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About the Project
The Poets
Alumni Publications

Welcome to the 30/30 Project, an extraordinary challenge and fundraiser for Tupelo Press, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) literary press. Each month, volunteer poets run the equivalent of a “poetry marathon,” writing 30 poems in 30 days, while the rest of us “sponsor” and encourage them every step of the way.

The volunteer poets for January are Tess Adams, Haley Bosse, Jess Bowe, Joanna Lee, Thomas Page, Sarah Paley, and Amy Snodgrass.

If you’d like to volunteer for a 30/30 Project month, please fill out our application and warm up your pen!

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 22

Winter Movement / Haley Bosse

Tufts of brown fur. The long faces of leaves Thin streams rippling
lifting as they dry. tunneling upward  from the crux of a planter
in the sharp thrill of morning & into the air across the sidewalk & into the road

Nearly-foamed snow. The crackCRACK The pop of wet gravel
cradling the roots of oversaturated tree trunks, thrown from a tire,
of the grass popping loose at their seams  its soft thump & then rest in the moss

The scuff and stomp  Small clusters of cicadas  A whistle breaking open
of boots & thick sneakers sleeping or suckling the midafternoon quiet,
dragging in a line at sap far below the startle of running through the cold

short bursts  / Jess Bowe

for a moment, i’d like to live in the body
of a woman unafraid to leave for Paris
at the intersection of twilight and daybreak,
leave the yard for someone else to tend to, leave 
the man who clings to me at midnight, 
temporarily, for a stretch with no clocks 
and a window to a street unfamiliar with my name.


for a moment, i’d like to pick blueberries back
when blueberries still grew here. fill my mouth
more than my basket, fill my hands with cups
of grass, bury a poem at the foot of a northern
pine and believe until i know, for a fact,
that next spring, a robin quilts her nest
with ribboned prayers, ink black as winter’s sleep.


for once, as this woman with this shape,
for once, i share my desire with the meadow flowers:
leave me be. let me be beautiful and smile
because i graced the day with a color
you haven’t seen in this way. leave me be and let me 
dance in the sun, in love with this little
great adventure i find myself in. alone, surrounded 
by strange friends, rainwashed and pink in the face.


Forever home  / Joanna Lee

This is where we begin, in the mud with the red-
eared sliders who, in their leisure time,
sun on logs in the canal building a bridge
to nowhere, then slip off into the green
as each slow canalboat passes,
drifting through the past
before hitting the locks.

 

We know this city through her mud. Through her grit
and mixed politics and potholes and the still
unplanted shadows where statues once stood.
And yet,
            from how many little upstairs apartments
do our students make their leaving plans…
then return two summers later because
the bigger world didn’t have that same
gently used, relaxed but stylish fit?

 

Like the cat at the midtown Lowe’s—we
will always be happy to be found, to return home.
Here chose us, now, our hands to reach for
her future, to dig her bones
out of the dirt
trail our fingers through the cobblestoned
gutters as rain washes down and we sit listening
to some home-grown band through
an open window on a Sunday night.

 

Listen, who else is gonna argue her history
and picnic in her cemeteries, with a view
out over the James where the sturgeon breach
and the trains coil along the banks like some prehistoric
steampunk black snake?
Those are our cards laid out, graffiti-tagged on the CSX,
bright against the creosote. We trace our names in
the wet tar, claiming. A small piece in the scroll of her archives,
a moment of her river. Our feet in its mud. Our footsteps
that echo all along Kanawha, at the Capitol, up Broad Street.
That will not be washed away.

Bear Documentaries / Thomas Page

While my father and I were waiting for 
you to get the stitches taken out, two 
receptionists were watching bear documentaries.

The bears, living out west, were hunting for 
small mammals drinking river water out 
of the stream unaware they were in a bear documentary.

The receptionists’ running commentary 
oscillated between stating how cute 
the bears were and bemoaning scary nature was.

Coyotes, then, came from over the snowy 
hills to scare the bears away from their prey—
much to the chagrin of the two receptionists. 

