
Matt Trease
is a poet, artist, teacher, and astrologer. He serves on the board of the Cascadia Poetics Lab, co-curates the Margin Shift reading series, and serves as the poetry editor for the CAELi Review. His poetry has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. He is the author of The Outside (forthcoming Carbonation Press, 2024) and the chapbooks Later Heaven (busylittle1way designs) and rcvrdtxt (rlysrslit). He lives in the Salish Sea region of Cascadia on the homeland of the Duwamish people with his partner Xan, his son Harvey, and their dog, Hoopla. Find out more @ https://bio.site/mjtrease.
Poet as Radio: Writing from Intuition
A 5-week online poetry workshop designed for folks with a wide variety of experience with poetry and with a keen interest in spirituality and the occult. This course is more than a workshop; it’s a journey into the unknown, where you’ll discover hidden messages and ideas both from within yourself and the outside world. Through chance, divination, games, and ritual, you’ll learn to trust your intuition and let your spontaneity guide your writing.
Participants will engage in simple but fun word games to encourage spontaneity, explore the body as a receiver of intuitive messages, and develop and practice small rituals that enhance their perception of everyday life. Readings will include works by Jack Spicer, Hoa Nguyen, and CA Conrad among others. Whether you’re just starting out or looking to deepen your poetic practice, this workshop will provide you with the tools and inspiration to transform your writing. Join us as we tune into the invisible frequencies and uncover hidden messages emanating from the world outside!
Sundays 3-5:00 PM Pacific Time
September 7 – October 5, 2025
September 7, 14, 21, 28
October 5
Download the Coarse Packet
Course Materials Week One
(Sunday, September 7, 2025, 3-5 pm PDT)
Read: Week 1 Notes: Listen to your Gut
For this week:
Take a look at the opening section of The Book of Surrealist Games (complied by Alaistair Brotchie in 1995) and a short article on one of those games, The Exquisite Corpse, and see what rings some bells for you. Maybe even give one a try if you have time. We’ll discuss what these ideas have opened up for us, even if that happens to be a can of worms, and (time permitting) even try our best to play a round of Exquisite Corpse adapted for cyberspace.
Course Materials Week Two
(Sunday, September 14, 2025, 3-5 pm PDT)
Read:
Week 2 Notes: Practicing Outside
The House That Jack Built: The Collected Lectures of Jack Spicer (Internet Archive version)
Jack Spicer, Textbook of Poetry
For this week:
While I find most audio books to be a tortuous experience (probably because prose in our culture is far too utilitarian to be anything but monotone or cartoonish), I do love listening to talks and poetry readings, and PennSound is a great repository of those types of recordings. They probably have recordings of many of your favorite poets from mid-20th-century to the present. The PennSound page for Jack Spicer has recordings of his Vancouver lectures. As an exercise, listen to as much as you can from Lecture 1 (parts 1 and 2) and (unless you’re driving) spontaneously jot down words and phrases that come alive for you as you listen. These don’t have to be what Jack actually says; the goal is to listen for whatever arises in the moment. If you can do the listening and note taking in the dark, that would be ideal but go with what is most accessible for you. Later on come back to those notes, and see if you can make a poem from them.
Listen:
Here’s a couple of albums I like to put on repeat to write with:
Son Volt, Trace
Adrienne Lenker, Bright Future
Course Materials Week Three
(Sunday, September 21, 2025, 3-5 pm PDT)
Read:
Week 3 Notes (Posting by Sept 22)
Hoa Nguyen’s short essay “Divinatory Poetics” adapted from a panel talk at AWP in Kansas City earlier this year (if you have time, here’s a recording of an online version of that same panel from Sept of 2023),a 3-way conversation on Poetry and Tarot with Hoa Nguyen, Airea Matthews and Trevor Ketner from Catapult Magazine in 2017
and at least one of these samples of divinated poetry by:
Hoa Nguyen from Violet Energy Ingots (Wave Books, 2016),
Noah Eli Gordon from The Source (Futurepoem, 2011),
Cedar Sigo from Royals (Wave Books, 2017),
Losarc Raal (aka Carlos Lara) from No Material (Black Sun Lit, 2023).
