The "Poetry Teatime" Tea with Julie starts.
Tea with Julie

Welcome to "Tea with Julie," a weekly missive by me, Julie Bogart. My wish is to give you food for thought over a cup of tea to enhance your life as an educator, parent, and awesome adult. Glad you're here. Pinkies up!
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Cincinnati, June 17, 2023

Hi Friend,

Join me for a new series that's perfect for this time of year: Poetry Teatime

Topics will include:

  • How to Have a Poetry Teatime 
  • The Value of Poetry
  • Poetry Books and How to Read Poetry Out Loud
  • Fresh Tips for Teatime
  • What if My Kids Don't Like It?
  • No Right Way
  • More Poetry Tea Resources

A simple idea with big implications

For as long as I can remember, adults and kids routinely confess a fear of poetry. They say, “Oh I hate poetry. It’s too difficult to understand.” In truth, most people assume they must do something with poetry—analyze it, make meaning from it, find its themes and imagery, identify its rhyme schemes. The provocative rhythms and sometimes old world vocabulary act as barriers to enjoyment, too, for so many smart, successful, fluent, English-speaking adults!

Yet somehow I managed to develop a love of poetry from an early age. My grandfather gave me a book of poems to read aloud when I was seven years old. I still have it. I played with words and wrote my own poems on scratch paper and in my diary. Poetry felt like puzzles, riddles, inside jokes, and bursts of music to me. I didn’t worry too much about “getting” it.

When my children were coming along every two years, I hoped to pass my enjoyment of poetry to them. Yet the culture of anxiety around poetry was so strong, I worried they would resist or declare, “I don’t get it!”

Enter Poetry Teatime

In most parts of the world, afternoons are incomplete without a hot drink break. There’s a universal urge to pause, to rest, to draw in to self and community around a soothing beverage. As a tea drinker myself, I looked forward to my afternoon mug of the strong stuff.

It dawned on me that the joy of that break, paired with a dressed up table, could be a platform for sharing my love of Shakespeare and poetry with my children. I tested that theory with just one child—Johannah, age 8. I read to her from a book of Shakespeare Stories while she sipped her cup of tea and milk. We watched the light of a candle flame dance. She felt grown up and special in the presence of a centerpiece and table cloth. She declared, “I love Shakespeare!”

The experience left such a good taste in our mouths, I realized that I could use the same strategy to introduce poetry! I stocked the table with Shel Silverstein and Jack Prelutsky—knowing that poems with punch lines would be a good introduction.

We laid the table with:

  • tea cups and mugs,
  • honey,
  • a pitcher of milk,
  • home made scones,
  • raspberry jam,
  • and candles.

I passed out the books and each child chose a poem to read. I read for the non-readers.

We laughed. We paused. We repeated silly rhymes. We sighed. We resumed the rest of the day less frantically.

The joy and natural ease around that table assured me that learning, in all its fullness, had occurred. Since the first teatime in 1997, thousands of families have adopted the same practice. They are discovering that old, young, schooled, homeschooled, unschooled, in college, around the world—all find poetry delightful when enjoyed in the setting of teatime.

Poetry appreciation leads to so many good places like:

  • greater awareness of the power of language,
  • the apt word,
  • linguistic musicality,
  • the impact of a metaphor,
  • and the joy of creativity.

Teatime leads to restored equilibrium in a busy household, delight for all the senses, nourishment, and family bonding.

There are few practices parents can adopt with their children that have as much power to transform the family dynamic with so little effort as this one ritual.

We invite you to try it! 

Warmly,

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P.S. Catch up on all the “Tea with Julie” emails here!

Julie Bogart
© 2023 Brave Writer LLC™
help@bravewriter.com

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