Posts for June 7, 2025 (page 5)

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

Propagation

A node has auxiliary buds—

possibility folded into the curve of a stem,

quietly waiting.

 

You sent one to me,

wrapped in moist paper,

tender and trembling with more

than plant life.

 

You called it a cutting,

but I knew it as something else:

a gesture

of hope,

a soft offering—

maybe even a test.

 

A node, you said,

forms adventitious roots

when exposed to moisture.

It adapts.

It learns where it is,

and decides to grow anyway.

 

I held it carefully.

Not just for what it was,

but for what it meant.

You trusted me

with something

that had no guarantees.

 

And I—

with hands still shaky from forgetting how to care—

placed it in water,

watched the light touch its edges.

Waited.

 

I remember what else you sent:

a photo.

Not of leaves,

not instructions,

but invitation.

Proof that you, too,

have tried to grow

in uncertain places.

 

There’s science in this,

yes—

auxin streaming through the cut,

telling it how to become.

But there’s longing, too.

And memory.

And the silent ache

of those who send roots

before they’re sure they’ll take.

 

What grows from this

isn’t wild.

It’s chosen.

It’s tended.

A bloom that defies timing—

not early,

not late,

but entirely

different.

 

And in this soft experiment

between leaf and breath,

I begin to believe again:

in trust,

in tending,

in the slow miracle

of being held,

and still—

becoming.


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

Guilty/Fruitless

I wish time
and again 
that I had done more;
tried harder
given life a different spin.

At one point,
I must have been a child.
I remember risk-taking felt so much freer.

now I curl up in a ball
    bend right over
    head stuck in dirt

If I can’t see it
               (which I can)
         I don’t have to feel guilt for missing it
                                    (when I do).

my back aches now

missed opportunities

if I could just 
get.   over.    myself.

I could hit her.

the rage I feel

for staying right there

     letting nothing change

She kept me wilted.

Now I’ve woken up
I want to go right back to sleep.

There’s nothing here for me.

I didn’t plant any seeds.


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

Back Road Reverie

Hackberry and red maple,
Pin oak and catalpa ~
Long fingered branches
Stretch across this
Narrow rural road somewhere
Between Lexington and Paris.

You can feel the air cool
As we leave the city behind,
Past barns,crossing StonerCreek,
pulling over toLet trucks pass.
Sharp scent of skunk,
Smell of a cattle farm and
The fresh green aroma
Of trees, fields and hay rolls.

My daughter provides
Well chosen country songs,
With banjo, fiddle and harmonica
Lending a nostalgic melody
To this backroad pilgrimage.

6/7/25
KW


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

Everything For You

I cannot be everything 
no matter how hard I try
I can’t be the scapegoat
the perfect daughter,
mother.
Why?

I can’t be the 
best friend
the lover
the star employee
I can’t be your sacrifice
fallen to her knees.

I can’t be
considerate yet sinister,
the hopeless optimist
the girl you can run to
but the girl you never miss.

I cannot be 
all these things
for you, it’s true
but rewind the clock 
let the day begin anew,
and I’ll be back on that stage
where you found me long ago
where you’ll find me years from now
the catchphrase,
the hope, the ego.

But when I exit stage right,
leaving the many “be’s” behind
I know deep down I would find you
with flowers and a sign, 
telling me you’re proud
that my anything was enough.
While everything, I couldn’t be,
your love isn’t fragile, it’s tough.


