poems by rachel kellum

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

above a storm

audiobook in my ears:

the clouds just below me

 

flight attendant’s voice:

the clouds below the clouds below me, draped over peaks

 

a kar a me mantra:

the vapor layer below that voice

 

my hope:

the plane’s shadow below the mantra, tiny on a blanket of clouds,

enlarging as we descend through grey mist

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

White Fragility: or, Why Jackhammers Can’t Get the Job Done

A year after initial installation, the Black Lives Matter mural was repainted

on the same street now repaved in fiberglass reinforced forever-concrete,

built to last, withstand centuries of traffic. Scholars called it performative. 

 

Five years later, onlookers in long lines carried it off with both hands in heavy chunks,

the valuable ones emblazoned with yellow paint, this one part of a T,

this one from the upper humped back of the B. Podcasters agree: not performative. 

 

Witnessing woke workers of the city carry off the pieces to their queen—Liberty,

quietly filling the earth with her brood—white deconstruction workers stashed chunks

in their MAGA stickered trucks, too, tickled to see that divisive message go.

 

 

After listening to This American Life’s episode Museum of Now

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

The Art Teacher Turns Greenhouse Teacher, or Why I Wake at 3 AM

I have dreamed of children’s stained-glass problems—

thick leaden seams, faint hatching wilding

into cross hatching, lopsided pinch pots thinning

and shy blending, afraid to saturate the page

with wide range and bold contrast

 

I have lost sleep on how to help them

find wisdom in the marriage

of their untried hands and sharp eyes

as though my life and their happiness

depends on the coordination of the senses

 

Now I dream of soil depth

and seeds, how to teach children

the art of pouring jewels of creation

into their sweaty palms, pinch

and release them into tiny trenches

 

and think metaphorically

of where to place them—plant companions,

mutual protectors—boldly thin crowded spouts

as if room to grow, green meals, more seeds

will absolutely save them

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

wind is trying

wind is trying

to touch everything

today, even me

in this light

drenched house

sliding open

low windows

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

autumn wedding planning

standing by our heart shaped pond

where we have shivered

up to shoulders

in snowmelt, palms up

in supplication to stillness

silence and spacious suffering,

I imagine where we’ll stand,

where our brother will pronounce

our union— our friends

perched on that log and that one,

or leaning backs against aspen trees

waving their yellow hands

over all our heads in blessing

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

preparing our mother’s house for sale

my sister gathers

her precious memories

to adorn a life

in assisted living

finds

 

leaves of folded tissues

hoarded in drawers

between scrawled notes

to herself going back years

don’t forget, she wrote

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

April and May Readings

These word-loving wonderful places have kindly invited me to read from my new book in celebration of National Poetry Month.

Change of Date:

The Baca Grande Library reading has been postponed to Saturday, May 10, 12 pm

I hope you can make it!

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

fed by the ash

have you noticed

when something burns down—

a city, a marriage, a math lesson, a minute—

some tiny green thing shoots up

fed by the ash

look for it

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2025 Rachel Kellum 2025 Rachel Kellum

her home

an old woman can beg

her god for her man to live

and lose her house

to lie beside him in a new bed

in a small room

an entire earned life shed

down to the warm center

of home

her hand on his chest

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