Category Archives: Lexington Poetry Month News

Any news related to Lexington Poetry Month, which we celebrate in June every year.

Dance of the Lilies

In the rock garden, orange day lilies
rest their heads on pillows of clover,
gazing up at the torn cotton
that creeps across the sky.  

Yesterday they stood with their colors
wrapped tight against the stinging rain;
then, straining toward the first slant
of yellow morning light, they opened.  

Now they rest, reclining like prima
ballerinas across the garden floor,
stretched out in their morning drama,
exhausted from the bloom.

A Timid Inclination

Your blue, run down van is in the middle of an unknown road

Crying by yourself very low

All alone in the wind

You didn’t figure out

How to start again

How to make it on your own

You could’ve called me on the telephone

But you didn’t really wanna know

What’s goin on

You said your goodbyes

You hung up on yourself

A little black buggy

Came speeding around the corner

He didn’t have time to warn ya

But you didn’t need it

Cause you always knew

You’d end up black and blue

I tried calling you on the telephone

To see how life was goin

Do I really wanna know?

You’re unconscious on a road

I Need to Laugh

 
 
but my friend is out of the country,
my sister doesn’t answer her cell, 
my daughter texts she is nursing her baby to sleep, 
Siri forgets the punch line, 
and the ole man is watching the evening news.  
I open pinterest and type “make me laugh” 
which appears as three different boxes:  
Make. Me. Laugh. which makes me laugh.
 A squirrel doing jive says People will stop asking you questions 
if you answer back in interpretive dance.  A chicken with lots of waddle
asks  Guess who I saw today? answers  Everybody I looked at
If humans stood in single file around the equator (a map of the world as water mark) 
most of them would drown.  A rainbow with a lightning bolt
shouts No Gold For U! where the strike hits land.
Then I found Erma. Gerd. Hilarious. and 
 
 
 
down here—
 
 
 
I’m on the floor

People and Words

When the cardinal dropped from the sky
When the phoenix lost its last feather flame
Setting fire to the whole damn aviary
While I was still inside crying for help,
No answers carrying the words I needed to hear
Or maybe just wanted to hear, unsatisfied,
That’s when it all made sense to me.
People are people and none of them understand
The complicated machinations of my mind
But my words, both shared and kept in closed notebooks,
They understand me and I understand them.
I live by them and they keep me together,
They lick my wounds and swallow my revenge
They kill my ghosts and give me a future to believe in
Where people are still people and my words are always mine.

Breaking Out

We all possess                  fears of the unknown especially in spheres

A particular domain        in which we are uncomfortable unsure

A bailiwick                          where we fear to tread

In which we                       perilously vulnerable forced to flounder

Operate with                     all our flaws on display

Expertise and                    skill gaps flaunted and

Authority                            humbled for our own good

 

key words to a poem i read once that i liked

Georgia O’Keefe

anachronism

flower flower flower

a condom in a tree

poem 
pokemon
bullying kids for
playing pokemon

[dramatic pause]

crayons                                            death
second grade   
[mother]                 

American Pie 2 (2001)

Thrasher hoodies

                      Chris Rock-Bring the Pain (1996) [YouTube rip].mp4

Courtland Rhapsody

Ten boys of the South

Fresh from education and institution

Bantered about flirtation and aspiration

Of wrongful women and this righteous retreat

 

On the way to Courtland

We picked up and passed a fallen rocket

And before we could clock it

We had hit the heartland

 

Each one of us locked eyes with the lake

Each one of us blessed by the beauty

Not the first or the last

To sign the wooden guestbook keepsake

 

Charmed by GaGa, a gracious hostess

Fed us homemade reubens and pie without protest

For the murals and decorations engrossed us

Some just fell under Nature’s hypnosis

 

Unconsciously we split into two groups

Those who were sporty with a shooting habit

Those who tinkered and toasted a Volkswagen Rabbit

Craving to keep driving in an endless loop

 

We bonded across the board

We dived in the lake

We fished, we fought, we feigned

We will never forget that Alabama lake

Mother Loggerhead

Nestled in the sand, you rest
only briefly.
Expelling a deep, heavy breath,
you spray a cloud of white powder.
Flippers move over the sand then dig in and flip,
over, in and flip,
over, in and flip,
scattering more of the white powder around you.
You’re drawing a crowd, now, but we watch
in respectful admiration.
You turn slightly clockwise
and rest
then rotate a few inches more
and rest.
And, again, until you are facing the ocean.
Adjacent to the tracks you created
while coming ashore,
you create a second path
back to the water,
slowly,
until you reach the waves
and disappear.

Envy

Across the road

Next door

In my yard

Trees meticulously trimmed and shaped

Wild and overbearing

Our gardens are winning

Sucked dry of all detritus

Sickly, dying, from some unknown blight

Battle of time and energy

Singular in their glory

Secret pockets of blooms

Goldenrod flourishes amid spent daylilies

No one casting shade upon another

Hidden gems forgotten

Husks of abandoned roses linger amid towering milkweed

LexPoMo Writing Challenge: Bonus Day

Dear Poets,

Due to overwhelming demand (and a couple technical snafus on my part), the Lexington Poetry Month 2016 Writing Challenge will continue through July 1st! If you were unable to post a poem near the deadline on June 30th, please go ahead and post. If you are excited at having another day to write a poem, please do! If you are outraged at technology, write about that. Just know that, no matter how you spend the LexPoMo Bonus Day, we are grateful to have you.

And on a more personal note, I want to thank everyone who has contributed as well as everyone who has let me know of any problems they’ve had. You are the best bunch of poets I’ve ever known and it is because of you that Lexington Poetry Month happens in the first place.