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

A Sketch of the Librarian on a Saturday Morning

A Sketch of the Librarian on a Saturday Morning:

 
She is dreaming of the restless desert sand that dances in the wind and taps on the strata at dawn. She hears an echo weaving through the dunes of loneliness and regret. She is the trumpet of soundless birds and the burning pages of Winter snow. She believes there are elemental rings mapping stories of how love is yoked in variations of turns. Her spine is stiff in the golden slant of the morning. Her head cap appears to be levitating as a glowing nimbus of flame. Her shoulders are the hinges that hold the hem of night between the mull of muslin and the promise of an untarnished evergreen. Her orange-flip lipstick smattered on the flyleaf of memories that tilt between the quake and hold of dark and dangerous fairytales. Outside her window pane, she hears a comforting sigh. A swallow’s chest flutters as it hoists a worm nigh. She is mesmerized and I am aware that the mechanisms for laying down battles are rife with wild rivers and folded hands. Her presence is tattooed on my own body of thoughts while I wonder if anyone would ever want to love her. Or will she return to the daffodils and the frosted waters of the forest instead of being here, waiting for someone, who will never come? 
 
©️Winter Dawn Burns

Category
Poem

Glacier

I met a man in the mountains
on the side of a dirty road.

Cigarette butts, empty chip bags, 
a used needle, old water bottles,
pieces of tires and chunks of asphalt,
butterflies: alive and dead–
markers of the map we made.

Dwarfed by jagged peaks, our paths
intertwined a hair’s breadth
from heaven.

They separated back on solid ground.
To remain,
(like so many things)
unexplored.


Category
Poem

Storm Brewing

There is a storm threat for my area
the grey skies match my mood
it is easier to cope during the work week,
when I can focus on my job and the day
goes by quickly, but weekends are harder
I have been thinking of my son all day
and wondering how I will survive this
monstrous loss.  The emotional storm 
brewing is probably going to be worse than
the weather based storm headed our way


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

Dream 6/7 and subsequent thoughts

you swing at me 
fist grazes cheek but doesn’t connect
instead it breaks the small window
inside a door

Bare feet step in the glass
each shard is pulled out one at a time

Dillards fills my view 
the same mall landscape I’ve had
too keep me company for 
almost four 
years

your words when I told you 
my major was changing to biotechnology 
“Do you think you are disciplined enough for that”
still sting, ring and bounce
in the corners of my mind

I have an interview Wednesday 
for a lab position 
they reached out to me


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

Grandmas, Gardens, Gods & Ghosts.

I was once six years old,

swaying on your rickety porch swing.

We played I Spy for hours,

trying to find something

the other didn’t see.

 

I look for you everywhere.

 

I beg the clouds to shape

some sign you’re still here.

I pluck stray hairs from your brush

and make a thousand desperate wishes.

 

I watch for red birds and butterflies.

I kiss a pack of envelopes

until my lips are cracked and raw.

I let the dogs lick the plates clean,

hoping they’ll reveal

some matriarch Mona Lisa.

 

I pace at the doorway

to hear your late-night worry.

I search flea markets

for a duplicate collection

of ceramic pigs.

 

I eat a whole pack of orange crème candies,

pick wild onions,

and promise to spend summers

sustained on tomato sandwiches.

 

I search for you in the unspoken truths

tucked beneath my rib cage.

I frantically consider going to church.

I know I don’t have to look that far.

 

I have your wheezing laugh,

your green thumb

(a few shades in the making),

your sweet tooth,

and that crooked big toe

forcing us to round up

half a size in every shoe.

 

My bones ache like yours,

and my tender heart.


Registration photo of Virginia Lee Alcott for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Discovering Birds

My first recognition of 
a bird is not the red tailed hawk
gliding across a crystalline sky, not
the bright red cardinal sparkling in
the snow after a lush winter storm.

It is a bird drawn by my grandmother’s
eighty year old hand, at the end of 
a letter on linen stationery, pink with
scalloped edges. Each letter promised a
bird or two, drawn in stick figure formation.

The birds made me smile, they were 
happy, appearing to look right at me.
I don’t remember seeing birds
in my city neighborhood in the northeast,
except for pigeons.

As a child, I did not realize pigeons were
birds, they were just pigeons, cooing and
walking around the concrete pavement. 
We threw them pieces of stale bread
when my mother allowed.

As I got older and became more attuned
to the natural world, I translated my sweet
grandmother’s drawings of birds into a
lifelong love language with these winged
creatures, loving each song. flight, feather.