Poetry Challenge #210-Engines Off!

Hide those car keys! Engines Off! Today is World Car Free Day.

Ever wonder why cars are also called “autos”? I’m thinking it’s to bless or blame one guy, Nicolaus Otto, who in 1876 “invented an effective gas motor engine.” Daimler and Benz may have built cars before him, but Otto’s 4-stroke internal combustion engine called the “Otto Cycle Engine” is what made the wheels go around…and around and around and around…

January 29, 1886 Benz was granted the first automobile patent.

January 29, 1886 Benz was granted the first automobile patent.

…Which seemed to make everyone, especially the oil & gas industry, very happy. Until sometime in the 50s, when some folks poked their heads out of the exhaust fumes and realized that cars were changing our cities, neighborhoods, lives. According to the National Day Calendar website, “from 1956 to 1957, the Netherlands and Belgium held car-free Sundays.”  On September 22, 2000, the European Car Free Day was held. It has since been an annual event for 46 countries and 2,000 cities all over the world—and now, here!

Poetry Challenge #210

Engines Off!

Take a moment to silence those noisy engines—if only in your mind—and imagine a day without cars. Any cars on the road, or buses, motorcycles, lawnmowers, too. What would you do? What sounds could you hear that you don’t usually? Where might you go and how would you get there?

If you can agree that the world—for this one car-free day—would be a quieter and probably slower place, challenge yourself to use quieter and slower sounding words.

“Quieter” words are those without hard-sounding endings: the hard K,G,T consonants.

“Slower words often have repeated vowel sounds and repeated soft consonants: double s, double m or n sounds.

Set Your Timer for 7 Minutes

Start Writing!

Don’t Think About it, just do it!

walk-school.jpg

Awwway weeeeee goooooooo!

Cindy Faughnan and I began this 7-Minute Poetry Challenge 1990+ days ago. Now we take turns creating prompts to share with you. Our hope is that creatives—children & adults—will use our prompts as springboards to word play time. If you join us in the Challenge, let us know by posting the title, a note, or if you want, the whole poem in the comments.

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All who subscribe, comment or share a poem will be entered in . . .

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