For this week:
Try your hand at writing a poem by divination. Bibliomancy, or divination by text, is an ancient form of this. To prepare, on a small slip of paper write down a word or phrase that stands for something that is personally vexing you – it should be something in your everyday experience (i.e. not some abstract idea like capitalism or Trump or cancel culture. You get the picture). Fold it up and put it somewhere on you (a pocket works well) and be sure to keep it on you until you’re done. A day or two later, go to your bookcase and grab a number of books. The actual number doesn’t matter but should be at least 3. Try to see if a number pops in your head once you start or if you experience a feeling that says you’ve got enough. Stack the books in a random order and put the stack near your writing space. Wait another day then sit down to write. Take out your slip of paper and read it to yourself. Then, take the first book in your stack and turn to page 26. Scan the page until a word or phrase (best if it’s 9 words or less) jumps out and write it down as a single line. Then pick up the 2nd book and repeat the process until you’ve used all the books. Read the poem out loud and take some notes on what the poem says about your vexation. DO NOT REVISE!!!!!
If you really want to have fun with it, have someone else write down the vexation and read the poem back to them and see what jumps out to them.
Listen:
Here’s some aural journeys beyond the looking glass by a couple of Alices
Alice Coletrane, Journey in Satchidanda
Alice Notley, “Two of Swords” from Live in Seattle
Course Materials Week Four
(Sunday, September 28, 2025, 3-5 pm PDT)
Read:
Week 4 Notes (posting by Sept 29)
Check out Allan Kaprow’s essay “The Real Experiment.” Kaprow was a student of Zen practitioner and avant-garde composer, John Cage and a friend an inspiration to the artists of the Fluxus movement. He was briefly art-world famous for what he called “Happenings,” in which everyday events were engaged as conscious performances. The idea was to get art out of the galleries and museums and apply it to everyday living. However, much to his chagrin, the idea was co-opted by the art world he was rebelling against, and turned into “Performance Art,” which he saw as a caricature of his intention. This is essay is from the end of his career and really gets at some great examples of how we might blur those lines.
In that same vein, take a look at Fluxus artist (and lightening rod for Beatle-fan misogyny) Yoko Ono’s Grapefruit, which is a collection of poems which are instructions for little rituals, or rehearsals for the real poem, which takes place in the mind of the reader-as-a-collaborator. It’s like a text book in how to ritualize little things in your life.
Also, take a look at the online archive for Learning to Love You More, an art-as-living project by Miranda July and Harrell Fletcher, in which the artists gave volunteer participants on the internet simple assignments for having and documenting creative experiments in their communities.
You’ll also want to familiarize yourself with the work of CA Conrad, who for the last 15 or so years has been contextualizing the act of poetry in the context of what they call (Soma)tic ritual, as a means of re-connecting poem making to lived experience.
Take a look at:
JUPITER HUMANIFESTO: A (Soma)tic Poetry Entrance,
this basic breakdown of the practice into 3 parts,
the short introduction to their book ECODEVIANCE,
this course packet of CA’s rituals (compiled by Michelle Taransky at UPenn),
this video of a Ritual construction workshop CA gave for Mack (live) in January of 2022,
and poems from their most recent collections posted at
Just Buffalo Literary Center, and
(Note: This week has a lot of SUGGESTED reading material. Read what you can and try to focus on your practice)
For this week:
try to envision a small ritual for yourself that you can practice over the next two weeks. The ritual should involve your body in some fashion and engage some aspect of your everyday life. Maybe there’s a nervous tic you have that you want to become more aware of, or a regular interaction with a person or group that’s become more habit of personality than conscious relating. Maybe you want to explore how your vexation from your divination exercise shows up for you. Whatever it is you want to wake to in your everyday life, find some physical intervention you can practice in the moment (have a safeword or phrase or a gesture to inject in those routine conversations, or clench your toes or fingers, or shift your posture or gaze to a new perspective, etc) and TAKE NOTES. Give yourself some brief time (5min) each day to write automatically (faster than your editor can keep up). DON’T EDIT these notes…yet. We’ll engage them in class and come up with a strategy for letting the transmissions come through as they want to.
Course Materials Week Five
(Sunday, October 5, 2025, 3-5 pm PDT)
Read:
Week 5 Notes (posting after October 5)
For this week:
Try your hand at turning the line, so to speak. Take 1-3 (or more if you have time) of your poems or ritual notes and sit down for a 2nd pass at it. Don’t think of this as editing or polishing, but a re-visiting or re-turning the piece like you’d turn a line. You might try bringing a different tool or process to the poem. If you started with bibliomancy, maybe try bringing in ritual, or a Surrealist game. If it’s a ritual note, maybe try copying the note over, and using Bibliomancy to bring in other material. Just go with your gut. It’ll tell you what you need to do next.
We’ll review those 2nd passes in class next week and talk about thoughts or ideas each of you have for what you might do post-lab, how you might (or not) incorporate some of the tools or practices we’ve talked about during this 5-week lab.
As part of your registration, you become a member of Cascadia Poetics LAB. Membership is free, carries no cost or obligations, and is recorded with your registration. See our Membership Policy for details.




