just a little. I'll keep you safe in these arms of mine." (January 26)

6. Once trust is broken it will never be fully restored! (January 30)

7. "Her bloodprints in the sand like valentines." What powerful imagery and language! (February 1)

8. She hesitates while her past screams of previous hurts, yet she knows in order to love there are risks involved. (February 2)

9. Why is it that people always love to hold others accountable but hate being held accountable? (February 2)

10.  If only maturity was infectious! (February 2)

11.  There is a work of art in my head, if I could only get it onto paper.  (February 3)

12.  Sometimes you have to make yourself numb in order to love someone! (February 4)

13.  In reality, vulnerability is inevitable if our life is to have any meaning, for it is the basis of all relationships and reason! (February 8)

Vulnerable
Like a hesitant heart
Numbs reality 

Argumentative
Like exceptions to the rule
Guard against edit

Accountable
Like a paper valentine
Confesses secrets

Imaginative
Like an infectious language
Trusts without reason

In reflecting upon both of these poems, I feel that the haiku based upon my microfiction was more gripping because it was inspired by a cohesive piece of writing, whereas many of my tweets, whie sharing a common emotion, do not share the same context.