To break up the implied violence shown up
by the waiting room’s ceiling-mounted set, 
receptionist #1 said to receptionist #2:

“We have a wild turkey problem at 
home but the state of Maryland says we 
can’t shoot it.” Receptionist #2 agreed with the absurdity. 

Details of the Incident / Sarah Paley

(for Liam Conejo Ramos apprehended after
returning home from his preschool classroom)

 

You are at the table

and, yes,

you are beautiful

and, yes,

we are ashamed


Sometimes: an Ars Poética  / Amy Snodgrass

My daughter ensconces herself in her room 
for hours and hours: building her own world, 
exploring her own mind, sharing only what, 
when, how, she wants to share. A knock can
bring an eye roll, a grunt, a smile, a story.
I never know, but I keep knocking to see.


A poem comes when it comes. Sometimes 
I invite one in and it smiles and plays along.
But most of the time it shoves out a snarky 
laugh and prefers to stay away. Sometimes 
the poem seems annoyed just because I’m 
in the room. Sometimes I even wonder if 
I’ve lost it for good. You get the connection.


So when a poem pops out like a 15-year-old girl 
ready to engage with her mother, swinging a casual 
“Whatssup?” and a half-grin-half-smirk, I revel in the 
miracle of relief, of capillary-bursting hope, of laughter, 
and (did I say relief?) Then sometimes, the poem and my 
daughter are in kahoots: each one seeming to find me 
a perfect vessel for their woes, a worthy speaker of their 
needs, and –dare I say it?–sometimes pretty good at my job.  


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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 21

The Song of Potatoes / Haley Bosse

is a gift I never expected to receive,
just like how they say
we’ll hear the birds’ true names
by the end of the winter
and how, even as we wreck her,
the Earth cries out
from countless twisting roots,
the softest crackle of their bodies
transfigured into chimes,
how when I’m dragging
my calluses through the soil,
I can't help but hum,
the cloud of my voice 
dissolving in the air.

porch on the moon  / Jess Bowe

tethered to rock, gray with waiting, 
bone dry, a face on the night –
i see you from the deep sea of space,
imaginary and ghostlike, paper swords,
a plume of worry from the smokestack
of the mind. it’s cold here, a home
diminished and returning. i can almost
feel the golden kiss placed constant
on your blue skin. i can almost feel
the bracket of living you most often
refuse – the ordinary shade of an oak
so familiar, you’ve stopped asking his name;
the seahorse, her three-beat cantor,
salt in her seaweed mane. the orange, 
still round on the branch. the subway car, 
its endless journey, bottomless pocket 
of noise and play and microbial
hands. you must believe it to be small,
your sight heavy with unanswerable 
asks of why. you must believe it 
a dark and creatured place. i can almost
hear it from here, the bombs you speak
of, fire eating what history can’t save,
licking the streets clean and bare
of anything worth passing to the open
hands of Someday. can you hear
me through the traffic between us?
can you count the stars to my front door?
i see you in heaven; globe of summer 
fruit, plump and sweet, promise
at the open mouth of eternity. 

Haibun: On the repetition of history  / Joanna Lee

Like a funeral procession, a line of police cruisers, sirens mute in the before-dawn, their evenly paced convoy heading south on Chamberlayne, taillights a string of fire as they exit the ramp north into darkness. All week there’s been reports: Short Pump, Chesterfield, Church Hill… now Southside: Hull and Warwick, just down the road. The temperature is falling. Small birds hop in pale twittering circles across the cold cement patio. Behind the counter, the barista waves each patron out the door, on instinct calling be safe more often than see ya round

 

like five summers back,
the body remembering
a same swoop-sick fear


An Erasure of an Erased Message from March 2020  / Thomas Page

I wanted to update you with what is happening with Ari. Mom and I went with her to the Howard County Medical Center after she had called mom. They requested an ambulance and she was taken to Johns Hopkins in Baltimore. They think it’s Leukemia. It’s what they feared. Mom is really stressing now. Can you drive Ari’s car from the Howard County parking lot? Mom also wants you to buy some gifts for dad’s birthday. Maybe giftcards? She wants you to do it before the quarantine. She’s on the phone with dad now. How is your meeting going? What time can you leave work? Mom said that you said that you asked for a sub for your meeting. I don’t feel well myself.

