University of Iowa School of Social Work Annual National Poetry Contest for Social Workers: 2023 Winning Poems

     The University of Iowa School of Social Work has announced the three winning poems and poets for the 2023 National Poetry Contest for Social Workers.

First Place

Coming Home to Alcoholism

by Laura Gaudette

University of Chicago, 2016

You haven’t been back in a while and you forget the white paint slathered around the house,

Over her toothy smile, dissolved into the wine. White is the color that tricksters wear

Your mother stands before you as your bullet proof dress drops to the front porch

Then you remember that white has sat in your body forever like forgotten milk

Your nostrils sting as you walk into the house.

Your skin gone green and foreign

Against the white walls. The sun glares through the sheer curtains

All your emotions cling to your bones

Even the dust tries to hide

Dinner time is the worst

The insects become restless under the varnished floorboards

The food is passed around with pleases and thank-yous, a mélange of grotesque and farm-fresh

Your stomach is empty and desperate. The snow outside gets heavier and heavier You look out the window and you see a black sheep limping away from the house Staining its path a red, so red, It must be true

Second Place

Doña Delfina / Mother Justice

by A. Gallup

University of Michigan, 2023

Doña Delfina,

They say your tears fall on hostile ground, but I know better! A roll of fat escapes the band of your scalloped apron

You pinch my flesh and twist, calling me by a true name in a barked whisper: “Big-little One”

Mothering me in your mother tongue; I pass the she-icon hung alongside dead sons and unfaithful husband

You rest before her framed in gray wisps of hair and smoke, swaddling an aching knee in goat hide

Suffering, as all Big-little Ones do

Yet here you are barefoot in sooted triumph, raising up the little to speak out Big

Tell me what you have passed through this side of the mountain

That I might cry out for antidote and strengthen my forearms in good-doing

You labored long for the wisdom in your gut

Pressing righteous anger into bread

The matriarch quietly ushering in justice as the pila gushes living water

We are sure this is not the way things have to be

Your tears seed tenderness into the hurting ground, testament to the fact that you—you know better.

Third Place

Impostor Syndrome

by Meggie Royer

University of Michigan – Ann Arbor, 2022

At some point, the moon was assembled

with the intention of surpassing human knowledge -

molten, unremitting, arc of construction paper against the sky.

In Utah, a man shot his girlfriend just because he could.

No preceding history of which anyone was aware.

No wonder the parameters of human myth are so unbounded;

no wonder we think we know someone

we never knew at all.

How ardently you can be afraid -

the moon could be a planet, inhabited,

flush with our worst fears of who might reside there,

or just another glow transmitting into the dark,

like the deep, momentary terror

of a man slowing his car beside you

only to realize he’s arrived at home.

About the National Poetry Contest for Social Workers

     The University of Iowa School of Social Work conducts an annual, nationwide poetry contest to affirm and encourage the creative talent of social workers and to draw attention to social work as a profession.

     This year’s three judges:

     Corinne Stanley lives in Iowa City and holds a Master’s in Spanish from the University of Iowa, as well as an MSW from University of Kentucky. Stanley translated and published Silencios del bosque/ Silence from the Forest (2018) by Spanish poet Esther Bendala Pavón and has two poetry collections, They Say This Is Light (1998) and Breathe into the Knowing (2014). Stanley co-creates a bilingual poetry blog, www.bilingualborderless.com, with award-winning Mexican poet Marjha Paulino. Her memoir, La Tercera Luz: A Poetic Journey through Spain, was published in 2023, and her chapbook, Down into the Upward Golden, is forthcoming from Dancing Girl Press.

     Ellen Szabo, M.Ed., practices and promotes the use of creative writing for personal transformation and social change. She is the published author of two books: Love and Apocalypse: Externalizing Your Inner Apocalypse with Creative Writing and Saving the World One Word at a Time: Writing Cli-Fi. Her poem, I Am Here, was nominated for the Pushcart Prize. She teaches the annual Creative Writing for Social Work seminar at the University of Iowa, School of Social Work. Recently, she taught Changing the World One Word at a Time: Writing Cli-Fi at the Sierra Writers Conference, and Journaling for Caregivers at the Family Caregivers Center, Mercy Hospital, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Her private practice is based in Cape Ann, where she writes and teaches with a focus on how innovation and creativity can illuminate, inspire, and advocate compassionate transformation. She earned her B.A. with a concentration in English and American Literature from Harvard College, and her M.Ed. in Counseling Psychology from Columbia University Teacher’s College.

       Mercedes Bern-Klug, Director of the University of Iowa School of Social Work, is a gerontological social work scholar and a creative writing enthusiast, currently focusing on the essay. She is a TimeSlips facilitator. TimeSlips is a creative story-telling process developed by Anne Bastings for people with dementia memory loss.  

     Next year’s National Poetry Contest for Social Workers will accept 15-line submissions from November 1, 2023, through January 31, 2024. All social work students and graduates from a CSWE-accredited social work program are eligible to submit one poem per year. See the University of Iowa School of Social Work website for instructions and prize amounts.

     In support of creative writing and creative writers, The New Social Worker is pleased to again publish the winners of this national contest.

Creative Writing 4-Day Seminar

     The University of Iowa School of Social Work also continues to host an annual creative writing seminar for social workers. Amateurs and those who have published their work are welcome to participate. For more information about this 4-day in-person writing seminar/workshop  (July 14-17, 2023 in Iowa City, Iowa), please visit: https://socialwork.uiowa.edu/resources/creative-writing-social-workers            

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