Most publishers aren't interested in writing about writing - but I think it's normal to explore the topic of writing when you are exploring the art - so I'll just list them here:
Inspired
 
I feel 
the pressure 
of something that 
may be there
or, disturbingly, isn’t. 
Instead the space filled 
with laughing wisps
of scent, of fading sound 
in long corridors,
of the weight of shadows.
 
Jamie Lynn Heller 2021 
finding
my words
 
combinations
of letters may 
encompass
most of my meaning
 
while some
ripples of thought 
only
float nearby  
 
waves
of ideas
not
ready for words
 
bind
syllables that don’t always 
contain
what they should
 
leaving
gaps 
between
us
 
-Jamie Lynn Heller 
How to Love Writing a Poem
There is the small pulse 
before thought even starts to babble, 
the shifting through files of language 
searching for the right sounds to string together 
into words that blend and bounce or slink 
with just the right tempo across a page.
Giving in to the infatuation, 
blind to all faults, drinking ego,
the angry late night fight about disappointment,
disenchantment, disillusionment, recognition 
of what is as is, acceptance, 
discovery that underneath it all, 
love has contentedly rooted.
 
Jamie Lynn Heller
7/2017
Reading Someone Else
Your words trip along exactly 
as I needed them to, 
taking my hand and 
walking with me 
to a new place we can go together 
or maybe a place I’ve already been 
and I’m so excited you’ve been there 
too, felt it too, thought it, wondered at it, written
it.  
We touch through the space of thin paper.  
For a moment I believe 
I want to meet you in person.  I see us 
letting the steam rise from chipped cups, 
no need to speak. 
But maybe you’re actually crazy 
in a needy way 
and you’ll talk non-stop never allowing a space to
think you’ll call 
at all hours asking for me to venture out into the
cold or 
spend our time together showing off 
how many other poets you can quote.  Or 
you’ll be fine
and I’ll be the crazy one, and you’ll say 
very little, make more eye contact with 
the waitress than me, 
and leave your cup half full,
still warm.
Jamie Lynn Heller
6/2015
From Me to You
I’ll truly never know 
if your hands closed 
around, held, loved
my meaning
softly 
or if you pocketed 
something else
leaving it 
shining on the grass 
only when a winter sun’s
sharper angles
find it
-Jamie Lynn Heller 12/14
Attention
with this extended
hand
I quietly place my
fingers
against your lips 
to stop exasperated
sighs 
and accusations of
contrived reality 
forcing poetics on
the world 
because before us 
on the road
there is a
butterfly resting
it orange wings
bright against grey fur 
on a raccoon’s open
but stilled eye  
-Jamie Lynn Heller
“It’s a poet’s truth” 
 
–
Hilary Mantel
And is better left 
un-photographed, un-posted, 
best shared late, 
after long talks have melted walls, 
with someone who is about 
to be someone to you
and you’re tired enough
to forget the facades,
touch the bared beams.
- Jamie Lynn Heller
there may be
time for one 
more poem 
if I let there be
-Jamie Lynn Heller
Reading Life
 
I relish clomping 
from font to furrow 
leaving muddy footprints 
while I make sure
each curve is properly stroked, 
each capital evaluated 
before the climb, each 
period sat upon.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
My Margins
When you 
write in 
my margins, 
filling 
the crisp boarders 
with your take on me, 
or squeeze 
your sentences 
between 
the lines 
of my text, 
I get stuck, 
sometimes mid 
thought,
afraid to 
turn the page.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
Reading Poetry before Bed
 
