Giving Up Reason
Pam Rehm
It happens like this:

Majestically,
the pigeons spill down

a few steps away
on a hot summer’s day
on Broadway

jostling one another
All the dust and the mess

I’ve become
overtaken

by unevenness
Within the days

Between the hours

I’m bewildered by
all the dollars I’ve spent

on a life out of balance
when there’s all this

cosmic consciousness

within a kiss
and the I AM

that haunts the hand
in my pocket

searching for the key
hole

All those mistakes ago

Like everyone else,
I feed them

A few cents of bread
But it’s the thirst

no one thinks about
When I look out

YOU are
always
The landscape within
from the book INNER VERSES / Wave Books 
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There is a searching that is also a gathering up. There is a discovering, which is also a falling-out-of-the-sky revelation. It is from within these two realms that I write poetry. I don't really come to writing with any kind of intentions. I usually write from what strikes me or from the fact that you can take a word like "rescue" and rearrange all those letters and make the word "secure."

Pam Rehm on "Giving Up Reason"
"Images and Text: Diana Khoi Nguyen’s Poetic Echoes"

“It's almost like sculpting. But, sculpting is a kind of subtraction, and then interweaving, and then just figuring out where I should begin, which comes next. I don't want another one of that sequence yet, because I wanna try something over here. So it was kind of intuitive. It's almost like each of the poems are holding their breath until they reemerge.”

via THE UNIVERSITY OF LAS VEGAS, NEVADA
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Color image listing the ways in which poetry might "keep us"
What Sparks Poetry:
Lloyd Wallace on What Keeps Us


"The sub-title of this installment of What Sparks Poetry is 'Poems to Read in Community.' The Poetry Daily team convened this semester, inspired by C.D. Wright’s 'What Keeps,' to select a group of twenty poems, most from our last year of publication, that one might pass across the table—to a loved one, to oneself. In last year’s version of this feature, Kerry Folan said the poems selected were meant to 'offer sustenance.' Roque Dalton did say that poetry, like bread, is for everyone. And I still think that holds true."
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