Kids, in our interconnecting circles online, we bump into each other in many of the same venues. One of the emergent voices in recent months is Susan Chast, of Susan's Poetry. Susan has a wonderfully clear poetic voice, and a very intriguing philosophy and belief system. So come fly with me, as we swoop over to Philadelphia, home of the famous song. We shall need at least two cups of tea, for this conversation is going to be very interesting, and we don't want to miss a single word.
Poets United: Susan, it's wonderful to be chatting with you at last. Would you set the scene for us? What does your life look like these days?
...........on the Isle of Skye
Susan: I live near
Philadelphia where I own a little Dutch colonial that has one apartment upstairs
and one down. I live on the second
floor, and a BFF of 37 years lives on the first. Her cat is Stuffing, mine is Miracle—a silver
tabby who is now 17 years old.
Miracle
Pierette is the name of my beloved black and white cat who died two years ago at age nineteen.
Pierette
Poets United: Oh, I'm sorry, Susan, I know what it's like to lose a long-time fur companion. Both kitties are so beautiful. Where did you grow up, and do you have a childhood memory
you’d like to share?
Susan: I grew up in the
countryside south of Albany, NY, between the Catskill Mountains and the Hudson
River. There I was part of a 4-H youth
group and laughed and played and read a lot.
I won the album West Side Story by
calling a radio station at the right time;
I won my only writing award for an essay about Thomas Cole, a painter of
the Hudson River School. That’s where
the climbing tree and the campfire were.
Susan, high school, 1969
Poets United: I see in your writing references to your grandmother. Would you say
she influenced your creative and artistic
pursuits?
Susan: Mary Berner, my maternal
grandmother, was an amazing woman. Born
in 1901 in Nurnberg, Germany, she came to the USA with her own grandmother in
1919 and immediately took a job. She was
a designer, artist, and teacher. In
fact, she was my art teacher, but was very critical, which may
actually have made me lose interest in visual arts.
She didn’t
influence me as much in creative and artistic pursuits as in my outlook on work and
politics.
She was a
workaholic who lived alone after grandfather died. I think I was 9. She graded drawings and painted and wrote way
into the night. She was a gardener and a
chef and an activist in local issues.
Her “Letters to the Editor” fill boxes.
She was one of the founders of Citizens to Preserve the Hudson, and in
the Athens Town Hall a plaque commemorates her for keeping power plants out of
the upper Hudson Valley. She and Pete
Seeger knew each other through this work, so she introduced me to his ship and
his folk festival, both called the Clearwater. (Maybe 30 years ago?)
Susan, college graduation
Poets United: She was an activist! Cool! (By the way, I'm enjoying watching your emergence in this series of photos!)
Susan: Mom, also an
artist, had a more positive influence on creative and artistic pursuits.
She took my brothers and me to the library every week, so I was always
reading. She and Dad took us to museums
and parks and zoos. Mom encouraged me to
write for the literary magazine and the Historical Society. And she encouraged me to be part of 4-H where
I not only sewed and baked and home improved, but also directed and acted in my
first drama—one of those bloody awful shadow shows of an operation where a body
is sawed open and junk is pulled out of the stomach: strings of sausages, old
boots and other funny trash.
My mother, Dot
Chast, is in “Arcadia in the Catskills” and “Star Power.”
She and I also have our issues, but not in the moments in these two
poems.
Poets United: It is clear you come by your creativity naturally. As a retired English teacher, would you tell us a bit about
what your work meant to you? I enjoyed reading in your bio how you drove to work smiling, preparing
for the day, and that, “as a teacher in love with learning, I think I was
kind”. Lovely to feel that way about
your work. And lucky kids, to have you for a teacher!
Susan: I think I have always been a
teacher, from when I demonstrated home-making methods for 4-H and started a
Future Teachers of America chapter in my high school, to retirement this year. Maybe I am still a teacher. I am not yet sure what this solitary writing
is meant to serve. I enjoy being part of
learning communities, and these blogging poetry groups are meeting this need
now.
A villanelle by
Roethke speaks to learning in my life:
The
Waking
Theodore Roethke
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.
We think by feeling. What is there to know?
