Sample poems.

I’d rather be influenced

to send more postcards.
To kiss with more tongue
and let cantaloupe juice
run all the way down
to my elbows. I’d rather
be influenced to cook
more quiche and make cold brew
at home. To wake up early and stay
in bed. To be better at remembering
my friends’ birthdays.
To vote early. I want an algorithm
that worships heirloom tomatoes.
The sound of that one summer
cricket outside my window.
Peach sorbet with tiny spoons.
The way the mountains go copper at dusk.
The chatter of your dog laughing
in a dream across the room.

Selected by James Crews for The Sunday Poem in Gwarlingo; 2022

“How to Talk About It”

Originally published in The Standard-Examiner & QSaltLake

Salt Lake City Poem

After Terrance Hayes

In Salt Lake City from a mountaintop 

one can see angels blowing air 

and a building trying to pop the sagging sky.

A line of worker bees working

along the crumbling freeway, feeding grey

to the underbelly of the clouds

and wondering why their kids cough so much at recess.

There is a boy in a man’s suit asking me—

telling me about his god,

my God; how we’re both so similar.

There’s a hairy-legged man in a tight sequin dress 

and I stare at him in the elevator because butterflies 

are rare in beehives. From a mountaintop 

in Salt Lake City, someone says My God,

pictures could never do it justice. I agree

and wonder why they try anyway. My God,

I am so fucking pretentious. I try to take a picture, too.

The Bad Kids with glitter on

their eyelids skipping and stumbling home

from the club. Last call for any butterflies

who didn’t find a honey. For any boy 

in a big man suit, who Googles tying ties

and tries praying out the honey, seeing

glitter when his eyes are shut or in the back

of his throat when he’s cleaning his tongue.

When the bees hatch the city buzzes with

babies in chevron bibs who cough on the sacred

mall’s escalators. I watch through hazy lenses 

from a mountaintop drinking nectar with friends. 

This is how I think of Salt Lake City—

someone craving nectar

but regurgitating honey.

Originally published in “Butterflies are Rare in Beehives,” || Glass Spider Publishing; 2017

If the world is ending

I’ll be in the backyard 

collecting the eggs from the coop.

Smelling and then showering the rage-red 

strawberries almost ripe enough

to eat. I’ll be dipping my knees into the soil 

while I tug up weeds. This is purer

than prayer. If the world is ending, 

come ‘round back. The gate is open. 

The lavender is shaking its small fragrant fists

by the thousands. The honey locust tree

is pulsing electric with a riot of bees. The air 

is thick with early summer and bloom. It’s quiet 

enough. And hey, the copper-black hen just laid 

her first egg—the color of Mars and tiger’s eye. 

It’s yours if you want it.

If the world is ending” || cityhomeCOLLECTIVE, House Calls; 2022

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