Category: poetry

  • The World Burns, and We Scroll: Bearing Witness to Genocide, Greed, and the Price of Empires

    The World Burns, and We Scroll: Bearing Witness to Genocide, Greed, and the Price of Empires

    We live in a world that feels like it’s cracking under the weight of its own reflection.

    As of 2025, humanitarian crises and genocides continue across the globe, largely ignored or exploited by the same systems that profit from their pain. In Gaza, tens of thousands have been killed and displaced as infrastructure collapses and access to aid remains restricted. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the cobalt and coltan mined by children still power the batteries of our phones, laptops, and electric cars. And in Sudan, an ongoing civil war has displaced millions, yet receives almost no media coverage compared to Western conflicts.

    Meanwhile, Americans scroll and spend, buried under debt, inflation, and propaganda. While, being told that freedom can be found in the checkout aisle or the next algorithmic distraction comes along.

    This poem was written as both confession and confrontation: a moment of truth-telling from within the belly of a capitalist empire that feeds on silence.

    Poem:

    “The World Burns, and We Scroll”

    I wake beneath the hum

    of screens,

    each one a sermon preaching more for sale,

    their glow a ghost of what we lost…

    to comfort,

    convenience,

    and compliance.

    The world burns,

    not metaphor,

    not news,

    she just burns.

    In Congo,

    in Sudan,

    in Palestine,

    children trade their breath for minerals.

    Their parents’ lives

    for borders drawn by hands

    that never had to bleed.

    Their cries travel

    through copper veins

    to light our phones, our news feeds,

    our many, many screens.

    The guilt, we share.

    We spend.

    We pretend.

    America,

    land of the barely living wage,

    where grief is taxed,

    and outrage costs extra.

    We chant freedom in discount aisles

    while bombs hum lullabies abroad,

    and children go to bed with dread

    fed by hunger.

    You’ve got to start to

    wonder.

    We are not free.

    We are stitched into these machines,

    screaming between algorithms.

    We need only to bear witness,

    to cradle a world that keeps unraveling,

    to tell everyone still fighting:

    we see you.

    Even if our country won’t.

    May every dollar dripped in blood

    rot back to dirt.

    May every empire collapse

    under its own reflection of depravity.

    May mercy outlive profit.

    May love…

    unfiltered, defiant, unbranded,

    outlast the hands that sell it.

    And may God hope He isn’t real

    after what He’s let these children

    feel.

    The violence unfolding in Palestine, Congo, and Sudan is not distant. It is wired directly into our daily lives. It is in our consumption, our comfort, our denial. Every tap, every scroll, every “neutral” stance allows empires to continue unchallenged. Bearing witness means refusing silence. It means calling it what it is: systemic greed, colonialism reborn, a global machine powered by both apathy and profit.

    But awareness can still become action. Sharing verified updates, supporting on-the-ground organizations like Doctors Without Borders, UNRWA, Refugees International, and Congo Relief Missions, or simply breaking the silence in our own communities. Each and every act chips away at the narrative that tells us we are helpless.

    Art alone cannot stop war, but it can refuse to let it vanish unseen.

    This poem stands as both lament and rebellion… against complicity, against erasure, and against the idea that humanity can be priced.

    Poet’s Note:

    I wrote this piece as an American who has grown exhausted by the repetition of history. We are watching the same injustices dressed in new slogans. We are taught to chase comfort while others are buried beneath it. This poem is not just grief; it’s a refusal to look away.

    If you read this and feel angry, good. That means you still have something the system hasn’t stolen, your empathy. Hold on to it. Use it. STAY WOKE!

    Because the world is burning, and still, somehow, we have the power to bear witness, to refuse to forget, and to keep telling the truth.