I feel my fate in what I cannot fear.
I learn by going where I have to go.
We think by feeling. What is there to know?
I
hear my being dance from ear to ear.
I
wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
Of
those so close beside me, which are you?
God
bless the Ground! I shall walk softly there,
And
learn by going where I have to go.
Light
takes the Tree; but who can tell us how?
The
lowly worm climbs up a winding stair;
I
wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
Great
Nature has another thing to do
To
you and me; so take the lively air,
And,
lovely, learn by going where to go.
This
shaking keeps me steady. I should know.
What
falls away is always. And is near.
I
wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I
learn by going where I have to go.
Poets United: Oh, I so adore this beautiful poem. You write so beautifully about your beliefs as a Quaker, a
belief system that has always resonated with me. When did this journey begin? I
love that you wrote, “As a Quaker, I am a Friend of Truth”. A friend of kindness too, I believe.
Susan: I hope so, but
Quakers can also be a little gruff and blunt, as we avoid small talk and refuse
oaths. Truth is always truth. But when I first met Quakers—members of the
Religious Society of Friends—it was kindness, openness and humor that attracted
me. These qualities were rare in the
highly contentious movement as it manifested at the Women’s Encampment for a Future
of Peace and Justice in the early 1980s. The Quakers’ persistence also
impressed me.
I started attending
Meeting for Worship in the silent tradition (there are others), where I learned
that my own experience of God is central to my faith and practice. No substitute exists, really, in a tradition
that is experiential and at times mystical.
The faith community with its readings and meetings both enhances and
provides clearness for experience and choice.
Poets United: This is so interesting, Susan. Thanks for telling us about the Friends. You walk a fascinating path. You mention having been an actor and stage director. Would
you tell us more about this part of your life? I think it must be quite
wonderful.
Susan: Still early in
my Quaker life, God passed me a message which I interpreted this way: "Why sit in front of the tanks like everyone
else when you have a God-given talent which you should be developing?” I had already been a founding member of a
collaborative theatre company called This River of Women, which affirmed that
theatre was not a luxury. It was a political and personal necessity.
After the message, I organized and
collaborated to create a performance for the peace movement. Called “It is Better to Speak’ from an Audre
Lorde poem, the performance grew from contributions we solicited from movement
people—written items that gave them either despair or hope.
Poets United: That is absolutely fantastic! You likely reached many people with those performances.
Susan: Next, a series of Quaker clearness committees helped me decide to go to graduate school for theatre—first for a masters and then for a PhD. At the time, I didn’t realize that I would have no time for ground-up organizing for many years. What I did have was a lot of support from my faith, community and grandmother.
Poets United: That is absolutely fantastic! You likely reached many people with those performances.
Susan: Next, a series of Quaker clearness committees helped me decide to go to graduate school for theatre—first for a masters and then for a PhD. At the time, I didn’t realize that I would have no time for ground-up organizing for many years. What I did have was a lot of support from my faith, community and grandmother.
Recently, I
wrote about this graduate school time:
The Dream
Product of the
radical seventies and one decade late,
I donned my
turtle hood to exit luxury, traveling
light and slow back
to the proverbial road not taken
"Halt the
erosion of truth," Grandmother called
from her White
House upon the hill, where she sat
Typing out
letters and letting them fall
Evergreen-trees
lined the night as Australia
Became a
no-nuke zone and an actor aligned
His springtime
in America to re-organize the right
And Grandmother
wrote “Dear Editor” from her remote site.
I, Turtle,
moved slowly through acres of passivity
While fateful
animals piled earth on my shell
And played out
the original rite of creativity
Grandmother
called out for my group to smite
The pharaoh and
his henchmen—like Moses to fight.
The living
image stays now though I close my eyes to sleep:
Old women awake
in a tower, Turtle inching straight,
Pharaoh
underground spinning orders that make
Wrinkled hands
type letters, clocks tick, bosses take.
Money moves,
truth dies, turtles walk. I sleep at
night
My eyes focused
upward, I see her steady Light.
