Thursday, May 1, 2025
May 1, 2025 Update
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
January News
Tuesday, December 31, 2024
December News and 2024 Roundup
I had four poems nominated for a Rhysling Award: "Below the Bible Belt," "Little Brown Changeling," "The Two of Coins," and "When the Honeymoon is Over." "Little Brown Changeling," was awarded first place.
- Ain't These Sorrows Sweet, Roadside Press, June 2024
- Screaming Intensifies, Whiskey City Press, September 2024
- In the King's Power series, self-published, to be released September 2024-February 2025
Friday, November 29, 2024
November News
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
It's going to be a long damn apocalypse.
Guys, I keep meaning to update everybody, and I’ve kept putting it off, so now I don’t even know where to start. I’ve been struggling with my own thoughts and reactions to everything. It’s a lot, so if you don’t want to read it all, I get it. Then we elected an orange Nazi to the White House and empowered his merry band of psychos, so there’s that.
TLDR: I am so fucked. We are all so fucked, so I feel bad about mentioning my situation specifically, but I can’t afford to be proud. If you could possibly bring yourself to donate a few bucks to help keep my bills and especially my medical bills paid, I would be much obliged. I have added a donate tab to this blog and a link on LinkTree.
But before I get to my (literal) bellyaching, let me say this about the political situation-- I know. I get it. I am as outraged and horrified and disgusted as the rest of you. But our despair is what they want. Broken spirits and broken wills are the goal. Broken people are easier to dominate. They don't fight back. We have to fight back. We have to continue to care for ourselves and each other, now more than ever. We define ourselves and our communities. Find your community. Build it, if you have to. Make it a sanctuary for yourself and for those who need it. American individualism is yet another thing that keeps us divided, cut off from each other, as if humans are not social animals. But we are, and if we lean into that, we could help each other thrive.
Racism and xenophobia are also the order of the day, even though America’s strength has always been its immigrants. My great-great-grandmother survived poverty, war, plague, immigration, and racism. She lost seven children and her husband to a typhus outbreak on the eve of the Mexican Revolution. She packed up the remaining family members and came all the way here, to the Midwest, from Michoacan. I have no idea how she made that trek, but she did.
They thrived. So can I. So can we.
We have to stay kind and compassionate - and no, I’m not saying be kind to bigoted pieces of shit. I have seen that paradox of tolerance post on about a hundred social media accounts, so you all know what I mean by that. I’m not saying that we should be naive, or doormats. I’m saying care for your community. We need each other. They can't take my kindness away. They can't stop me from caring about my fellow humans. That might mean fighting to defend the vulnerable. In our society, selflessness is a radical act. Selflessness, joy, optimism, compassion, empathy-- all radical. Be radical.
I may not have much, but what I have, I will share with those who need it.
I don't have any physical strength, but I will fight for those who cannot fight for themselves.
Don't let them take your joy away. Find it wherever you can. Share it. We only get one shot at this life. Don’t spend it despairing.
Now. On to my personal problems. Sorry.
CW: suicidal thoughts and unpleasant medical oversharing. No medical advice, please and thank you. Whatever you’ve got, I guarantee, I’ve heard of it. If I haven’t already tried it, there’s a good reason.
Last Wednesday, Patrick had to take me to the emergency room. I’ve had some pretty apocalyptic migraines over the course of my life. More than once, I have lain in a dark room and wondered if I was dying, having a stroke, having a seizure, or some combination thereof. The one I had last Wednesday definitely made my Top 10. It felt like someone had rammed a railroad spike in my left eye, and another one through the top left quadrant of my skull. I wanted to die. I wanted to bang my head against the wall. Emergency room doctors have given me morphine before, and that’s what I was hoping for-- if I can’t be dead, unconsciousness is the next best thing. But I also started throwing up. I’ve had migraines make me throw up before, but that’s not the norm for me. And I just kept throwing up. Uncontrollably. On the way to the hospital, Patrick had to stop several times so I could jump out and puke, and I still puked in the car. And on myself. Nothing like showing up at the ER with chunks on your shirt, eh?
The emergency room was packed. We ended up having to wait 2.5 hours to be seen. Emergency rooms are bright and loud. I had a plastic barf bag and sat there yakking in front of 50 or so people. I snapped at the teenager sitting next to me for drumming his feet on the floor. The doc ordered a CT scan of my abdomen and it turns out I have acute colitis, which often presents with a headache.
