Friday, 22 January 2010
Monaghan Asks for Poems In The Waiting Room
A batch of PITWR leaflets are in the post to be distributed in some lucky medical centres' waiting rooms. Ask you doctor where yours are!
Sunday, 22 November 2009
Poëzie verzacht de zeden in Ierse dokterswachtkamers
We were covered by the Dutch Dirk Leyman in NRC boeken. The title means roughly "Poetry softens the boredom in Irish Doctors' waiting rooms."
Wednesday, 28 January 2009
Otago Poems in the Waiting Room
Check out this link to Otago Poems in the waiting room in Dunedin, New Zealand. Like me, Ruth Arniston has found it difficult to secure funding. But congratulations for getting it going.
Monday, 5 January 2009
New Link
The lovely Darragh links to PITWR at This is what I do.
It is an interesting project, for sure. But a lot of work for little return. Not sure I'll scrimp a grant for 2009. The economic climate is very iffy for the arts.
Monday, 1 December 2008
Poetry as Therapy
Here's an interesting article on Poetry as Therapy from the Huffington Post.
...
In an article for the Psychiatric Centers Information Network, registered poetry therapist Perie J. Longo instructs us that "the word therapy, after all, comes from the Greek word therapeia meaning to nurse or cure through dance, song, poem and drama."
...
Friday, 31 October 2008
Hospital Feedback
Clane Hospital reported that the leaflets were going down well and they still had some left.
Naas Hospital had the same problem with responses from the busy receptionists as in the doctors’ surgeries. She did an excellent study going round the waiting rooms herself and asking 100 people for their responses face to face. 91% said that they liked the poems. 88% would like to see poetry available in the hospital waiting areas on a permanent basis.
Some of the comments included:
• “Very refreshing in comparison to literature usually present in waiting rooms. Diversity and quality of poems are extraordinary”
• “I like the variety more humour in poems please we need cheering up”
• “Passes the time”
• “Puts one thinking”
• “At the age of 66 some meant a lot to me”
• “Learnt back in school – 80 yrs ago”
• “Different”
• “It eases the mind/relaxing”
• “Reminds me of school”
• “Waste of money”
• “They are lovely”
• “A good read”
She asked for suggestions on improving the waiting room experience.
• “Too much television – not enough magazines for men”
• “Someone to recite the poetry”
• “Drinks machines/water cooler”
• “Ask waiting patients to compose poem/essays themselves!”
• “Faster service-take patients at arranged time.”
• “More poems and short stories”
• “Books of poetry and short stories would help peoples thoughts and feelings and relax them before visiting the doctor”
• “Ask people to compose their own and send in. Also a bit of Art (painting) not all “modern impressionist but real life and landscape”
• “Play area for little children”
Thursday, 30 October 2008
Feedback from Surgeries
Feedback from the surgeries was positive in the main. Many of the waiting rooms are out of view of the reception so they couldn’t see exactly how the visitors reacted to the leaflets in the waiting rooms.
Some of the comments from surgeries:
• “Well done. I noticed people taking them away.”
• “They weren’t thrown around. People were reading them.”
• “..very positive. They are reluctant to take them home.”
• “They’ve all gone.”
• “They take them but whatever they do with them, I don’t know.”
• “Nice idea.”
• “Not gone down too well. People are writing on them.”
• “I haven’t read a poem since the leaving cert.”
Out of 22 responses, all but one were positive. One requested another batch of leaflets to replace those already taken home.
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
Doctors’ Waiting Rooms
There is not one source of a list of doctor’s waiting rooms in Kildare. The list was compiled from various sources including the phone book and internet resources including yourlocal.ie, goldenpages.ie and kildare.ie. This resulted in a list that included some dentists and some doctors who were retired, as well other out of date or inaccurate information.
Each surgery was called, some more than once to catch their limited opening hours, to confirm the data and to explain the project before posting the leaflets.
Uptake
Out of 48 surgeries that were contactable and still working, 44 requested a batch of leaflets. Each waiting room received 20 leaflets limited by the postal cost.
Sunday, 12 October 2008
More Blogs quote us in a positive light
Bob and Margery's blog on about.com talks about poetry as public art.
Bob Holman is from New York and Margery Snyder is from San Francisco.
Also in the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies (IFACCA) news
Saturday, 11 October 2008
Wednesday, 16 July 2008
We are now in Clane Hospital
Monday, 30 June 2008
Poem Suggestion
I received this email from kildare.ie.
Hi,
I picked up a leaflet in the library to day ‘Poems in the Waiting Room’ – what a great idea. Can I suggest a poem for a future leaflet? This one appeared on the recent Leaving. Cert. Higher level English paper as the unseen poem. It reminds me of my own lovely kind father.
Regards
She attached the lovely poem, 'Those Winter Sundays' by Robert Hayden.
Well, to respond to your suggestion, I know the poem well. I first came across it in the lovely poetry anthology from Bloodaxe, Staying Alive (or maybe it was Being Alive). The problem is that the poem is still in copyright, he died in 1980, so we would have to pay to include it. We try to keep paying for rights to living poets so most of the poems are out of copyright.
I won't quote it here so I don't breach copyright (but try googling it if you want to read it.)
Any more suggestions?
Sunday, 15 June 2008
More Interest in our Project
The leaflets have started being distributed.
Naas Hospital are raising awareness in their waiting rooms and the leaflets should be out next week.
The 15 Kildare libraries will receive their leaflets this week.
We are in the process of contacting Doctor's surgeries and posting out or hand delivering to everyone who expresses an interest.
We are especially keen to get feedback from the readers, the visitors and staff as well. Comments are appreciated, good or bad.
We have an article in the Liffey Champion and will be on KFM radio.