Others words fill the space 
between me and my thoughts, 
sponges expanding in crevices 
gone dry and sandy,
my dreams are colored 
with the their visions 
inviting me 
to play along.  
When I fall into their embraces 
the book slips from hand, lays on his chest.  
He’s made
 jealous comments
about being my poetry prop.
-Jamie Lynn Heller 06/2014
The Writer
I need a place on a boulder or tree limb
just off and above the trail 
with a view of the peaks
and the lone stream below
so I can watch 
quietly
on some days, 
and on others smile and wave, 
call out greetings to friends and strangers, 
but I can’t go too far alone 
in the woods.
I won’t be able 
to find my way again.
-Jamie Lynn Heller 06/2014
Poetry Poolside
Poetry makes a perfect poolside companion.
Short snippets of lines 
free the eyes to jump up 
and check on small bodies 
staying above water.
Seeds of thoughts to contemplate 
while fending off 
water gun barrages from hyper boys.
Non-intimidating pages with wide margins 
inviting daydreams under summer sun.
Just a glimpse of what I’m reading
kills any attempt
at conversation from overly talkative others.
But I am careful to not stay out too long.
Poetry is more likely to burn.
-Jamie Lynn Heller 07/2013
Thin Poems
  
When so 
few 
words 
drip down 
a page, 
they must 
either 
be worthy 
of pulp, 
of
space 
or run 
quickly 
on
their
way
-Jamie Lynn Heller 03/2012
Why My Sentences Come Out Wrong Sometimes
There’s this thought parade, constantly 
marching, with a grandmaster pompously leading the way, 
widely sweeping his arms left and right to encourage cheers 
for what is about to travel his carefully prepared route, in a large tail 
the rest come along with their floats all in the right order, 
their coordinated colors, side shows of clowns, ribbon twirling dancers 
spinning carefully off, tickling the children, but if they turn a corner 
too quickly, that last float of a word gets 
disconnected, lost in the crowd, 
and it’s the street sweep, with his extra large broom, his bit of leftover 
makeup and discarded foam nose, that’s left with the task 
of frantically searching for the next closest option to fill in the spot 
so all can end as intended.  He grabs any noun, verb, or adjective
from the nearby crowd, but his substitute doesn’t always quite fit 
right, bringing the whole contraption to a sudden tangled stop, 
an anchor plunked on its hem.  The grandmaster turns to see 
what the problem is, gasps at the wreck in his wake, and lands 
his eyes accusingly on the street sweep, who shrugs 
and begins sweeping the mess into a neat pile.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
Retirement Plan
I don’t want to outlive books.  
I’d rather collect them in sagging cardboard boxes, 
dusty shelves, find a little house at the edge 
of quaintness and fill it with stories and must.  
A little tinkling bell on the door 
will alert me to visitors making their way 
across creaking, slanting floors 
whose worn varnish speaks 
of past lives crossing there.  
And I will smile and ask if there is something 
I can help with, and they’ll tell me, 
or look around a little more to be polite, 
and then quietly leave me 
to my chores of sorting, or re-reading, or looking 
out the window while running my fingers along spines.
-Jamie Lynn Heller 01/2013
Woolf Wanderings
If while reading Virginia’s experiment,
stemming from an unidentified spot 
on her wall, I find my own mind falling off 
the side of the page and landing 
elsewhere, 
I wonder if she would be frustrated that 
I didn’t follow her path or 
proud that I found my own
-Jamie Lynn Heller 
Meeting the Poet
 
While waiting in line 
I pull down pieces 
of the chatter 
floating about 
to look at for a while.
Snuggled among dramas 
of the day, restaurant reviews,  
and other relishings,
I hear I am not the only one 
to leave the book jacket at home, 
carefully laid aside to prevent 
accidental tears and smudges 
on the way to the auditorium. 
She asks the poetish looking boy 
two admirers in front of me 
if that’s what he’d done with his cover.  
His emancipated beret topped body 
bows slightly in humbled response.
So now 
what will I say 
to her
when the line reluctantly 
empties 
because I’ve dressed carefully 
for this part 
and everything.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
Like Photographs
Words reach out to grab
at a moment and catch it 
even before those days 
when subjects strained 
to be still, new magicians 
hiding under black scarves
focusing through a large box
and thick lenses, puffs 
of black smoke startled
them all and people peered
wonderingly to see 
what they looked like
on thin sheets of metal
we turned into paper
and now ride on wireless airstreams
without the dramatic show
we snap soundlessly under skirts
poems that travel the world
in seconds
-Jamie Lynn Heller 07/2012
Your Words
 
