Celebrating Living Poets: Lyndsay Rush

She calls herself Mary Oliver’s Drunk Cousin. Lyndsay Rush is the living poet I’m celebrating today during the 2026 Slice of Life Challenge. You can read all the posts each day at www.twowritingteachers.org as writers blog throughout March and post their links on the community site. If I had a colleague at the water cooler flattening her hand to admire her nail polish and declaring that she was so damn sure she would never read a poem she liked, this is the book I’d hand her before retreating around the corner and peering over the top of the cubicle at her in her chair devouring these poems and proving herself wrong.

Lyndsay Rush, author of A Bit Much, got her start as an Instagram poet. Click her name to read the interview that gives more information about Lyndsay. I’ve used her collection to create a Cento poem by writing several of her existing lines into a new arrangement.

The Dark Doorway

You heard it here first:

Otters hold hands while they sleep

If you’re feeling weird lately

stand in the dark doorway of

The Gospel I was raised on

for the nonbelievers

and drive off into the sunset

Lines in this Cento are taken from these poems, in this order: Maybe Crocs are Okay; Loving Each Otter; Help; Someone to Eat Chips With; His Body is Bread and So is Mine; Beware of Lost Boys; A Spell for Success

A sneak peek of poets days 11-20

17 Replies to “Celebrating Living Poets: Lyndsay Rush”

  1. Kim,

    There’s a lot packed into this poem, especially the lines about “the gospel for nonbelievers.” Oof! I know THAT gospel and its whip. I follow LR on Instagram. Lots of good posts there. I keep of file of poems that inspire me when I scroll. I think I need this collection. After all, there are otters holding hands in those pages.

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  2. Love this share! Not only do you share a great cento poem, but you inspire us to read more of the poet’s poetry! Good well done 🙂 I will have to write a cento for next week’s poetry Thursday!

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    1. Rita, I have 18 poetry books on interlibrary loans right now and am seriously thinking of ordering many of them so I can own them and read them anytime. I simply adore being able to pick up a collection and nibble on different poets’ pages based on what my heart needs. I’m glad you are enjoying the poets.

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    1. I’m thinking, based on reading your blog post today, that we are a lot alike. So I hope that there are many in here that will appeal to you. I lean toward some of these more than others, but then when my mood shifts I lean toward others. Funny how that works! Thanks for reading.

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  3. I love the description of your imaginary colleague to hand this book to: “If I had a colleague at the water cooler flattening her hand to admire her nail polish and declaring that she was so damn sure she would never read a poem she liked…” Now I’m off to check out Lyndsay Rush’s work!

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  4. There is such a thing as an instagram poet? I am old! Love what you’ve done with Lyndsay’s titles. And that image of the otters holding hands while they sleep made me smile. The world is not so terrifying in the little corners of the world.

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