Kildare.ie also feature us here.
And we have been picked up by no less illustrious a publication than The New Yorker.
Thursday, 12 June 2008
Dublin's Evening Herald
We're in Dublin's Evening Herald newspaper. A whole page (minus an advert for the Anglo Irish Bank) on page 23.
Just what the doctor ordered - waiting room reading gets a dose of culture with free poetry leaflets.
By Sarah Neville.
A great article. I hope loads of people read it and drop by the website. I hope some doctor's read it and get in touch.
Just a couple of corrections.
We have 2,000 leaflets, not 2,000 poems. We have 6 poems in this first issue. We are sponsored by Kildare County Council Arts Service.
Poems in the Waiting Room was established in the UK in 1995. And not by the National Health but by an Arts In Health Charity. And they are supplying over 1,000 waiting rooms each quarter with a total of 22,000 leaflets, a great achievement. It is no longer supported by the Arts Council but by a number of charitable trusts, including the Beatrice Trust, The Tanner Trust and The Oakdale Trust.
Friday, 6 June 2008
Thursday, 5 June 2008
Iggy McGovern - The Difference
Iggy McGovern was born in Coleraine and lives in Dublin where he is Associate Professor of Physics at Trinity College. His poetry has been widely published in anthologies and journals in Ireland and abroad, as well as in the popular ‘Poetry in Motion’ series on trains in the Dublin suburban rail system (DART). Well-known for his witty, playful, but emotionally engaged poems, McGovern is the recipient of the McCrae Literary Award and the Hennessy Literary Award for poetry.
The Difference is a poem from his first collection, The King of Suburbia. It is subtitled for Eoin. This was published in November 2005 for which he received the Glen Dimplex Poetry Award.
You can download and listen to Iggy reading some of his poems on the Dedalus Press website where you can also order the book.
Wednesday, 4 June 2008
Ann Egan - Aspen Falls
Ann Egan was born in 1948 in Co Laois. Her collections are Landing the Sea (Cork, Bradshaw Books, 2003); and The Wren Women (Ballyclare, Co Antrim, The Black Mountain Press, 2003). She has won numerous prizes for her poetry, including several at Listowel Writers’ Week; The Athlone Poetry Prize; The Annamakerrig Prize, 75 years of RTE radio and in 2001, the Oki Prize. She lives in Co Kildare.
The poem 'Aspen Falls' in our first leaflet is taken from the collection 'Landing the Sea.' This can be ordered from Bradshaw books and all good bookshops.
Tuesday, 3 June 2008
Hope - Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson was born December 10, 1830 in Amherst, Massachusetts to a successful family with strong community ties, she lived a mostly introverted and reclusive life. She was a prolific private poet, choosing to publish fewer than a dozen of her nearly eighteen hundred poems. The work that was published during her lifetime was usually altered significantly by the publishers to fit the conventional poetic rules of the time. Dickinson's poems are unique for the era in which she wrote; they contain short lines, typically lack titles, and often utilize slant rhyme as well as unconventional capitalization and punctuation. Her poems also tend to deal with themes of death and immortality, two subjects which infused her letters to friends.
She died on May 15, 1886.
Despite her prolific writing, fewer than a dozen of her poems were published during her lifetime. After her younger sister Vinnie discovered the collection of nearly eighteen hundred poems, Dickinson's first volume was published four years after her death. Until the 1955 publication of Dickinson's Complete Poems by Thomas H. Johnson, her poetry was considerably edited and altered from their manuscript versions. Since 1890 Dickinson has remained continuously in print.
See Wikipedia for more information on her life and works.
'Hope' is the fourth part of a longer poem called 'Life.' It was written around 1861. It is an extended metaphor using a bird for Hope. Why not download the poster of the poem and frame or laminate it for your waiting room or staffroom? You order The Complete Poems by Emily Dickinson published by Faber from Amazon and all good bookshops.
Here is a good analysis of the poem, Hope.
Monday, 2 June 2008
Sunday, 1 June 2008
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 130
William Shakespeare was baptised 26 April 1564 in Stratford upon Avon in England. He was an poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "The Bard"). His surviving works consist of 38 plays, 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and several other poems. His plays have been translated into every major living language, and are performed more often than those of any other playwright. He died on 23 April 1616.
The Sonnets were published in 1609, but Scholars are not certain when each of the 154sonnets was composed; Evidence suggests that Shakespeare wrote sonnets throughout his career for a private readership.
In Sonnet 130 included in our first leaflet, the poet satirises the tradition of comparing one's beloved to all things beautiful under the sun, and to things divine and immortal as well. It is often said that the praise of his mistress is so negative that the reader is left with the impression that she is almost unlovable. On the contrary, although the first part makes many negative comparisons, the second part contrives to make one believe that the sound of her voice is sweeter than any music, and that she far outdistances any goddess in her merely human beauties and her mortal approachability.
This is the sonnet as originally published:
M Y Miſtres eyes are nothing like the Sunne,
Currall is farre more red,then her lips red,
If ſnow be white,why then her breſts are dun:
If haires be wiers,black wiers grow on her head:
I haue ſeene Roſes damaskt,red and white,
But no ſuch Roſes ſee I in her cheekes,
And in ſome perfumes is there more delight,
Then in the breath that from my Miſtres reekes.
I loue to heare her ſpeake,yet well I know,
That Muſicke hath a farre more pleaſing found:
I graunt I neuer ſaw a goddeſſe goe,
My Miſtres when ſhee walkes treads on the ground.
And yet by heauen I thinke my loue as rare,
As any ſhe beli'd with falſe compare.
Why not download the poster of the poem and frame or laminate it for your waiting room or staffroom? You order Shakespeare's Sonnets published by many publishers from Amazon and all good bookshops.
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