Registration photo of Leah Tolle for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Indecision

the feeling of turning a coin over 
in my hand, head to tail, until that sharp
scent of metal rubs off on my skin.

the five o’ clock alarm that never properly rung,
and after having resolved that June first would be productive,
lying in bed until twelve forty five.

mauling over what to make my first entry 
for months and months and months
and deciding that certainty is overrated anyway.

the blinds have not been properly drawn open,
nor have the towels all been collected for washing.
maybe i’ll do it today, who knows.

Registration photo of EDL for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Wide-Legged Pants

Right leg caught
in a fashion disaster.

Putting on a full show for the passengers.

I missed the bus.
Howling like a wolf.

My cast comes off
in four to six weeks.

Registration photo of Wayne Willis for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Orphan at Seventy 

How it feels
when both parents are gone
no matter how old you are.

No parent to call to tell about the cute thing
the grandkids did
or how smart and talented and big
they are.  

No parent to rely on for comfort
when a scary health problem hits
or your best friend dies.  

No wise patriarch
to ask advice
in the face of hard decisions.

Even in old age,
miss Mom and Dad
terribly.  

Registration photo of Elaine Olund for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

An Ode to Soil

We pave you over
without thought, squeeze
breath and water from you
rip you open recklessly
poison you, cut you,
clear you, use you

We pray to distant heavens
while our existence
is owed to you,
invisible you, underfoot
our faithful servant
until drought
and monocultures
and heat spins you
into a gray wind-ghost

You are:
elemental galaxy
organic universe
root-veined
gravity-bound
unappreciated home
of plants, insects, arachnids,
moles, voles, worms,
fungi and microbes
a miracle

Your dark webbed empire
sustains all life, all riches;
without you,
a planet dirt-poor

May we fall to our knees
in love, in wonder,
may we learn to pray
to your grandeur before
it is too late.

Registration photo of Bernard Deville for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Poetry in the Wild

Scat doesn’t lie.
The birds ate my blueberries.
My dog stole some carrots.
When unraveled, owl poop
reveals the mouse bones;
the structure of past nutrition
made strong in the night sky.  

Neither do poems.
There are entire months where
I sift, sniff, massage, weigh,
and reassemble the bones of other people’s poetry.
What they ate. How they change.
Tracking their traces,
holding them up to the light
to see what shadows get reflected on the wall.  

Mini-maps of entropy, intent,
and just possibly a way forward.

Registration photo of Dillon Hume for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

authenti

antecedents prescient
on the mind on my way
awash in fluorescent Appalachia
as summer blooms

to know what joys I walk amidst
what pleasure awaits
those who release
from scratched clouds
or living truths
mind weaves roads forward 

Registration photo of Linda Angelo for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

June 1

It’s June, the beginning of PoMo, the first day
of gardening with the construction noise next door silenced.
I pull weeds, dig some shade plants to share —  
Shade Begonias and Solomon Seal to be exact,
but exact is not my mood out there with the birds
whose names and calls I cannot remember and I am not
in the mood for Merlin to tell me who they are
nor for figuring what I am smelling this morning,
whether magnolia or the last of the catalpa blossoms.
I want only to breathe in bird song, hands in dirt.

Registration photo of Goldie for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Inset set in a stress test pestling blood clots grown to the girth of bones

Just chucking mismanaged

aggression at everyone, some-
body chumming for love with
blood and sputum: recall now the
 
disco ball, your hate
but a spall among everything
                                         echoing
only slanting scarcely differently, everything
 
scars or scabs or doors or
blown-out tire tread trellising
over the shores of some
cramped crick Cair Paravel’s
pinned around, maybe your 
lost home town or the
hangdog groundwater 
welling up under the
pound sign expression of
tumbleweed discontent
or the tardigrade power plays peppering 
hesitant pleasantries, 
hen-picking,
everything
barely 
 
a mirror bent over a
basketball bounced, broke 
down to a puddle-sprawled
skin depicting scar-wan stars struck, some-
 
thing some shrill shart or hiccup dis-
rupts to the scuffle of color-
blot meeples im-
pinged in a nervous-
ly dervishing
skirmish or
tears of
rage run 
rampant across an old,
thrilling kandinsky moodscape crimped—this
 
leak of life leeched out of how many im-
maculate macular moodstones marbling
 
air, so unconditionally shifting, staking 
their claim upon straining stars while,
circling long-paved parkways, barking out
 
terms like, only god will love
                   unconditionally—
 
                   fuck the fruits—go
                   back to the motherland—all
 
of this screech owl jeering and garbling
starling song so simply, contemptibly, envi-
ably even, entrenched in an
eddied ascent about
everything even a
pothole depicts 
more pure and
cleaner than
this or that
or this or
what
 
was this impetus thrumming the tortuous
tongue, like a corkscrew stuck in a-
ttempting to tickle the skiff 
from the jug or the
house profoundly
bound twixt 
scotch-
taped
finger-
trapped
bottles,
some science
fair fodder incensed
to present but a storm 
more rather than placid and 
taciturn, bottle-cracked bights and
tides delighting in styling shorelines—
shorelines, frames, soft serifs some
beet-stained name’s hemmed in with,
tabards and tack and the match 
stick tackiness thatching the
long-hallowed Hapsburg chin
or the conibear jaws of the
squirming House of Bourbon
bent into murders of bloodclots—chortling 
sanderlings striding in time with the tide to 
mock the knock-kneed
bob and weave of a 
weevil-wobble 
Cuchulain 
puking, 
 
exhausted with even the 
thought of foregoing in-
cestual onslaught, sinking a 
rusted knot of recoiling 
bumbershoot rebar over
but yodeling totems of 
froth and delicate, libertine,
gawking and lawless flotsam
 
what strained shadow doffed 
floundering
evermore
heavenly,
heavily,
tepidly,
shore-
ward—

Category
Poem

July Blue Sky

That July blue-sky
         morning called

Nico sits on barn-red porch step
         crow-black
                  guitar on knee

Throws back her head
          sings Gershwin’s “Summertime”
                    in unadorned voice

Registration photo of Deanna Mascle for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Fly

After Lucille Clifton
open your eyes to water

Now
    is the time to
Steer
    away from the safe harbors
Position
    green islands with sandy beaches at your back
Crank
    your anchor tightly into its locker
Rest
    your hands lightly on the wheel then
Fill
    your sails with wind to
Fly