Posts for June 13, 2025 (page 9)

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

Strawberry Fields is More Than a Beatles’ Song

I cannot erase the image from my mind
of farmworkers running through the
strawberry fields trying to get away from ICE agents.
Strawberry fields is more than a Beatles’ song.

Men and women working long hours,
doing their job picking strawberries in the
California sun, lucious fruit for our just desserts.
Strawberry fields is more than a Beatles’ song.

They woke up early that morning to get to the
fields and meet their quota so that the rest of us
would be able to savor this delectable fruit.
Strawberry fields is more than a Beatles’ song.

Little did they know the day would end with a
run for their lives through the fields of their labor
as the juices ran like blood across the soles of shoes.
Strawberry fields is more than a Beatles’ song.


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

Summer of ‘07

They were ready to show me the entire state and special places of their fading childhood adolescent memories. They settled on taking me to one of their favorite smoke spots. A place nicknamed Barnhole. There was no barn, but there was a shallow cave, a glitter of water between jagged hills. They rolled two quick ones and we were off. Back into the jeep and back onto the winding roads. The lights of small town America flickering past dirty windshield, we were still getting over what was fed to us when we were snakes in mother’s bed, tossing sand out open window. Riders on a storm not yet confronted, a masked man, a black circle above halos. Heaven like doldrums over summer peaking through tree tops onto dirt room, naked feet in creek, water cool. We were brothers of love and chaos, no anger, no white lighters allowed in a white Kia or red Jimmy. A band of uncertainty, comedians without an audience or microphone stand. We were high on high bridge howling out laughable nonsense, we lied, bragged, flexed conversations, please be impressed. Every cough bringing us closer to God, who smirked knowing it would come to an end, over, and you would be gone, body dismantled, swollen cheekbones, broken soul, a yellow hat falling to the ground. Learning to fly before you’re an angel will leave you dragged out and buried. You took summer with you the day you tried falling with style, bringing fist to the pavement, coffin into dirt, and guilt to the monster I would become. High bridge became a monument to death and I would sit feet dangling over river top, shoe laces dangling from the same spot your eyes rolled back and arms let go of. I sat there sore with the night sky wondering asking why why why every youthful summer and every good or bad life will end, but the bridge would only groan and say nothing more


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

of David

                                                   nothing
   makes
              me             still
   refreshes
                                 the      path
      i
                        walk

I       fear
                      th  e
     rod
             for
                             my enemies
              overflow
                        my
                                 house
Erasure of Psalm 23


Category
Poem

ABOUT

What’s this about?

Where abouts?

About what?

About time!

Bring her about!

How do you face Muhammad Ali?

In a bout!


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

Friday Morning

   You can drown in an inch of water if
You are face down and can’t get up
She thinks
Staring at the spreading puddle  

Life is like that
One moment a puddle, the next
Boiling like a lobster in a stock pot  
Tail thrashing, cortisol leaking
From dying flesh  

She slips the towel from the rack, bends
Wipes the puddle, watching the wetness transfer
Floor to towel to soul and she wonders
Is this enlightenment


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

American Sentences in Search of a Train

For Pam Campbell

The morning’s ritual in darkness: Can the trudge to the bathroom wait?
Bliss before the sentinel screeches from bedside; breeze brings morning’s kiss.
Dream: a plane lands on a Denver thoroughfare, stops at all bus kiosks.
Wynken, Blynken, Nod agree to sail in new verse as Lex, Po and Mo.
Birth dirge, emerge! Sickness, sorrow and despair/ and the Leader’s orange hair.
Recission: Legal becomes an evil knife, trimming Big Bird’s feathers.
Coffee, toast and sunrise await the train and I hear its whistling now.


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

The Still Life of a Box Fan

The box fan clicks twice
then begins its heavy circle.
I sit legs splayed
watching the dust build
in corners I haven’t touched.

I’ve kept every luxury I could,

every envelope they sent
about my many deficits. Not out of shame
but proof. Like maple leaves,
they crackle when I touch them,
hollow as anything. 
Some days not everything needs naming—
some days I survive on breath alone, 
the glass of tea and this whir
of motion that doesn’t go anywhere,
a rhythm too soft to parade itself,
but still: an air,

a rhythm. I pour 

water into a pot, stir,
add salt like I mean it,
watch the water just rise
without it boiling yet. The sky, 
behind blinds,
is either bruised or blooming—
I haven’t decided. Who can?

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

Mushroom Bloom

 
Killing wind snaps off a 60-foot
red oak. Clues from missing bark
& diminishing foliage.
Three-feet from the ground it splinters
& leaves still-rooted stump
that exposes a trunkhole 
now swarming with ants.
 
Thirty days to chop
& stack. Then time 
to construct a mushroom 
garden for shiittake – umbrella
saucers, tan gills & wide-open
veils. Crisscross logs 
& make holes with handheld drill. 
 
Fill holes with compressed
spore that resemble wooden dowels.
It takes a year for a mushroom
garden to grow through raindrench
& blizzard. When the logs
look like a broken-down cabin 
mushroom are ready to sing.


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

The Trouble with Being Human

A fox slinks by the roadside,
her kits tucked in the brambles,
knowing hunger, yes,
and maybe cunning,
but not envy, not shame.

A hawk snatches the slowest sparrow—
there’s no malice in her talons,
no market built
on the feathers of the fallen.

Yet we,
lords of opposable thumbs,
make of survival
an artful cruelty.

We build walls not just to keep wolves out
but to lock neighbors away.
We take more than hunger asks,
feed on fear,
turn bread into weapon,
give names to the other and write them in blood.

No deer ever sharpened a coin
to divide a meadow,
no rabbit forced her kin
to dig a ditch for a king’s gold.

Only we count our worth
in acres and gods,
only we sing hymns
as we torch another village.

Yet—
watch us cradle the smallest hurt:
a man lifting a child from floodwater,
a woman weaving a blanket
from her only thread.

See how we hold funerals
for the fallen dog,
write elegies for whales,
weep for the forests we destroy,
curse ourselves for loving
what we later leave in ruin.

Animals love without irony—
they lick their wounds,
nuzzle the newborn,
turn their backs and are gone.

They do not write sonnets,
do not burn books,
do not build cathedrals
only to close the doors.

But only we
see a stranger’s hunger
and name it our own.
Only we,
who have walked in violence,
also walk in forgiveness.

We are the worst:
greedy, vengeful, forgetful—
capable of atrocity
even against our own kind.

But we are also the best:
capable of mercy,
of poetry,
of laying down the sword
to plant something green
where nothing grew before.

What a strange thing it is,
to be human—
to carry both plague and promise,
the fox’s cunning
and the dove’s return,
to be both the flame and the hand
that snuffs it out.

We are the trouble
and the tenderness.
We are the wound
and the healing.

Perhaps that is why the world
keeps spinning us onward—
because nowhere else
has nature made
such a dangerous,
such a dazzling,
mistake.


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

ultrasound

They said
there’s something that needs a closer look
a smudge,
a blur on the clean white sheet
of who I thought I was.

I said okay,
but inside, something stood up.
Not fear
something older than that.
Steel in the spine.
Fire under skin.

I’ve carried worse
and walked through louder storms.
This?
This is just a maybe
trying to rattle my windows.

Let it try.