LexPoMo has wrapped, and if you took part in the 30-day writing marathon, you might be feeling a mix of pride, relief—and maybe a little uncertainty. Now what?
At Kentucky State Poetry Society, we believe that the end of writing is never the end of the poem. It’s an invitation. A doorway. A second look.
Whether you wrote 3 poems or 30 last month, July is the perfect time to step back and start revising. Revision isn’t about fixing something broken—it’s about listening closer, discovering layers you didn’t know were there, and shaping your words to say what they truly want to say.
A Few Questions to Begin:
- Where does the poem surprise even you?
- Which lines still feel electric weeks later?
- Which ones feel heavy—or hollow?
- What would happen if you changed the point of view? The tense? The line breaks?
Sometimes the poem you thought was finished is only just beginning.
Need a Reason to Revisit Your Work?
We’ve got two:
- Our Poetry Reading is July 15—a great chance to hear how another poet crafts meaning, tension, and emotion in their work—and maybe get ideas for your own revisions in the process.
- Our Adult Poetry Contest closes July 31. The poems that often rise to the top? The ones that have been thoughtfully revised, trimmed, expanded, and shaped with care.
Tip for the Week: Read Aloud
One of the simplest and most powerful revision tools? Your own voice.
Reading a poem aloud will catch clunky phrasing, weak images, and rhythm that doesn’t quite sing. It can also help you fall back in love with your own language.
So go ahead—step outside, find some shade, and give your poem a voice. You might just hear something new.
We’d love to see where your revision journey leads. Tag us @kystatepoetry —we might feature them in a future post. However you return to your work, know this: every poet rewrites. And every revision is an act of belief in your own voice.



