Posts for June 5, 2025 (page 9)

Category
Poem

all that you are

all that you are
is a ball of hopes and dreams
in the form of one
created in God’s image
by two born sinners
something that we have been given
but that we barely deserve
daddy and mommy have been burdened and
tainted by this world
forgive us both for
all of the mistakes we will make along the way
even though one of us has done this
twice before
this time is different
this time
and place in which we live
still puts black girls last
still stunts their esteem while labeling them
fast
still assumes the very worst
still presumes they are the least worthy and deserving of love
still assumes their pain tolerance
is unlimited
and yet, both hands
behind her head I hold
much, much more
baby, all that you are is
the third person I would absolutely
either live or die for
someone so small
and delicately powerful
that pulls close to me to fall asleep
and instantly feel a different kind of love
that I didn’t know I needed
because you never miss
what you never, ever had

and all that I am
is your dad


Registration photo of ASH for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

🎀Mothers and Love🎀

This is a piece I wrote on Mothers Day of 2025.

🎀Mothers and Love🎀

 
A mother’s love.
To love a mother.
To lose a mother.
 
Beautiful mother,
Wounded one,
The mother who remembers and
who loves like the sun.
 
She co-creates a bond that grows,
with the little soul she chose.
A light that shines, not drains,
a heart that holds through joy and pain.
 
She helps her children find their flame,
to know their worth, to speak their name.
 
Motherhood, reclaimed.
In the name of all that’s real,
of sacred truth,
of love that heals.
 
On this Mother’s Day, I rise.
in power,
in peace,
with open eyes.
 
This is mine.
It always was.
 
No more masks.
No more pause.
 
Motherhood, beyond the noise,
beyond the rules,
beyond the ploys.
 
Welcome to the world anew-
where sovereignty guides
and hearts ring true.
 
I hope you stay.

Registration photo of Mya Sophia for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

A Prayer for the Madleen

Named after Gaza’s first & only fisherwoman
your bow points to resilience & courage
Yemaya, mother of fish & oceans
please protect the civilian vessel carrying
aid to the Palestinians in Gaza.
steady the wind & tides, oh mother of
my people you protected the shores
of the motherland when slavers took them
Please protect the Madleen now.

Guide it’s starboard to the sacred & ancient 
homeland of Palestinians
As a genocide, a holocaust continues
under occupation
Please let them break the siege

Keffiyehs & Palestinians flags & sails
dance in your wind, Goddess, on
this vessel of true humanity
May it remind us of the bare minimum
responsibility of us as interdependent creatures
May we too have the determination of
those 12 who sail the Madleen
May we demand our leaders for their
Safe passage & join the resistance anyway
we can
May we love the world so much
that this is simply the right thing to do.


Registration photo of Christopher Mattingly for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Why I Love Teaching Guitar

Start with your pointer finger on
String five Fret two.  

No, that’s the second string.  

You count the strings from bottom up,
The one closest to the floor is string one.

  Yes, the fifth string, that’s it.  

Fifth string, fret two.  

No, fifth string, not fifth fret.
 
Yeah, there ya’ go.  That’s it.  No worries.
I do this all day. It doesn’t bother me a bit.  
The joy is in the doing, not the completion.  

So, fifth string, fret two with your index finger.  

Your index finger.  

Your index.  

Index.  

No, your index finger Is your pointer, that is your ring finger.  

OK, good, there you go, play two times, then fret four, string five.  

Two times, not seven.  

I understand.  Let’s read what’s written on the page.  

You sound great.  You didn’t practice this week? 
Really?  You must be a natural.  Some people come to
This with intuitively correct technique.  

You must be one of those people.  

Now fifth string, fret four, ring finger.   

Don’t use your pinkie on the fifth fret, use your ring finger.  

Ring finger.  

Ring finger.  

Ring finger.  

Ri- YES! that’s the one.   

Just once, not six times.  
Try to watch the page when you play, only play what’s written.  

Good!  Remember, fifth string.  

Almost!  

You’re on string six with your picking hand.  

No, your other hand.   

Look at your right hand.  

Your right hand.  That’s your left hand. 

Look at your right hand.  

There you go.  See?  You’re striking string six.  

Really?  I’m left handed too. 

It takes two hands to play. No worries. 
Jimi Hendrix played left handed.  Elizabeth Cotten…  

OK, take a breath. 
Let’s try again from the beginning, shall we?
Shake the tension out of your hands.  

Good. Now where were we?   Oh yes, String five, fret two with your index finger.   

Your index finger.  

Your index.  

Index.  

No, your index finger Is your pointer….


