Variations on a Theme: One Truth in Three Parts

I’ve recently entered several writing competitions on AllPoetry. Each one comes with its own rules involving word count, required techniques, and structure, but I often return to the same underlying themes. Here are three of my favorite entries, each written for a different contest but connected by one truth.


Gazpacho

Plucked 
overripe from aging 
vine, 

your ruby-red 
juice
mingles fresh 
with neighboring 
neglected cucumber.

Aventurine Thought

A thought skipped stones
across my head,
glinting green down a lucky, bumpy shred,
strolling through clover,
climbing a tree,
then bouncing off brick
to startle me.

Ripe

I didn’t 
inherit 
my family’s
summer 
obession 
with watermelon.

I think
it’s the seeds.


Found in the Margins

These poems may have been written to meet the demands of specific prompts, but they still reflect parts of me. Each one circles around the edges of thought, tradition, or experience. In Gazpacho, I found beauty in what is overlooked. Aventurine Thought captures how ideas can surprise me when I am not looking straight at them. And in Ripe, I touch on the quiet ways I have stepped outside family traditions. I did not plan a common theme, but looking back, I see how often I write from the margins, where the small, the stray, and the unexpected leave their mark.

I’d love to know what other threads you notice. Are there any themes that stood out to you across these three poems? Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments.