Registration photo of Bronson O'Quinn for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
News


Generative AI & Lexington Poetry Month

Hey everyone,

I’m excited, although technology keeps changing, causing me to fix some stuff that probably shouldn’t have been broken (which was the topic of my “welcome” post last year.) I’m currently working on a lot of stuff on the backend, including the issue some folks are having with sign-ups, so I want everyone to know that I appreciate your patience. If you’ve sent an email or completed the Contact form, I promise you aren’t forgotten, just “in line,” as it were.

Despite the backlog of tech issues, I wanted to address a particular elephant; even as I update the backend of this site, it’s an elephant whose tendril-like trunk ekes its way into the WordPress changelog as much as it navigates your own personal terms of service with Facebook, TikTok, or even college commencements, and that is this so-called “Artificial Intelligence,” the generative large-language models whose investors require them forced into every aspect of modern life. I want to explicitly define our AI policy, as it concerns the Lexington Poetry Month Writing Challenge.

A few years back, when generative AI was a new and largely untested technology, I created an account during the LexPoMo Writing Challenge called “Bronson’s Poetry AI.” I have occasionally created secondary accounts based on a simple (often silly) premise because I’ve wanted to challenge myself and experiment with the medium. One such account was “MC DK,” an account where I crafted single-line poems out of one- to three-letter words on the high scores of a Donkey Kong machine at Arcadium (R.I.P.) Here is one such masterpiece:

Donkey Kong high score screen where rank 1-5 spell "DO NOT DO THE DEW"

I bring up this example to illustrate that my intentions were mostly silly. My goal with an AI “poet” was to demonstrate the algorithm’s lack of creativity. While it could “technically” create poems, they were trite, impersonal, and forgettable. It could not “create” in the true artistic sense of sharing thoughts with perspective and a yearning for insight. Computers are dumb, even if they sound smart. AI chat bots are, for all intents and purposes, “confidence men,” selling you what you already want with the faux poise of expertise.

While plenty of folks understood my intention, many sent me concerned emails asking if our servers – hosting their creative work – contained AI software. I personally replied to each of those emails guaranteeing that there are no AI models, algorithms, or software on the LexPoMo servers; I explained my process of writing prompts into ChatGPT and Dal-E then copying the results back to this site. I promised that I did not think generative AI served a place in the world of poetry, nor did I ever intend on implementing it on any part of the LexPoMo website.

In all honesty, I chuckled when I first saw those emails because I understood the technology enough to know that it could never “create” art, in the true humanist sense. I wrote an article for my employer at the time demonstrating how the only use was as a middle-man for Google, allowing users to write a search query as a grammatical English question and receive search results in the form of a grammatical English answer. Any attempt at creative work was actually just an attempt at completing the “assignment,” but because the algorithms know which words and syntactic structures tend to impress, it’s easy to mistake “plagiarism” for “art.” I assumed everyone else shared my view and saw these products for what they were. That is, unfortunately, not the case.

In the years since “Bronson’s Poetry AI” published nonsense about “twilight whispers” and “roses’ sweet perfume,” we’ve seen an explosion in AI products as every businessman is forcing it into things it doesn’t belong. We’ve seen tech CEOs make life-altering decisions based on prompts; therapists went on strike to prevent being replaced by chatbots; and we’ve even coined the term “AI Psychosis” to describe an increasingly common condition where the agreeability of chatbots can lead susceptible users to amplify delusional thinking (potentially affecting venture capitalists or even helping cause a preventable death.)

And that doesn’t even mention the environmental catastrophe of data centers, which pollute the air and siphon communities’ water supplies, fast-tracking nuclear power plants (even here in Kentucky) to keep up with the massive energy drain required for this snake oil. People are losing their jobs not because AI can replace them but because grifters have convinced thousands of powerful people that it could.

I recently wrote a blog article with my updated 2026 feelings on AI and, to sum it up, I’m not a fan. Even when I’ve been forced to use it, I ended up disabling it. I don’t think it’s helpful, and even if it were, the advantages are far outweighed by its devastating effects on the environment, our communities, and the economy.

With that in mind, I want Lexington Poetry Month to be AI-free. For the Writing Challenge on this website, we have no intention of ever using it for any part of the site. And as far as using it to write, I trust the folks who grace us with their perspectives, so I don’t think I’d need to say this, but just to keep things clear, do not write poetry with generative AI.

If you want to do the thing I did, to prove it’s bad, please don’t; we know it’s bad. If you want to “consult it” because you worry you aren’t talented, just go back and read some of my poems to see that it doesn’t matter. I don’t consider myself a poet, but it wouldn’t matter if I did because art is completely subjective. I do consider myself a writer, though. I respect artists and craftsfolk from all walks of life. And while I can only speak for myself, I’d much rather see your attempt at “bad” poetry than anything coughed out of Grok’s exhaust valve.

With that out of the way, I’m excited for this year’s Lexington Poetry Month and hope you are, too! Please join us this year in an awesome month of poetry, and feel safe knowing that, while the robots aren’t welcome, everyone else is.

Love and Light,
Bronson O’Quinn

Registration photo of Christopher McCurry for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
News

Selections from Lexington Poetry Month 2025!

Please join us in celebrating Arwen Careaga’s selections from Lexington Poetry Month 2025! If you want to get a copy from the forthcoming anthology and support our community, please join our Patreon.

A.VirelaiA Palimpsest of the Female Gaze
A. G.VanoverMania
A. N.Morris-RussellScream
A.R.KoehlerOff to bed
AaliyahEl-AminSwan’s Farewell Dance
AbbyKaneI Wish I Lived in the Apartment Upstairs
AbigailKestenA Poem About Light and Heat
AdysonReiszBible Study
AlissaSammarcoRoad to the city on the lake
AllenBlaironce wanted To Be an astronomer
AloraJonesTo the worn out 16-year-old with bloodshot eyes working at McDonalds:
AlveraPermanCicada Roar II
AmandaCorbinJune 25: IV. The Emperor
AmandaJattauntitled
AmyFiggsAltered
AmyLe AnnRichardsonTo Love a Complicated Place
AndreaLawlerHunger
AniHow Can I Write A Poem From The Hospital Room
AnnHaneyPompeii
AnnaKatOne need not be a hollow
AntheiaAntheiaAppalachian Elegy (The Flood)
ArwenThe Poem
AshSanctuary
AshSauCan’t
atmospheriquespill your guts (tepid edition)
AubreyJust Another Daughter
AustenReilleyThe Male Loneliness Epidemic (a modern myth)
AustinRathboneI’ve Been Busy and I No Longer Know How to Write
AutumnCook8:00 PM
B.ElizabethBeckSolace in Purgatory Season
BeatriceUnderwood-SweetCousins
beckGaia fears no flame
BernardDevilleCorvus, By Any Other Name
BethanyRobinsonIf I can
BillBrymerRest for the Weary
BillVerbleA Basket Poem
BingKilljoy
BrentMeta Pigeons
BrianMcCartyLice: A Love Story
BronsonO’ QuinnOrder of Operations
BrookeRussellSister
BrotherBuckMarkowitzREMEMBER THE FUTURE
BudRGhost Dreams
C. A.GradyRebel Until It Becomes Another Latte Flavor
CaraBlairSolstice
CarolWhen Abusers Die
carolejohnstonsky spinning
CarrieElam SpillmanWilted flowers
carterskaggsmichelangelo and his david
ccos32Creative Spaces
CharlesWilliamA Note to M
ChelsieKreitzmanVenomous Barbs
ChristinaJoyher – story (I)
ChristinaMcCleanhanWith Clasped Hands
ChristinaMyersYou Are
ChristopherMillerS – – –
ChristopherMattinglyThe Rising
ChristopherMcCurryThe Coach’s Wife
ClaudiaLoveMairyou+me (for d)
ColemanDavisKomorebi
ColetteCrownBody Fragility
ConundrumConundrumComputer Love
CourtneyMusic-JohnsonWant Not, Have Not
CrozzyNo new worries
D.DietzAlmost a cliche
DanaWangsgardMercy
DangerfieldYellaLead Off or Hughie Jennings
DaniJune 06: For Her
DanielleFlemingJune 18: Upper Brush Creek
DanielleValenilla ∞Unmasking Mona Lisa
DarleneRoseDeMariaConfidence Manifesto
DavidMadillTimeline of Events
Deanna35 Years Married
DeatReading until you’re the villain
DebbieCooperJune 08: It’s raining in Chicago
DebraGlennonce lovely
DennisPrestonPious Beauty
DianaWorthingtonBeat the Heat
E. E.PackardWoman Riding West
EDLTraces of you
ElaineOlundShe Pulls Me In, Naked