    Links. Portfolio. Poetizer

  • Kelso 2 Poetry Zine Launch: Mature Love Poems by Poeaxtry | Digital PDF + Mystery Extras

    Kelso 2 Poetry Zine Launch: Mature Love Poems by Poeaxtry | Digital PDF + Mystery Extras

    Kelso volume 2 by Axton N.O. Mitchell a zine for his partner
    Kelso Volume 2

    Kelso: 2

    The Kelso 2 Poetry Zine has officially launched! It’s the 2nd edition in the Kelso Collection. This edition captures poetry from our 3rd and 4th years together, exploring a love that is mature, real, and beautifully flawed. Kelso 2 isn’t about the rush of new romance; it’s about the moments that come after. Here is where the patience, honesty, and quiet strength that define enduring connections comes into the picture.

    Highlighted pieces like “You Are Not the Sun” reflect the truths of lasting love: life goes on if someone is gone, but their absence changes everything in subtle, poignant ways. Every digital download of Kelso 2 includes six hidden mystery extras woven into the PDF. Through hidden words and QR codes, designed to make every reading experience personal and immersive.

    Where it started:

    Kelso volume 1 a zine for his Partner by Axton N.O. Mitchell
    Kelso volume 1 where it started

    The first Kelso zine started as a handmade, one-of-a-kind gift for my partner. I started making digital zines later and, the natural thing to do is to immortalize the personal physical copy as a digital item as well. Kelso is about love that is new and exciting, while also adapting to reflective and enduring love. Kelso 1 introduced readers to the thrill of early connection, while Kelso 2 you will see a new side of me that dives into realistic, patient love that lasts. Together, they form the Kelso Collection, a cohesive, poetic exploration of human relationships.

    New options for ease of access:

    Excitingly, the Kelso series (and all my other zines & ebooks also) will soon be available on Google Play Books. We are currently awaiting verification, but the files are already prepared and ready to launch as automatically when approval is complete. This will make the collection accessible to more readers worldwide, expanding the reach of Poeaxtry’s indie poetry zines & ebooks while keeping the curated, intimate experience of the PDF format intact.

    Written & Curated by Poeaxtry and Published by Poeaxtry’s Poetry Prism, the Kelso series continues to push the boundaries of indie poetry, combining authenticity, relatability, and the immersive experience of hidden digital content.

    Whether you’re a long-time Poeaxtry reader or discovering the zine for the first time, Kelso 2 is your invitation to explore love beyond the surface, paired with surprises that make the reading experience unique.

    Available now:

    Etsy Gumroad Payhip

    And soon, Google Play Books!

    So stay tuned for the official launch.

    💌 Access & Community Options

    If you don’t currently have the funds for a zine or ebook, I’m always happy to make it accessible. You can:

    Become a reviewer: submit here

    Trade art or curated items for zines/ebooks: submit here

    While the reviewer form is for just that the trade form is just the general contact form. So just let me know what you wish to trade for what and your best contact information to reply.

    Everyone deserves to experience art and literature, so I help where I can by keeping my curated collections accessible. With these options I am able to destroy the paywall while also leaving the option to support my indie community projects and goals.

    Poeaxtry 🔗

    Portfolio

    Journal

  • Racism and Fascism in America Protest as Poetry

    Racism and Fascism in America Protest as Poetry

    This poem confronts the realities of racism, fascism, and systemic oppression in the United States. Through vivid imagery and raw emotion, it exposes how fear, privilege, and institutional violence shape American life, while highlighting the resilience and voice of marginalized communities.

    “The State of the Dis-United”

    An original poem by: Axton N.O. Mitchell

    Rabid preacher,

    lying through perfect teeth

    straightened by the braces of minorities.

    Speaking of liberty and God,

    sitting there choking on both.

    You draped hate in Stars and Stripes,

    hung pride from every porch post,

    called it patriotism…

    it was merely your fear

    in a pretty JoJo bow.

    Your police hunt.

    Your politicians feed.

    And your children pledge allegiance

    to the god, and to the country,

    that never answered a single prayer

    from the lips of someone “different.”

    You see shelter

    where I see a cage.

    I scream bullets.

