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

Target Acquired

I’ve been spotted.

Screaming,
I run for my life.
They chase me down.
I cower and cry
like a child.

Damn seagulls.

Like torpedoes,
they took my hot dog,
a victim
of unfriendly fire.

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

Prayer From Others to God

Help me pray in a way to help
you listen. For all the people
I want to help and the good
I want done. There’s nothing more
I want than for you to see
how much I love my neighbor and
all that. Find all the noble qualities
you can and magnify them in me.
Give me a bleeding for others.

Help me pray in a way that doesn’t
question your judgment.

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

REMEMBER

fragrance of roses
colors of sunset and sunrise
cactus spines, thin and thick, hurt
sound of rain, pounding on the roof
start and end days by thanking the universe
    for _________ (can be one or many things)
vinegar has many uses
(cleans, deodorizes, disinfects, pickles, alleviates sunburn sting)
choose reading and/or writing over cleaning
(always, always, always)
controlling your breath controls your body and emotions
(shoulders back, fill your lungs, and COUNT)
baby steps take you further than sweeping resolutions
(babies fall, get back up, start again, on repeat)
keep an aloe plant alive and nearby
(for emergencies)

Registration photo of Ash Nicole Morris-Russell for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Backwoods Gospel

Something happened when we fled to the cities 
piling into skyscrapers 
plugged into screens 
ushered asleep by the staccato street sounds 
bathed in the blue light ambiance 
we fell into a collective slumber 

something, again, happens when we return 
a wildflower revivial brought back to awareness
by the buzz of honey bees

somehow I can hear God again 
when at the top of a grassy mountain bald 
like promixity to the sky boosts the signal 

I simply needed a creek comunion 
and a golden pollen baptism 
to be lured back to life by nature’s catechism 
a sacred scripture 
of earthen sounds, smells, and sensations 
that seep in and settle in your bones 
home again 

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

spindrift

forsaken at
point nemo,
i drug myself
through
hadal waters
fighting my way
towards
the shoreline
with only
the currents
to guide me.

the ocean,
too unforgivable
a thing
for search
and rescue.
my charybdal
heart not worth
the risk of
the best of men.

and here,
i hoped
they’d be
looking
for me,
to pull me from
the tides.
hair wet,
skin shriveled,
water expunging
the sin from
my mouth.

yet,
for all that
drifting,
i was still
more sea witch
than survivor.

my feet hit sand,
stumbling upon
the coastline
depth-dazed,
i am met
with anchor
and chain.
the seaweed
forced
between my
teeth,
my head
plunged
underwater
so they can
pretend at
god.

i become
salt to sea,
the dissolving
of myself into
spindrift
until nothing
ancient is
left.
until no man
can make me
become what
i am no longer.

Registration photo of Kim Kayne Shaver for the LexPoMo 2026 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

fave bra RIP haiku

               pink lace cups drip, drop
     loose straps droop over shoulders
               the girls want perky

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

From the Song of a Fog Born Ghost

It is morning
and I am in the middle room
of our City Shotgun
Where the bullets are kept
in the darkest chamber

I am not letting
more light in —just leaving
the inch wide glow
from the window
where the curtains
don’t meet

I leave off the electricity
keeping it dimly lit
It is the way
I think a
poem requires
to enter
unsuspecting
of the giant bear trap
waiting between
my pen nib and paper

So I wait for a poem
to slip in close
on the back
of a shadow thought
or with its ankles caught in
the vibratory trill
from the song
of a fog born ghost
sailing on a floating leaf
in the lagoon
of lost loves
as she combs
her long hair
with fingers spread
soothing and nourishing
the world
with her beauty
I crane to hear
her voice

I fear she might hear me
for surely she listens too
knowing the Sun
will take over the day soon
She closes her eyes
and delights
in the liminal space
for her last few moments
of visibility

As do I—
Sitting in this chair
hand hewn by
an ancient craftsman
No poem yet,
but I think
I will wait here
at this table
believing there
is a feast within
where the
wood grain
outdates us all
I watch how
it maps
beneath my
hovering hand

Category
Poem

The Appalachians are more hallowed than any church.

I tried to run away
to the shining, towering city.
I tried to pray,
begged something holy to take pity.

It was foolish to think
there exists a power higher
than the mountains that gently sink
to embrace those we buried prior.

As surely as they wear down,
they raised me to love
like the people of my little town
that greed nearly disposed of.

So, here I stand:
home once more,
barefoot upon ancestral land.
Suddenly, there’s someone to stand for.

I found them gasping for air
beneath smothering kudzu vines.
The mountains hear my prayer
for the children of the mines.

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

Go, Call Gregory Peck

Would you look at
the tension in her elbow? There she sits,
cuffed and ironed, white blouse and wool skirt.
pin-wrapped hair, a don’t-come-any-closer posture,
flame-red flats lifting the weight of her independence.
…but haze-filled indecision still lingers…
Grown Men,
smelling of aftershave and tobacco,
adjust their belted necessity and wait for her
to understand reason, their vision.
Can’t she see that all morning they have
wasted paper, and this case
is about profit.
And then…
there is Stan- a young man who
gave his brown hair a fresh combing before
grabbing his wife’s pencil from
the ‘for emergencies’ notepad in the hallway of
their inherited starter home.
Who cares about any verdict when
it is a September Friday, and tonight,
while the White Sox go deep, there will be
cold meatloaf sandwiches, sliced thick on warmed sourdough?

– a response to Norman Rockwell’s 1959 Saturday Evening Post cover, The Holdout. 

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

Why Fight

Picked my battle and lost,
ultimately it made no difference. 

Picked my battle and won,
ultimately it made no difference. 

So why fight 
over stuff that doesn’t matter?