Happy Wednesday, and welcome back to Day 22 of Na/GloPoWriMo đ„đ„
Todayâs prompt leans into something both playful and deceptively deepâwriting a poem where the speaker is in conversation with themselves. Inspired by Jaswinder Bolinaâs âMood Ring,â this idea of dualityâof being both the voice and the one answeringâopens the door to something raw, reflective, and a little unhinged in the best way.
For this one, I leaned into the long nights that built Whiskey and the Autumn Windâthe research, the obsession, the weight of studying Ernest Hemingwayâs minimalist style⊠and what it costs to try to write that simply.
Hereâs my take.

âTwo Men, One Fireâ
The fire was low
but not dyingâ
just thinking about it.
I poured another finger of whiskey.
Or two.
âYou always overpour.â
I didnât look up.
âOnly when it matters.â
A pause.
The cigar burned uneven,
ash leaning like it might confess something.
âYou wanted to write it clean,â
he said.
âI did.â
âLike him.â
I took the drink.
Let it sit.
Let it argue with me.
âNot like him,â I said.
âBecause of him.â
He laughedâquiet,
like it came from the walls.
âYou read everything, didnât you?â
âAll of it.â
âThe sentences.â
âYes.â
âThe silences?â
That one stayed longer.
The fire shifted.
Wood settling into itself.
âI tried,â I said.
He leaned forwardâ
or maybe I did.
âThatâs the problem,â he said.
âYou tried to be minimal.â
âI stripped it down.â
âNo,â he said.
âYou shaved it raw.â
The cigar cracked at the edge.
I tapped it into the tray.
âYou think he didnât feel it?â
âI know he did.â
âThen whyâd you hide it?â
âI didnât hide it.â
âYou buried it.â
Another drink.
This one burned faster.
âItâs in there,â I said.
âWhere?â
âIn the spaces.â
He smiled.
I could feel it without seeing it.
âThatâs the gamble, isnât it?â
The fire poppedâsharp, sudden.
âYou leave it out,â he said,
âand hope they feel it anyway.â
âThatâs the point.â
âThatâs the risk.â
We sat thereâ
both of usâ
watching something turn to embers.
âYou think you got close?â
âTo him?â
He nodded.
I shook my head.
âNo.â
âGood.â
I looked up then.
âWhy good?â
âBecause you werenât supposed to.â
The room felt smaller.
Or maybe clearer.
âYou wrote the wind,â he said.
âNot the man.â
The glass was empty.
I didnât remember finishing it.
âAnd the whiskey?â I asked.
He leaned back into me.
âThat part,â he said,
âyou didnât have to research.â
The fire held.
So did the silence.
And for onceâ
it said enough.
Thereâs something about this prompt that forces honestyâyou canât really hide when youâre both the one asking and the one answering.
Sometimes the hardest conversations arenât with critics or readers⊠theyâre the ones that happen long after midnight, when itâs just you, the work, and whateverâs left in the glass.
If you enjoyed this poem and whiskey, you may also find a kindred rhythm in my book, Whiskey and the Autumn Wind.

Whiskey and the Autumn Wind is a collection rooted in the same season youâve just stepped intoâwhere the air turns sharp, the light grows softer, and everything begins to let go. These poems carry the weight of memory, the burn of reflection, and the slow, steady acceptance that comes with change. Thereâs a glass on the table, leaves at your feet, and a voice that doesnât rushâonly lingers where it matters.
If youâre drawn to poetry that feels lived-inâŠ
to quiet moments that echo long after the pageâŠ
to the kind of writing that sits with you like a late autumn eveningâ
then this collection is waiting for you.
You can find it here: Amazon, Barnes and Noble
If you want to explore more voices answering todayâs prompt. Step beyond this page and into the wider current of #NaPoWriMoâwhere each voice bends the world in its own way. You can find them here:Â https://napowrimo.net/
âOr view the list of social media hashtags below.
X:Â #NaPoWriMo

Lovely write, Richard. đ It was easy to imagine this (the backstory helped a lot đ )
I liked this little exchange the best:
âThatâs the point.â
âThatâs the risk.â
Thank you very much. I wanted it to be as realistic as possible. As if I were two men talking. In reality, it’s just me with undecided dialogue, wondering if people would like the book or not.