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Deep Dive into Beat Poetry

Introducing the Beat Generation & Writing Poetry Freely
Dear read poetry friends,
read poetry26 LIKES2 RESTACKS
poetry and musings by JC's avatar
poetry and musings by JC
Thank you for introducing me to this type of poetry.
I read First Snow, Kerhonkson
By Diane di Prima.
Love it. Left me wanting more, thinking intrigued
teatablepoet's avatar
teatablepoet
Okay, so I wasn't prepared for bear poetry. I think I will return it 😄


Upon this rock

“the rock is here, is extremely visible and extremely, oh, eloquent”
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama283 LIKES15 RESTACKS
Jo Mosser's avatar
Jo Mosser
I live in some of the oldest mountains, where mind-bogglingly ancient peaks have been rounded by so much time and weather. I have always felt it is the deep bedrock here that helps write the story of our lives… it sends me to other places to meet other rocks.. and pulls me back again to tell about it. Ken Wilber once used a rock as an example of something that will not respond to you if you speak to it and I felt so unimpressed by his inability to relate. I agree with Don McKay about the eloquence of rocks. I’ve never once addressed a rock that did not address me back.
I’ve heard that if you really want to commit to something, tell a rock about it. I once told a pleasingly smooth chunk of sooty basalt that I wanted to be free from the chokehold of my father’s abuses, and we are still in this good conversation.
I once carried seven large stones in the back of my pick up truck--it was like divination, to see their configurations after each drive. I had a mysterious incident in that truck, in which I did not die, and not long after that, I carried these stones on a canoe, with my beloved, and dropped them near the center of an 800ft-deep lake. I return to them in my mind often, to learn about those deep, impossibly deep places.
When I am in need of grounding, I find some exposed bedrock and sit with my back to it. I imagine my bones are remembering something from the stone, or that the stone is listening to me through my bones.
I can’t wait to hear everyone’s stone stories here!
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello Pádraig and friends,
Thank you all for another week of generous, thoughtful writing. Thank you, Pádraig, for this prompt and for Don McKay's voice in my ears. His description of rocks as "extremely visible, extremely eloquent” and the way they give us access to deep time struck a chord with me.
The first thing that came to mind from your prompt is a memory from an essay I wrote for Family Stories a few years back about meeting my brother Miles. My brother Miles was adopted before me, though he's younger, as an infant. I arrived on the scene years later at the age of 8.
Here's the extract:
My adoptive parents brought me into the house before the placement was even finalized. During that first full day and night with them, I was certain that this would only be trouble. I didn't trust a soul and had seen from experience that adults were not to be trusted.
Miles took me by the hand and showed me the house. Then the two of us slipped out the front door, sat on the cracked front stoop for a minute, where I stayed silent, pouting. After a few minutes of side-eying me, he pulled me over to the side of the house, where he showed me some rocks.
"This is mica, and they call this 'fool's gold,' and this is my favorite sandstone," he said.
"What's so great about sandstone?" I asked, kicking at the grass.
He took a pale red piece of sandstone, picked up another larger rock and broke the soft red rock into pieces, crushing it with the harder rock. He ground it down as if he were using a mortar and pestle.
Then he picked up the hose, filled a plastic bucket with water, and returned to me. He cupped some water in his hand and let a few drops fall onto our mound of red rock dust. Then, he rubbed it between his fingers to form a kind of paste. He then — very seriously — drew lines on my cheeks and forehead, after his own, and said: "Now we're ready for anything. War paint!"
That red sandstone held everything Miles was trying to tell me. You belong here. I've got you. We're in this together. He called it "war paint”, borrowing language from childhood imagination, not understanding its weight, but what he meant was simpler and deep. We're a team now, we're protected, we're ready. The rock became a bridge between two kids who didn't know how to trust anyone yet, and somehow, through dust and water and ritual, we began. Don McKay was right, rocks are eloquent. That pale red sandstone spoke for my brother when he couldn’t find words himself.

