Posts for June 23, 2025 (page 3)

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

an unnecessarily difficult and long day

I’m too tired to
complete the challenge today—
don’t feel good right now.


Registration photo of Sue Neufarth Howard for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Serenading Blues

It’s a color
it’s a feeling
every day affects you.

Blue skies
blue eyes
blue moods
blue birds’ chirps too.

Blues music for groovin’
blue blankets for soothin’
rain coming soon
when white clouds turn blue

Pretty bright blue flowers
have mood soothing powers.
Which color most soothing to you?
Perhaps it will always be blue.


Registration photo of Darlene Rose DeMaria for the LexPoMo 2025 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Skin

the self you leave behind is only the skin you’ve outgrown
like a snake

many a skin has been shed
in slithering forth on this journey 
skins discarded bringing one closer to the one meant to be

the skin of the young braided co-ed restless and determined
skin of the invincible youngin’ who jumped a freight hitching west to east
tasting her conservative history and solid stability
this travel skin lit a match in the soul of a restless gypsy

the skin of the ever-searching ever-questioning Catholic
one who sought spiritual refuge in a Guru in an Ashram
meditating, fasting, practicing yoga’s fifth limb, prudent pratyahara
skin that withdrew the senses from external objects to turn deeply inward

to peel back the skin of samskaras ~ the subtle mental imprints left by past
thoughts, actions and incarnations
a skin that served to quiet the mind and instill deeper states of meditation

now after years on this slithering journey a dire need is embraced to place self-care, deep listening and repetition of loving self-commentary a daily practice of reptilian survival

to lead with Love in the crusade of desert survival
to compliment the trials and glean the gifts of wisdom
to be charmed by the hypnotic flute of innocent truth 


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

The Vigil

The ocean at moms house is the highway hidden by trees
the breaking waves is the traffic
golden hour is for watering the flowers around the house
there are hanging ferns,
hostas imported from Grandma’s farm,
pink and white impatients,
If it’s in a pot you have to water it. 
so each evening as the sun slips lower she walks the boundaries,
Mom’s vigil broken only to wave at the neighbors and say goodnight to the cone flowers 
the fireflies light her way home. 


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

Abuser

Crawl across the spine of Earth
drink the cooling blue of her blood
kiss the green softness of her body
show her the beauty of being alive
as she has gifted you,
yet you have not returned.
Oh constant abuser,
burning her skin with discarded waste
and half put out cigarette butts,
could you find the decency
to pick it all back up
mend the pieces fully
rather than a half-ass apology
trailing moments of healing
but not wholly repairing
the damage you’ve left
creating a lasting scar
on the sacred breasts
you’ve garnered life from?


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

War Lessons


My father served in WWII
Enlisted in the Navy
An officer of men

My uncle served as well
Early in the war
B-17 pilot, with a crew to protect

They had no protection
Down over France
No one survived

We were fighting imperialists
Power hungry men seeking control
To rule the world

There is a statement
From the rooms of recovery
Lending sanity, reason:

Lest problems of money, property and prestige
divert us from our primary purpose

To be at peace
Experiencing joy, understanding
Goodwill for all


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

I am waiting at the cosmic DMV

I am waiting at the cosmic DMV
for God to call my number
and over the intercom decide
that it is now my turn.

Documents in hand I approach
the counter and am turned away
for an inexplicable reason,
to the back of the line.

The pastor uses the joke to talk
about the end times. Wait patiently.
Deliberately. But from the pew
I cannot help but scoff

as my friends have weddings
and children while the world
explodes in bombings and
loneliness. When is it our

turn to be happy?


Category
Poem

untitled

I can barely breathe
The the rising feeling
Sorrow and rage like lava
Churning, burning, rising
Up my chest
My lungs on fire as I
Attempt to inhale
The tightness worsens
And I am overcome
The tears flow down my cheeks
As I wail
My body thrusts forward
And heavy sobs escape
In catharsis
This will not be the end


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

Inside a cave, Future listens for Present

the walls that contain this world
smooth, expressionless
stark
cliff faces voices of water
pour from the shells of your throats

sounds find me
on the inside
decanting incantations
from the solitude
of my beatless heart
crafting meaning
from the noises you make

in my murky den
colors don’t exist until invented
and my shattered legs can’t ache
until I let them
every crack and hinge
caked in fronds and moss
to trap the outside sun


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

i grieve between figments of youth

figment; fragment 

i could not tell you what a fig tree looks like,

tho i imagine i once sat beneath one

sometime, within the field of granny’s blackberry bushes

as she often spoke of figs

and how her mother loved them 

whilst doctor oz rambled on from the kitchen television 

set atop the fridge 

 

i do not know what flavor they liken

or quite how you cook them 

maybe as a fill to a pie or a tart, 

possibly sweet— probably soured 

 

granny didn’t bake much;  she cooked 

chicken and ham and green beans with the fatty bits of bacon 

i no longer eat meat, didn’t want to then either 

but if i know anything, you don’t say no to offers from granny nor papaw 

even when he asks you to church 

and you’ve no longer anything proper to wear

nor patience to spare for that withered wooden pew 

‘cause they won’t be here forever, and their god may forsake you too