Registration photo of Linda Bryant for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Palm Trees Near Venice Beach

 
Palm trees can root in sand,
their tough fronds dance
above the Boardwalk.
 
Restless, my son moves
with high hopes. He lands
a dream job as a comedy writer.
 
I look at technicolor photos
of pastel painted bicycles
& sweeping arcs of graffiti, 
 
imagine him telling R-rated
jokes, cartooning in endless
sketchbooks, going to open mics.
 
Swirling wildfires sear & scorch 
parts of Los Angeles. My lamb
doesn’t write or phone.
 
Ungovernable flames
shoot up the tall trees 
like hot elevators.

Registration photo of J. Mo for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Skip to the Bottom for the Recipe

I envy those that can write 

When happy
Most of my writing happens
With tears in my eyes
Gasping breaths
Heart stolen from my sleeve 
In petty thefts
And it’s almost as if this
✨e m o t i o n a l  l a b o r✨
Is a necessary ingredient 
Enhancing my work
Throwing in this fine seasoning 
All mixed up in a paste
No exact measurements 
Just adding to taste
Then inviting some guests
To try it while it’s still hot
Registration photo of jstpoetry for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Twisted Like a Cherry Stem

Your love: a drug that makes the rest feel like decaf; a breeze that bent my knees back on the first pass; a light tap that made ink drip out like tree sap. I need that. I’m left wondering when you’ll be back.

A delusion seen by two—”Folie à deux.” When you left, you took the summer with you. I need the substantial pleasure of seeing and possessing you, too.

Because you see, I’d find you in the darkness if you were there. Always in a form that’s rare; why was the night so dazzling when your scent was in the air?

How much time passes before you never talk to someone then?

I’ll never love again, the misery I’m buried in is twisted like the cherry stem.

Category
Poem

The Family Hasn’t Been Found

Those who see me the way time does 
A flowing river you enter twice 
Holding their words in the palms of their handsI am on the otherside, peeking through their fingers. 
 
Name and form without distinctions 
Paralyzing fear with no trust 
Womanhood may kill me, but it also greets me with ‘dearest’
I’ll die for my body, wrapped in Sappho’s poems. 
 
I’ve written with evil intent and great satisfaction 
Because what I say is what I must 
I am the woman I would shower with kisses 
As if she is a traveler who has just arrived home.
Registration photo of Bud R for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Like a Curtain

The rain is coming down 
like a curtain 
and I’m certain that I’ll never feel this way 
again.

And you never fall apart 
where we can see.

The train is coming down
with its flywheel
and I’m stealing glances across the tracks
while sparks collide.

And you never run out of steam
that we can tell.

It’s just as well 
that you dance with all the vigor
of someone who must be bigger
than the way they made you feel.

It’s from the dreams
that you cut control and fear in those bigger folks 
who were steering you the way 
they wanted you to be.

The change is coming round
after the storms
and the sky’s blue painted clouds
are all we see.

Registration photo of Rafael Ribeiro for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Black and Gold

Your poems, clutches of bright set gold
at the hardware store at twilight on Sunday.

                            I chose black at the store on Sunday.
                            Black my favorite—color of your hair.

My sweet, I never took black locks of your hair,
or conjured bonds locking our true small hands.

                            Lavish the secrets of your true small hands
                            which secretly reach the length of my leg.

You’re a cat, curled close comfy around my leg.
Smoke curling comfortable coming again.

                            I’ll smoke with you from time to time again,
                            Time our servant will never grow old.

From now, as you’re mine I’ll serve, ’til I’m old,
your poems, clutches of bright set gold.

Registration photo of inge for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Recycled Top Flight Wide Rule

All translucent:

Where is my small green notebook?
Where is my pocket knife?
even if you etch it into paper
print hardened by carving wood
(why?, later
my knife carved in Roman letters)

If you want to know, ask.
Can you ask her?
May I?

Watch out for rattlers.

Mead’s court offers no subliminal stenographer.
You have got to use your fingers.
Who was that woman?
What metamorphosis?
Letters escape, reverse, occlude themselves.
From trusting false memory I came up empty.

Letusnotagaindescendintomerely
keepingrecordsbetheyrecordsofo
urowndreamsrecordsofourtravels
recordsofourtimespentinhalingye
astfumesatthenearestpublichous
e Memoryasarecordkeeperdisap
pointedenoughtosatisfyeventhem
ostmasochisticamongus Lestwer
elivethedrudgeryrereadingourtatt
eredjournalsletusnotbecounterso
fsocialbeans Letusinsteadcombi
nefactwithfable Letustrailourstor
ieslikevinesclimbthestalkrelease
theGIANT Letusteachhimtoread
thenprovidehimwithstoriestopro
nouncetothe Gods
Count not Plant
Feed and water.
Remain. Focus your
energies. Do not be dis
tracted, yet remain patient.
Smoke and spreadtheashinthe
                                                        ga
                                                           r
                                                                  de

                                                              n

Registration photo of Coleman Davis for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

June, in Winter

 
 

                                        *after the poem Lunchlady by Silas House
 
  
 
 
Dear Mr. House,
After Robert Hayden, you write,
 I thanked her, but not enough, now or then.
 
The hot kitchen recipes 
of those days linger like afternoon Commons.
Offering us food on the sly, Shepard’s pie 
 
and lasagna. Many of the students never saw 
her, auntie June, nor felt the firelight in her stare.
Never witnessed the pop of grease 
 
at breakfast or the hot dark before auntie Shirley
flipped on the cool white of fluorescent lights.
Father Piltz had no rage or kept it hidden, 
 
like the good dishes we dropped, splintered
and buried under the juice boxes and napkins.
Always ready to catch me by the pale bleached
 
collar yet leave his wife the reading quietly 
and with concern, of the dove colored code written
on my face and arms; like yolky egg gone cold.
 
  –My hands–
 
left them unscrubbed, to remain a stain. Forever
from the scape pit to the Hobart to the blue-silver
of the stainless steel shelves.
 
You write, I did not understand the moment.
Me too, Silas. Me too. 
and Hayden, What did I know, what did I know
 
of love?  Auntie June says, Here, have a brownie, 
one ice cream sandwich.
Later, much later a tray comes through a door
 
the inmate in the cell next to mine whispers,
You are more a friend to me than I am to myself.
We’ve done our best, but what do we know?
 
We can only hope our best is good enough.
“Inverted” and still respectfully yours,  
   Coleman Davis 
Registration photo of Lee Chottiner for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Resist

This republic
sits condemned
in its cell

Outside
a gallows
is being built

made from
dark laws  &
aborted ballots

Soon
the noose
is placed

around the
national neck
the floor falls

out from
under its feet
Tyranny 

On the rope
the corpse twists
Resist

Category
Poem

A Morning Fog Clears

Light fog edged across the garden at dawn
The morning after a strawberry moon
In the mist, a figure walks, a small fawn.
He stands frozen listening for death’s swoon
No mother to watch the shadows of June
Are we all listening? Are we alone?
The fawn moves onward. Fear lifts. He walks home
Each morning brings fog or rain, cold, or heat
We wake and decide what path we call our own
Whether the day brings  victory or defeat