ElizabethDrewKneibertSkinny Soliloquy
EllenAustin-LiThe First Amendment
EmilyBrownAlternative Universe
EricMorrisA Dead Body or Just Sleeping?
EricWillisIn the Immediate Aftermath
EricScottSutherlandThe Moss Remembers
ErinLeighMathewsConvincing Change to Be My Girlfriend
EvelynPaigeA Dark Night of the Soul
Evyn WeaverWeaverBack, back, and back (again)
FannyH.SalmonPlatonic fields
FolioFolio6/3/25- Hero Peaceful
FrancescaAnnoniIce Age, Fire Age, Whatnot
GabyBedettiEverything Often Feels Like an Emergency in Our World
GeoffWhiteAnd So, Good Night
GoldieMood Tone 22 (or a yawning that dares defy dead Chekhov’s gun)
graybrodersonJune 02: pride on HRT
GregFriedmanYou took the vow of poverty
GwynethStewartWhen The World Is Falling Apart
H. E.LarchProof
H.A.Lady of the Lake
H.PShawEephus
HaleyBiddleWhat Kind Of Woman
Hannahhungry. for what?
HatWounds
hbelamlucifer
HillaryTucker
HjMerimeeThorned Rose
HopeWilderlove like home
HunterNelsonIdentity Politics
huntere.westenhoferI wonder what it means to be forgotten
ingeA Louisville Poem
J.MoApple Bottom Jeans Are A Misnomer
J.E.BarrStockholm Syndrome
j.ltaylorwhere the earth is shallow
JasmineAllencats and pancakes
JasmineRobinsonIn Light of the Current Chaos
JayMcCoyMrs. Clayton, or Alan Turing’s Housekeeper
JazmineOpdyckeOn the Back of a Postcard
JazzyThirty-Five Years Ago
JenniferBarricklowExpanding universe
JerielleOn a Passerby at the Art show
JerryHicksThe Day’s Routine
JessRoatTurtle
JessicaStumpLight as Memories
JessicaFarquharJune 13: SLIPPERY SLOPE
JessicaSwafford6/30/25
JimLallyThe Afterlife
JoeAnthonySwallowing
JohnW.McCauleyStewards of the Land
JohnVanceI THINK THE UNIVERSE, Part ? of ??
JonelSalleeHer Hands
JordanQuinnMore than Zero
JosephAllenNicholsConvergence
JosieAngelVampire
jstpoetryThe Grey Descent
KKaimilaniJune 02: The Elder Generation
K.NicoleWilsonVowel Movement
kareeatzpoemzzblue draft poem
KarenGeorgeLast night I slept on the floor of the sea
KatGillespiePenultimate
KatelynDonley-WeldonA Typical Father’s Day
KaterinaStoykovaDispatch from the Tiny Western Town KS is Visiting
KatherinePaisleyCommon Luxury
KathyRueveThe Circus
KatieHassallStruggle Bus
KatieHughbankstime capsule
KatrinaRolfsenThe World’s a Bad Dream, but my Mother’s cutting Zucchini in the Kitchen
kaylynkaylyn12/19
KeezThe Cake, The Circus, The Cut
KelProctorOdysseus Did Not Forget Telemachus I.
KellyWaterburyA Venturesome Day
KendallBrookeVows
KendraKisermary, wendell and ansel
KerfootThe thief of joy
KevinNanceTo My Parents
KiitanAdedejiCome Be Saved
KimKayne ShaverHappy Hour, 1963
kjMay I have this dance?
KrisGillisChampion of the Playground
KristiMaxwellOne’s Mark
KristinSixuntitled
KristinaErnyhappy
L.CoyneFrankenstein
l.jōnzarmoured
L.Sipe(She said) “I’ll be right back. I promise.”
LauraFoleyTrash Collection in Heaven
LaurenceWhitepace
LavThe universe gives us signs when we ignore our own discernment
LavagurlLavagurlTreasure Map
LaverneZabielskiThe Hardest Part About Being Mom
LeahTenneywink
LeahTolleDeath
LeeChottinerPaper Family
LennartLundhFor the Asking and Giving
LennieHayChautauqua’s Secrets
LeslieDavisEarly Harvest Moon, Summer 2025
LeslieWorkmanJune 03: Upon Watching the Kids
LHMartinWHEN I DIE
LibbyFalk JonesNo Goodbyes
LilAndreDon’t Worry
LillianBramblecold planer
LindaAngeloOne More Thing
LindaBryantBeauty is More Than Flowering
LindaFreudenbergerDoes the body sense time running out?
LindaMegFrithAn Act of Mercy
LisJune 06: Untitled
LisaJensenTrading Comfort
LittleBirdA break from the muse
LizPratherAll These Other Tellings
LoriTaylorPossibility Closed for Business
LorieConleyStormy Evening
LouiseTallenSummer of ‘07
LucyOquayeThoughts from the Backyard
LydiaPLightless Nights
M LKinneyLittle Treasures
