A Man I Didn't Sleep with Asked What Word Defined Me

I must have been around fourteen years old when my family took a trip South for spring break. We all got together with a friend of my parents and that friend’s new family—he had gotten divorced and remarried and now had stepchildren who were about my age. It was our first time meeting the kids, and those kids asked me and my sister if we wanted to go see a movie, and we said yes.

The parents didn’t go with us—theirs or ours—and somehow I ended up sitting next to the stepson of my parents’ friend at the theater. I was there to see the movie, but the stepson spent a lot of the screen time trying to make a move on me. I don’t remember exactly how I stopped something from happening, only that I didn’t confront directly, and when the outing was over, I didn’t tell my parents what had happened, but now I cannot figure out why. Sometimes I think back on that time and remember how young I was, and then I think about how later in life I was able to stick up for myself in new ways, how life taught me more about what was mine and no one else’s.

Which leads me to this next poem by Melissa Fite Johnson, a poem about becoming who we are meant to be. I have loved this poem for well over a year, and I am thrilled I can feature it this month on my blog (thank you, Melissa!):

This was poem was originally published in Ploughshares and is reprinted here with the poet’s permission. The poem is also in Melissa’s newly released poetry collection, Midlife Abecedarian. Learn more about Melissa Fite Johnson here.

It’s National Poetry Month! Every week on my blog during the month of April, I share poems I love from contemporary writers. I hope to pique your interest in poetry, if it needs to be piqued, and to show you that a really great poem can be accessible to all. 

“See” you soon with another fabulous poem.

Photo credit: Tomas Jasovsky from Unsplash.com


The Patron Saint of Airport Sparrows

Sometimes when I look back on my life, I think about how one seemingly small decision changed the trajectory of my life: going to graduate school at the last minute; getting on a plane to Mexico to teach and leaving so many things I loved behind; saying yes to someone and then later ignoring the doubts; driving into the mountains on a late May day (even though I didn’t feel like it) and meeting the man who would become the love of my life.

The following poem (“The Patron Saint Of Airport Sparrows”) is, for me, about decisions and trajectories, and how we alter our lives sometimes without knowing we are, only realizing it looking back. James Davis May starts with the setup in just a few words (giving us context for why the speaker is in the airport), and then takes a moment and a detail—a bird—and makes meaning of it, relates it to the life and circumstance of the speaker. Here is the poem:

This poem was reprinted here with permission of the poet. It was originally published in The Sun (December 2023).

You can learn more about May here. May’s most recent poetry collection is Unusually Grand Ideas

Thank you so much, James Davis May, for this tender poem. It has quickly become one of my favorite poems ever.

It’s National Poetry Month. Every week on my blog during the month of April, I share poems I love from contemporary writers. I hope to pique your interest in poetry, if it needs to be piqued, and to show you that a really great poem can be accessible to all. 

“See” you soon with another fabulous poem.

(Photo credit: Yousef Alfuhigi from Unsplash dot com. )



Upcoming Online Writing Workshops

Looking for the Beautiful Things

I moved quite a few times in my twenties and thirties, often with help but sometimes making the final drive by myself. I remember one particular drive when I left my Ohio hometown to move to Chapel Hill, North Carolina with my new husband. It’s hard for me to think about that drive—even as I am writing this, tears are forming in my eyes and my throat is thick. I didn’t want to leave, but I thought back then I could not stay, not if I wanted to be married to the man who told me that he would never want to remain in my hometown or in Ohio. That drive might have been the hardest I have ever made, but I did my best to have hope, to keep hold of the belief that this was the right thing, that I would be happy once I got there.

Which brings me to this poem by Joy Priest, a poem I have loved for a long time. If you are new to my blog, you might not know that every week of April I feature poems on my blog with the hope that if you don’t think you like poetry, you might change your mind.

Here is Joy Priest’s poem:

This poem was reprinted here with permission of the poet. Copyright © 2021 by Joy Priest. This poem was originally published in Poem-a-Day on May 20, 2021, by the Academy of American Poets. Joy Priest’s latest poetry collection is Horsepower.

Thank you, Joy Priest, for letting me share your work.

It’s National Poetry Month. Every week during the month of April, I am sharing poems I love from contemporary writers. I hope to pique your interest in poetry, if it needs to be piqued, and to show you that a really great poem can be accessible to all. 

“See” you soon with another fabulous poem.

(Photo credit: Kimi Lee)


Upcoming Online Writing Workshops