Credit: Kelly O
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Kelly O

MAKES:
Poems rocket off the page.

HAS:
Southern roots. Northern shoots. Tools to turn the blues different colors.

WANTS:
To sing lead vox in a parody R&B cover band.

Amateurs find art therapeutic because it allows them to “express themselves,” but poet Robert Lashley finds therapy in work itself. For him, high-sounding descriptions of a love lost or a tragedy endured don’t heal as much as crafting the correct metaphor does. Allowing yourself to “feel feelings” doesn’t move as much as shaping a wild rhythm does. In this way, though Lashley’s poems often emerge from personal traumas and daily observations of his neighborhood, drafting a poem is closer to refurbishing an alternator than it is to writing a diary entry.

He inherits his approach to poetry from his uncle Moe, who was born in 1920 in Mississippi. According to Lashley, Uncle Moe was a wonk. “He didn’t believe in ‘first thought, best thought.’ He believed in ‘hundredth thought, best thought.'” And he was a “rhapsodist,” Lashley said, “in the way that the Harlem Renaissance poets were rhapsodists”โ€”they had to find the right music. “He would stutter, he would t-t-t-try to find the right words when things were too much.”

Rich Smith is The Stranger's former News Editor. He writes about politics, books, and performance. You can read his poems at www.richsmithpoetry.com