MaddieColemanSevere Thunderstorm Watch
maddiemitchellthe days as they catch up with me
MadisonMillerArmageddon Therapy in 3 Parts
MaggieHeltzelJune 03: Sweet Heat
MairaFaisalSpinning a Yarn
MakiaAdkinsJune 02: Where Is Happiness?
mannygrimaldiWeatherhead & Wormwood
MariannePeelSaltana the Singer in Porto, Portugal
MarianneTEFFTJune 30: Lalibela
MarieSloneThe Whippoorwill Calls
MartaElam DortonJune 01: 1
MaryAllenA Clutch of Calico
MaryPottsHer
McKennaCarterbeautiful, hungry, forever
meadowdawnapb
MeepowMeepowLeaving Arkansas
MeganSlusarewiczThe Mild Night I Died
MelissaHeltonCraniotomy
MelpOur lives, Dreams
MeredithMcCurryLove is Blind
michaelolsonJune 27: A Visit to Spring Grove Cemetery
MichaylaGatsosNew Vine, Old Vine
MicheleLeNoirJune Forecasts
MikeWilsonOur Age
MistySkaggsThe Bus and the Blue Ford
MJHatfieldThe Green Man
MorganBlack2002
MorganCaudillvatica
MrsLadybugJune
mtpoetAfter so much rain
MyaSophiaA Prayer for the Madleen
N. DBloom
NancyGourdePretty Consignment Lady
NancyJentschOpposite Directions
NatashaLeeAsterisk
NETTIEFARRISWHY DOES TAYLOR SWIFT SUDDENLY APPEAR SO FREQUENTLY IN MY FACEBOOK FEED?
NoelCagneyTurtle Crossing
P.C.CimexSaint Virginia
PamCampbellAmerican Sentence LXIV
PamDWait
PatOwenOn the Opinion of Others
PatrickJohnsonEstate Sale
PatrickMilesplenty of fish
PatrickWaldenNatural Disasters with Hands
PaulettaHanselPost-Apocalyptic Postcard to My Parents
PBSartista day dreaming day
Quackstarsame same different
R.HoustonTo be a woman in this world
RaeGrevePostcard from Lyon
RenaNuttProof of Need
RenéeRigdonGrief is not a wave, but nearly every other thing is.
RiverJump, June
RobertaSchultzI Hide in the Wide Open
RosemarieWurth-GriceHeart Attack
S.MurreyThe Vigil
S.L.Bradleywhen thoughts take a turn
SallyEslinger.Things Missing Somewhere in This House
SamArthursSouls for Blackened Lungs
SamShowalterBig Man
SamanthaI Hope You Think About Me
SamanthaRatcliffeTo Be Gentle in the Love of Dominion
SamarJadeInheritance II
SamuelCollins HicksThrowing a Fit
SanidaPalavraThe Nature of Enough
SarahNealwhat scared her
SarahStoltzfus AllenShe Doesn’t Know the Difference Between Sweet and Bitter Almonds
SarahJosephinePenningtonJune 01: From Article III of the By-Laws of the Woman Suffrage Association of Louisville
Sassieuntitled
SavNoëlMY HEART
ScottWilsonAn afternoon wedding party
SeanCorbinSupper
ShaunTurnerPersephone at Cracker Barrel
SheryZimmermannThe Zoo
SJSorrellJune 03: Daughters of the Revolution
SomniaPerform
SonyaPavonavaledictory
SophieWatsonTo Touch My Own Heart
SpitFire1111MITOCHONDRIAL DNA
stefanihellerNobody Is Killing Me
SueLeathersElegy
SueNeufarth HowardWild
SunnyIf I could just try
SusannaSpearmanBaptist Health, South Tower, Room 448 (hospice)
SusieSlusherShillito Park
SylviaAhrensJust One More 30 Doll Christmas
SylviaPurviscompassion
T.C.Phillipsstraw
TabithaDialWe Leave for Newark
TacoThe Reason for 20%
TaniaHorneColloquialism
TaunjaThomsonThe Bad Year
TerryGabardinegood job
ThrowerPlaying Zombies on Television: My Brief Hollywood Career Part 7: On Meeting the Great Character Actor and Maybe Having Alogia
TinaParkerC Block Solitary
TomHunleyMy First Poem
ToniMenkI Miss the Pandemic
vanesavanesaJune 05: my costa rica
victoriacruz-falkYou Told Me to Do Something, So
VictoriaGrossThe Women We Blame I
VirginiaLeeAlcottHellebores in Winter
W.B.LaslieNOLA
WackeyCathyAnacoluthon on 2 Corinthians 11:14
WayneWillisVoodoo Doll
wendyjettMalevolent
WillAguilar-GeeslinJune 07: He Kindly Stopped For Me
WinterDawnBurnsScotch Pine and Pogonip After Cockrow
YersiniaPscavolta
Z.Z.Van TappenIn the Other Room
Registration photo of Leah Tolle for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Reflection