A recollection of a kind thing said

And the making of a map of memory
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama353 LIKES31 RESTACKS
Anne Pender's avatar
Anne Pender
I have been working on a poem for a while now, trying to articulate to myself what had moved me so intensely about a comment made at the end of a 30-year college reunion not so long ago. Your prompt this week suddenly clicked it into place, Pádraig – thank you…
"Seen"
I lower my head,
lessen the distance
between your mouth and my ear
to catch your words in the noisy bar:
“You were the one I really wanted to see tonight.”
It has been a long time since the anticipation of me
has lingered in a man’s thoughts.
No matter if just platonic,
a delicious friction
flickers between us.
And I feel a sudden alive lightness at being seen
again; me, here, worth something to someone,
after years of invisible unexistence,
a future now beckoning
unexpectedly on the horizon.
David Levy's avatar
David Levy
High school was a disaster,
Not that anything happened there,
Life was too dangerous
To be visible, so I wasn’t.
Until one day, driving a green VW bug
Through my hometown’s “inner city”,
John Henry sat on a corner playing
The blues guitar. Blues harp in hand,
I asked him “May I join you?”
Sitting eyeball to eyeball, smile to smile,
We played those blues. John Henry
Paused, said “this boy’s got a bit of Soul”. Anointed, baptised, that’s what I was.

A question that’s guided me ...

... for 30 years
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama442 LIKES32 RESTACKS
Deb Bonham's avatar
Deb Bonham
When I’ve been in a Sydney ocean pool and I get out all tingley with my back to the sun. Watching other water addicts doing their thing! People are alive and informal at the oceans edge! I also like a full moon rise over the horizon.
Dipti  Vyas's avatar
Dipti Vyas
When do I feel most alive?
Not in becoming
but in the soft undoing
of the one who becomes
when effort loosens
its grip on meaning
and nothing is being held
not even “I”
not even “alive”
just this
without centre
without second
breathing itself
as what it is


The Time underneath Time

and what gives life
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama347 LIKES27 RESTACKS
Emily Bruno's avatar
Emily Bruno
When I was a litigator, I had a little ritual around my rage for when opposing counsel or the judge made me really angry. I would slick my hair back into a bun and put on bright red lipstick and then get to work on whatever email, reply, motion, brief, etc. the moment called for. It started as a kind of joke (a signal to others to leave me the hell alone if you don't want your head bitten off), but I soon found this literal "marking" of the emotion actually did help me get into a sort of flow state where some of my best, even creative, legal work was done. I would venture to say it was something of a sacred time. So I think there's something to the way we acknowledge and honor our rage, which can so often feel out of control, that helps us wrangle its wildness just a bit, to where we can work with it. Even if it's just with a coat of red lipstick.
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello Pádraig and all of you lovely poets. Happy Mother's Day to those who celebrate, and for those for whom this day is fraught, I am sending you extra special juju.
Pádraig, your poem "Makebelieve" is stunning (as usual), especially "all our songs and stories; our songs about the stories we've forgotten; and all that we've forgotten we've forgotten." That waterfall of forgetting, and the songs that somehow survive it. That feels like the heart of why we keep making things at all.
This question about rage and creativity sent me back to a piece I wrote years ago for HuffPost about being the Black adopted daughter of a woman whose father was in the KKK. I used my fury as fuel, but an important part was making sure the rage didn't corrode the work itself. Rage alone can be corrosive, destructive. We must do no harm, even when we're blazing.
That said, as a micro-to-macro writer, I have so often used my own rage to speak to larger issues, to turn private pain into something that might be useful, that might help someone else see more clearly. The trick, I think, is to let the rage propel you toward the page, then step back and let craft, precision, and empathy take over. The poem (or essay, or protest, or policy, or painting, or song, etc.) becomes the container that holds the heat without letting it burn everything down. (This idea of words as containers that hold meaning is inspired by the splendid Metaphors We Live By (1980) by George Lakoff and Mark Johnson, which I've been fascinated by this last week and highly recommend.) Thank you as ever, community and fosterer of the same!!

What time is it?