    You respond justice.

    Where white is “normal,”

    and everyone else…

    a “problem.”

    I’ve seen your suburbs

    built on

    brown

    and

    black

    bones,

    your schools still teaching how to forget

    by preaching white lies.

    You sell “unity”

    with a Confederate discount,

    while renaming oppression

    “freedom of speech.”

    Your anthem is a siren,

    and every verse

    bleeds red, white, and bruise.

    And still…

    we breathe.

    We march.

    We write.

    Turning every war-won wound

    into witness.

    No fascist flag

    can outshine

    the fire of the people

    they try to silence.

    This poem is born from my lived experience as a trans person navigating a country built on fear, exclusion, and hierarchy. I wrote it to call out the hypocrisy, the violence, and the ways systems crush those they deem “other.” But it’s also a testament to: resilience, survival, and the voices of all marginalized communities. This is me and I stand with you. Every line is a refusal to stay silent, every image a witness to injustice. I wrote it because poetry is my weapon, my witness, and my way of demanding that the world see us, hear us, and reckon with what we endure.

  • A Poetic Conversation Across Generations: My Stepdad’s Legacy

    A Poetic Conversation Across Generations: My Stepdad’s Legacy

    When Poetry Runs in the Family

    Sometimes poetry isn’t just something we stumble into, and it’s something that threads itself into our family history. My stepdad, as a teenager, had a poem published. That poem became one of his early milestones, a moment of recognition that showed him his words carried weight and resonance.

    For years, that story lived in our family as a point of pride. A reminder that poetry can reach beyond the page, that it can take a teenager’s thoughts and stamp them into the world for others to see.

    Carrying the Torch: My Poetic Response

    Recently, I found myself thinking about that poem again. But instead of just admiring it, I decided to step into the conversation myself. I wrote a response piece… no, not to his father, as his original poem had been written, but to him.

    In doing so, the poem became something multi-generational. His words reached back toward his father. Mine reached back, to him. The thread stretched, carrying a dialogue that spans decades, relationships, and grief, yet ties us together in the language of poetry.

    Here is that poem, my response to his legacy:

    “Dad One”

    From the son…

    To dad one with love
    Remember when you came into my life,
    stepped to the plate,
    and even taught me how to play ball?

    Dad, you never missed a game,
    a practice, or a play.

    You helped mold me into the man I am.
    I may not share your genes,
    but I carry all of you.

    I would give many things
    to have another conversation with you,
    to say what we have left unsaid.

    This is coming from the heart.
    Though we can never start again,
    every day I wake knowing
    you are proud of me.

    Why This Matters

    Poetry has a way of crossing boundaries. Whether it is between time, between people, or even between generations. My stepdad’s published poem and my response to it stand as proof that art doesn’t live in isolation. It echoes, it answers, and it evolves.

    This wasn’t just about writing a poem. It was about creating a bridge. His words to his father, and my words to him. That’s what makes poetry eternal. It has a way of inviting others into the conversation, long after the ink has dried.

    Family stories take many forms. Ours happened to take the shape of poetry, a legacy written in lines and verses. My stepdad’s published work planted a seed, and my response poem carries that seed into new ground.

    Maybe that’s the real beauty of poetry. It never really ends. It just keeps finding new voices to speak through.

    Links

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    Ko-fi

    Goodreads

  • Trannys &the ‘Tism: A Satirical Look at Society, Identity, and Misconceptions

    Trannys &the ‘Tism: A Satirical Look at Society, Identity, and Misconceptions

    In “Trannys &the ‘Tism,” the lines between satire, social critique, and personal identity blur. This poem challenges misinformation, conspiracy theories, and prejudice surrounding trans people and autism, delivering a raw, unapologetic perspective. With biting humor and lyrical cadence, it confronts societal biases while affirming that marginalized identities persist despite ignorance and fear.

