Posts for June 1, 2024 (page 15)

Registration photo of Coleman Davis for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Meadowthorpe

Today under a polyester Kentucky blue sky
it’s all long chainsaw drones, chipper yowls.
A storm tore into the streets late last night
ripped down some of the older, bigger trees.
 
It destroyed the pickets, split-rail and privacy
fencings that surround the mostly manicured 
back yards of this simple brick mid-century
Cape Cod and ranchette-dotted wonderland.
 
We have moved north to the city 
to be near hospitals and doctors.
In this enclave of sidewalks and parks
 
dogs on their leashes, we remodeled 
a house that was built the same
year my wife was born. This is recovery.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Registration photo of Mike Wilson for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

As They Tow Me to the Salvage Yard

I generally keep my head on straight
but I can’t say if it does me any good.  

I’m a long gray Cadillac convertible
with a might of mileage and a mite of wear
but old cars rode a certain stretch of road.  

I slowed, at times, to be admired,
hoping I’d be a collector’s item
someday tucked away in God’s garage.  

All I do now is stay in the moment,
try not to worry or think about
what waits at the end of the ride.  

I generally kept my head on straight.
Soon I’ll learn if it did me any good.  


Registration photo of Chelsie Kreitzman for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

My Therapist Asks Me to Name Something I Can Smell

The musty scent of old books. 

Damp curl of hymnal pages
in a humid sanctuary.

Shadowed by the illuminated cross
hanging among silver 

flues of a pipe organ,
my hands and heart are wrenched 

wide open, too small to grasp the whole
of love as long as I keep them closed.

It’s only when I let myself cry
that salt and light swirl in my eye. Alone  

in a church built over a swamp,
I breathe the aroma of Christ.


Registration photo of Gaby Bedetti for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Spring

an old friend dies
a robin sings loudly
hoping to attract a mate


Registration photo of Joseph Nichols for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Requiem Aeternum

  “Save us from all the evil that we do…”

                                         I Am Ghost

 

Enroll.  Type.  Edit.  Post.  Edit.  Devour

 

self, in service to

 

algorithms, expectations

 

EHarmony.  Zoosk.  Tinder.

 

Facebook.  Instagram.  X.

 

Post.  Edit.  Message.  Edit.  Unsend.

 

Transform seeming, diminish Being

 

anything that’s anything

 

that’s You to be

 

Less, to be

 

palatable for public

 

consumption.

 

Attach.  Edit.  Detach.  Edit.

 

Desecrate the temple

 

to build

 

a silent

 

shrine.


Registration photo of dustin cecil for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

stump speech #1 (haiku)

suburban women-
plenty more pussy to grab
twenty twenty four


Registration photo of H.A. for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Vince Neil Gave My Father Parenting Advice

My father is an ever-present phantom

Who poses as a poltergeist when he doesn’t get his way
Spitting words and objects through the air,
They shatter against walls
The shards explode, sending broken pieces everywhere
Slicing anything in their path
 
My father becomes transparent, opaque
A barely-present absence that lingers as the wounds heal 
and later rip themselves open when a closing door’s breeze slams it shut
The cuts bleed empty and fill a crevasse reported to be immeasurable
 
My father was once a chauffeur for famous people who have no idea how tragic his life is and was and continues to be
They would banter with him as they sat in midtown traffic,
Usually a lift from Madison Square Garden to somewhere on the breezy shores of Long Island
Awaiting lights to turn green with cars lined bumper-to-bumper
Horns honking like wild geese soaring above in their signature flying-v formation
And nowhere to go other than where their instincts guide them
The small talk never lasts
Silence befalls any real connection between the stars and the veiled underworld in which my father exists–
They think they see him, but really, he’s just a moment of belief or an absence of faith
Or a vision conjured in a sleepy, inebriated haze.
 
My father hustled this side gig to make extra money for his second family
It was just another way to pay for mistakes and to invest in first futures that were left behind
Until a soon-to-be washed-up rock star’s despair pierced the veil and frightened the ghost.
Vince Neil sat in the backseat,
His eyes locked on faraway thoughts too quick to catch
His daughter was losing a battle with a rare form of cancer. 
No child should suffer such a fate.
No money could save her.
No fame could save her.
Her father couldn’t save her.
My father couldn’t save her.
Nobody’s father could save her.
 
 
My father told me this story years later.
He said the conversation went like this:
“You got kids, man?”
“Yeah. A son and a daughter.”
“Call your daughter. Tell her you love her.”
“I will.”
 
 
My father accepted parenting advice from Vince Neil.
He called me late one night and whispered a soft, “You know I love you, right?”
I was young and didn’t understand the question.
“Sure, dad. Yeah.”
The static on the line fogged expectations of reciprocation.
Nobody’s father needs to save me.
 

Category
Poem

Snickers

At fifty-nine years of age,
on an overnight business trip,
I shoplifted a candy bar 
from the hotel kiosk,
picked up two pocketing one
as I’ve read the professionals do, 
gave the night clerk my room number
and made my way back up to my floor,
mindful of the elevator camera,
prize warming against thigh, 
waited for the knock on the door,
and when none came,
slowly ate the one and then the gooey other
while zoning out to ESPN, satisfied, 
after all these years,
to still be learning who I am.


Registration photo of PBSartist for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

be delight

I eat sunlight as if raspberries
as if sweet candy  taken in great gulps
a child with no restraint
I’ve missed a lesson in the body’s propensities for reaction

nearly upon us the solstice  bittersweet
turning goes on unabashed
my hands clench to keep the days
long  warm  tender  alive

they’ve said it is necessary 
I do agree  yet that has no meaning when doors close
windows lock  all heads turn inward  tightly bound toward protection 

now is the time   this masterclass in living to one’s fullest wildest potential

in recent years I’d become numb  empty
knowing something  there to discover
get curious  again  again  creation perhaps  earth’s

again  I kept searching  it’s what I have  right
hoping 
believing
trusting
the miopic view of endings  lies

turning  toward perpetuated becomings
easing  mind’s fraught alighting over inconsistent surfaces

plants do that
their continuous growth  a lesson in longevity 

living  densely  I am offered a chance
more than one 
to re member myself to continuity
the fact of my nature
this natural habitat
delight


Registration photo of Fanny H. Salmon for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Metastasis

You knew better
yet surfed the wave blindly
until it
crashed on you,
stealing friends
and memories to
the abyss deep and new
your pointless yelps
wash you back
to the feet
of the beast
you know better
and yet