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Upcoming Poetry Events

Open mics, poetry slams, book launches, workshops, festivals and more!
Hi everyone! Welcome to your fave monthly Uplift Poetry newsletter, featuring upcoming poetry events happening throughout Australia and online. Whether you’re looking to write, listen, or perform, there’s plenty of events to check out. Scroll down to view our list of open mics, poetry slams, book launches, workshops, festivals and more.
Uplift Poetry1 LIKES1 RESTACKS

Deep Dive into Medieval Poetry

Romance, Religion, and Legends
Dear read poetry friends,
read poetry25 LIKES3 RESTACKS
The Wizard's avatar
The Wizard
There is nothing shameful about being moved by old books. A sentence written two centuries ago can still find the hidden room in the heart and open the window.
Crystal Cunningham's avatar
Crystal Cunningham
Hey lady! This is awesome information to read through. Surprised that “Gewain…” wasn’t translated until 19th century whaaaa?
Ive used Beowulf for inspiration for some longer pieces with rhyming

Dear Joni

Poetry by Trisha Leigh Shufelt
The Poetry Moth13 LIKES8 RESTACKS
Mark Crutchfield's avatar
Mark Crutchfield
I loved this poem Trisha. The imagery from the first lines with a tin angel, is so vivid. Many great lines in the piece too - too many to quote!
For me, these lines feel like the meaning behind the piece "making something more than what it was / by marrying memory with metaphors", and where the piece moves from imagery into memory transformed, and the end feels just like a dream, fading away.
Mark Crutchfield's avatar
Mark Crutchfield
Two comments Trisha, as I forgot about the audio reading. Loved it too!.
I can feels what starts with grief, slowly transform through waves into an expansiveness and then fade away at the end — just like a dream.
Wonderful!

Poems are choreographed as much as composed.

"Writing poetry helps me slow to a pace where I can see more clearly." An interview with Katie Columbus, the poet behind June's Poem of the Month.
Katie Columbus won June's Poem of the Month with Vision & Flame. Here is our usual poet interview, delivered on the 10th of each month with the recent POTM poet.
VERVE Poetry2 LIKES1 RESTACKS

A poem, an invitation and an interview ft. Loch Baillie

On poetry, fire stations, and relational writing
Hello poets, feels like it’s been forever (because it has). Sophie and I have been busy writing oh so many thesis words, but we couldn’t turn down the opportunity to partner with longtime Trapper Keeper, Loch Baillie to launch his new poetry book River Running
Poetry Trapper Keeper11 LIKES3 RESTACKS

Today is history …

… making the future
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama235 LIKES19 RESTACKS
Karen Ehrens's avatar
Karen Ehrens
Upon waking in 2176, I would love to find out:
* What was it that got people to stop burning fossil fuels and instead rely upon the sun and wind for power?
* How did people decide to make boundaries on artificial intelligence, to be able to use it for the good and still rein it in?
* How are people researching the past, when people didn’t have nearly as much time to make poetry and art?
* Who was the last trillionaire?
* Where can I find some ice cream?
Anne Pender's avatar
Anne Pender
I often struggle to think about the future right now, stuck as I am – as we all seem to be – in an endless limbo present of rehashed violence and separation but the two most important questions that come to mind to ask of such a future would seem to be: Are we still here? Do we still love each other?
In the meantime, these lines from the young Pakistani-American activist and writer Ayisha Siddiqa are a balm - they come from her poem “On another panel about climate, they ask me to sell the future and all I’ve got is a love poem”.
“What if the future is soft and revolution is so kind that there is no end to us in sight.
Whole cities breathe and bad luck is bested by a promise to the leaves.
To withstand your own end is difficult.
The future frolics about, promised to no one, as is her right.
Rage against injustice makes the voice grow harsher yet.
If the future leaves without us, the silence that will follow will be an unspeakable nothing.
What if we convince her to stay?
How rare and beautiful it is that we exist.
What if we stun existence one more time?...”

