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

Black Box

 

Tucked softly
in the waistband of my shorts

is an expensive black box.

It opens up a world

and holds the lives of mankind

like herding livestock.

Beware opening this black box.

When you do,

it will become fused to you.

A dystopian hell’s wet dream.

 

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

to anyone listening, soft as the grave suiseki assuages a cataract’s grip

smoothing two coals on a callused palm
like a monk might manage ben wa
or baoding, she
 
shot a svelte snot-rocket 
sprig of contortionist wis-
dom to anyone willing 
to grip it, 
 
like some grab 
gas or the rattle of 
latter day saints and 
still go stumbling over the 
edge of the quay or the fray
or the way suspended in
 
dust bunnies barbing a
sun beam even—I see
 
but the Salvator Mundi impressed
on a sun-plucked windshield, puckering,
laying that mudra of safety
scissors on throttling cau-
tion tape tethering toddling 
grass blades bulged about all
but expectant and unkempt concrete; see,
 
where the lips link
soil and sky, where it
reads in flint-flinched rune
stones stuttering, slurred or 
                                unrealized—see,
As above,
so below,
though know
 
that the mouth 
is the molten
navel—
Registration photo of Ali for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Clean Lineation 1999

All Hallows’ Eve Eve, and I
dress in lambskin,
slip a dirty book
into my bag,
make a pilgrimage
to the reading,
where you’re waiting
to wink at me
and see the rose petal
I keep pressing
to my lips,
to my knee.

You trot
to catch me,
walk me
past lamplit buildings,
talking of igloos,
close enough
that my body forgets
where it stops,
until the sidewalk ends,
and I turn
while you keep going.

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

CHRYSOPOEIA

this lead organ peeking beneath 
my rib cage sheath, cracked and weary
turn this dull heart to noble gold
and promise to hold it dearly

just behind front door autumn wreath
making out, tongues soaked in whiskey
we puddle up on the landing
love soaked arrows keep us tipsy

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

The Debtor

My young garden calls out to me, chirp
by chirp, where sparrows sing sweet, sweet, sweet,

then trill in gratitude for bee balm— 
blazing purple bursts of fireworks—
and lavender sparklers of liatris.

They praise dahlias’ dinner-plate heads,
folded creamy petals where legions of bees flit,

and the upright sunflowers,
the tallest birdfeeders in this haven.
They belt out for all the flowers in between.

To whom did these flighty creatures
once call out their gratitude?

Color from across the centuries-old
pasture catches my eye. Wildflowers populate
the grasses, sown by years of northern

cardinals, Carolina chickadees,
and tufted titmice dropping seeds with blue

jays and gold finches. A mourning
dove’s familiar coo-ah coo coo drifts
down from above. I look

back at my new sowings, then out
again at what their scatterings have built.

I close my eyes and bow my head
to the true keepers of this color-filled song.

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

13 Ways of Cutting up a Veggie

(After watching Cooking YouTuber Ethan Chlebowski)

Among twenty temptations

to parody Walkace Stevens,
I’ll keep this short and juicy:
 
Cube cucumber for the salad 
that goes with salmon.
 
Slice a large tomato–
a quarter beef patty-wide– 
to perfect the buttered 
English muffin sandwich.
 
Try new methods, uncover truths:
Technically, those two above are fruits. 
Category
Poem

poor

yet another day leaving work with $1 to my name 
waiting for next week’s paycheck 
while wearing clothes that fund ceos
using products that make them millions 
but i try not to let it fill my head 
before i make it to my bed

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

Puddin-N-Tane  

I dragged a pen across the white door frame
To show Icarus’ height above the driveway
When he realized the sun had moved
To a different neighborhood.  

“It don’t shine on the same crowd
All the time,” said Job, alphabetizing scabs
In a filing cabinet plated in pyrite .  

“A finish line,” Lazarus said with baffling snicker
As he smudged the line’s blue ink with his thumb.  

“This is not a miracle,” the billboard mumbles,
Air quotes like cocked eyebrows
Discarded to the side
Above a secondhand shop, Puddin-N-Tane.  

“A tight rope,” said Sisyphus,
Though no one knew why.  

Then we saw an ant balancing on it
As it crossed the threshold. It tore
A fly—tattooed days before to the wall
By a swatter—in half, even though it was already
Little more than a collage—thorax, wings,
A thousand eyes.  

“Ah, yes,” I said, thinking of new ways to frame it.
“Ayes,” added Long John Silver, prompting
Baffled glances all around.  

Then autocorrect chimed in on the mark:
“it’s not a line, it’s a limb.”
We all looked at each other with genuine concern,
Heard a “crack!,” and fell through the bottomless shades
Planted below the tree of knowledge.

Category
Poem

Fighting with Richard Attenborough

It’s over between us

there is nothing more to say

after you tell me birdsong is actually male birds posturing

warning each other

vying for territory

sometimes cawing immitatively

to trick females into fear and then

offering them a place to stay.

 

Have we not been through that enough

in

real

life?

how do you expect me to go on?

I thought we came out here to soak up

the yin of this tree the soaked chlorophyllic propaganda of lolly and boxwood

but all there is is the cacophany of male measuring racket in my ears and a park I used to go to all the time that I cant go to now since the new wifi tower has been put up across the streeet putting the feeling of wolfpaws back into my tendons and tearing them to shreds

 

don’t you understand how solitary a life an immobile body has?

How far I moved from the city to keep my pain manageable

away from towers

submerged in these lollytree woods?

 

how can you still love the outdoors

still love a forest

still know peace

when the lullabies in these trees

are just dinosauric catcalling

alley fights

waiting to

happen?

 

Why couldn’t you have told me everything

except

that?

 

I know ruth bader ginsberg always said the key to a good relationship is selective deafness

but I havent mastered that yet

Why couldn’t you have told me everything else

about the world,

except

that?

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

Third Act to the Tune of Genetics

I order my third genetic sequencing service.

This one checks more markers.

I am full of questions and hope.

I wonder if I’ll learn.

Why’d he tucked his money into the vents?

Is my snake plant is overwatered?

How’d she live so removed from her body?

Why didn’t he speak for two full years?

Why’d they kept all those junkable cars?

Who taught him to wad up tobacco in his lip like that?

Why didn’t she want to see the ocean?

Did he know how to ride a bike?

How do I know if the tomato is ripe for pickin’?

Did anyone every dust off that old telescope?

Why’d they fill the medication they never took?

Did they really prefer Diet Rite?