My pen.
My fork.
Only printing paper. But art.
“There’s virtue in my strokes,
charisma in random colours,” my marker whispers.
A thousand tools of metal and stick,
items on every wood,
Work,
Muddy jars
And poor ergonomics
I’m a wicked pilgrim of materiality,
imagination is my sect.
I put purple and green in its grey,
My lips pursed with a smile I’m not aware of.
My coloured hair rests on busy shoulders.
Dark brown eyes pooled with awe of God’s design,
But my fingers work to slate it
To their own multicoloured, heinous tastes
A studio,
my dream nature reserve.
Points:
Time spent:
Canary word: Present
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Hello!

From the summary, I didn‘t expect a poem but here we go 😊
Hmm is “stick” really a material here? “A thousand tools of metal and stick,” I would have thought you’d go for wood here… but then you have it in the next line… hmmm
“And poor ergonomics“ ah well, if that isn’t a callout =D
I really like how you say and imply so much with this line: “My coloured hair rests on busy shoulders.”
I don’t quite understand how this is the beginning of series but I suppose that can easily be chalked up to my unfamiliarity of poems and serial poems.
Namaste (hey)
this is my honest review on your work
This poem, “My pen. My fork.”, strikes me immediately with its raw intimacy and playful reverence for the act of creation. I can feel the pulse of a mind both mischievous and devout, someone who treats everyday objects—pens, forks, jars—not merely as tools, but as instruments of sacred exploration. The opening lines are deceptively simple, almost minimalist, yet they hold immense weight: in their brevity, they suggest that art need not be grandiose; it is born even from the mundane.
I am drawn to the way the poem animates the tools: “There’s virtue in my strokes, charisma in random colours,” my marker whispers. It’s almost as if the objects themselves are collaborators, and the marker becomes a confidant. That personification creates a bridge between the material and the imaginative, which runs like a current through the poem.
The language and imagery are strikingly tactile. Phrases like “muddy jars and poor ergonomics” juxtapose the beauty of creation with the discomfort and messiness of the process, reminding me that art is both labor and joy. The poet’s declaration—“I’m a wicked pilgrim of materiality, imagination is my sect”—is profoundly resonant. It frames creativity as a spiritual pursuit, yet one that embraces chaos, indulgence, and personal eccentricity.
I love the way color is used almost sacramentally: purple and green bleeding into grey, fingers defiling and sanctifying simultaneously, lips pursed in an unaware smile. The imagery of “dark brown eyes pooled with awe of God’s design” anchors the poem in reverence, yet the following lines—where the fingers assert their “multicoloured, heinous tastes”—remind me that this is not solemn worship but joyful, messy, living art.
Structurally, the poem flows like a stream of consciousness, with short, staccato lines juxtaposed against long, lush phrases. This mirrors the creative process itself: moments of sharp focus interspersed with expansive wonder. The final line—“A studio, my dream nature reserve”—feels like a benediction. It’s a revelation: the studio is a sanctuary, a curated wildness where imagination roams free.
Overall, this poem is a celebration of creation in its most authentic form. It captures the messy, tactile, and sacred nature of artistic pursuit while remaining playful and deeply human. I am truly inspired by the vivid world you’ve created with your words. Your dedication, imagination, and unique perspective shine brilliantly, and it is a joy to witness your artistry.
Heartfelt appreciation for this beautiful work, and my very best wishes to you—may your creativity continue to flourish, your colors always remain bold, and your imagination never cease to surprise and inspire the world.
reviewed by shakthisinha