Midway through life’s journey

and all the things it brings
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama262 LIKES26 RESTACKS
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Good morning, dear friends, and Pádraig, what a lovely gift to arrive at this prompt on a Sunday morning, wren song and all. I am slow to wake this morning after a weekend of gigs. Last night, a sunset concert with my old band, Hippie Tendencies, with whom I haven't sung in quite some time. Revisiting the songs I wrote just after that midlife point led to the most luminous evening (I’ll leave a photo in my notes) and had us all questioning why we aren't still writing together. The answer is artistic evolution, each of us reaching, but perhaps it is time for a revisit.
I just turned 60 in May, so by these measures, midlife would have been 30. I had just moved to Italy following a man who was not good for me. I didn’t yet speak the language, and I was floundering, trying to decide what direction my creative path would take. It was a moment of reckoning with a difficult childhood and the slow, terrible recognition that I was recreating the same stifling atmosphere I had grown up in.
It took a few more years, but the epiphany came when my brother visited and said that next time he would stay in a hotel because he could not bear to watch how I was being treated. That same night, I understood: any home where my favorite person on the planet cannot stay is no home I want to build. bell hooks had already been whispering this to me. "All too often women believe it is a sign of commitment, an expression of love, to endure unkindness or cruelty, to forgive and forget. In actuality, when we love rightly we know that the healthy, loving response to cruelty and abuse is putting ourselves out of harm's way." I left.
My companions in that period were mostly musical, as I was building a band. Ani DiFranco, in particular, was instrumental in the steady expansion of my own badassness. (One of the few covers we played last night was her "Buildings and Bridges”!!) And it was in that same period that I discovered bell hooks, whose Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood expanded my everything and handed me back a sense of self. She wrote, "To be truly visionary we have to root our imagination in our concrete reality while simultaneously imagining possibilities beyond that reality." That sentence became a compass.
I am still building on what she gave me. I look forward to reading you all, though I may be slow this week, still feeling the beautiful work of the last three nights.
Lyn Taylor Hale's avatar
Lyn Taylor Hale
When I think of the middle of my life-to-date, I tend to revisit the great tearing asunder the occurred when my faith and marriage fell apart in tandem, which happened in my 40's. I am 63. So this prompt leads me to my early 30's. I love this. What "happened" to me in that half decade was my children. I finished having the four of them. They were my constant companions in every literal way. In every place I was, they were there. I have lately been feeling some envy towards my friends, also in their 60's, whose life work has amassed into things rather substantial. A body of work. A giant life savings. Recognition. Acclaim. On a long drive down the Eastern seaboard a few weeks ago I was pondering this. Pondering the "generativity v. stagnation" of my own life. Padraig made the off-hand comment at Omega that "no one will read us after we are dead" (by which I was terribly offended). Maybe not. But in my children, in their children, in their physical attributes, the tone of their voices, their sense of humor, their dreams, their integrity, the folks they touch...I do get to endure. My bank account is by no means bulging. No one is heralding me for anything more than a kind word or deed. And I am deeply loved. And I love oh-so-deeply. And this is all brought to you by what "happened" to me in mid-life. Thanks, Padraig.

Poems on SPIRIT.

The winning poem and shortlisted selection for JUNE 2026 Poem of the Month Competition.
This article features the winning and shortlisted poems from June’s Poem of the Month.
VERVE Poetry10 LIKES1 RESTACKS

The True Gift of Nature

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and writing prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors29 LIKES2 RESTACKS
Michelle DiSarno's avatar
Michelle DiSarno
Forgive me
I fell
in envy
of the owl seized
by hunger
hunting
of the crooked
branches
of the trees
of the tossed
moon
on its way
to another
morning.
I am restless
and wild.
In and out
of slippery
shadows
I could settle
on nothing
while the things
of darkness
followed their sleepy
course, bristling
life spreading through
branch and beak
the red songs
rise and fall
and nothing new
ever happens
which is the true
gift of nature
which is
the reason
I have failed
sleep.
Tsehai Adama's avatar
Tsehai Adama
Another morning,
which is the true gift of nature,
the reason bristling life
went on lapping on its slow way
and tossed the red songs that rose and fell
all night
in their accustomed place.
Forgive me,
restless and wild,
I had tried following the things of darkness,
and failed,
I could settle on nothing,
I floated away
in and out of the slippery shadows,
in which nothing new would ever happen.

Solstice stories

this June day
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama284 LIKES20 RESTACKS
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello and happy solstice, friends, and thank you, Pádraig, for this luminous prompt on this luminous day.
I cannot recall one specific summer solstice, but what the word conjures is the summertime freedom of youth, a day long enough to contain everything: swimming in the sea, laughter, worries left at the shore, a perfect book, rosé, and the all-encompassing lust of summer. And then, when the day had given all it had, a campfire crackling under an endless canopy of stars, a guitar, friends lying back scanning the sky for shooting stars, young love burning as brightly as the flames. As brightly as those stars. The night so wide and generous it felt like it would never close. Wishing you all a day long enough to contain everything.
Three Gates South's avatar
Three Gates South
It was late afternoon, early evening.
My wife was mending our trampoline.
My sons were playing backyard soccer.
I was collecting tree clippings into our green bin.
And we were like, "Shouldn't it be darker by now?"

