What if your art practice could strengthen your mind? Join The Napkin Poetry Review for a workshop that will teach you not only how to make poetry an accessible part of your everyday toolbox, but also how to use it to think more clearly and creatively. After some interactive questions to help you reflect on your cognitive and emotional goals, we’ll share the psychology and neuroscience behind how poetry enhances mental flexibility and rational processing.
We’ll then share case studies of great thinkers––from scientists to artists to business entrepreneurs––who have also used poetry to help achieve their aspirations.
Then it’s your turn to try: through a series of short, freestyle writing prompts, we will teach you some exercises that can break down fixed ideas to cultivate emotional intelligence, spontaneity, and unforeseen creative links you can carry into any sphere of life. Whether or not you’ve ever called yourself a poet, after this workshop you’ll have the resources to wield this art wherever you go.
About your host
Born from the idea that across history, the most skilled poets could encapsulate a life-story on the back of a cocktail napkin, bringing creation stories—sparks of brilliance—to life, The Napkin Poetry Review (www.napkinpoetryreview.org; @napkinpoetry_review) is a platform founded by Anna Seidel and Caroline King that celebrates poets and their ability to translate imaginations into narratives we can experience. Through consulting, art collaborations, community outreach, poetry publications, and interviews, our initiative engages global-minded readers and writers to promote poetry as a tool for mental, physical, and social wellbeing.
Based on scientific and interdisciplinary research, we believe that poetry is an exercise that affects the brain in ways both overlapping and distinct from other linguistic forms. By offering insights on how to incorporate poetry into our daily lives, we hope to encourage mindfulness and reflection, highlighting poetry’s capacity to build both conceptual thinking tools and empathic understandings that can help connect communities. As a platform, we hope to contribute to mediations of this cultural dialogue as we support and advocate for understandings of the magic, both quantitative and undefinable, behind this art form.
This is a more traditional format where participants absorb information through presentations and talks.
This FieldTrip will not be recorded.
writer & former move to Portugal consultant at trenholm writing & consulting.
Fail Forward
Writer/editor/communications strategist.
communications consultant at Deborah Brosseau Communications.
Director of Public Art at Denver Arts and Venues.
Facilitator, Trainer, Learning Experience Designer at BCIT.
Co-Founder and Editor at The Napkin Poetry Review.
Communications Manager at Rabobank.
Online teacher of Spanish as a foreign language.
Graphic Designer at Advoc8.
Senior Creative Strategist at MLive Media Group.
The FieldTrips experience is defined not only by what the host has to share, but also by how we show up individually and collectively. The way we show up impacts our capacity to be moved, inspired, and activated.
Get ready to be immersed! Engage with smiles, nods, waves, emojis. Share in the chat. Get cozy. Turn off notifications. Sip your favorite beverage.
Wear your beginner’s hat. Go with the flow. Welcome the stumbles and fumbles. Congratulate yourself for trying. Keep going!
Our hosts are members of the CreativeMornings community—just like you! Everyone comes to this with different backgrounds—a lot of our hosts have never done anything like this before! And we love that! Cheer them on when something goes awry and when it goes perfectly.
We’re all figuring things out in real time. Celebrate, rather than critique emerging ideas. Cheer each other on as you try new things. Try “Yes! And…” in conversation.
It’s 100% okay when a FieldTrip does not resonate with you. Pop out quietly and try another experience later. Fill out the survey with your feedback (no dms to host or chat commentary, please.)