Susan: In odd little ways, yes, though I have stopped the directing
and teaching of theatre I did in various colleges from 1984-2000. Part of that time, I also taught and did public speaking and performance. Since I started teaching HS English in High
school in 2000, I have been too tired to pursue evening work in theatre. Yet, my classes were heavily drama- oriented
and I also assisted the theatre teacher in my high school and met with student
poets. Poetry club led to slam
competition and also to building up the literary magazine. Now, I am writing poetry and looking for
places to participate in public readings.
Dad and me in Williamsburg
Poets United: How did your writing life develop?
Susan: I remember a
story in a literary magazine, the prize-winning essay, and some love poetry.
But I have none of these. I have years
of journaling that includes poetry, and a folder of poems from periods of
creativity between jobs. I’ve always been under a lot of pressure to BE a
WRITER, to PUBLISH—which I hope is not why I haven’t done it! Over the years, I have told myself I prefer
theatre that ends, rather than publication that lasts for 300 years. But this explanation has become a lie.
Poets United: What is it about poetry, that you chose it as your means of
creative expression?
Susan: I chose stage
directing first, but that part of my life ended over a decade ago. Becoming a poet is a wonderful and still
awesome surprise. I find I actually
complete the poems I write. And I love
reading poetry aloud—my own and especially the poems of others. I enjoy poetry’s devices and sensual
description and new comparisons. This is
the style I want even for novels and plays.
Poetic language wakes me up, slows me down, tickles me and always gives
back lively spirit even within the most devastating of passages. And the words and phrases I love are often
just what I hear around me. I think that
the novel I am working on is composed from poetry. The first 7 chapters are delightful in that
way.
Poets United: Oh my goodness! Tell us about your novel!!
Susan: What I can tell you about the novel is that I started
writing it 2 summers ago during the SUISS creative writing class in
Scotland. The main character is a librarian and storyteller. It
is semi-autobiographical, of course, which means that it
includes theatre and writing, feminism and spirituality, teaching and
relationship, and conflict and humor. I don't know if I will finish
it this year or if it will take ten years, but I will finish it.
To get back on track, I will have to write the next
chapter with my first cup of coffee in the morning and and only turn to the
poetry blog after meeting a daily goal. That's on the calendar for
September, God willing. Seems this is the first September of my
life that I am not going back to school. It's so incredibly amazing to be "retired."
Poets United: I know what you mean about writing before going online. Once in, it's hard to get out, of a morning! Your novel sounds wonderful, as if it would be fun to write. Keep us posted! Do you have a poem of yours that you think gives insight into who you are?
Susan: Hmm, maybe this one:
“Nicely spun” they say and instantly I become Charlotte
using my web for the welfare of others while waiting
for the two facts of life: offspring and death.
I am told that they come at the same moment
and have to remind myself that though I am a spinster
I am not a spider. Spider is just my avatar
and, truth, my house is home to multiple spiders
whose webs hold it together, and whose yarns
I overhear from the edge of sleep:
Do we truly have a safe harbor? A human beinghas a brush for a hand instead of a rock. Whocares more about the yarn than the trapand can we stay and un-spin our luggageshouting as if from Whosville: listen, listen, if only,hear us and meet us and do not eat usand we will spin your tales into gold, anddecorate your bookshelves, world without end
My tenants have already traced their paths from
children’s books into poetry and the classics
and one recent waking dawn they told me to write a play
in which Charlotte, Anansi, and Ariadne meet
for a beauty contest with a human judge
I said I am not interested in world politics,
and they said, this is our home, and we are
your blessings, speak. And my tuffet became
their hang out and drop in while I spun and spin
and spin with ink as my yarn or the word process-
er on and they move my fingers while I sleep.
Poets United: I so love this! I need spiders like yours! Which book affected you most profoundly as a child, and why?
Susan: Black Beauty. Oh,
I loved horses for their proud beauty and size and strength and eyes. I hung out in the livestock barns of the 4-H
Youth Fair and at the State Exposition.
I never wanted to ride a horse so much as pet and curry and feed and
talk to one. The character Beauty was
completely abused and taken advantage of which hurt a lot. This book had a lot to do with my care of
fragile things and awareness of abuse in the world.
