Poetry 4-30-2026

Hey y’all. I’ve been participating in National Poetry Month with a challenge through Writing Heights. And let me tell you, nothing humbles you more than being in the presence of such amazingly talented poets (especially when they all decry their lack of talent). We didn’t have any gentleman join us in the challenge, and I will say that I think the supportive structure of mature women in a safe environment really gave birth to vibrant and visceral work. It reminds me how powerful women are. How intelligent. How kind. How empathetic. Am I saying that men are not these things? No. I’m saying that for too long women in this weird patriarchal, capitalist, christian nationalist environment have been silenced, reduced to objects, and vilified for expressing themselves. It is grounding to know, despite the illusions spread to keep them subservient, women are in fact the creators.

That was a long intro to these poems. One, from a prompt this month. One I wrote as an exercise. Neither edited much. Enjoy, and if you were insulted by the previous paragraph…stop reading my blog.

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Insomnia (a pantoum)

I am sitting at home, on the south side of a once-small Colorado town
I used to hear crickets, but now there are sirens
The dog snores, unbothered, and my wristwatch patiently counts seconds I no longer own
I can see the faint glow, of a nightlight down the hall

I used to hear crickets, but now there are only sirens
There is a coldness where a warm love used to lie, beside me, tucked away
I can see the faint glow of a nightlight down the hall
Time has taken the children from the rooms, but I keep them plugged in

There is a coldness, where a warm love used to lie
And I feel it, tucking away from me, lonely and quiet
Time has taken the children from the rooms, but I keep them plugged in
I’ll never sleep the way I used to, when I knew we were all safe

And I feel it, over and over, love tucking away from me lonely and quiet
The dog snores unbothered, and the wristwatch ticks away the seconds I no longer own
I’ll never sleep the way I used to, when they were down the hall
I am sitting, up in bed, once a home, on the lonely side of a once-small Colorado town.


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Them

tom-boy
rough and tumble
the feral ruler
of broken-down neighborhoods
in dying mining towns
knew no gender
just the horsepower of my
skinned-kneed legs
and the unfettered mane
more wild adherent to herd
than human girl or boy
wind-tossed and unmanageable
out in sunlit days with any
able-bodied child my height
who could keep up
invent dragons
and build castles in trees
uncategorized,
unencumbered by expectations
of bows
or army men
dolls or
trucks
why not both?
why not all?
aren’t our hearts really just
wildings?
in the beginning
we were all
unfettered dragons,
able-bodied castles
nurturing friends
and fauna
in trees alike
we were all
‘them’

Poetry 2-12-26

I’ve been writing a lot of rage poetry and journal entries lately. It’s a method of processing, a safe space where my feelings won’t be chastised or be cautioned to calm down. To be told, with shrugs, that this is just the way it is. To be hounded with others’ convictions that I’m being the irrational one (or worse, the powerlessness, of ‘nothing can be done’). No wonder women go mad. No wonder we quit our jobs and our relationships in droves. I think someday we’ll all probably wander of the grid and go feral. I hope that someday our leaving destroys the grid completely. I hope ‘feral’ is a return to what we were always supposed to be. In ownership of our own bodies, part of an egalitarian community, taking care of the Earth that sustains us, protecting one another. I hope for this.

Today’s poem is part of a project I’m working on, tracing philosophically through the roots of my own rage, and the collective anger of my generation of women. Raised to believe we could be equal from a generation that was slowly learning it themselves. As such, this poem is an exploration and an ode to one of the most influential albums (and songs) of my teenage years. And to the seeds that she planted in my soul, that have found a fearsome bloom in current times.

The Jagged Little Pill (I can No Longer Swallow) 
(lyrical exploration of "All I Really Want" by Alanis Morissette)

All I really want
is deliverance


from the maddening hold
of the lesser sex’s self
inflation

Do I stress you out?

to remind you
that you came from a womb
and still she chose to keep you
even after all
the repulsions she knew you would
own and
call power?

I am frightened by the corrupted ways of this land

when faced with pedophilic horrors
and the butchering of innocence
as if it were any
other
expendable resource
men rape the land, why not us too?
why not our daughters? our sons?
we are fresh streams and
teeming oceans
gold mines
and diamond fields
all for the taking
all for the discarding

Reel them in
and spit them out


calm down
there is nothing to be done
let the broader shoulders shrug
to end the matter

I am frustrated by your apathy


while you drink your martini
and cast sunshine, between sips,
that at least the stock market
is finally up
and I sit still, as prey
praying in bushes might,
cheap wine I feel guilty for
and watch blood run in the gutters
and remember my own, horrible
8-year-old truths
while the news blares
of babies being eaten
or burned
or buried by the ninth hole
water hazard and sand trap
thank fucking god
the stock market is okay

the sound of pretenses falling

is louder to me
but you were never listening
anyway, were you?
just for the sound of panties dropping
be a good little girl
for daddy
sit on my lap and reassure me,
I’m still a ‘nice guy’
right?

No.

I won't speak these lies
any longer
my lips have been sewn shut
needles in and out
the thread of anger
trapping unsettled bees in my throat
and handcuffed wrists bleeding
as I fight against
the radiator of the American Dream

why are you so petrified of silence?

does it make you hear the echoes
of your own dissonance?
A good man who still
sometimes
objectifies his high school students
and calls it ‘American Beauty’

And all I really want is some peace
a place to find a common ground

but we aren’t standing on even ground
never was there equal footing
from the day I spilled out of my mother
my knees have been broken
by the bat of masculine ‘protection’
my voice scalded with the shame
this system gave me
for a body
that nature knew and named
as more divine

you want me to calm down

all I really want is justice