(to singer/song writers)
Cradled and nursed 
you wrote them, 
found the colors, the rhymes, 
the notes that painted your dreams 
and sang.  We wrapped them 
around us as coats, blankets, armor 
all our own and as you stood 
under bright lights our breath 
teasing your hair, 
you closed your eyes 
and let us give 
your words back to you.
After The Indigo Girls Concert, KCMO 07/19/2012
-Jamie Lynn Heller
If you love something 
 
and write it 
carefully, wholly
keep it close. 
Each word 
a rosary bead 
held at night 
prayed over 
released from
shaking hands 
moving on 
to the next
beginning again. 
If you
set it free
out there 
it can be abused 
cherished, ignored 
and even if 
it comes back 
to you 
it will no longer be yours.
-Jamie Lynn Heller 04/2012
Too Young at the Poetry Reading
She sat on my lap in the front row, her growing 
legs slung over mine, her head barely fitting 
beneath my chin.  When I feared her wiggles 
and not soft enough whispers would interrupt
the hushed room listening to the poets take 
their turns bouncing words off paper, walls, 
and opinions, I handed her my pen and the 
backsides of poems and she settled in to drawing 
flowers and stick people wearing see-through dresses.  
After each new image she’d tap my arm and point for 
recognition.  I’d nod and grin my approval, kiss her 
hair and she’d move on to her next scene while words, 
gentle applause and murmurs of appreciation swam around us.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
09/2011
Reading Poetry
“If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry” – Emily Dickinson
It is a hand off the page inviting me, 
Dunn’s old sonnets maneuver like chess pieces, 
Uncle Walt’s lead along the languid stream as it slips slowly to the coast, 
Williams reminds me to stop, look, breath slowly for a moment,
Kay’s take me across stepping stones to stand before a mirror, 
And when I pick up a local newspaper in Colorado, 
I find today’s people flinging themselves to poetry 
to describe how they grapple with rock and the world.
Writing in the Dark
My hand flops around on the night stand
striking first the tissue box, then the little 
framed finger painting, the clock, my latest 
read, until recognizing the pages of the notebook 
laying open and waiting, 
the metal sharp pencil resting 
a finger’s length away 
easily slides into place, its tip pricking 
my ear drum, letting the rumble out, 
tacking it down with crooked 
determined letters before 
it blows away into the night.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
Poet Laureates’ Collection
When there are too many pages to bend 
that closing would crack the spine, 
I switch to desecrating with pencil 
but soon it’s time to wash the duvet 
striped with my friendly fire of appreciation.
-Jamie Lynn Heller
12/10
Mockingbird
What poet hasn’t been entrapped 
in attempting to translate 
your translucent spirit 
by penning it down? 
Your copycat originality 
enthralls us, flaunts your 
innate calling to use
already borne sounds 
differently, and so 
notes overheard or inherited, 
wait to be picked up,
rearranged, in our
attempt to say something 
somehow new. 
-Jamie Lynn Heller
 
A Poem
A painting
gathered in a comfortable frame
settled into just the right spot 
halts your steps
makes you look 
each word a brushstroke 
leads you all along its images and imaginings
matches you heartbeat for heartbeat 
before allowing you to move on
-Jamie Lynn Heller
First Publication
Even after trying not 
to turn the event into a world halting moment, 
my heart still skips a beat
 when holding the magazine
knowing my first work in print 
is contained somewhere within.  
I think about flipping 
through like a casual reader 
to see when my eye stumbles across 
my own words - 
what a romantic idea 
conceived while I flip 
to the table of contents and 
scan for my name, 
then run to the page and there it is – 
my thoughts, my inspiration, 
my moment of clarity printed. 
Centered in its little space 
although I always left justified the lines, 
the word clock appears where I’d written cloak 
which is pretty important 
since the whole idea rides inside a metaphor of a cloak. 
And it looks so small.  Tucked in the corner. 
I’d given it a whole page, all its own in which to stand, and 
here it’s squeezed into a 
corner.
Even my own name 
doesn’t look as familiar as it should and 
I realize that this 
is what’s it like 
-Jamie Lynn Heller
06/2010