I have never been healthy. I am what the medical establishment calls a “complex” patient. I’ve always had multiple, major chronic health issues. I have weird allergies. I don’t tolerate most pharmaceuticals well– if there’s some god-awful side effect, I will probably have it. When the ER doctor asked me what conditions I have, I was like, “Uh, it would actually be shorter to tell you what ISN’T a problem. My heart. I think my heart is pretty much the only thing that functions properly. And maybe my bones. As far as I know, my bones are sound.”
Over the past four years, the health situation has become really untenable. My migraines have become almost constant. Last month, I had 24 migraine days. I experience vestibular attacks, which give me intense vertigo and nausea. It’s started to affect my balance, so now sometimes, I need a cane. It’s causing severe motion sickness so that I can barely ride in a car, let alone drive. I have started experiencing Alice in Wonderland Syndrome, which causes size and spatial distortion, so I have almost fallen down the steps a few times, among other challenges. The migraines cause hallucinations, mood swings, insomnia.
Two years ago, I was diagnosed with gastroparesis, which means my body does not digest food properly. It causes vomiting attacks, as well as early satiety and acid reflux. It is also associated with dysautonomia, which I also seem to have. In my case, my body can’t regulate temperature, so I frequently get intense hot flashes that make me red-faced and sweaty. I can’t wear sweaters or long sleeves anymore. I can’t use makeup because it just becomes a mudslide. Any little exertion makes me absolutely gross. Summer is torture.
I take an antidepressant that causes insomnia. I use medical marijuana for nausea and motion sickness, but it has killed my short-term memory. I often forget what I was saying mid-sentence.
When I was younger, I was able to shake off migraines to a degree. Now, they put me out of commission for at least three days. Between them and the stomach issues, I never get a chance to recover. At best, I am only ever operating at 50%.
Last February, my doctor put me on a new medication. It gave me hives for four days. I am allergic to Benadryl, so there wasn’t much to be done about it. I had never had hives for multiple days. I had them from my scalp down to the soles of my feet. The itching was so terrible, I wanted to throw myself off a building. I scratched myself bloody.
The only thing that has allowed me to keep a job these past six years was being able to work from home, and even then, I was struggling. Last July, I was knocked down to part-time. Not because I’m sick all the time, but because we got new management and underwent massive restructuring. I was relieved, but worried– would we be able to afford my salary being cut in half? I applied for dozens of jobs, went on five or six interviews, and didn’t get hired anywhere. But I was so freaked out– if someone DID hire me, everything has gone back to in-office. How would I get there every day? Would I be able to make it through any probationary periods without getting fired for absenteeism?
So. Can’t drive. Can’t travel. I’m pretty much a shut-in. I never go anywhere or do anything. It’s impossible to make plans because I never know how I’m going to be feeling from day to day. My diet is highly restricted. I often can’t sleep. I have poor concentration and retention. My job situation had become very precarious. You probably will not be surprised to hear that I became very depressed, despite the meds. I very seriously considered suicide because I am quite literally worth more dead than alive. I am tired of being in pain. I am tired of watching my life, which was already so limited, get smaller and narrower with each passing year. I researched methods. The only reason I didn’t go through with it was because, with my luck, something would go wrong and I would just end up a vegetable or something, and that’s the only thing worse than my current situation.
Once the restructuring at my job was complete, I had a new supervisor, and was assigned to a grant project. It was going to be a lot more work and a lot of pressure with no extra pay– basically, they wanted management-level work for secretarial pay. The new management was pushing for everyone to return to the office.
No thank you.
So I quit. I don’t have many good days anymore, and I don’t want to spend them in a job that I don’t especially like, and one that criminally underpays me. And here I am. Unemployed and unemployable. Still sick, exhausted, and on antibiotics, Zofran and weed. Colitis can last anywhere from a few days to four weeks, depending on the severity of the infection.
Trump is in office. I don’t even know what to say. Life just keeps kicking me in the nards and I’m not sure I can keep getting up. I quit my job just over a month ago, and I still haven’t fully processed and decompressed.
This is only scratching the surface of the suck. I have a whole catalog of other health issues. My laptop died last week. I just found out my primary care doctor quit the practice, so now I have to either track her down wherever she went, or find a new doctor. Our entire plumbing system had to be replaced last summer, which means a hefty loan payment every month, on top of my student loans and our grossly inflated mortgage. I can barely perform day-to-day tasks like cooking, cleaning or even showering regularly. We’ve had a housekeeper and a lawn service, but now that I can’t work, that’s over. My parents came over the other day to tidy up and do some laundry and it’s so, so demoralizing to be a grown-ass adult who needs Mommy to come over and change my sheets.