(it’s pantoum time)
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama292 LIKES45 RESTACKS
Michael T Smith's avatar
Michael T Smith
The day my wife and son go to church
And I stay behind
Although yesterday I spoke something
As I write, I become unraveled
And I stay behind
When I was younger I would draw pictures
As I write, I become unraveled
I couldn’t have known how fast it would go
When I was younger I would draw pictures
And anyway I still draw, well paint
I couldn’t have known how fast it would go
I had a dream that God told me to stop
And anyway I still draw, well paint
Although yesterday I spoke something
I had a dream that God told me to stop
The day my wife and son go to church
Adam Lauver's avatar
Adam Lauver
Today is the day my friends leave
and I think I'll miss them when they're gone
although yesterday I wasn't so sure.
As I write, I wonder about friends
and I think I'll miss them when they're gone.
When I was younger I wanted them to miss me.
As I wrote, I'd wonder about friends:
I couldn’t have known how much I'd miss
when I was younger. I wanted to be missed,
and anyway, is every missing a lack?
I couldn’t have known how much I'd miss.
I had a dream I was stuck, waving at the gate
and anyway, is every missing a lack?
Tomorrow I may not be so sure.
In this one I'm stuck again, waving at the gate.
Today is the day I leave.

We Will Be Known as a Culture That Feared Death and Adored Power

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors66 LIKES12 RESTACKS
Jeanie Shrode's avatar
Jeanie Shrode
Here is my response to "Of the Empire". I'm so grateful to have found this safe place to share poetry!
Chris Madden's avatar
Chris Madden
Many of my poems are brighter than this one, but I often sadly see darkness when I look at what much of humanity is becoming - here is my response:
Truth
No escape from pings, rings, screens
the messiness of ourselves
noise everywhere, especially inside
seducing attention, diluting awareness
constricting, suffocating, blinding, killing
smearing and erasing truth so many times
we can't find our way back from chaos
as we consume the dying earth
humankind scrambling, ever urgent
but where is the kind in our stories and dramas
mindless and disconnected, discarding the miracle of ordinary
seeking pleasure at the expense of ALL
afflicted affluence, maligned intentions
voting with our scornful actions
vomiting false words, taking the gift for granted
rotten honey dribbling from the spectre's grin
lemmings marching in trance over the cliff of promise and prison
as we seek false ground chasing selfish illusions
grasping for a mirage of certainty and security in polluted air
we will be known as a culture of waste, division, destruction, death
the ignorant pandemic consuming our world
justifying the wasteland we leave behind
while the lotus blooms alone, unobserved, silent
and the loon cries into the barely moonlit night
begging us to notice the only truth left
-Chris Madden 5/22/26

The Insensible Light

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors40 LIKES5 RESTACKS
Jessie May's avatar
Jessie May
Here is my poem!
What did you think when you
stood in that wheat field
did you see it all
the beauty of life the darkness
it brings
did you startle with the
crows
did you long to fly
away
away from this place
away from its pain
did their exit settle like
lead into your lonely
bones
Where do they go
the crows when they fly
away
and where did you go
so far into the despair of your mind that you could not be
reached
I want to tell you look
down from the crows and
their pesky omens
run your hand through the golden
wheat and know what it is
to live to shine
in light of the moon to
push up from the darkness of the
ground and live a second life
on and on and on
Off Ramp to Brave Spaces's avatar
Off Ramp to Brave Spaces
Salvation
By @offramptobravespaces
How many paths before you cut
hopeful green swaths
through this golden field, aiming
at a horizon where
baby blue clouds tried
to hide a too-large storm
Why you
Why anyone
should seek this harsh
salvation
among the sharp, cutting blades
when the light goes out
What called you to the wheat fields
when the sun had gone out?
Etching your paths through
fighting grass, the effort evident,
each stroke heavy
like footsteps, dragging
even as you lifted your brushes
in one last reprisal
Conflicted by memories of
starry nights whose comfort
never carried past morning
This time something stopped
The wheat fields lost their hue
The paths cease mid-field
Why this field, Why this time?
Your brush strokes,
bold as ever,
belied the tortuous journey
too far for any man
to travel alone
-Written in response to the prompt about Vincent Van Gogh's Wheat Fields

These poems place what's going on in the world as background noise to relational encounters.