(Other powerful
books were first read to me: The Little
Engine that Could and The Magic Bus
and Twilight Fairy Tales. The characters in these books became symbolic
and mythic to me. I understood the world
through them. I read them over and over again.)
Susan: I like being at home best.
I feel that way now, and I felt that way in Berkeley, Williamsburg, and
upstate New York. It’s a turtle thing,
maybe, or connected to the Cancer star sign of my birth.
Susan: The two countries I like so much that I have returned more than once are Scotland and Mexico. In Scotland, the Isle of Skye with its ocean and mountains gave me hiking and writing time alone with the spirit of the land and my own spirit.
"Arthur's Seat" : view from my dorm room at the University
And Edinburgh University’s summer writing course is where I started taking my writing seriously two summers ago. The city of Edinburgh is a place of international exchange that brings many of my interests together: history, art, theatre, gardens, landscapes, book fair, fringe festival, poets, music, King Arthur’s Seat and other great walking and writing places.
View of the Palace of Holyrood in Edinburgh
View from Edinburgh Castle where I also saw the Military Tattoo.
SO many miles are visible in all directions that this hill
has been important to community defense
back to the beginning of history
Poets United: What an amazing summer that must have been - the writing, of course, and in such a glorious setting!!!
San Cristobal de las Casas
Susan: In Mexico, I love the little town
of San Cristobal de las Casas in Chiapas, where I enjoy the food, coffee,
colors, language, music and mixture of the ancient and the modern in every
area.
Poets United: It is so beautiful, and you look very at home there, among the locals. What makes for a perfect day, for you?
Susan: Waking rested
after a good night’s sleep, drinking good coffee, writing a new piece that I
like and: cat greetings, no stress, low
pain, good food, time and temperature
for walking or for dunking at the local swim club, attendance on God and
liveliness.
That usually
means morning is divided among writing, emailing, catching up on world news,
and social networking; afternoon is reading or a nap or a visit with a friend
to museums, gardens, or the zoo; and evenings are watching movies on TV, attending Meetings, or
volunteering (currently on phone banks for the Obama campaign).
Poets United: I wish Canadians could vote, we'd re-elect him in a heartbeat!
Poets United: I wish Canadians could vote, we'd re-elect him in a heartbeat!
Susan: And I enjoy
taking time off to visit friends and family in Austin, Raleigh, Cincinnati,
Orlando, NY City, and anywhere on the ocean.
I find myself more interested in cooking
and recipes since I retired. Partly this
is because I have to control the weight gain from taking lyrica and lowering
stress activity, partly I just have more time and energy. I’ve been reading up on nutrition and health,
and I’ve started buying from Harvest
Local Foods, a
distributer for farmers who use non-chemical and kind methods of growing food
and raising animals.
2 I truly love movies, and can gaze at old
movies for hours.
And I love a good game of Scrabble,
preferably in person.
Poets United: I see you started blogging recently, in April of this year.
How has the blogging world impacted your writing?
Susan: Great
question! I visit that
world 2 to 3 times daily. It’s certainly
made me more daring more often in my own writing. By that I mean that I show more of myself
than I could in any of my other work settings.
I do not hesitate anymore to include my faith and God. I have grown more confident that my voice and
point of view matter and that I am not wasting my time. I don’t wait for approval—though I like
approval—and I finally have mine.
I am
lucky to have found small communities that care to read and respond to poetry,
like this one—Poets United—and Imaginary Gardens with Real Toads, dVerse PoetsPub, Magpie Tales, Haiku Heights, Poetic Bloomings, Poetry Jam, and occasionally others.
This month, my blog link is included in the Sweepy Jean’s Third Sunday Blog Carnival, where my poem “Pushed” is one of the features. Now “Pushed” was my response to a challenge by Brian Miller at dVerse Poets Pub. We are all interrelated, which is fun. I find that the ongoing challenges that we poets give each other through blogging are helping me to grow as a writer.
This month, my blog link is included in the Sweepy Jean’s Third Sunday Blog Carnival, where my poem “Pushed” is one of the features. Now “Pushed” was my response to a challenge by Brian Miller at dVerse Poets Pub. We are all interrelated, which is fun. I find that the ongoing challenges that we poets give each other through blogging are helping me to grow as a writer.