Registration photo of Jazzy for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Same But Different

I Read
A book about a Minute Bat
Who lived in a Shed
Content
A home he loved more than the Desert

The owner never thought he’d Desert
He chased the new occupant
Swinging his Louisville Slugger Bat

Minute Bat –
1
Owner – Zip 
Record those stats

Content of the Shed
Hair Shed by dogs and cats
No owner
Just a Content Minute Bat
Is the official Record

His story is a good Read
It only takes a Minute
Read it  


Registration photo of Ariana Alvarado for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

How Can I Write A Poem From The Hospital Room

when I am stuck at work
and in the back room the air
conditioner coos like pigeons

ways to remind me of the outdoors
their feathers whirring
in the Caribbean sun back home

in the hospital my father
relearns how to breathe
his lungs floating in fluid

as his heart slowly fails
and the time here passes so slowly
the sun over the parking lot

what can be done
except to rediscover my life
and pray for mercy over his

grab the poetry by the throat
and hold it like God to the scalpel
sliced open just to find

all i have ever said is please
please
please


Registration photo of Bethany Robinson for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Day to night, Night to day

Magic in the sky
The sun and moon
At the same time
One rising one falling
Brightness behind me
Darkness still ahead of me
The world to turn 
On its axis
To flip my perspective 


Registration photo of Sanida Palavra for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Seventh Heaven

The lonely wooden door,

tucked in the corner of the second floor,

opened up to the storylands

as far as the mind can ideate.

 

I would pick a book off the shelf,

like an apple off the tree,

bite into its delicious prose,

savor every word.

 

Leafing through pages,

sounds would fly up,

soar through the 

the deafening silence of the room:

murmurs, grumbles, and mumbles,

whines and sighs,

oohs and ahhs.

 

Then, the scents and sounds would intertwine:

Chocolate,
charcoal, and
chuckles.

 

Entranced,

I danced through new worlds

with new friends —

 

in seventh heaven.


Registration photo of Winter Dawn Burns for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

No Reason for the Rhyme

No Reason for the Rhyme: 
 
The comfort of your heart carries me through the lens of a living dream. I find that doves are following me home at dawn when you are far from me. I’m sure you know how I long to see the burning stars in your eyes and the moon on your shoulder, like that night when our bodies blanketed the grass in the sparkling dew of the holler. Or what about that time you thrummed “Iris” on your guitar and the whole world was washed in the zest of Winter’s missing kiss? Maybe we would not have lost all of our footsteps in the athenaeum if we were sitting together in the mourning rain, instead. 
 
©ď¸ŹWinter Dawn Burns 

Registration photo of Austen Reilley for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Scenes from a Mother-Daughter Getaway in Austin

Day 1: Walking down SoCo to see the bats fly out
from under the bridge (which you can’t actually see
because they’re black against dark water, but still),
we accidentally walk right into a sweet couple’s
engagement photo shoot. We apologize.
The photographer smiles, puts his hand on his chest,
“You are just fine. OMG, I have all your albums. Aahh-mazing.”
Mom turns to me, perplexed, but I am laughing
too hard to breathe or explain
what I understand that Mom does not:
He thinks she is Carole King.

Day 2: The Continental Club, watching live music,
Mom has earplugs in because everything’s loud.
She leans in and says, “What are they singing?”
I say, “Tennessee Whiskey, like the Chris Stapleton song.”
“Ohhh… I was thinking it was Tennessee Landscape.
That makes more sense. Who’s Chris Stapleton- is he playing tonight?”

Day 3: The Broken Spoke
We go early for a group dance lesson
so we can, you know, fit in with the regulars.
The teacher is an aging line dance Barbie,
this is her domain, she leads the class
with the same attitude I imagine Celine Dion
might deejay karaoke at your local bar.
We are lost, but because Mom doesn’t care,
I don’t care either. She makes three new friends
before we leave for our Air B’n’b. It would not surprise me
if they all still email to this day, six years later.

Day 4: Shopping at local thrift stores
I am stuck in a vintage boot. You read that correctly. Stuck.
It is patent leather and I am sweaty because it’s Texas
and even at times when I am thin, I am still out of shape.
I reach the point of asking a stranger for help,
she enlists another lady, who gets a salesgirl,
three of them are trying to yank this off my damned leg,
there is talk of cutting it off (the boot, not the leg),
I am giggling and snorting but also
panic screaming cuz toe cramps, and finally say,
“Can someone find my mom? She looks like Carole King in a ballcap!”
She comes. Waits to laugh until after the emergency.
Gives me deep calming eye contact. Yanks and twists. I am free.