May 26 VERVE Poem of the Month winning and shortlisted poems.
This article features the winning and shortlisted poems from May’s Poem of the Month.
VERVE Poetry10 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Jaiden Hordosillo's avatar
Jaiden Hordosillo
“Daughter” reminded me a lot of how parents help their children after bouts with addiction. I am going to be thinking about that all day now.
Awanto Magaret's avatar
Awanto Magaret
Loved reading all the poems

The Prism of Poetry: A Rabbit Room Poetry Roundup—Ashlyn McKayla Ohm

By Ashlyn McKayla Ohm
The Rabbit Room and Ashlyn McKayla Ohm128 LIKES49 RESTACKS
Rachel S. Donahue's avatar
Rachel S. Donahue
I should probably be emptying my inbox instead of adding new subscriptions, but there are so many good poets here! 🙈 Keep up the good work, friends!
j j b r i n s k i's avatar
j j b r i n s k i
FRIENDS! So happy to say I personally read and know 3/4 of this amazing list. Such wonderful poetry and poets.

Poetry Prompts #1—May 2026

Part of the purpose of Rabbit Room Poetry is to not only nourish your creativity with excellent featured work but also give you actionable steps for moving forward with your own poetic projects. At the beginning of every month, we’ll be sharing a roundup of poetry prompts created by our Director of Content, Andy Patton, to whet your imagination and laun…
The Rabbit Room62 LIKES7 RESTACKS
Heggel Rafaelano's avatar
Heggel Rafaelano
Prompt #1 Place:
Toil of Tantalus
Furthest of my heights, can’t reach.
Depths of my bends, can’t taste.
Under the homage shade of fig and olive trees,
light rests on craggy branches and green leaves.
I came to realize eternity over dreams.
Even upon relief from my torment,
still asking when this time ends?
Here, the fruits are eaten by winds,
and the water is parched by lands.
I too, always set up tents in extreme,
when there is wilderness in-between.
The ground evolutionarily sips:
“Neither bow: might makes right,
and right that makes its own light”.
The wind ideologically keens:
“You want to keep wanting,
the bonds of old aren’t the promises of now”.
Both are the tortuous spirits of the
philosophy of push and pull. O how
love makes life as sweet as figs,
making it edible, with no vow.
So perched is the Owl of Minerva on
starlit branches. Silent flight, coming
back from dusk with deferred messages.
Turned heads forced by boredom, anguish
or salience? Still the rock is overhead.
To see my neighbors Tityos and Sisyphus.
Whose imagined happiness was handed by
one in Tartarus, gathering with constellations.
As if the stars had any concern for us.
Being ignorant on the origins of beauty,
and hubristic to the origins of ugliness.
My hands toiled not, greed comforted me.
Spoiled by comforts, attaining desires.
I lived as death, gorging on goodness.
Expedience came, as it left:
covering my nakedness.
Still, I hunger and thirst,
there must be such a thing
as drink and food first;
that fill, quench and spring.
as sure as the dawn poetry's avatar
as sure as the dawn poetry
Sheila Bair
Prompt #3 Refrain:
Yet you are always with me
you are anchor spinal cord breathing beating chest on whom I rest lean
Yet you are always with
you surround embrace me reclaim me never abandoned never orphaned alone
Yet you are always
you scoop me up receive me into love endless bottomless first gasp to last unfailing
Yet you are
you never change never vacillate hesitate I cling to your solid rockness sureness
Yet you
infiltrate me contain me the air surrounding me breath inhaled life held
Yet
there is nothing I can do to drive you away
nothing I can do to make you stay
you are yesterday tomorrow today
you are always
you are with
you are
you

Writing, Poetry and Me

White Rabbit Monday Featured Poet Gary L. Taylor
Thanks for reading White Rabbit Poetry Society! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
Dorie Snow/雪多丽18 LIKES6 RESTACKS
Hina Gondal's avatar
Hina Gondal
Gary this is amazing 😍
Phoeby's avatar
Phoeby
I admire Gary very much. He is a very good writer, one who inspires me, and his perseverance is a constant lesson for me.
I was glad to discover even more about him in this essay.
Thank you, Dorie, for this opportunity. And thank you, Gary, for letting us be carried into your world.

