Enter Serenity: WordPlay Welcomes a New Mentor Writer

By Baton Rouge Lagniappe, published Mar 20, 2007
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Baton Rouge's WordPlay Teen Writing Project traffics in safe spaces and scorching syntax. For a year and a half WordPlay staff have worked hard to empower young people in Baton Rouge by supplying them with the knowledge and resources they need to create art, community, and social change through literacy. The frenzy of activity and work constantly happening in the WordPlay office space at the Big Buddy Program is tiring just to watch. We are all thankful - young people and adults - once a month, to find some release, some pat on the back, some right word on the mic, some snatch of applause, some new voice to carry us forward.

When the feature poet took the stage at the January Freshhhh Heat open mic, she came with a certain calm. Latasha Weatherspoon, member of the Baton Rouge Poetry Alliance, took the stage with a slow gate and handed out two hot poems. Before leaving the stage she treated the audience to one last piece, a collaborative freestyle. She asked the young people to lift an object into the air so that she could work each object into her poem. The poem became a story of moving, carrying on, not stopping or letting up, with each new object a twist in the road, a talisman, a forebear of the journey. Each bag and each cap, each comb and each pen, each potato chip and each soda can, mine! and mine too! and don't forget that one sitting over there! every head and every shoulder, every young voice in the room willing to raise their hand, considered and engaged, accounted for and counted. The beauty of the poem rested in the poet's ability to work with the audience rather than speaking at the audience alone. By the end of the sometimes tangential narrative, the mood of the room was, well, serene.

A week after the open mic, WordPlay introduced Tasha to WordCrew, Baton Rouge's teen poetry council, and the staff of WordPlay welcomed Ms. Weatherspoon into their office, their classrooms, and their programs. Tasha, already a Project Rise mentor, was hired by WordPlay to teach workshops and tutor teens after school.

Enter Serenity: WordPlay Welcomes a New Mentor Writer

Tasha Weatherspoon

Credit: Gris Gris Lagniappe

Copyright: Gri

Takeaways
  • Baton Rouge's WordPlay Teen Writing Project traffics in safe spaces and scorching syntax.
  • The poem became a story of moving, carrying on, not stopping or letting up.
  • The beauty of the poem rested in the poet's ability to work with the audience.
Did You Know?
Tasha Weatherspoon, already a Project Rise mentor, was hired by WordPlay to teach workshops and tutor teens after school.
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
This is wonderful to get teens involved in writing and the performing arts. It is also great that there are people around to support them. :-)

Posted on 11/10/2007 at 7:11:00 AM

 
Keep in mind that writing is just one of the three R's. My observation is that children should spend more time on science and math. It is far more profitable for them in the workplace.

Posted on 03/23/2007 at 7:03:00 PM

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