August 2025

The Blood Project features Yvette Perry's "What You Will Call Me"

August 2025

By Yvette Perry

Recently one of my poems (and audio reading of the poem), “What You Will Call Me,” was featured on The Blood Project website. The Blood Project aims “to promote exploration and deeper understanding of the role of blood in health, injury and disease, integrated with the patient’s experience in pursuit of enhanced individualized care.”

Reconnecting with Your Poetic Voice

August 2025

By Jenny Hegland

Twice a month, our Listener Poet community (now 80+ and growing) gathers for our regular Community of Practice. Last month, the focus of our sessions was on poetic voice – that one-of-a-kind artistic expression that allows us to communicate not only our own truths but also the truths and stories of others.

Board Spotlight: Nancy Scherlong

August 2025

Nancy Scherlong, LCSW-R, CHHC, SEP, CP, PTR/CJT-CM, brings a deep well of experience – and heart – to The Good Listening Project’s Board of Directors. A psychotherapist, educator, and long-time expressive arts advocate, Nancy believes that “creative resonance” – the feeling of being seen or understood through art – is a “powerful complement to any healing process.”

The Other Revival by Salaam Green

August 2025

Salaam Green, an alum of the first cohort of the The Good Listening Project’s Certified Listener Poet course, has released a poetry collection. The Other Revival is a story of homecoming. This collection of poems revolves around a house built in Harpersville, Alabama in 1841. Thirty-nine people enslaved by Samuel Wallace, the owner of the property, constructed the house and worked the land.

Ravenna Raven’s Poetry Featured in "For the Soul" Exhibition

August 2025

Poet and educator Ravenna Raven was recently featured in For the Soul: A Group Exhibition in Seattle’s Pioneer Square. Curated by Geheim Gallery in partnership with Lion and Lamb Fine Art, the exhibition brought together 20 artists from across the country to explore a resonant question: What does the soul of your work look like?