I know it seems like I’m a prolific writer, but pretty much everything you’ve seen get published over the past two years was written before 2022. I have only written a handful of poems since then and very little else.
I’m sorry to be such a downer, but I needed to get this off my chest. I will be applying for disability, but if you know anything about disability in the US, then you know people pretty much get rejected on the first try. It can take years to get approved, if at all.
Today was the first day I have felt a bit better. Since the election, I have frantically been collecting every happy/comforting TV show and film I can think of and mainlining them like a Community and Ted Lasso-lovin’ methhead. I’ve been listening and singing along to music. Art has always been my salvation. It will always be my salvation, my life jacket. I will make and consume art until I drop dead.
Find your salvation. Find your life jacket and strap it on. It’s going to be a long damn apocalypse.
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
December News and 2023 Roundup
NOMINATION
I am pleased to share that my poem, “Knowing You,” was nominated for a Pushcart by Gnashing Teeth Publishing. Thank you to Karen Cline-Tardiff for this honor. Not a bad way to close out the year!
2023 ROUNDUP
This year, 38 of my pieces appeared in 18 publications, including short stories and poems. (A few of the covers are included in the above collage.) I was a featured storyteller for the May 2023 Truth in Comedy event in Kansas City, MO. Additionally, I published four books, including:
- Midnight Glossolalia (with Scott Ferry and Lillian Necakov), Meat for Tea Press, February 2023
- Morels, Voice Lux Press, May 2023
- Moonlight and Monsters, Gnashing Teeth Publishing, July 2023
- Points of Light: Poems to Express Gratitude for Nurses During the COVID-19 Pandemic, July 2023, (editor and contributor)
I had work nominated for two Best of the Nets, a Pushcart, and a Rhysling Award. I continue to serve as an editor at Gleam, and wrote blurbs for each imaginary arrow (Scott Ferry) and The Very Special Dead (Christian Livermore). If you haven't read those books, I can't recommend them enough.
I’ve had years where I’ve had more publications, but then, this is the first
time I’ve published four books in a year, so sometimes success is kinda hard to
quantify. Publishing four books meant a pretty hard marketing push with readings,
podcasts, and events. Otherwise, 2023 was a soft hiatus for me. For the first time
in recent memory, I did not write every day. In fact, I barely wrote at all. Besides
health problems, my husband and I purchased a house, which has needed a lot of
time and attention. But most of all, I was burned out. Submitting and publishing
can be an absolute grind, and I was just all out of spoons and all out fucks. I’m
just now trying to get back into a writing routine, and trying to find a better
work-life balance. To all who have supported me, this year and every other, you
have my sincerest gratitude.
OTHER NEWS
I am now on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/laurenscharhag.bsky.social
I just got the invite code on December 22, so I still haven't really figured it out yet, but I hope to get proficient soon, and get off the sinking ship that is the platform formerly known as Twitter.
Hope you all had a safe and happy holiday season, and wishing you all the best for '24!
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
November News
Tuesday, May 30, 2023
May News
We received our first review on Midnight Glossolalia. Poet Jerome Berglund writes, “…it’s absolutely one of the most interesting, provocative, entertaining works of poetry (and collaboration) I’ve had the enormous privilege and good luck of discovering.” Thank you so much, Jerome! Read his full review on Amazon or Goodreads.
Moonlight and Monsters, my latest poetry collection, will be releasing in June from Gnashing Teeth Press.
Screaming Intensifies, a collection of short horror stories, will be releasing later this year from Whiskey City Press – date TBD. I will keep you all posted.
PUBLICATIONS
Morels was released earlier this month from Voice Lux Press as part of their chapbook series. Download a copy for $3 on their website.
My prose-poem, “Below the Bible Belt,” appeared in Thanatos. Thank you to editors Rebecca Kilroy and Arden Delphine Young. This piece is also in my latest collection, Midnight Glossolalia (co-authored with Scott Ferry and Lillian Necakov).
APPEARANCES
On May 13, I attended the Dark and Stormy Night open mic at Darkwood House Gallery in Independence, MO. Darkwood House Gallery is a fabulous venue for dark art and events, as well as an oddities and curiosities shop, and a fashion boutique for designer Ezra October. If you’re ever in Independence and love strange/occult stuff, stop in! I look forward to visiting again.
