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

Praise to the lovers of books

To Sergei Parajanov

Praise to the monks who make our books
Shaping and illustrating
Lifting up the contents for adoration
And worship

Praise to the monks who spread their spines into the open air
Pressing into the hands of the young
Rustling of pages in the wind
And mind

Praise to the monks who venture forth with texts too heavy
Stacking them for the blessing
Squeezing juice out of each volume
And fruit

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

Rotting Ghost

There is a ghost in my walls,
wailing and weeping.
He creeps like mildew,
consuming the bones
of my home.
I see him in my reflection,
his eyes glow with
cooling embers of life.

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

Naomi

It’s official;
      It just wasn’t going to be you. 

Frankly, 
I have gained new tastes. 

An appetite for full-throttle 
adoration. I told him I am 

at my wit’s end with dreamers.  

I am finished with wannabe
muses. 

I am sickened by 
the rigamaroll of rudimentary relations. 

it is too much for me. 

it all means so little

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

junior year

your poems are short
your songs are sad
and your hair is oily
what happened to your heart?

are you nervous for junior year?
you’re still in sophmore slump
your stories are bored
and your books are dead

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

Innocence

The child I push on the swing
screams with delight
Higher higher she screams
Her laughter is totally free  

Does not know the future
This is just as it is supposed to be
May she go through childhood
without too many bumps and scrapes
Survives her first broken heart
Reaches for her dreams with resolve
Finds her special purpose  

Comes around now and then
when I am wrinkled and old
Sees me push her child on this swing

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

Libra Sun

you shimmering socialite
always living between extremes
friend to all no matter the cost
don’r run so fast lest someone get close
you’re so much easier to love than you think

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

Our Daily

Prayer works. Just not in the
way expected. A real
Father-knows-best scenario,

the trust has to be there.
Kneeling in the dark, night
after night,  voicing my

concerns, my doubt, my creeping
suspicions. I open myself
up to God and it is

up to God what happens.
I question every decision
until I’m proven wrong.

This becomes our normal,
a tete-a-tete where I cause
God to vet his plans through

me, I charge debts, saying
You owe me a good life!
ignoring that which I 

already have: a good life.

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

pet rock

she saw some guy from california tell johnny carson about his great idea and she liked it / actually she loved it / she had that sense of humor / that whimsy / but she would whoop me good for calling her whimsical / she was too practical for that nonsense / she definitely wouldn’t go out and buy a pet rock at the store / she would probably have to go all the way to Lexington even to get it / and they’d probably be sold out anyway / and she’d have to wait / you know they wouldn’t have it right away down at the Magic Mart / she could just get one out of the yard / there were plenty good choices to adopt in that little stretch of gravel by the driveway out back / between the street and the yard / she did pick her one out / let me help with the selection / i even got my own / we stood in the backyard for hours / picking up rocks and stones / dusting them off / rolling them around in our hands / exchanging some / grasping them in our palms / completely encasing them under fleshy fingers / she chose a more muted grey somewhat flat stone / it had a rough edge with a chip / but smooth everywhere else / i went with a darker one almost black with flecks and lines of red running through it / it was bumpy / but it felt good in my almost 8-year-old hands / i named mine geronimo / he was my favorite of the chiefs / mother called hers hudson / said it was for a man in the movies / she kept hudson in her purse / said i could keep geronimo in my pocket / even take him to school if i wanted / we took them to myrtle beach with us the next few years / i even remember sometime in the early 80s / had to be before 85 / we were on the beach for our annual family pilgrimage with the campbells / and she pulled hudson from her purse / not the same purse as before / she would change purses with he seasons / but it was the same hudson / she had embellished him with a smiley face at some point over the last six or seven years / but still the same / when she passed a few years ago / i found hudson still in her purse / his smiley face a little faded / almost gone if i were honest / but i still saw it
Registration photo of Bethany Robinson for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

I must fly before I fall

I heard birds sing this morning

Nestled in the home of their branches

Among the dying tree outside my window

As the snow flurried down

Peeping through the slit in the curtains

I yell to the baby birds

To fly away as this is not their time

To hold space in their decaying nest

My breath a small cold cloud escaping my lips

Why do we stay longer than we should

Why do I hope it shall pass or all to be well

When we see the imminent destruction around us

Knowing that branches can only hold for so long

Beginning to break underneath the weight

Still clinging to the hope we can still fly away 

At any point before it’s too late

Why must I cling to this

A continued sense of hope

That something else, or even someone else

Will save me when I am to save myself

I wish to rise out of my grave of twigs

My little nest I keep buried in

Lifting my tired head to be with the snow

And simply fly away

Before the tree branch snaps

Before it comes crashing down

Before I lose everything

Before I lose myself 

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

I Lie to a Bee

An exhausted bee lit on my knee
and stared directly at me.
Then he said,
“I think it best
if I have a rest
before I take off again.
As you surely must know,
I help living things grow.”
Then, after a pause, he asked,
“What is it you do?”
I thought of my days
and the odd, random ways
I had spent them all.
Then I seemed to recall
a once earnest dream
and how true it might seem.
I replied to the bee,
“Oh, me? I’m a pediatrician.
So you see, friendly bee,
I, just like you,
help things grow up too.”
I don’t know why
I told that lie.
I just couldn’t admit
for employment I’m unfit
even though he seemed to me
a very understanding bee.