Poets United: Me, too, kiddo. Poets United is so lucky to have you. We look forward to enjoying much more of your work. And kids, do check out Susan's other blog, Susan continued, where the poet discusses various interesting topics in prose.
Well, kids, there you have it! A poet, a Friend, a seeker and speaker of Truth. Isn't it true that the people behind the pens are some of the most interesting folks around? I think we have proof of that in this interview series! Come back to see who we talk to next. Who knows? It might be you!
Well, kids, there you have it! A poet, a Friend, a seeker and speaker of Truth. Isn't it true that the people behind the pens are some of the most interesting folks around? I think we have proof of that in this interview series! Come back to see who we talk to next. Who knows? It might be you!
Sherry, another wonderful interview, thank you ~
ReplyDeleteSusan, it's a pleasure to know and read more about your life and work. Your experiences are so rich and varied, and you can certainly contribute a lot to the poetry communities around blogger world. Thanks for sharing your enthusiasm and lovely words ~
A wonderful interview first thing this morning. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteSherry, as Grace said, another wonderful interview. Susan, I have enjoyed your poetry wherever you have linked it; so it was fascinating to read your diverse background. What a lovely experience that writing workshop in Scotland must have been. Enjoyed reading about your teaching & your theater work. Good luck with the novel...which is indeed a time-consuming, but rewarding, undertaking.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sherry. I enjoyed our emails and talks which opened many memories. Gosh, I am speechless. So many pictures! Very well spun!
ReplyDeleteI liked Susan before; now, I absolutely adore her! What a fantastic interview!
ReplyDelete"I don't know if I will finish it this year or if it will take ten years, but I will finish it." And I believe you will! Your life is full of accomplishments and travel! Oh, how I would love to do that, but somehow, I think it won't happen for a long time! What I LOVE about our poetry groups is how diverse we all are, yet we all support and encourage each other. :) Love the old pics of the 60's and 70's.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview. Your life is an inspiration for those who love the spoken and written word, Susan. You show how dreams should be pursued.
ReplyDeleteWonderful interview Susan! So nice to get to know you better~ I love how you see the world and keep trying new things! I love what you shared and look forward to your poetry~ What an interesting life you have had so far~ I dream of taking a writing course in those surrounds!
ReplyDeleteGreat job ladies ;D
Another fine interview Sherry - good to get to learn a bit more about you Susan, I will continue to follow your poetry and keep watch for your book which I fully believe you will finish! Thanks for this - it was fascinating.
ReplyDeleteSusan...i was so happy to read about you.....you are a wonderful person....I think i can read your poems from a new perspective now....as poetry and the personality is so interconnected....I think so...
ReplyDeleteTo the Courageous and loving Readers of Interviews with Sherry:
ReplyDeleteGrace, Nancy, Mary, Mama Zen, Margaret, Kerry, Ella, S.E and others who did not leave their names,
Thank you for your kind words and enthusiasm.
Sherry's Interview is a major milestone for me--even a little scarey--and you all helped me to achieve it. I am happy to be getting to know such positive and creative people.
It's a mutual inspiration society . . .
Susan Ma'am,
ReplyDeleteOnly lately that I got to your poetry blog. You write with such fervor and maturity of a true poet that I really enjoy reading. And what strikes me most are your responses in 'comments' for other blogs. You really take the efforts to present convincing and sincere comments in more words than what most others do. This interview is fantastic! You've covered so much grounds, very exhaustive! Thank you!
Hank
Hank, thank you for this feedback. I like knowing that you value my reading and writing. I enjoyed your interview, too, and so I can relax and enjoy the mutual admiration! grin.
ReplyDeleteRecently I got to know about your poetry blogroll, Susan.Wan to join this group.
ReplyDeleteThe interview is awesome! You paint pictures with your words...very very inspiring read!!
Good to know you :)Thank you.
Glad I read this / getting to know Susan and what is her driving light
ReplyDeleteFound this later, intrigued to learn more of the interesting person behind the blog. Glad to meet another who appreciates spiders!
ReplyDelete