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

Here, take mine

Knowing that you are in pain
is far more excruciating than any discomfort of my own
I’m prickling sensitive, imminently tearful
My body on high alert, as if my activated response can somehow overpower
          the slow sadness of your loss
as if I can conjure a force field of fierce protection
around your heart.

Here, take mine –
I’d rather it be the broken one
it’s pulled through before
and I want yours whole, and warm, and wild with bliss;
Let me
handle the storms.

6/23/26

Registration photo of j.e. barr for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Make a Move

Just a quick reminder
if you feel alone because
you’re waiting for your friends to reach out to you first,
you’re not being a good friend either.

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

Lemon Balm Wednesday

I rise lightly as birds sing their morning song,

gleeful and grateful for their message.

I tiptoe to the coffee maker, careful not to wake the baby.

Pressure simmers beneath the surface boiling, boiling.

My heart aches.

The baby wakes, happy and sweet.

We wander to the garden to take a peek.

To my surprise, lemon balm flourishes.

My mood lifts as the pressure turns to smoke.

I delicately grab a few leaves.

It feels only right to make a cup of tea,

to soothe the cracked iceberg that is me.

We walk into the house.

Baby hits her head on the threshold, perched on my hip.

She cries and I do too.

The world tilts a cry, a thrum, a flood of warmth

that rises, shakes, spills, and then softens us both.

I sip the lemon balm tea slowly,

from my favorite cup blue as night,

moons and stars, a whispered promise follow your dreams.

The tea warms me,

and I taste joy in the ocean beneath the iceberg.

Gently, with green leaves, tiny hands,

and a cup that knows how to hold my heart,

a lemon balm Wednesday unfolds delicate and frail.

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

Solstice, Right Before Bed

I go outside to my wife’s van
to get the charging cord for
my phone that I took on vacation.
I had forgotten it for a day
and my phone’s battery and I
had registered its absence.
Lunch hasn’t been made for tomorrow,
the dogs need feeding and we 
had just cleaned out the van of
groceries that need to be put away.

A step outside the house, and
the air hits me, muggy with moisture,
heavy in my lungs. The clouds start
wisping away, showing first stars
in the growing twilight. A breath
of wind stirs the trees and lifts
leaves of the firecracker daylilies,
opening and wilting to spite my
abandonment the week before.
And just out of the corner of my eye
a lone firefly winks into existence,
it’s slow pattern telling me – 
Slow down before summer’s gone.

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

Forgive Us Our Trespasses

Hiking into the mist as the trail rises to the peak
Damp leaves slip beneath our sneakers
Speech is rare and soft in this temple
Water rushes off to the left
A jay scolds unnecessarily above our heads
We know we are trespassing

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

Good Teeth

The three of you are so
full of life in the photo,
smiling widely. Such good teeth.

“Are you taking care of your teeth? ” my
father, your granddad, might ask
out of nowhere, his hand paused
mid-bourbon on the way to his mouth.

“Absolutely,” I’d tell him. Here’s
more evidence of how good a dad I was.

“Look at those smiles.”

I know photos lie, especially
this kind, a
posed portrait,
but you all seem so happy.
Excited to show the world
how happy you are.

Photos can sometimes
tell the truth, too.

And you are smiling so widely.

Were you hiding?
At least one of
you were.

I know that now.

Did I know that then?

Category
Poem

slow fast

when she fasts

everything she does seems to involve water

touching water activates

aquaporins

real things

in the body

magical chemicals

that trigger the appetite to be around water

like sex triggers

chemical appetite

for more sex

 

she stays away

from water\tapes her mouth

Save The Saliva

but it hunts her down

finds a way

like grand canyon cutting rock

the flat wagon tire needs testing

…in a bathtub

she transplants weeds

to grow protected

in a bucket

…and waters them

because there’s no such thing as weeds

just poorly located stuffs

then her hands are dirty

because dirt

…and so they need rinsing

sitting with tv

means drinking water

or supplements

or sol

two flies up the nose

mean a rinse would be nice

and a bath

a bath

is always

always

nice

 

but not as nice as

feeling better

sucking out the body’s inflammation

feeling dull

ratracing with communicable disease

from the audacity of picking up

her mail

and shaking a hand

a day ago

that someone else initiated

that never happens

so nice when a beautiful human

inside and out

takes initiative

I already feel better

she thinks

sailing from human contact

forgetting to inhale

the germkiller gas

when she gets home

 

the body is fine

this fasting life

feels most natural to her

but the heart is restless

somehow sleep comes poorly

during a fast

lots of bioreasons

but the days get long

long and numb

as unpleasant a combo as

rich and stupid

 

another fly comes by

daring to enjoy an open window

she thinks

as she watches pictures of gardeners

now harvestng

okra purple corn melon tomatoes

when hers stay quiet

considering their options

only the sunchokes are all in

as they slurp up water from the air

and the flies

look for water

here in the fasting house

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

If I were God

I’d have left clearer instructions when I went,
ensuring none could twist and misinterpret my words.
Love one another, by which I mean love and accept everyone
for who they are, by which I mean let them live their own 
lives, without restricting them to follow your own beliefs.
And by everyone I mean literally everyone, not just those
who physically look like you or are geographically close.
I’ll be extra clear, don’t be racist, just treat everyone like you
would treat everyone else, which means you should treat
everyone kindly, by which…
On second thought, maybe I would get tired and quit,
giving the same vague direction—Love one another—
before going out to buy some cosmic cigarettes.

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

Grounding

Tell the soil a secret
Then plant a flower on top
To keep it safe

Plant another beside it
Make sure to give it space
But not too much

Watch them grow tall
And taller still
Until you forget
What’s rooted below

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

Judith Beheading Holofernes 1612-1613

(Another poem from my ekphrastic serices on Artemesia Gentileschi. I wrote this as a strike out poem, but that doesn’t work on the LexPoMo website, so it’s an erasure poem instead.)

                 Gentileschi presents a portrait of women’s power,                      asserting                                 the capacity to                            make her own decisions… 

                Gentileschi makes the servant        woman              participate in the killing.                        It adds a savage realism                                       – it would take two women to kill this brute.   

“Judith Beheading Holofernes” 
TheArtStory.org 
Artemesia Gentileschi Artworks 
Italian Baroque Artist