    “Tranny’s &the ‘Tism”

    An original poem by: Axton N.O. Mitchell

    Tylenol made me a tranny.
    But, it…
    Didn’t make me a tyrant.

    If I had my way
    migrants wouldn’t need let in.

    Since borders are reliant
    On the color of your skin.

    Didn’t you hear?
    Chem trails turned the frogs gay!

    They want to destroy national parks.
    They don’t care
    about pollution or
    Corruption.

    Release the Epstein Files!

    Five mass shootings have been by people who are trans!

    How many from those like you?
    There are bad seeds everywhere!

    Does your wife know you
    Touch children
    down there?
    Down stairs?

    Autism isn’t from a pill
    or
    vaccine


    It is not a disease
    It is not
    something
    that can be
    eradicated

    Trannys and the ‘tism:
    Are here to stay!
    As long as people
    Like me have got
    A Say!

    “Trannys &the ‘Tism” leaves readers with a defiant affirmation: identities cannot be erased by misinformation, prejudice, or societal fear. Through sharp satire and fearless honesty, it demands recognition of trans and neurodiverse voices and reminds us that visibility, truth, and agency endure, no matter the resistance.

    Links

    Portfolio

    Ko-fi

  • The Best of Axton N. O. Mitchell: Powerful Poetry Collection Unveiled

    The Best of Axton N. O. Mitchell: Powerful Poetry Collection Unveiled

    Introducing “The Best of Axton N. O. Mitchell”
    – A Curated Poetry Collection

    I’m excited to share my latest creative project with you all. It is a carefully curated collection of my most powerful poems. It is now available online for your viewing. This collection shows some of my most personal work. It is thought-provoking and explores themes of identity, loss, and relationships. The human experience is also explored.

    “The Best of Axton N. O. Mitchell” features five poems that hold special significance in my creative journey:

    1. “Wheeling Roads: Mother’s Home”: A deeply personal exploration of grief and friendship. It also delves into the lingering questions we face when someone important leaves our lives.
    2. “TDOV”: A powerful piece written for Trans Day of Visibility. It examines the intersection of identity, community, and the struggle for recognition in a world that often seeks to erase.
    3. “Transitional”: This poem challenges societal constructs around gender, examining the journey from childhood expectations to authentic self-expression.
    4. “They/Them”: A celebration of love, connection, and the beauty of relationships that transcend traditional boundaries.
    5. “Hands-Off”: A bold statement on autonomy, identity, and the right to exist authentically without interference.

    This collection is presented with a distinctive aesthetic. Powerful words are set against moody, grayscale landscapes. These elements enhance the emotional impact of each piece. The visual presentation complements the raw honesty of the poetry, creating an immersive experience for readers.

    Each poem signifies a different facet of my voice as a writer, from intimate confessions to bold declarations. Together, they create a tapestry of experiences. I hope these experiences will resonate with readers who have walked similar paths. They also resonate with those who seek to understand different perspectives of their own.

    I invite you to explore “The Best of Axton N. O. Mitchell” presented by Poeaxtry. The collection is designed to be experienced at your own pace, allowing each piece to be absorbed and reflected upon.

    Are a longtime follower of my work? Or you are discovering it for the first time? I hope these poems speak to you in meaningful ways. Poetry has always been my way of making sense of the world. Sharing these pieces feels like extending a hand of connection.

    This collection shows just a part of my work, and I look ahead to sharing more in the future. If you connect with these poems, I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.

    How does poetry help you process your experiences? Which poem in this collection resonates with you most?

    The best of Axton N.O. Mitchell

    links

  • A Thousand Times: A Poetic Reflection on Growth and Self-Discovery

    A Thousand Times: A Poetic Reflection on Growth and Self-Discovery

    This poem, “A Thousand Times,” is a heartfelt reflection on personal growth, identity, and the journey of self-discovery. It explores the desire to reach back in time to encourage your younger self while celebrating the resilience and courage it takes to embrace who you truly are.

