| Forwarded this newsletter? Subscribe here. | Good morning and happy new year. This week, I’m in Paris, stumbling through the cold and grey morning buzzing with the magic of newness and too much caffeine. How are you meeting today? I hope it’s with great care and consideration for your tender heart. Today, I’m sharing a few poems that may inspire your approach to the new year. | After sending my last newsletter, I spent a couple of days blissfully offline, so I only started reading your responses yesterday. I’m overwhelmed by how many of you were inspired to shift your perspective on New Year’s and write your own lists! As I wade through replying to each of you individually, please know that you’re always welcome to share this newsletter with your friends and community. I kindly ask you to cite me and whoever I’ve cited as you do!' | Thank you so much to the readers who donate to this newsletter. This space has made my work possible for the past five years, which is such an enormous gift. You can join in by making a one-time or monthly donation on our website, PayPal or Venmo (@reimaginednews). Manage your subscription here. | Take care, | Nicole | ps – looking for the audio version of this newsletter? Click to read the web version, and you’ll find the audio recording at the top of the page. This is a service provided by Beehiiv, our email publishing platform, and AI-generated. |
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| | How do we honor a new year? First, a cleansing. In “Burning the Old Year,” Palestinian American poet Naomi Shihab Nye invites us to transition. I appreciate how this poem balances the grief of loss with the tenderness of loving what is gone, and honoring the space that remains. In its last three lines, this poem offers a meditation on how to approach the things we did not do last year, whether the things we left unsaid, the goals we didn’t accomplish, or other miscellaneous tasks incomplete. Are they kindling for this year’s fire? Or will we carry them, heavy and sooty, like coal? | Letters swallow themselves in seconds. Notes friends tied to the doorknob, transparent scarlet paper, sizzle like moth wings, marry the air. So much of any year is flammable, lists of vegetables, partial poems. Orange swirling flame of days, so little is a stone. Where there was something and suddenly isn’t, an absence shouts, celebrates, leaves a space. I begin again with the smallest numbers. Quick dance, shuffle of losses and leaves, only the things I didn’t do crackle after the blazing dies. | | | | Naomi Shihab Nye |
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| To prepare for what’s ahead, let’s turn to the work of Lucille Clifton. She passed in 2010, but her work has found immortality on social media. I don’t think I have a friend who hasn’t shared a screenshot of “won’t you celebrate with me” in a birthday carousel post (including myself). And each new year, “i am running into a new year” takes over my feed, as if the urgency in its prose compels it to run haplessly, recklessly across the internet. I am thirty-six this new year, so it feels particularly resonant. | You’ve probably seen it, so instead of focusing on it in this newsletter, let me turn your attention to “blessing of the boats,” which was written while Clifton was at St. Mary’s College of Maryland. It refers to the Blessing of the Fleet, an annual observation that commemorates the Dove landing in the city in 1634, carrying the first English settlers to the shores of Maryland. It also commemorates our own journeys through life, and invites us to face the new year and trust in the unseen forces that are assured to bring safe harbor. | (at St. Mary's) may the tide that is entering even now the lip of our understanding carry you out beyond the face of fear may you kiss the wind then turn from it certain that it will love your back may you open your eyes to water water waving forever and may you in your innocence sail through this to that | | | | Lucille Clifton |
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| Speaking of social media, poet Kate Baer shares her simple and straightforward work directly on Instagram, which is how I came across “New Year.” She had posted it with the caption “my New Year’s resolution is to stay alive,” a refreshing take in the midst of people sharing their highlight reels and bold resolutions. Can we remember that staying alive is the real magic? Especially for those of us who have struggled with suicidality, or are fighting to stay healthy and sound? There is so much potential in a new year. It can feel overwhelming, all these possibilities. This poem reminds us that we can cherish the potentiality itself. Its value is not in how we wield it, only that it’s here. That can be more than enough. | Look at it, cold and wet like a newborn calf. I want to tell it everything—how we struggled, how we tore out our hair and thumbed through rusted nails just to stand for its birth. I want to say: look how far we’ve come. Promise our resolutions. But what does a baby care for oaths and pledges? It only wants to live. | | | | Kate Baer |
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| As I wrote last week, I’ve become less fond of writing resolutions. I prefer to steal them, shamelessly hoping the wisdom of those more articulate and determined than myself to rub off on me. One of those is the incomparable June Jordan, whose frank and uncompromising prose has made me feel more confident in my defiance of what does not serve me. “Resolution #1,003” both beckons and sets boundaries, both an invitation and a warning that seems to say “you better come correct, 2026.” | I will love who loves me I will love as much as I am loved I will hate who hates me I will feel nothing for everyone oblivious to me I will stay indifferent to indifference I will live hostile to hostility I will make myself a passionate and eager lover in response to passionate and eager love I will be nobody’s fool | | | | June Jordan |
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| Another poet who encourages us to meet the new year with defiance and ferocity is Carrie Williams Clifford, a Black woman poet born in 1862. Her poem “The New Year” is a rallying cry for all of us, but reflects her personal fight for racial equity through her work with the Niagara Movement and the Ohio State Federation of Colored Women. Here, the “we” isn’t looking for mere equality, but god-like immortality; unbridled power and potential. I love the boldness of this poem and how outlandish it may have felt in those times. I want more of this energy in my life this year. | The New Year comes—fling wide, fling wide the door Of Opportunity! the spirit free To scale the utmost heights of hopes to be, To rest on peaks ne’er reached by man before! The boundless infinite let us explore, To search out undiscovered mystery, Undreamed of in our poor philosophy! The bounty of the gods upon us pour! Nay, in the New Year we shall be as gods: No longer apish puppets or dull clods Of clay; but poised, empowered to command, Upon the Etna of New Worlds we’ll stand— This scant earth-raiment to the winds will cast— Full richly robed as supermen at last! | | | | Carrie Williams Clifford |
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| As you plan for the year ahead, remember that this moment–steeped in newness and opportunity–is perpetual. We can enjoy a new year each moment and every day, choose to start anew on a Tuesday afternoon or resolve for something greater whenever we please. Bryan Obinna Joseph Okwesili, a queer Nigerian poet and storyteller, reminds us of this in “[New Year’s Eve Poem] Like a Semicolon,” using the punctuation in text and symbol reminds us that if we are here we can keep writing our future, a helpful meditation for us as individuals and as any member of marginalized communities that persist against systemic oppression. | The past year recedes like a chameleon's tongue— a miss, I am not taken. Before my mirror, wiped with the nectaring newness of the year, I am the visage of a boy styling his life into a poem, resolute to say more, to do more, like a semicolon; | | | | Bryan Obinna Joseph Okwesili |
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| Which would you add to this list? I’d love to hear yours–reply to this email to share. | | | Conflict Evolution 101 | Tuesday, January 13 | 3-5pm EST | Learn how to navigate moments of tension and conflict as they arise in professional settings. Participants will learn practical, real-time strategies for de-escalating situations, intervening effectively, and rebuilding trust after moments of rupture. Through hands-on practice and scenario work, we’ll develop a personalized toolkit for addressing workplace tensions while maintaining cultural awareness and psychological safety. | |
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| | | Rupture and Repair | Tuesday, February 10 | 3-5pm EST | |
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