Posts for June 24, 2024 (page 3)

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

Train Track Mudpies

It’s just an echo
There’s no turn-down button
But the volume does go up on its own
There’s blood on those hands
And I’ve never heard of that drink
It’s heavy and lethargic
The weight of that 18 years is medically diagnosed-
As never going away
“In fact it will affect you more as you age”
I was trying to wear these boots but they’re too big and
I’m not
Your framed little picture on the top of the fireplace
I drive down those long back roads
Down by the river and
I Shake
I cringe
So empty back here
There’s no way to clean your hands
You already got them dirty
I won’t pretty it up and I won’t nod my head
I used to play Barbies,
Make mudpies and heat them up on the rusted tracks
It’s all so blurry
And I’m in no rush to figure it out
Since it only gets worse as you age


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

Southern Words

You and I share the memory of entering Appalachia
like a wet curtain that soaks up sound.
When you’re on the other side you’re only there–
and nowhere else. It isn’t Kentucky, it’s the county
you call to.

In poetry,
we share the carrying of counties like pennies,
each attempting to name a familiar self.
In poetry, we bond over how suffocating,
how beautiful its been.
We bond over the rejection, the cordial porcelain
the way that both vases and toilets hold all of it the
same. 

We share the giving up of Food City,
Piggly Wiggly, and Dawahares for
anonymity in cities. The tired pursuit of identity:
some single self. To be strange, or named stranger,
where no one stops you in isles, where no one ever knew
your grandmother’s maiden name.
Together, we suffer such mid-life freedom.

Try to define this paranoid blood,
where rooted madness drives us. 
Some of us hide inside our syllables
stretched over words like blankets because it feels better.
Kentucky lucky is being stuck in the same poem,
all crying and laughing at one line. Asking and begging:
what do you do with a thing when it won’t rewind?
Hillbilly descendants reread
Wendell and hooks
to enter the curtain
again, against our eyes.
We drink around it, the flat top mountains, our coasters,
We hold the taste in our mouths as long as we can.

It’s all you can do to scratch at a thing like this.

 


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

Dorian Gray

The picture is framed
atop my mother’s dresser
smiling one day old
like a blank slate so dirtied
its time now as old as me.


Registration photo of Sav Noël Hoover for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

HOLLER BOY

the other boy in the holler was free

he ate raw hotdogs from the refrigerator

screamed NO at the top of his softened goose down lungs

Sliced a stripe down the drive way with his bicycle

 

while up top my bones rattled with trepidation

I cried like the ice cream pouring down my small hands

so afraid be sticky, fearful to shout NO

his world was the wind and mine was the root cellar

 

I was prepared for long winters, wrapping my feet

he was hungry for adventure, cutting his teeth

he used up all his life in thirty sun circles

and I read the millionth vague obituary

 

I attended the pain, avoided the funerals

hollers are eat up with invisible missiles


Category
Poem

THE IMPORTANT THING

about a water-
fall is that it is blessed.


Category
Poem

Lucid Dreaming

Eyes fluttering
As I drift away,
Familiar visions
Of years past
Float in my head,
A freckled face,
A strong nose,
Sun-bleached
Blonde hair,
Soft to the touch,
Featherlike fluff,
His blue eyes –
Or were they green?
Yes definitely green –
Wait, no, brown,
Maybe blue?
Can’t remember –
The familiar face
Looms over me
Like a phantom,
A fictionalized photo,
A roughly distorted memory,
Days of old, spent dreaming,
Haunted by what I’ve lost,
Haunted by what I don’t have.


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

Thirst

Color’s coming back again. 
No more desert sand,
Back to green.

The sky can’t withhold the rain for too long.

Everyday we reach,
as high as we can
to that sun.
Hoping for a drop of water,
Even when hope is dry.

We know what the clouds are,
We don’t know when they will.

The aches of endless rambling
lost in a coma
coming to a close.
If the water falls from these eyes,
Why won’t it rain?

I see you up there.
I don’t know what you’re thinking.

The heat grows,
I awake to the damp reminder
That color is coming back again.
The washrag mouthed prayers for rain
Seemingly gain no traction.
A wash of hope in irony. 

Anyday now, 
Any damn day.

You learn really quick
Of the trick.
Distract the dry yearning.
Do. Act. Go.
Salted sting, nature’s spit to the face. 

I’m tired of waiting.
I’ll never wait again.

The burden of wait,
Adding to the weight,
Only serves to suffocate.
The mind: reframe.
Self-loathe: refrain.

This is a process. 
Everything takes time.

You must reach to the sun.
Be ready for the rain.
When all hope is lost.
We must have faith. 

A drought is never a drought
for too long
to those who thirst.


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

Unimpactful

I sweared to miss

a turtle yesterday.

Today, it laid

on the other side

of the road, dead. 

I did my compulsion

and drove on to work. 

I’m tired of my actions

not mattering. 


Registration photo of Sue Neufarth Howard for the LexPoMo 2024 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

untitled

Find shards of sweetness
Weed out withered truths
from slithery tongues
Scatter seeds of your soul


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

Evening

windows open just a sliver
invite pine kissed air into the living room
where I sit in contemplation on a breezy June evening

the horizon looks to catch the falling sun
while a quiet psithurism whispers summer sweetness into my ears
turning itself into a surprise caesura that breaks the stormy sky’s unwelcome fermata

the wind tiptoes along my arms
and I shiver slightly as its invisible prints disappear

I prepare for nightfall–
overcome with the desire to dance barefoot
beneath the milky way
swaying to nature’s symphony with you