Monday, July 2, 2012

Top 10 Tips to Writing Great Candle Lighting Ceremony Poems

###Top 10 Tips to Writing Great Candle Lighting Ceremony Poems### Advertisements

10. Get inspired.

Lighting

Think about an anecdote or personal trait that makes this man extra to you and write it down.

Example: For a bar mitzvah boy's grandfather who passed away very recently, the notes one could write about him are as follows:

He was Irish, Catholic, not Jewish. He was so proud of the man that David is becoming. He lived in Florida and he made David feel safe in Florida by telling him that his home was indeed David's Florida home, so David was never homesick in Florida. He was a baker, he used to make bread on the kitchen table without a bowl, he made a lake in the middle of the flour. There needs to be something about David remembering him development bread with the lake on the table. The candle will be lit by Grandpa's brother Uncle Frank and Aunt Marianne. This is the first house get together without him.

With a minuscule work you can turn it into this:

My grandfather who I love so dear

Passed away recently, but I know he is near

His was my second home in Florida, of this I know

He told me how proud he was as he watched me grow

Grandpa was a baker and bread he would always make

With flour on the table, in the center he made a lake

This candle is to honor him, that has been my plan

Please come up to light it with me, Uncle Frank & Aunt Marianne

9. Make poems that are 4-8 lines.

Too few will be hard to transport your message and too many might bore your audience.

8. Try to keep each poem the same length.

You don't want Grandma to be upset that she got 4 lines when Uncle Bill got 8.

7. If you are having trouble looking a word to rhyme with someone else word, you can either pick a different word (like selecting "great" instead of "good" or "sweet" instead of "nice") or try going to http://www.rhymezone.com/

It is a great rhyming dictionary on-line that comes in handy for those tough to rhyme words.

6. Try to make the first line rhyme with the second line and the third line should rhyme with the fourth line.

It's an Aabbccdd pattern that makes it simpler to read and find a rhyming word.

5. If you know who you want to call up to light the candle, find a word that rhymes with their name

With you guys as house I am never alone... (and end the line with) Come on up Uncle Bill and Aunt Joan.

4. An easy formula to use is to find a last line that rhymes with the whole you are on.

For example:

Grandma's cooking always tastes like heaven,

So come on up to light candle whole eleven.

3. There are a few catch phrases that you can use for any poem such as:

...I love you ...

Come light candle whole two.

And...

"To my aunt and uncle whom I truly adore,

Please come up to light candle whole four."

Here is an example of how you turn the notes you jot down into a poem. For Grandma & PopPop: Michael is their first and only grandchild, he has slept there every Friday the first 2 years of his life, and still sleeps over at times. They took him skiing for the first time when he was 4, they take him to movies, play cards, you name it, they do it for him!

Turn that into:

There are two extra people here who I just love and adore

They introduced me to skiing when I was a boy of four

I have learned so much from both of them about being a good friend

Whether it's at the movies or playing cards, there's laughter without end

When I was minuscule I stayed with them almost every Friday night

Grandma & PopPop it's whole twelve, I'd love your help to light

2. If there is man on the list that your house knows, but you don't know so well, be sure to speak to your house and get some insight into who they are and why they are special.

Example:

For a very dear friend of Mom and Dad's - JoAnn. Steven's mom has known JoAnn since they were 6 and of course JoAnn knows Steven since his birth. She helped the house a great deal when Mom and Dad were going straight through a divorce. She helped move them from Staten Island to Nj, she stayed there for 2 weeks to help them rule in. always there for Mom, serious or fun...she is a lot of fun to be around.

Turn that into:

This next candle is for a house friend who's always there in a fix

She's known me since my birth and known Mom since they were six

From Staten Island to New Jersey, she helped us with our move

Two weeks she kept us company, till we got into a groove

Always fun to be around, that's why I'm such a fan

Please come up for candle eleven, mom's dear friend JoAnn

1. When in doubt, go to a expert who will write the poems for you and allow you to merge on all the other things you have to do when becoming a bar or bat mitzvah. Visit me at http://www.thepoemlady.com or email heymannyc@yahoo.com. I'll write candle lighting poems for you based on the facts you provide. I also help pick out the songs and make the whole thing effort free. The poems are sweet and funny. You can even print them out and roll them up in a scroll and hand them to the candle-lighters as they come up so they can take their personalized poem home with them.

Most important, just remember to have fun and enjoy your extra day

Top 10 Tips to Writing Great Candle Lighting Ceremony Poems


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