Posts for June 12, 2025 (page 10)

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

Overthrust

Just to sleep at night,
sometimes I hold you from behind and run
my thumb across your gullied fault lines.
Read the book spine of your body.
Your second growth of spine, a love cut you grew up 
like a raised garden of personhood, sprouting
pink flowered scar. Magenta row of rosebuds.
You carry the supine thorns in you, straight across
your heart you dared them to cut you up for good.
For the good of man-kind, to be the kind of man
who is allowed to be joyous and gay. To be okay
You cut and pulled yourself closer to yourself,
Soft covers over your heart, all blood and capillary
waves of relief. Interstate highway of free land reclaimed
indefinitely. My thumb travels miles across your chest,
walks one way and another, slowly and solely in meditation,
in awe of it all, this handful of all, of you. At the edges,
I turn back because there’s so much more to know, better.
Braille poetry of a man stretch like a smile beaming
with pride in the June summer heat. Shirtless like a signature
that dances and spins its way into the most beautiful chosen name.
You’re a birthday card full of love letters to yourself.
Sacred and brimming with secrets so dear you’ve taped
up all the edges for safekeeping and it feels
like a knot beneath my doting fingers. Clay enclave of heart
beating code to me beneath the wall of your chest.
We’re night cot neighboring skin bonding, tiny knocks
back and forth, always asking to come in, come closer.
My thumb walks the gravel holler of your chest
as if to come home. Foothills of hair and sky of freckled star.
Everything about you is North. In the dark,
we are just two lost pieces of Pine Mountain
shifting to meet itself all over again.


Category
Poem

My spice rack

Holds many different spices
Thyme is saved for Jim’s savory soups and stews
Cinnamon sprinkles are in mama’s apple pie
Red pepper abounds in my brother’s chili
Dill pricks my potato salad
Paprika dusts mama’s deviled eggs
Cardamon gives my chai scones their best
Ginger spikes grannie’s ginger snaps
Nutmeg scents our holiday egg nog
Oregano floats in mama’s spaghetti sauce
Saffron flavors Jim’s bouillabaisse
Sage fills the air at thanksgiving
Pumpkin pie spice pumps  our pumpkin pie
Marjoram flavors Hazel’s potato soup
Sesame seeds dot my Szechuan stir fry
Basil goes in my spaghetti sauce and omelets
Garlic powder fits the need when fresh is unavailable
Rosemary flavored shortbread cookies are a delight
Fennel seeds go in Jim’s special sauces.

Did I whet your appetite with these spicy memories?


Registration photo of Linda Meg Frith for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

False Starts

Somewhere near the Big Bang,

a gutless wonder jumps out of a hat,
too late for gravity to transpire,
a quantum leap appears
and particles wave at each other
while waves disappear,
advancing elsewhere,
the sun distracted by winter
attempts to lengthen the shadow,
arriving at the nearest conclusion,
antimatter and end of days.
Out of chaos comes order.
From darkness,
let one true thing emerge.
 
 
 
 

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

The Best Teacher I’ve Ever Known

How do I explain to my wife
how my daughter explained to me
how to miss someone?

That my daughter,
seventeen months old,
fourteen teeth,
hair not yet cut,
walking only last month,
one word more than one syllable,
(cookie)
explained to me a concept that,
until now,
I thought myself incapable of comprehending?

In second grade,
or maybe first,
I graduated from the type of summer church camp
where your grandparents stay with you for the week,
to the type you go to alone.

36 hours into the camp,
I did finally stop crying.

I honestly can’t recall much from that camp
other than that coming home
wasn’t an option.
As was made clear to me on the camp phone.

I settled in,
admittedly did have a good time,
and never asked my parents to reassure me again.

Since then, I venture solo
as any good eldest child should.
No one told me what middle school would be like,
how to take a job interview,
how to buy a house.

I just do it.
I go where I need to go,
do what I need to do, and
never look back.

At first my wife didn’t understand
why I couldn’t understand
why I should miss her.

But over time, I explained it well.
It’s just who I am.
I’m not a sentimental type.

Just a few months ago, in fact,
I was away on business for a week or so.
Going where I needed to go,
doing what I needed to do.
Explaining to my wife over video call that it wasn’t anything personal that I didn’t miss her.
When the camera turned to my daughter in only a diaper,
sitting on the chair we cut the legs off of
so that she could climb up into it and look out the window,
eating a small piece torn off a generic brand Eggo waffle.

I glanced down at the generic hotel waffle on my plate,
swallowed,
(not the waffle)
and missed her.


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

Cicada

Cracks, crevices, and holes disgorge  
Insects by the trillions, a dizzying horde  
Clicking so quickly, their tymbals abuzz  
All to find love, reproduce, and then  
Die
Abandoned exoskeletons, shift and sigh


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

First and last haiku – reflections on being a third grader

Spring, thy lovely face
Looks upon us all the way
Guide us to summer

What eight year-old kid
Uses “thy” in a poem?
Me, apparently.


Category
Poem

In Sickness

You sit bundled and layered
despite the summer heat,
the heavy blanket
covering you,
chilled and addled
by chemo,
dozing off, head slumped
on your chest, waiting
to feel better, to have
enough energy, enough breath
to climb a flight of stairs.
And I sit, sweating, and watching you,
wondering what food I should order
from Applebee’s
to celebrate our anniversary,
which likely will be
our last together.


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

visiting mother again

I don’t want to talk
of her  a broken record
yet body lingers


Category
Poem

A Life of Crime

Do we have the power to redeem or is forgive the best we can do
And if so, can one do it to oneself
And if one is trying to redeem oneself
From a life of crime, say

Where comes the courage. Without it
How else would one ever do what is neccesary
The apologies the confessions the belittlement
The admissions even to oneself

Even further from what corner of my cell would courage crawl
Very few of us here are dimwitted they are put somewhere else
Many of us can catch a fly in the hand pierce a heart with a toothbrush
Ruck a fake if that’s all we can find but we can’t find the courage


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

Deadline Dad

He lives in the pit of my stomach,
this long-dead avatar of my real father,
whose residue still murmurs.
He haunts every new project,
hanging over me like smoke after fireworks,
to choke a boy no longer small
who waited ‘til the night before the essay was due,
or the poster or the book report.       
“You’re cutting close, aren’t you?  

My father was at our family store well before opening
before the customers,
and stuck around past closing if any remained—  
         (the memorable Sunday afternoon
        when someone came in at closing
        
time with a box full of those vacuum
        tubes to power a 1960s TV,
        to check
them out on our “U-TEST-EM” machine,
        
a supposed moneymaker my father
        
had installed in our little convenience
        
deli. We had to wait ‘til he was done).  

He was a good dad, I hasten to add,
but his shade hovers diligent
in the doorway of my imagination.
I’m told to tolerate him,
to negotiate, cajole, bargain,
to tell him where to go–
but he springs from love
and it endures.