Incandescence

My Mother's Light
Incandescence
Plein Air Poetry, Brad Davis, and Alexandra McIntosh26 LIKES6 RESTACKS
SAIDY's avatar
SAIDY
Beautiful works, and beautiful painting. So disheartening to hear it will be sold to developers... We are losing too many special places to developing companies
Margaret Ann Silver's avatar
Margaret Ann Silver
So lovely.

fleeting moment

A collaborative poem
attend to the heart hold it dearly its flickering light but a flash fading too easily
Messy Ink Poetry24 LIKES6 RESTACKS
Amrita Skye Blaine's avatar
Amrita Skye Blaine
Powerful, Messy. Thanks for finding a way to include me even though I was late. I'll try to be more timely.
Rolando Andrade's avatar
Rolando Andrade
So beautiful. Thank you

⭐Memorial Day BBQ⭐

3 Acapella Version
⭐Memorial Day BBQ⭐ 3 Acapella Version Smoke in the air, sun on the ground Neighbors roll in from all over town Flags on the fence, kids runnin’ free Feels like the place we’re meant to be Grill’s heating up, boots in the dirt Old stories told in a red flannel shirt Laughs in the yard, dogs beggin’ for meat Good friends gather where the h…
Outlawed Poetry4 LIKES

Ghost-Note & Other Poetry

A Tribute to Bob Dylan on His 85th Birthday
Martin Mc Carthy47 LIKES26 RESTACKS
Rolando Andrade's avatar
Rolando Andrade
This tribute to Bob Dylan is fantastic because it lets us read the poem while hearing Bob’s voice in our heads. It’s very evocative, a bit in the style of Bob Dylan, and it’s, as always, Martin’s excellent poetry .
Grace Drigo's avatar
Grace Drigo
This poem and tribute to Bob Dylan hit like a ray of sunshine through a gloomy day. The beautiful power of music and poetry, their ability to transcend time and last through generations has always amazed me. Happy Birthday Bob, what an incredible force of nature you are. Gorgeous trubute, Martin.🩵🎼🩵

Overthinking وسوسة: Why You Must Protect Your Thoughts

Most suffering is memory or imagination. Who will you become when you stop letting fear decide?
Nothing kills you faster than your own thoughts.
Poetry and Gahwa1226 LIKES462 RESTACKS
Ohanabanana's avatar
Ohanabanana
“Dhikr interrupts the cycle of overthinking” 🙌 accurate
kabdo's avatar
kabdo
Such a great post! It's always good to remind ourselves of Allah, especially during times when so many thoughts are consuming our minds. I think the Dhikr of Allah, and the Qur'an, also known as Al-Dhikr, is something we can sometimes forget, but we always have the ability to be reminded of it. The more we remind ourselves of Allah and His message, the more we will be able to remember Him. I believe it all goes back to this: We don't control the thoughts that come to our mind, but we can control what we think about. Thanks for writing this, it was much needed.

“Do a good deed and throw it in the river. One day it will come back to you in the desert”

Never regret the love or kindness you give. It returns to you in another time, in another person, in other circumstances. But it always comes back to you
When did we begin to believe that loving less is safer than loving well?
Poetry and Gahwa446 LIKES152 RESTACKS
Thoughts of a Nomad's avatar
Thoughts of a Nomad
I wish I could like this a million times
Shafa Yahya's avatar
Shafa Yahya
Just what I needed to read. JazakAllah khair 🤲🏼 May our hearts soften even in times of distress and not lose hope

I’m Gay. And I didn’t know.

