Posts for June 14, 2024 (page 12)

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

Wild Horses

Wild Horses

I leaned over your desk,
left a paperweight snow globe— 
in it a floating message that everything 

changes—hoping you’d see
that meant that everything could
circle our track around to finish at home.

After hard training came roads—
Kentucky winter paved with your name,
I fell into your sea to see vistas looking for spring.

But no one rings the phones
today—only the sound of bosses
sounding the interoffice messaging apps

on the MacOffice computer
reminding to pick up only memories,
pick up notebooks, pens, and papers—

I’m tired of writing about you.
I’m tired of talking circles about you.
I was tired of the amorous love faces you would make.

It is every night I want to unbutton 
your blouse and my Levi’s jeans—to take a bite 
of your mouth—without disturbing your personal affairs:

rip the bit out of your mouth, 
lay the saddle in the dirt, and pretend 
for a happy marriage for seven whooping hours.

I don’t know. Will you’ll find me 
acceptable?—We’ll write a contract
over Eggs Benedict—I’ll cook—then a fiery look

will come over your auburn eyes, 
almost angry, where you’ll kick me in the teeth 
saying, “Nice plan, but I’m everyone you’ve ever had.”


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

Dolled Up

For Frankie

I have a real early recollection 
that smells like Aquanetand Marlboro Lights. 
My two aunts have got me 
standing balanced on the toilet lid
in ruffled socks,
in front of a mirror framed
by fake plastic bamboo.
I was wearing a dress I can’t remember.
Their excited conversation escapes me too.
They chirped like birds and flitted around me
each one armed with a curling iron,
turning me from a real girl

into a chubby cheeked, blue eyed babydoll.
I knew a man was coming.
And that the grown ups said
the stranger was my father, but maybe
not my Dad.
One of my earliest memories
is how handsome he turned out to be,
blue eyes sparkling and a smile that flashed.
And how Mommy folded her arms across
her typically generous chest
and looked mad like that smile
couldn’t phase her.
I remember how I hid behind
the curtain of her wide legged jeans,
when he reached for me
so familiarly. 
I remember I didn’t cry. 


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

|| Remind “”

In the middle of the night I piss beside them “” and think: I
shouldn’t be mourning you yet. “” I tell myself every day I’ll
throw them away. “” Then every morning I
get up and greet the decay like a friend ||

By Friday | I
can’t watch another living thing ||
Share suffocation in this house anymore. ||I buckle; I
wasn’t mad at the buds “” Lucky to be bought,
they no longer “” have to wait “” Tired ||
and on display, || at last no one would look at them
with scrutiny ||except for me “”
I pour out the week in the bathroom sink “” And hold
the bundle still to refill the pitcher ||I
can feel them rejoice and relax in my reach
|| With fragility and memoried paper thin skin. ||
They crunch against my will and I
“” like you, feel nothing at all. ||

No flower can survive in the dark “”
For 3 days I didn’t even look at this batch“”
Refused to cut the dead leaves || These are the prettiest ones and I || Wouldn’t give them the light or attention they need ||
|| Some women get flowers as a reminder
“” As soon as you leave, they forget why. ||


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

The ATM Alchemy of the Self

As if in our biology were born
a malfeasance, a money-sick
demeanor we might cure
with cardiocredit that shames
itself to energyspend and carrymore.  

But death is just waking up
on the wrong side of the bed
of roses.  

I know this because I have lost
myself in high fructose. Have lived in the flesh
of purple poppy-mallow. Have prostrated
before the one-eyed shasta stare and moseyed,
heart full of yesses,
across carpet sewn with pink and primrose gusto.   

Have given it something less than my all and yet
something more than it deserved of me.


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

American Sentence XXXVII

A puckered, peevish woman in black taffeta tuts disapproval.


Category
Poem

blink

hummingbird is hovering
he darts, and he stirs
feasting on forsythia
he’s here; then he blurs
then he’s gone in an instant