All of this poeti- fication seems to have gotten people inspired, too. NPR has reported on how poetry was a regular part of the Olympics before 1948 and, in that tradition, is hosting a Olympic-themed poetry contest on Morning Edition next week where listeners will get to choose the winner. The Economist, Huffington Post, and The New York Times, among others, have been writing about poetry and the Olympics. And Wells-Next-the-Sea in England has stepped up and done a collaborative performance of "Going for Gold" that you can watch here.
All of this made the P&PC staff think back to February of 2009 when we posted "What's In Your Bowl Today: The Poetry of Michael Phelps," which we are re-posting here to help commemorate the opening of the 2012 games. Phelps may have moved beyond the little marijuana-involved indiscretion that provided the occasion for our meditation on inspiration, inhalation, and ingestion, but "Amazing Awaits"—a theme also taken up by Maya Angelou in her 2008 Olympic poem "Amazement Awaits"—reminds us that while London's efforts are pretty darn cool, it isn't the first, nor the last, endeavor to mix poetry and sport. London may have erected monuments to poetry, but in 2009 Kellogg's and Phelps asked us to eat it up.
Here's what we had to say back in '09:
where we least expect it, or
after training for it all our lives.
it awaits in our Olympians.
in all Americans.
in the honor of victory
and the glory of pursuit.
with a nation behind us,
with a world before us,
and within us all ...
amazing awaits
As the genre most associated with interiority, the poetry follows suit if not swimsuit. As the excerpt above suggests, "Amazing Awaits" is taken with the language of inherence, immanence or inspiration. The poem's first stanza—
it awaits in 200 meters,
in a hundredth of a second,
in our courageous first steps,
and with our every last breath
—establishes this focus, and while the rest of poem plays with the various other places where "amazing awaits," it makes sure to end with lines—
with a nation behind us
with a world before us
and within us all
—that repeat the central trope of inspiration illustrated so well by the amphibious Phelps who, in two pictures, is gulping in air as he swims. Along the way, of course, Kellogg's is managing to make its product not just a source of Olympic and national inspiration but also a means by which hungry Americans can participate in Olympian endeavors themselves—via, well, whatever bowl they happen to have at the breakfast table.