Emily Dickinson, buttercups, and death

(plus a strange typo)
Dear friends,
Poetry Unbound363 LIKES34 RESTACKS
Lyn Taylor Hale's avatar
Lyn Taylor Hale
For the eleven years I lived there, my mother always said she wanted to die in the living room (ah, the irony) of my hilltop home, looking out at the Green Mountains and Lake Champlain. However, her last illness took place in North Carolina where she grew so weak she could not travel. Nine days before she died, she paid a fortune to have an ambulance transport her, it took them 19 hours, from North Carolina to my Vermont living room. Hospice put a hospital bed and oxygen in that room, taught me how to care for her, and for nine days my mom, Toby (my gentle Labradoodle) and I listened to Bach and watched the Greens. The sunrises. The changing colors of water and sky. The red geraniums in the window boxes. I administered so much morphine and held her--her hand or body. Toby and I slept on the couch adjacent to the bed. She died at 2:00 a.m. on a Sunday. It was agonizing and good enough.
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello all. My sister died by suicide during Covid. She had bipolar disorder and had been suffering for a long time. I've resisted the 'released from pain' frame; it feels too small for her. But she was someone who deeply touched many lives, and as I went through her papers, I came to think she knew something about what she needed. Whether that counts as 'good enough' I still don't know. Carrying my remembrances of her feels like carrying her through that field of buttercups. She was beautiful, fierce, and aching. Your line, Pádraig, “One of the strange things about being alive is that death is part of it.” That sentence is reverberating in my bones. We’ve lost more than I knew I could bear, and I'm aware now that death is no longer something happening elsewhere or to others. My sister walked into that truth before I was ready. I'm still catching up to her.

The Forecast of Grief

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and writing prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors46 LIKES8 RESTACKS
Rachel Wadlow's avatar
Rachel Wadlow
These prompts are great ideas, thank you for sharing! Here's mine:
Storm-Tossed Woman
The rocks are exposed by the churning sea,
and so is my soul while waves deluge me.
The wind blows so fiercely I cannot see.
My heart’s aching murmur: “Seems harsh to me.”
But then! Earth’s mouth opens in symphony,
and the glint in my eye returns to me
through storm-tossed gale there is treasure, I see;
in a creation-groaned birth of Divine Mystery.
blue's avatar
blue
Skying
Birds on my chest. Sky
like a face about to break
bad news. Wordless drifting
on a stream of unconscious
thought. incomprehensible
texture of an old damp coat.
Inside, lights forget their own
off-switches, lackadaisically
senseless, produce
a sweet halogen glare.
Replace the sun with the un-sun. Constable
used to observe the wet weather.
tracing the shape of the clouds,
called it skying. I can’t look up anymore.

Rebirth of HerOutlets.

Welcome to an introduction of yours truly..Some thangs will be revealed, some thangs will be reminders of me. Read with intention.
Welcome to my humble new abode, here on Substack!
HerOutlets Poetry7 LIKES1 RESTACKS
Divine Marie's avatar
Divine Marie
Thanks for sharing some of your story 💖 Can’t wait to hear more.

Morning in a New Land

Your weekly Mary Oliver poem and prompt.
Welcome to Dream Work: A Year-Long Writing Journey with Mary Oliver
Poetry Outdoors45 LIKES7 RESTACKS
Maria Jose Cordon's avatar
Maria Jose Cordon
From this wannabe a poet. This Brought back good memories of a trip to Argentina,
Waking up,
The light filtering through the window,
Too bright for dawn..
Where am I?
Suddenly, it dawned
On me,
Villa La Angostura
Joyfully coming through the window.
Laura Bender's avatar
Laura Bender
The Sun is Blinding
My eyes adjust ~~~
The Heat
Oh the heat
I’m sweating
Profusely
Wait - let me be proper
in my word choice
I’m perspiring ~~~
The feeling of recognition
I’ve not been here
But I know this place ~~~
Was I here before..
In some other way..
A dream - An imagining ~~~
Home - I think I’ve come home
To a place I’ve never been before ~~~