Moonlight and Monsters Book Release, hosted by Gnashing Teeth Press, Saturday, July 8, 2 pm CT; Scott Ferry will be joining us emcee and reader!
A Reading and Conversation with Lindsey Royce and Lauren Scharhag, hosted by Press 53, Thursday, August 10, 6:30 pm CT
SpoFest Featured Reader, Tuesday, September 5, 6 pm CT
OTHER NEWS
Some of my books are now available for purchase at the Darkwood House Gallery, 10918 E Winner Road, Lower Level, Independence, MO 64052. Thank you to Darren Hineslety for agreeing to peddle my wares! I think I’ve found my people at Darkwood House.
Thursday, April 27, 2023
April News
Morels, a poetry chapbook, will be released in May by Voice Lux Press. How gorgeous is this cover art by Katriina Purru.
“Skinwalker,” appeared in Anvil Tongue Books. (It was previously published at Mitchell Pluto’s Artzine.) Many thanks to editor Daniel Cyran.
“Another Poem About the Moon,” is up at the Rye Whiskey. I am so grateful to John Patrick Robbins for his continuous support of my work.
“The Ledger” and “Jack and Lucy” appear in The Dead Pets Poetry Anthology (Transcendent Zero Press). It is available to purchase on Amazon. Proceeds from this book go to the ASPCA. Many thanks to editors Damian Ward Hey and Rick C. Christiansen.
APPEARANCES
I was the featured reader at the Spoken Word Club on April 25. Thank you to Robbi Nester for hosting.
Saturday, May 20, 8 pm, I will be one of the storytellers at Truth in Comedy at the Bunker Center for the Arts, 1014 E 19th Street, KCMO 64108. Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door. Please visit www.truthincomedy.com for more details. **Update - tickets available for purchase at Prekindle.
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
March News
“Skinwalker” appeared in the Mitchell Pluto Artzine. Thank you to Mitchell for publishing this piece.
“Light Studies,” “Heaven Spelled Backwards,” and “The Pottery Shard Graveyard” are in Issue 4 of The Black Shamrock. My deepest gratitude, as always, to editor John Patrick Robbins.
“Curandera,” “Overlook” and “Lambent” appeared in Setu Magazine’s annual Western Voices Edition. Thank you to guest editor Thomas Scott Outlar and to EiC Anurag Sharma.
“Medusa Browses the Beauty Aisle,” is up at Ice Floe Press as part of their Cassandra/Chorale Mythology Project. Many thanks to editor Robert Frede Kenter. The poem is paired with art by Robert, “Display Case – Medusa Goes Shopping.” This poem will appear in my poetry collection, Moonlight and Monsters, forthcoming from Gnashing Teeth Press.
“Medusa Browses the Beauty Aisle,” “The Ghost Forest,” “Curse of the Spider Woman,” “Snakes and Boxes” and “Root” appear in Lothlorien Journal, Vol. 20: Masks of Many Colours, which is now available to purchase on Lulu. You can also read these poems for free at Lothlorien online. Many thanks to editor Strider Marcus Jones.
APPEARANCES
My brilliant co-authors, Scott Ferry and Lillian Necakov, and I did two more readings this month to promote our new release, Midnight Glossolalia (Meat for Tea Press). They’re both available to watch on video.
The first was at SpoFest. Thank you to fabulous hosts, James Bryant and Rick Christiansen.
The second was hosted by Tina Marie Johnson of Blue Mountain Creative Consulting. To access, input passcode &uN2d&7C.
Sunday, February 26, 2023
February News
My prose-poem, "Interdimensional Border Town," has made the long list for the 2022 Rhysling Awards. The poem was originally published in Unlikely Stories, and appears in my new collection, Midnight Glossolalia. Many thanks to the SFPA and congrats to my fellow nominees.
NEW RELEASE
In case you missed it, my latest poetry collection, Midnight Glossolalia, written in collaboration with Scott Ferry and Lillian Necakov, is now available. Purchase directly from either publisher Meat for Tea Press or from Amazon.
About the Book
In Midnight Glossolalia, three poets braid their voices into a kingdom of dark matter, speaking in tongues on subjects both modern and mystical. These 63 poems are an alchemical brew composed of gods, ghosts, UFOs, alternate dimensions, ancestors, science, technology, math, music, nature, and Fruit Loops. They are the chemtrails of lost songs, a muffled heart piano swelling with the mystery of existence.
APPEARANCES
We were also the featured readers on Moore Poetry this month. Thank you to Christopher Moore for hosting.
