poems by rachel kellum

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2008, My Work in Other Venues Rachel Kellum 2008, My Work in Other Venues Rachel Kellum

Buddha Woman Speaks and Surrenders, Again

Oh, it is you again
standing here within me,
dancing the darkest moon of my dish
washing, gnawing my hipped belly bowl

promising blood.
You tango through the terror
of my uninhabited dreams, rip
the seams of me where these

clothes don’t fit, haven’t fit
for years of moons at many sinks.
I try not to think about it, but you,
Blood Woman, you needle

to keep me true to who
I think I am, or wanted to be,
but I am always changing, see?
We never agree. You say throw the plates!

I say make them gleam.
I am tired of our existential arguing.
Of cutting myself in pieces for your uses:
Mother, writer, sister, teacher, lover, painter, blue.

You are ruthless, refuse to let me lose these faces.
If only we could multiply our tongue by two!
If only they could flap at once,
in absolute and relative bliss,

Laughing: this/not this! this/not this!
But you won’t have it.
You insist: this, this, this!
I can’t resist. I drop a dish.

2008

featured in Slow Trains, 2008

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Rachel Kellum Rachel Kellum

vestige of an old friend

It’s been two intensive weeks of moving twelve years worth (820-some posts!) of wordweeds content from Wordpress to this new, more functional and, hopefully, more beautiful Squarespace site. With the expert help of my web guru, the incomparable poet Sally Seck, it was a fairly simple, joyful process to witness the ease with which all content (posts, comments, photos, pages, categories, dates, archives, etc.), slid right into their new home without a hitch but one: every single poem had decided to throw off the clothing of line breaks and stanzas and start their new lives as chunky, naked little prose poems. Hence began the face-melting, time consuming task of cutting and pasting, cutting and pasting previously formatted poems into the new site. It was a labor of love, as they say, a gentle reckoning to handle the cloth of poems written as far back as the late 1990s, travel through the sunshine and storms of the twenty-oughts and -tens up to now. I’m grateful for the opportunity to go back and re-read what has become a rather large body of work, my body. I’m mixing metaphors now.

A pang of grief shocked through me when I successfully transferred the wordweeds.com domain name to the new site, clicked refresh, and realized my old site was gone forever. Poof. She was a dear friend and curator of my poetry life for over a decade. I miss her already, the funny way she dressed.

I wish I had snapped a screenshot of that adorably circa 2010 homepage design, with its long scarf of a navigation bar hanging along the right arm of the page, forcing me to make short line breaks. It’ll be nice to have more room to stretch out here.

This image of the homepage header will have to do: a business card that has always better served as a book mark.

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2022 Sally Seck 2022 Sally Seck

Affording Sugar

On mother’s day I’m up early,

peeking in on my child,

wiping up cat vomit, sharing

yesterday’s beet scraps

with five chickens in the run,

feeding two dogs who never tire

of my touch. My husband 

and youngest son, who arrived  

last night while I slept,

are still asleep, bless them,

giant men whose lives happen

above my head, witnessing

the dusty tops of fridges

everywhere they go. They know.


I’m down here, whisking matcha,

marveling at cedar shadows

quaking across dusty windows,

a sun rising through smoke

over the Sangres, boiling

four parts water to one part

sugar for the hummingbird

we heard zipping about this week,

looking for our sweet life, the one 

my grandmother gave me

growing my sweet mother inside, 

whose tiny body already cradled

all the eggs she’d ever release,

including me, so lucky.

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Self-Interview in The Nervous Breakdown

This interview was published in The Nervous Breakdown on January 15, 2013. I bumped into it again while migrating content from the old wordweeds website. Enjoy!


You’ve been awfully quiet today. What’s up?

I’ve been thinking of my attraction to bardo spaces. The in-between places. I suppose I’ve been dancing there since my early 20s when I left organized religion and began formally pursuing the visual and literary arts. An early exhibit of oils and monotypes called Between featured quasi-mythological, autobiographical figures knee-deep to chest-high in water, both on land and at sea at once. Looking back, it isn’t a surprise that ten years later I would begin seriously studying Tibetan Buddhism where this concept of the between figures prominently. It’s a natural fit for me. Any philosophy that makes a practice out of living beyond duality and with the concept of both/and feels like home.

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2022 Sally Seck 2022 Sally Seck

The night before I turned 51

I dreamed my father next to me

holding my hand through a parking lot,

his full cheeked smile held inside

those radiating parentheses reaching

out like endless arms from his eyes—

like mine in the brightest sunlight,

caught laughing in a rearview mirror.

(I learned to love my smile by loving his.)

We walked like this toward some store

I wanted to avoid, so he wouldn’t feel

he had to buy me something, the coat

I wanted, or some other ephemeral

thready thing to make up for a lifetime

of missing him, missing him, missing him.

I rehearsed in my mind what I wanted

him to know: I forgive you every day.

I woke before I said it, distracted by

a gallery of Japanese woodcut prints,

one of them a curious face watching us

pass as I noticed us drift across glass.

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2022 2022

Building

A couple walks 
into a house and knows 
it is the one.
For years they 
will bend it 
and each other 
toward 
the life they want. 

Around beds
of irises and echinacea
her gully rocks doze.
His callouses raise
walls for chickens, 
basil, arugula,
pour a foundation,
puzzle together a dome.

Her toddler task: 
hand up
triangular panes
of glass one by one 
and wait
until he is done 
with other 
buildings paying
bills, feeding children.

Their silent fights 
could fell a pine,
peel a porch,
invent new words.
Their tenderness
could birth a 
sutra, decades,
this church.

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2022 2022

New Pecking Order

It is hard to abide
the cruelty of chickens
raised from chicks.
You give the Easter Eggers
names that curse them, 
like Curious Georgia, the gentle
smart, blond one who always 
looked up from the litter,
eyeing you like a giant god
whose hand giveth,
or let a little girl name one
something edible like Brownie,
or your ironic teenage son
dub the tan one Sweet and Sour.
Worst of all, you yourself
name three Plymouth Barred Rocks 
you can’t tell apart The Morrigan
after the Irish triple goddess of war. 
You even learn and then forget
how to pronounce their Gaelic names:
Macha, Nemain, Badb. 
All but one of six are tattered now,
more or less plucked.
Curious Georgia? back bald 
and bloody rumped! 
The fully feathered one, 
maybe Macha, you snatch and lock  
in chicken jail just inside the run, 
watch Curious Georgia’s
tail feathers re-grow as she struts 
and shits across the chicken wire 
roof of her tormentor who paces
frantically below, looking up.

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My Work in Other Venues, 2022 Sally Seck My Work in Other Venues, 2022 Sally Seck

KCRT Radio Interview

Enjoy this radio interview with Eli Debono of KCRT 99.3, based in Trinidad, Colorado, a few days before my reading for Corazon de Trinidad, hosted by the wonderful Hilary Depolo.

KCRT Radio Interview April 2022
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