    “A Thousand Times”

    Brave girl, you have a beautiful
    soul…
    brave little girl

    y
    o
    u

    are worth far more than you know
    and oh,
    the places you will go

    I have wished a thousand
    times
    for the ability to travel back in
    time

    to let you know

    that w
    e

    Made it.

    You just had to give life a try.

    Oh,

    And…

    Realize that you’re a guy.

    That,

    was always enough.

    A Thousand Times encourages readers to reflect on their own journeys of self-discovery and resilience. It’s a reminder that embracing identity, learning to trust oneself, and recognizing your worth are victories worth celebrating. This poem is both an homage to the past and a celebration of the present, highlighting the strength it takes to grow and accept oneself fully.

    Poeaxtry Links

    Another poem

    Poems

  • Zipper Titty: 18-Page Trans Poetry Zine

    Zipper Titty: 18-Page Trans Poetry Zine

    What Is Zipper Titty?

    Introducing Zipper Titty, the newest zine from Poeaxtry_. This 18-page collection including the cover, table of contents, dedication page, 14 bold poems, and an end page, creates a complete and immersive reading experience. Each page is designed to pull readers into a world that is honest, dysphoric, positive, and deeply rooted in transgender experiences.

    The name Zipper Titty reflects humor, reclamation, and a bold transmasc perspective. The work leans into identity, embodiment, and resilience. While the zine carries a transmasc viewpoint the add-ons are useable and meaningful for readers of any gender identity as well as the general themes, just from a transgender man’s point of view.

    What Makes This Zine Special?

    Zipper Titty is completely independent from the TransOhio Symposium seminar I am giving. Each copy comes with the collectable zine specific image and at least 5 other add-ons. These elements are meant to be explored, revisited, and treasured by collectors and readers alike.

    This is my second zine released to date , so it also introduces the second collector’s image in the Poeaxtry_ series. Every detail, from layout to crafted add-ons is developed to provide a full, immersive, collectible, and resourceful zine experience.

    How Was Zipper Titty Created?

    I realized Saturday night… because of an email filter I didn’t know existed I found out I had actually been approved to speak at Ohio’s 16th Annual Transgender &y symposium. Despite the late realization, I had everything ready by Friday night way before my Monday deadline. This means I made an entire speaking layout, a zine, all the zine add-ons, 2 companion handouts, a PowerPoint presentation, and edited it all. The attendees of the symposium do get the zine for free and another digital copy to gift a homie. The zine itself, however, stands alone as an independent work, and its add-ons and content are not tied to the presentation or handouts. This was a way I saw to allow the attendees to experience some of my work after hearing about it, and to allow them to gift it to a friend. This also is open to other speakers at the symposium to grab a handout to download and or gift.

    What Interactive Elements Are Included?

    Interactive elements hidden throughout the zine hide individual letters missing to complete the url to receive 3 extras by finding bold, italic, and yellow letters to spell different words, 3 QR codes link to at least 3 extras as well for quicker access to some ad-ons. Other instructions to find any additional add-ons may be placed through the material, so keep your eyes peeled!

    How Can You Get Your Copy?

    Someone told me you wanted a copy, so I’ll let you in on how:

    TransOhio Symposium Attendees, speakers, and the Homies of anyone there have access to a Free download.

    Everyone Else: $4.99 via Poeaxtry_ stores. This version (like any other zine) does include all add-ons and the collector’s image (handouts tied to the presentation are not included). And if you’d like it on a free for honest reviews model I’ll be glad to provide you a free download discount, after we go over what that entails.

    Email Poeaxtryspoetryprism@gmail.com and ask about How the free E-books & E-zines for honest reviews model works.

    Or

    check out my ✨Poeaxtry’s Contact Page ✨ for other ways to get ahold of me for all things Poeaxtry related.

    Why Does Zipper Titty Matter?

