An
Interview with Donnel Lester, poet from Bakersfield, California.
(February
28, 2005)
Question:
What prompted you to start writing poetry?
Donnel: I have enjoyed reading poetry over the last twelve years or more.
I wrote an occasional poem but I wasn't aware of any inspiration to continue writing poetry. It wasn't that I didn't
have inspirational moments, just that I didn't connect them with writing.
Much of the
poetry that I was exposed to over those twelve years dealt with the hazards and joys of being male, the struggle for masculine
identity, the paradoxes, the trials and celebrations of discovering the male mystique. I guess that was what drew me
into poetry, a vehicle that took me to places in myself that I hadn't seen or appreciated before.
The poem
"Free Flight" that appears elsewhere on this website was probably where I reached what is called "critical mass" in nuclear
physics, the point of no return. I didn't know it at the time, but looking back on it now, something happened that day
from which there was no turning back. I had seen too much of myself to hide in denial.
Question: What was it about the poem "Free Flight" that
drew you further into writing poetry?
Donnel: It was just three days after my birthday and
my delightful wife told me she had a surprise birthday gift for me and we had to go to Solvang so she could give
it to me. We drove into a valley back toward the mountains and my heart went wild when I saw the gliders at an airport,
realizing my wife was giving me the gift I had longed for more than 25 years. I was going up in a glider!
Talk about a peak experience! I was that little
kid with his first brand new bicycle for his birthday, just the right color with everything he wanted on it. Once we
were released from the launch plane, we caught a thermal and rose up above the mountains where we could see the ocean, the
whole valley and the town of Solvang. That was when
the pilot said "It's yours now. You're the pilot" and for about twenty minutes we soared very close to heaven.
After the pilot landed the glider, I walked over to my
wife who was waiting expectantly, perhaps wondering if the candor of my expression suggested that I was on drugs and
why didn't my feet touch the ground when I walked? After about five minutes of describing my experience, I blurted out
"I need to write now" and grabbed my notebook from the car and started writing. In less than twenty minutes I had written
the poem, in essentially the same form as it is now. Before we left the airport I found the pilot and read the poem
to him as a way of saying thank you, something I had already done a dozen times. I knew that we had seen the same thing,
in the same way, when he asked me to send him a copy to put on his office wall. I heard a key turn inside me and I crossed
a threshold; I didn't know it at the time but there was no going back
Question: When did you start to write poetry on
a regular basis?
Donnel: A couple of months later I guess.
My mother had died the month before that birthday and I had been keeping a grieving journal even before she died which I continued
into the next year. The grief journal eventually morphed into my life journal. Then for some reason I stopped
writing in it regularly and it faded into the background. I became restless and uneasy when the writing in my journal
tapered off; I guess detached would be a good word to describe the experience, detached from myself.
About the same time, my wife, amazing how she shows up
at the right times, introduced me to a poetry mentor and coach. In her subtle and convincing way, my wife suggested
that I attend a workshop series that Alexa was offering here in Bakersfield.
The voice inside me said "go" and I did. In January the following year I went to another poetry writing workshop
series and decided that I would write at least one poem a week for the remainder of that year. By the end of that
year poetry had become part of the fabric of my life, and so I continue to write.
Question: Do you have a particular style of writing?
Donnel: Not really. I'm still exploring the
possibilities of who I can be in poetic expression. If this works the way I think it does, I will always be
open to new ways of expressing myself through writing, not unlike a painter who keeps experimenting with new styles of expression.
Do you have plans to publish any of your poems?
Donnel: I'm not considering publishing anything
at this point. I'm retired and write poems because it helps me to be a whole person. By whole, I mean emotionally
and spiritually well. I think that is the purpose of writing and reading poetry, for personal wellbeing.
Before there was psychotherapy there was poetry and all of the other creative means of expressions. I think everyone
needs to have creative outlets where they bring the best of what lies within them into the world.... and it makes no
difference what anyone else thinks of it either. I admire those who make a living writing poetry, sculpting or painting;
it's risky business and I applaud them; it's just not something I'm interested in for myself.
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