Exploring the present with the past

and how conversations with centuries are contemporary
Dear friends,
Pádraig Ó Tuama196 LIKES18 RESTACKS
Lisa Marie Simmons's avatar
Lisa Marie Simmons
Hello and happy Sunday to this wonderful group. Thank you, Pádraig. Isn't it delightful that every single week there is someone in the comments who says, what kismet, I was just thinking about this. Today that person is me.
Pádraig, that image of the past as a living Creature with claws is so apt a phrase for what I’m exploring, because for two years I sat on my yoga mat every morning and turned toward exactly that beast, thanking ancestors I couldn't yet picture, compelled by the recognition that I didn't come from a void. Resilience, creativity, perseverence, I had finally realized that none of it was self-invented. After two years of that daily practice, I found my birth mother. The ancestors, apparently, were waiting for me to say good morning first. Now the stories she and our family tell are soil I am actively growing in, feeding a large work I am deeply immersed in right now.
Anne Pender's avatar
Anne Pender
It can be overwhelming, sometimes, to reflect on all the negative weight of history, and the cycles of war, oppression and domination that seem to recur with depressing regularity. But then I read something written by another human centuries ago and I am reminded that there is so much more that connects us than divides us and that what I’m going through today was experienced by someone else in another time and place.
For example, I came across a phrase from Plato’s Symposium recently, where he talks about the feeling of meeting a soulmate. He describes the experience as one of “… an amazement of love and friendship and intimacy” and it just felt so real and true and beautiful, even two thousand years later.
I also love this perspective from James Baldwin on history and time and the importance of remembering those who have gone before us:
“For nothing is fixed, forever and forever and forever, it is not fixed; the earth is always shifting, the light is always changing, the sea does not cease to grind down rock. Generations do not cease to be born, and we are responsible to them because we are the only witnesses they have. The sea rises, the light fails, lovers cling to each other, and children cling to us. The moment we cease to hold each other, the sea engulfs us and the light goes out.”

driving by my friend's house

reflections on once being young
we had the same instinct.
Poetry Culture6 LIKES
Lucinda Blackwood's avatar
Lucinda Blackwood
Lovely. Poignant. Relatable.
Diana Of The Dreamt's avatar
Diana Of The Dreamt
Ah the tenderness here, I so honor the sharing of it as much as the experience itself. you always get me in the heart and make me weep, in the best way with all the feels 💖 Beautiful writing sweet spirit, I’m loving how you’re writing lately the journal entry style flipping through memory. That in and if itself is really touching. So many can overlook just how precious and filled with complexity the living presence of memory really is especially with loss. Never bad at all to write something honest Alexander- if anything it makes it that much more cherished and important to be put to ink. I trust someone somewhere will stumble upon this and it be the exact thing their heart needs to hear. The photo was beautiful also and poignant in juxtaposition💖

Yes, Poetry, YES--

July 11. 2026
Yes, there will be a Zoom poetry reading & discussion this Saturday. I hope you know how much I look forward to your work in the open reading weekly. Click on the link below at the appointed time to join.
Bruce Isaacson2 LIKES2 RESTACKS

Submissions Are Open!

Utterly Human: In Defense of the Imperfect, the Embodied, and the Creaturely
Our first Substack reading period is officially open!
Arcana Poetry Press88 LIKES13 RESTACKS

How We Mourn the Dead by Hannah Levy

Utterly Human: In Defense of the Imperfect, the Embodied, and the Creaturely · No. 1
Will you make room for a poem?
Arcana Poetry Press and Hannah Eve Levy56 LIKES11 RESTACKS
Hannah Eve Levy's avatar
Hannah Eve Levy
Thank you for publishing this poem. It found the perfect home. I'm deeply honored!


June 2026

Happy Pride! Open submissions, Tomatoes, and Good Lit
June 2026
Plants & Poetry House10 LIKES2 RESTACKS

To be Seen by God

when I have spent all my time trying to see Him
I declared utter despair yesterday.
Resurrection Poetry8 LIKES3 RESTACKS
Willa's avatar
Willa
This found me at a very needed moment.
Beautiful! <3
Laurel Luehmann's avatar
Laurel Luehmann
Oh my goodness.😭😭😭"We have a gospel story written on our daily lives, a mystery into which the very angels long to look, and I am unhappy because I have been placed in a different genre than I wanted." Thank you for sharing...I needed to read this.🫶🏼

Beautiful Ruins

A poem about the misfortunes of a first time gardener.
Beautiful Ruins Ash Kilback My first summer as a gardener I was an accomplice in a silent crime. At first, I was oblivious to the omen of the scarlet beetle. Fooled by their red flare of seduction. I let them carry on their hours of sun-drunk lovemaking until weeks later when the leaves were sticky with thick glob…
Poetry Outdoors31 LIKES7 RESTACKS
The Sawyer's Daughter's avatar
The Sawyer's Daughter
I feel you!
Earlier this week I posted a poem to vent my own first-time flower garden frustrations!!
A good piece, Ash!
BJ Martin's avatar
BJ Martin
Ash, this is a powerful image. "tossed them in a the compost" I wonder what I need to toss there in my own life to save something beautiful.


Poetry Prompt of the Week: Writing Aftermath

In this contemplative prompt, write in the charged atmosphere following a major experience, saying as little as you can about the experience itself.
Far and away the most fascinating part of teaching poetry at Juilliard has been discovering just how much of artistic practice overlaps across disciplines and genres. My students come in not knowing much of anything about poetry, but are already expert in another art—music, dance, acting, opera. Invariably, …
Robert Wood Lynn14 LIKES
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