Mayhew's Handy Free No Residency MFA Hints
The phrase "for [unit of time in the plural]" is a poetic cliché left over from the 70s period style, especially if it is set aside as its own line:  
"for hours"
"for days"
"for years"  
"for weeks"  
or if it is supposed to convey a poignant, plaintive sense of the passage of time.  "I stared out the window / for months"
or if it is something that cannot  logically be done for that length of time "I stayed in the bathtub / for years."  "For decades I searched the house..."  "For centuries I washed my back."   Friends don't let friends write "for days"  in this particular way.  
Jorie Graham:  "For days they have been crossing.  We live beneath these geese."  
If you don't recognize this, you haven't been paying attention /  for decades.   
This is the kind of thing you have to have a separate MFA program just to UNLEARN.  My free of charge, no residence MFA program is open for business.  Watch for other helpful hints.   
 
 
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