A โbonus postโ since I jumped the gun before some of the prompts were posted! So hereโs the second challenge, to combine the following:
โOpen _____ โ and โa poem in which a profession or vocation is described differently than it typically is considered to be.โ
Technically, a Writer
Open chat.
Enjoy the cameraderie of writers.
Until the conversation turns
to royalties and contracts,
publishers and agentsโฆ
โHave you been published lately?โ
They ask, to be polite.
Consider yanking the modem cord from the wall.
โLine noise.โ (Lame excuse.)
Then realize that itโs really all
a matter of perspective. Tell them
โYes,โ of course. Tell them
that your last book (youโve lost count)
was published (because it was)
in more languages than those
of the famous author they adore โ
twenty-six, you think. Maybe twenty-eight.
Five million books sold, worldwide.
(So far.) But whoโs counting.
Fifteen hundred, two thousand dollars
each, and readers seem happy โ
you get paid, right as rain,
every two weeks. Youโd tell them
how much, but theyโre already green
with envy. โBest part of the deal?โ
you say, โEach reader gets a free PC
with every book.โ
Itโs all a matter of perspective.
Mine.
Inspiration
Another true story. When I was in college, studying Rhetoric & Writing, I dreamed of writing novels for a living. Or getting paid to write โ Iโd settle for that. After a few years in computer operations and systems engineering, during which I suffered from a massive case of โimposter syndrome,โ I was tapped for a job as a technical writer. I didnโt know what that was, but it had the word โwriterโ in it and it wasnโt a demotion. I write well, Iโm technically adept, curious, and a quick learner. I retired, in 2020, after almost 30 years of documenting hardware and software. Much of it was behind-the-scenes work, creating unglamorous but auditor-required internal systems documentation in fields like oil & gas and airline industries, until I went to work for Compaq/HP and wrote User Guides, online Windows Help, and eventually returned to a more technical field โ data science, mining tens of thousands of product reviews for customer experience insights.
I have also published childrenโs books, anthologies of short stories and poetry, non-fiction articles, and blogs.ย Now, I am President and Webmaster of the Poetry Society of Texas and most of my writing is focused on poetry. But really, when someone asks me, โWhat do you write?โ itโs easier to say what I donโt write. I donโt write about finance. Math was never my favorite subject.
This poem was an actual conversation I had in the Writersโ Ink RoundTable on GEnie in the 1990s โ back when we still had modems that plugged into the wall. Probably at 14,400 baud. My books never bore my name, but thatโs a blessing in disguise โ I still got paid, โright as rain, every two weeks!โ and didnโt have to field support questions. Ironically, a good chunk of my time, now, is spent fielding support questions from writers. About Windows and Word, self-publishing platforms, book covers, websites and blogs, copyright issuesโฆ
And lets not forget โhow to answer a call on my Samsung Galaxy phone.โ Iโm hoping that, for once, youโre here for the poetry.
About the Prompts & Challenge for April
Seeย Apricots: a Tanka Encompassing Three Promptsย for the prompts Iโll be using (if I use any at all) this month. To the extent possible, Iโm determined to combine all three, plus theย Blogging A to Z Challenge, each day. That said, I reserve the right not to โ despite my conviction that creativity thrives when challenged to overcome constraints.
I recommend reading the daily posts at each of these sites to get a fuller picture of the prompts, though I will summarize them here so you get the general idea:
- NaPoWriMo
- 2026 April PAD Challenge: Guidelines โ Writerโs Digest
- April Prompts โ Poets Northwest
Be sure to check out some of theย Blogging A to Z blogs here, too! And do leave comments โ seriously, donโt be shy. Real people who still blog still love to get comments! Egg โem on! Iโm number 81 of 133 on the list, this year.
Other National Poetry Month Posts
- National Poetry Month, Texas Style!
- Apricots: a Tanka Encompassing Three Prompts
- Bee Sting: Day 2 of National Poetry Month
- Cacophony and CBD: Day 3 in Nonsense Verse and Found Poetry
- Technically, a Writer: Day 3 of National Poetry Month
- Dive: Day 4 of National Poetry Month
- Storm Front: Day 4 of National Poetry Month
- Energized: Day 5 of National Poetry Month
- Grump: Day 5 ยฝ of National Poetry Month
- Future Frittered Away: Day 6 of National Poetry Month
- Hell, Hell, Hell: Day 7 (More or Less) of National Poetry Month
- Insomnia: Day 8 of National Poetry Month
- Juxtaposition: Day 9 of National Poetry Month
- Knife Edge: Day 10 of National Poetry Month
- Lost a Day: Day 11 of National Poetry Month
- Many Definitions: Day 12 of National Poetry Month
- New Form โ Quadrille Quaiku: Day 13 of National Poetry Month
- Ode to Imagination: Day 14 of National Poetry Month
- Pixellated People: Day 15 of National Poetry Month
- Quintessential, Querulous Quintet: Day 16/17 of National Poetry Month
- Renewal: Day 18 of National Poetry Month
- Secrets of the Terrarium: Day 19 of National Poetry Month
- Tenacious: Day 20 of National Poetry Month
- Unruly: Day 21 of National Poetry Month
- Villainous Villanelle: Day 22 of National Poetry Month
- Waiting for the Chimes: Day 23 of National Poetry Month
- X: Day 24 of National Poetry Month
- You Are Here: Day 25 of National Poetry Month
- Z to A, a Reverse Abecedarian: Day 26 of National Poetry Month
Your Turn!
How might you look at your current job from a different perspective?
As always, I appreciate your comments โ please leave one before you leave! And come back for more conversation. You can subscribe to get new posts and follow-up comments. If you subscribe to my Substack, youโll occasionally get a little digest of new posts and random observations. No spam from me, and no cost to subscribe, I promise!

“Line noise. (Lame excuse.)” Cool soundplay in that … double slant rhyme, consonance.
Damn – good thing I came by that naturally because you KNOW I suck at slant rhyme! (I did teach my grandson about meter and slant rhyme while we were on spring break, though. It came up because I taught him the proper plural of octopus – octopodes – and its Greek roots (octopi is an erroneous plural based on the incorrect assumption that octopus is Latin) and we got off on numbering prefixes, which led to octometer, heptameter, hexameter, pentameter… So of course I brought in iambs and trochees and anapests… And then we hiked a little and swam in the pool and talked about how cacti were and were not like porcupines. And how they didn’t have feet, so they weren’t cactopodes.
Having once written part of a software manual for a long-forgotten program, I loved this. It may not be the most “creative” form of writing (though it is satisfying, in its way) but it does sell!
That it does!