    Zipper Titty is more than poetry, it’s a resource containing interactive experience. While it also makes trans positive artwork and solidifies transgender identities. Therefore, making the ability to erase our existence impossible. Its 18 pages, 14 poems, multiple add-ons, and resources make it a must-have for LGB people, trans community members, allies, and anyone who wants to engage with bold, immersive transmasc artistry.

    Find all my shops and more: All things Poeaxtry any time

    Or

    Read more about my panic upon finding the email from TransOhio so late here:

    TransOhio 16th Annual symposium- Here Axton Comes

    And some of my work is here if you wanna look at it:

    Poeaxtry’s Link

    What are your experiences with transgender poetry? Have you collected zines before?

    Share your thoughts in the comments!

    Portfolio

  • A Poem About Letting Go of a Toxic Friendship

    A Poem About Letting Go of a Toxic Friendship

    The Truth Behind the Poem:

    Friends can break your heart too, and friendship breakups can hurt as worse than some romantic ones. “Miss Me With It” is a unfiltered poem about ending a toxic friendship, walking away from betrayal, and reclaiming self-respect. Written in Axton’s own jagged, concrete style, this poem shows how letting go of someone who used you isn’t weakness by any stretch. But is a show of one’s power. If you’re searching for poems about toxic friendships, cutting ties, or healing through poetry, this one’s for you. You can even send it to your toxic ex. My reason for writing it doesn’t have to be your reason for resonating with it.

    “Miss me with it”

    I hope that one day you wake up

    U

    p

    And you no longer know me

    N

    O

    I hope one day you wake up

    And you no longer reach out.

    No fake check-up

    No pretend care.

    I know it makes you feel

    B

    E

    T

    T

    E

    R

    Before asking me to

    B

    U

    M

    A ride, my money, my home

    Miss me…

    it’s getting old

    Miss me…

    it’s s

    a

    d

    Used me when you had me

    Now you’re used up, washed up.

    With no where to turn

    No one to

    R

    U

    N

    to.

    You miss me

    B

    U

    T

    Miss me with it

    Pretend you don’t know my name

    Why Letting Go Is Sometimes the Only Option:

    Friendship endings are often overlooked. Yet, they leave scars just as real. “Miss Me With It” is a poem for anyone who’s walked away from a toxic relationship of any kind and chosen closure over chaos. Share this poem if you’ve ever had to let go of anyone that no longer served you.

    Links

  • End Game: A Poetic Reckoning

    End Game: A Poetic Reckoning

    This poem is about the weight of stolen creativity, systemic inequality, and the silence forced on those most marginalized. It’s a reckoning, a declaration, and a visual picture of frustration and resilience.

    “End game”

    Paying artist who live in poverty

     for published 

    creativity.

    K

    N

    O

    W

    I

    N

    G

    history stole from the likes of us. ..

    Those most used to 

             others

    taking… figurative 

    remote

        Controls

                        L

                            I

                                C k

                                    I

                                     N 

                                        G

                             mute.

    Voiceless & 

    left 

    to

    suffer in 

    i

    l

    e

    n

    c

    e

    .

    Misery, I guess,

    doesn’t get company

    unless it’s 

    misery experienced 

                    By

             one  

    Significantly more 

                               P.R.I.V.I.L.E.G.E.D. 

    than 

           the 

                   likes

           of me or you.

    a fate I

    wouldn’t wish 

              on an enemy.

    A life stuck to never escaping 

    poverty

    Look at that! 

    they

    a

    k

    e

    the boot off their neck,

    press it

    into yours

    and still claim

    they’re a

    victim 

    ’cause OHHH-nooooo,

    look,

    he thinks human worth

    works on 

    hierarchy…

    Bet

    I

    get the   

    LAST

      A

           U

               G

                    H.

    -An Axton N.O. Mitchell original

    In the end, survival isn’t close to quiet. Justice isn’t near polite. The final laugh isn’t soft, but it’s deliberate, loud, and well-overdue. This poem is a reminder that even when history and systems try to erase us, our voices, our work, and our defiance endure.