The hopes I had for the end of June
were to be content with my life
and the gray area surrounding my existence
being neither employed nor in school
while accepting what has happened to me the past seventeen years
and eventually what will for roughly the next seventy.
What I’ve learned the past month since graduation is that
it’s my turn to be an adult
with complex emotions and intrusive thoughts.
If I were a man, I’d probably have a five o’ clock shadow.
That’s all from me, folks. 

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

My Energy is Not to Be Wasted

I’ve tried for so long

to recognize when 

expressing my opinion 

is a fight or a win

I developed a sense

whether right or wrong

of staying out of places

where I don’t belong

But still it’s so hard

to give logic a pass

cause a friend may suffer

if I look like an ass

and say what I’m thinking 

when nobody’s asked

though it looks like the story

is clearly a mask

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

We’ve been waiting for you

Dedicated to the James Still Cabin, Hindman Settlement School

Even before you were born. You were born, still
in the hills of Eastern Kentucky. You were dew-bound leaf
weighing a nearby tree and Mr. Still wrote something down
then looked up, straight into you, and you both knew you
before you were named. He practiced the naming.

That’s when anyone could have pointed you out
as what you really are; wild, untamed ribbon of creek,
leaf vein swinging, salty tear, beckoning wind. 

And now, again, at the desk that’s been waiting for you
since you moved into humanhood. Quiet in this house
built by the words of a woman.The nerve of Lucy Furman.
Sit still and listen until you see them where you were
You be the namer. It’s your turn to try to be tamed.

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

Ghost-rhythm

The little red truck, its relentless

work. Memaw once saw it move low—
window cracked just enough.

Enough for the slow rhythm
too soft to parade itself—
a dented chariot by the old root cellar.
I want to hold them in my hand now.
Barnlight on broken glass. The field
blurred thick through the heat-haze fractured
even in my dreams:
a mechanical psalm.

Just the ghost-
rhythm of when the heart cracked open—
every interstate exit
a groan of brakes and the smell of diesel.

This is a cento made from lines of my previous LexPoMo 2025 poems. 

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

A Healing Scar

Time won’t ask if you’re ready to mend,
It just moves forward, friend by friend.
Some wounds don’t close, they just grow kind—
A softer scar, a stronger mind.

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

what matters most

what matters most
is having a good soul 
don’t let them shatter hope 
truth’s like a dagger in your throat
what matters most 
is the passion in your soul 
making someone else feel less alone 
we’re all messes yes i know 
what’s all that stressin for
that’s all we ever known 
your truest self did you let it grow
or did you just let it go 
for some car or some home 
for some silver or some gold 
the best things in life 
can’t be bought or sold 
the best things in life 
aren’t things at all 
cut the strings let it fall
this puppet show 
entertain us for follows 
make us more vain and hollow 
don’t go against the grain 
best do what you’re told 
if you want some fame 
if you want out of that hole 
you’ve dug your ditch 
you love to bitch 
about the actions of others 
but how are you taking care 
of your sisters and brothers
of this world 
you can’t make it fair 
but we can make it more 
than it is 

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

Missing Person

Where were you

that day…..
 
The day 
the devil put his
heavy hand on my 
quivering chest…..
 
The day he put his 
honeyed lips 
to my eager mouth
……and seduced my breath
from my lungs.
 
Where were you
When I mistook
His murderous gaze
…….for flirtation…
 
I forgave myself
for my youth..
my vulnerability..
my naivety..
 
But where were you….
 
 
…..the day I almost died. 
 
 
 
 
 
Category
Poem

Hunting Hydras

The thing no one tells you
about fulfilling dreams 
is not that it is like 
hunting mythic creatures;
no, the fact they leave out
is which creature you hunt
and why its difficulties doom you.
Oh, what you would give
to attract another unicorn
in a deep crystal clearing,
yet you find unicorns on the daily
even as the world crushes your own horns
for potions that prick every curiosity.
The dream instead merges and morphs
and flits and flutters
as readily as the morning sun and the clouds,
but the only truth that keeps your dream alive
is not knowing the truth 
or not knowing your dream–
or not knowing if you cannot achieve it.