PUBLICATIONS
The inaugural issue of Death Nail Magazine is out! It includes my short horror story, “Those We Serve,” along with two flash fiction pieces, “Gastromancy” and “The Wishing Hole.” Thank you so much to editor and fellow horror geek John Patrick Robbins for this!
“Those We Serve” is the story of a Midwestern family whose seemingly idyllic farm is on the edge of a forest where strange creatures dwell, and the creatures demand offerings.
Excerpt
I’d brought the last offering a week ago. They always seemed hungrier this time of year and, indeed, the dishes I’d left were empty save for some bones and an apple core. I cleared them away and set out clean plates, arranged everything neatly, including the flowers. I poured the beer into mugs.
I’d only entered the clearing itself maybe a handful of times. Now, I paused to watch the first glimmers of pale sun coming through the trees. The clearing was maybe five acres, its western border defined by a quick-running stream.
We never take the cattle to graze in there. Not that we could get them to set one hoof in that field. Horses and dogs won’t go there, either. The clearing is lined with mounds of earth, all of them neat and round, more or less uniform in size…
Excerpt
When Daddy came home and told us what he’d done, I thought for sure he’d been in his own stash.
The ensuing argument was conducted in whispers. Mama was in bed and we didn’t want to bother her. Daddy set the cuttings down on the table so I could see for myself what he’d sold me for. The Orchidaceae family has thousands of species, forty-four of which are native to Louisiana. While I don’t have every single one of them neatly catalogued in my brain, I couldn’t exactly argue his point—these flowers were unique. Their colors and shapes almost defied description. Collectors will pay thousands of dollars for a rare specimen, and here, Daddy had six. With that kind of money, there could be braces for Lark, doctors for Mama, comfort for Granddaddy in his golden years.
And speaking of Granddaddy, when he heard about the whole business, he hit the roof, but though he cussed and hollered, and the little ones cried, there seemed to be no way around it. If Daddy didn’t hold up his end of the bargain, the whole family would suffer. The orchids Daddy had gathered would wither and die, as would any green and growing thing he touched. Even crabgrass would wilt beneath his feet. How would Daddy support us then?
So, early the next morning, I was shipped off to live with the Beast…
Saturday, January 28, 2023
January News
I missed a publication from 2022 - Stone Poetry Quarterly’s November issue included three of my poems, “Endlings,” “Faded Ink,” and “Night Shades.” Many thanks to editor D. Ward Hey.
Illumen Magazine, edited by Tyree Campbell, published two of my speculative poems, “Backwards and in Glass Heels,” and “Haunted Algorithm” (the latter received an Honorable Mention in the 2022 SFFP Speculative Poetry Awards, long form.) The Winter 2023 issue is available in print or e-copy from Hiraeth Publishing.
The Writers Place of Kansas City released Voices from the Writers Place, Volume 2, an audiobook of local poets. It’s available for purchase on Bandcamp. My poem, “Alligator Tooth,” is included. Many thanks to James Benger.
Lothlorien Poetry Journal, one of my favorite literary spaces, published five of my poems, “Medusa Browses the Beauty Aisle,” “The Ghost Forest,” “Curse of the Spider Woman,” “Snakes and Boxes,” and “Root.” Many thanks to editor Strider Marcus Jones for giving my work a home again.
The Dope Fiend Daily published “Earth and Sky.” I am eternally grateful to editor Scott Simmons for giving my words a home on the regular.
Written Tales published my poem, “Home for Christmas.” It’s a subscription magazine, but they offer a free 7-day trial to view content. Many thanks to Kevin for accepting this piece.
Scott Ferry, Lillian Necakov and I will be on Meat for Teacast this coming Thursday, Feb. 2, at 7 pm. The Meat for Tea Podcast is on Goodpods, Apple and Spotify. Many thanks to Elizabeth MacDuffie for not only publishing us, but for inviting us to talk about our work. If you can’t tune in live, it will be available to listen later.
Midnight Glossolalia, the poetry collaboration by Scott Ferry, Lillian Necakov and myself, will be released by Meat for Tea Press in March.
My latest solo poetry collection, Moonlight and Monsters, will be released by Gnashing Teeth Press in June.
Don’t forget to check out my other works!
Poetry collections: West Side Girl & Other Poems,* Requiem for a Robot Dog (Cajun Mutt Press), High Water Lines (Prolific Press), and Languages, First and Last (Cyberwit Press)
*Available on Kindle Unlimited




































