Reading Too Quickly for My Own Good

Nov 20, 2025 | Poetry, Writing

Robert Brewer’s prompt for November 19 was to “write a six word poem.” I should’ve read farther, but the idea of a six-word poem immediately triggered thoughts of the infamous “six word story” (often misattributed to Hemingway). Aside from that one example, I have yet to see six words that, by themselves, constitute a story. They are barely a sentence or two. Six words might capture a moment or a mood, but they are not a story.

Could six words constitute a poem? Maybe. I usually avoid very short forms. Few poets – and I include myself in this – write them well. We all learned to write haiku in elementary school, but most of us learned it badly. Too often, I think they read like fortune cookies or insipid platitudes or the ubiquitous “inspirational quotations” that are floating around on the internet. But Brewer’s prompt brought out my inner smart-ass. He even offered “extra credit” and if you know me, I’ll fall for the “extra credit” assignment every time. He provided a list of six words and urged us to include at least three. That left only three words to play with, as I originally read the prompt. And so I wrote an “immediate reaction poem.”

Write a Six Word Poem?

See my gnarled squint?
Gibberish. No.

A woman with a gnarled squint.


After reading Brewer’s example, I realized my error. His “six-word poem” prompt was more like the decades’ worth of prompts from the Creative Copy Challenge. I vowed to try again, and the following is the result.

A Mind Gone to Seed

She squints off in the distance
contemplates the violence
of the tranquil river’s rapids
roiling far below. How bit by bit,
a millimeter here or there
it yields. This hard, river-slicked
rock relents, gives way
to bubbles’ joyful dancing.
He's a cup of summer sunshine
held in gnarled hands. Gibberish
slips now from his lips like
dandelions gone to seed. She knows
that it would only take a moment,
just the slightest breeze. She blows.


Yikes. I hope he’s in a better place.

Holly Jahangiri

Holly Jahangiri is the author of Trockle, illustrated by Jordan Vinyard; A Puppy, Not a Guppy, illustrated by Ryan Shaw; and the newest release: A New Leaf for Lyle, illustrated by Carrie Salazar. She draws inspiration from her family, from her own childhood adventures (some of which only happened in her overactive imagination), and from readers both young and young-at-heart. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband, J.J., whose love and encouragement make writing books twice the fun.

2 Comments

    • Holly

      Which one? 😂

      Reply

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