Bisexual awakening.
Britney and Madonna, back in the day.
Ethereal Twilight Poetry49 LIKES15 RESTACKS
Thirty Poems (soon to be MDD)'s avatar
Thirty Poems (soon to be MDD)
🔥
imi's avatar
imi
This was such an honest and surprisingly tender read. I really liked how humour was used not to dismiss the experience, but almost to soften the weight of looking back at all the signs that suddenly make sense in hindsight. There’s something very human about realising how deeply we can rationalise parts of ourselves when we’re not ready to see them yet.
Also, the line between comedy and grief was handled really well here. You can feel the younger version of you trying to survive through denial while the present version looks back with more compassion instead of shame. Iloved it way too much ❤️

Sunday in the Land of Passing Clouds

Walking with my family, we happen
Poetry and Miracles18 LIKES
Still Hoping's avatar
Still Hoping
What a beautiful space you’ve created here. In my culture, we have a concept called 'Karamat' — small, quiet miracles that happen in our daily lives when we need them most. It feels like poetry and miracles always go hand in hand, helping us see the divine in ordinary moments. I’m so glad to have found your page and can't wait to read your journey.
Virginia Curtis's avatar
Virginia Curtis
This is so good.

Maktūb مَكْتُوب: What Is Yours Will Always Find You

What is written for you will never miss you. Finding peace when life doesn’t go to plan.
There is a freedom that enters the heart when you finally realise that what was written for you cannot be taken away by delay, distance, rejection, or time.
Poetry and Gahwa711 LIKES245 RESTACKS
Dave Woodcock's avatar
Dave Woodcock
This. All of it. This to me is the most important, the most truthful. I've never read it written. This especially, I've never heard, read....“The angel is sent to him and writes four matters: his provision, his lifespan, his deeds, and whether he will be wretched or blessed.”....as I've often thought, it's not anyone's fault. This post has made me want to read the Qur'an. Blown away again, some tears at the end, again. This, what you've written about here has been so fundamental to my thinking, living, struggling, accepting, keeping going, surrender for many years now. I've never read it, heard anyone speak about it. I agree with everything you've written in totality. Reading it, feels surreal. Emotional. Validated. Especially from you. And the quotes from the Qur'an.
Alisha's avatar
Alisha
I have a problem with always needing to know. Always wanting answers always hurting about things that never worked out. After reading this, I’ve realized I’m not putting my faith in Allah and all that he has written for me before I know I wanted it. He wants me closer to him before I receive what I pray for. I’ve been so busy sad about what didn’t work out but not focusing on what is mine is mine and I don’t have to be scared or anxious that I lost it.
This was such a beautiful piece that made me truly reflect on my faith and I want to trust more. I want to get closer to Allah and I want to believe that everything that has happened is for a reason I can’t see but Allah’s mercy.
I appreciate this account so much. Thank you for writing such wonderful pieces. Truly I downloaded Substack for your account and I also follow in IG. I love everything you post.

The River Of Him (Poem) - Voiceover

A love poem for Elijah ❤️
Photo: Pinterest
Ethereal Twilight Poetry51 LIKES15 RESTACKS
Elijah Westin's avatar
Elijah Westin
Awwww thank youuu this is so sweet 🥹 I absolutely love it..
I've never gotten a love letter not to mention a love poem. Shit I haven't even gotten flowers
This is so beautiful
"He’s the river meant to run
Through my valleys, we are one
I enter the currents of his heart
Earth and flowing counterpart."
Gorgeous agghhh
Wet Ink's avatar
Wet Ink
May this be yours, Elijah. Someday it will, don’t stop believing in it.

Kun Fa-Yakūn كُن فَيَكُونُ: Why You Must Be Delusional in Your Dreams

Because the Impossible Becomes Real for Those Courageous Enough to Believe
The audacity to dream
Poetry and Gahwa1328 LIKES575 RESTACKS
Yfa's avatar
Yfa
Masha Allah. This writing truly feels like a divine intervention, it arrives to me in such a perfect timing; just when I start to doubt myself for having a dream again.
I need to have this article ingrained to my brain! Delusional is the key!
CRAZY F's avatar
CRAZY F
This article is perhaps the best piece you've written so far and it has resonated with me far more than your previous work. I hope you'll continue to produce writing of this caliber ❤️❤️❤️