I start with a single idea, smoldering sweetly like a single piece of coal. If I leave it unattended, too much time and moisture will combine to cool the sweet heat of creation. If I write before it's ready, time again becomes a factor. A hot coal needs time, the unwise smother an otherwise fine fire with sticks and leaves and logs. Some are attracted to the bright sheen of gasoline, but all I see is a brilliant facade that fades within seconds. It burns too hot, the heat isn't appreciated and the living leave for darkness. A good poem, like a good fire, needs time and tact to survive. It needs to be nurtured, worked and tinkered with. A good poem needs varying heats, complimentary conditions to grow. It needs time to breathe, room to become a bonfire or a forest fire. Either way, I try to bring the bright heat from the warm coal of creation.