Human intelligence depends on many things to strengthen both mentally and psychologically. In science, reading morning poetry is essential for building an active mind. These poems are very important in accelerating innovation and creating logical images or information about the future.
Poetry—the pen that designs the great layout in our minds—is the motion of continuity. For every mind that becomes stuck, poetry is a door for unlocking it, since every great logic is made through great creativity.
A poem is the antidote. It doesn’t ask you to do anything, solve anything, or buy anything. It asks you to feel, to notice, to connect. It’s like a gentle stretch for your consciousness, waking up your senses to rhythm, metaphor, and sound before the day’s demands take over your linear thinking.
A good poem works like a magnifying glass, focusing the scattered morning light of your attention onto a single point of beauty, grief, or wonder. In just a few lines, it can stop the mental chatter and ground you in the present moment. Consider Mary Oliver’s famous question: “Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?” That’s not a question for your busy 2 PM brain; it’s a question for the quiet clarity of morning.
Unlike a novel or a podcast, poetry meets you where you are. You can read a haiku, a sonnet, or a couple of free-verse stanzas in the time it takes for your coffee to brew. The commitment is minimal, but the resonance can last all day. A single striking image—frost on a window, a bird’s song—can alter how you see the world on your community.
Morning routines often become hyper-optimized for productivity. Poetry does the opposite. It doesn’t offer advice; it offers recognition. You might read a line that articulates a feeling you couldn’t name. That small moment of being understood—by a stranger, maybe one who lived centuries ago—is a profound reminder that you’re not alone. It’s a dose of empathy before you even interact with anyone else.
The morning is full of mundane rituals: brushing teeth, waiting for the kettle, staring out the window. Poetry teaches us that these aren’t “filler” moments; they are the substance of life. A poem about a common sparrow or a chipped mug can make your own kitchen feel suddenly luminous and significant. It trains your eye to find the extraordinary hiding in your everyday morning.
You don’t need to analyze or “figure out” the poem. Just read it once, aloud if possible, and sit with it for a few breaths. Here’s a short, powerful one to have with your coffee tomorrow, by Michael Mussa poetry:
That feed my mind ,
Building the great leaves ,
It observe the world like the light of the heavens,
That every particles in each corner of the world must be attracted,
A modern block constructing the great tower of the mountain,
For the light to spread the whole universe."
To love poetry as a morning dose is to choose to feed your soul before you feed your inbox. It’s a declaration that before you are a worker, a parent, or a consumer, you are a human being who is moved by language and alive to the world.
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Michael Mussa poetry (writing about philosophy and literature)he has a degree in philosophy and literature: contact michaelmussa3000@gmail.com