Cherry Picking in Pasa Robles 1945 / Sarah Paley

You look pretty up on the ladder
in your capri dungarees – your bobby
socks slumped down around your sneakers.
The night before, you tied one on, danced
in the dusty streets and shouted
at the locals about how you hated
their western town, their hick ways.
Now you’re feeling different surrounded
by the branches heavy with fruit. You
hand the baskets down to men who have
done this work before. You, you’re just broke
and out on a lark. Years from now you’ll grab
a tiny plastic saber and stab a maraschino cherry
out of a cocktail glass and declare: I picked that!


Dusty Learns to Drink Water  / Amy Snodgrass

Something I didn't know: newborn kittens don’t know how to drink. I found him, 
discarded, holding on, in a plastic bag, in an empty lot, under a warm drizzling rain. 


We built a strange partnership: six weeks of every-two-hour feedings, droppers, 
formula, warmth. Time passes, of course, and now, somehow, it is time to wean. 


Another thing I didn’t know: kittens prefer to drink from wide and flat receptacles, 
not bowls. I set out a wide, flat green plate, a field for his new and necessary adventure.  


Thirst, and instinct, and no mother but me: so gigantic and strange. He has to teach himself. 
At the first wet touch on the tip of his nose, he starts and shakes and sneezes, hopping back 


like a frog in reverse. Mini-splashes ripple again and again. I tire before he does and so, 
distracted, I miss the moment, damn it.  I miss his choice to stay and see what happens 


if he doesn’t start or shake. I miss his determined overcoming.  By the end of the day 
he has it: lapping. I stare, awash with regret and awe. Just this morning he still had to learn. 


Just this morning he didn’t know. Just this morning he depended on me.  It is hard 
to remember now, the not-drinking. It seems as if he had always done it, as if his mother 


had taught him, as if that plastic bag were being used to wrap a sandwich 
somewhere else instead, as if the confusions of the past never existed. 


But they did, and they do, and they will: as essential and mysterious as weaning, as water. 

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 20

Other Fairies / Haley Bosse

You were born in a year 
of lesser fires 
and unrung quakes. 

The worst you faced 
were children sick around you 
and then, of course, 
a fever of your own. 

We lay curled 
and sweat-stuck 
into blankets. 

When the rain started or 
when the rain stopped, 
we pulled ourselves up
to learn its dance. 

Look, the moon said,
and there we were.

good on paper  / Jess Bowe

some people don’t try hard enough when it’s hard,
i’ve heard. some people make rash decisions.
some people don’t let the lovemaking heal them
after the last fight. there’s a folded packet
of paper in my old bag, sitting on my closet
shelf. i never asked what to do with it, so i kept
it at the bottom of the dark. i wonder what home
we’d have today. we'd probably fight about the elk
antlers. they don’t belong in the living room. 
you’d probably be asleep on the couch after work.
your brother would still hate me. i’d still 
be counting minutes into the morning
for the booze to lift and the beer to wash
itself out of my hallways. somewhere inside 
of us are two kids: one listening to you read,
one laying on my bedroom floor after the funeral.


Poem I write while packing up the Christmas tree ornaments  / Joanna Lee

I did not mean to be thinking of you.
I was just stealing a few minutes
before dinner to tuck
your little glass angels
into their bubble wrap sleeves,
stack the crystal-and-gold snow-
flakes precisely one atop the other.
And yet here we are, the ghost
of your cigarette smoke
staining the bottom of each box
like cheap fingernail polish, a yellow
memory.
Funny, I can see you
in your red sweater, arm
over the back of the couch,
the cigarette in your hand.
I have heard your voice on repeat
in my dreams, and one cold clear day,
it emerged out of my own lungs
when another car collided lightly
with mine. But I cannot see you
take the smoke into your body.
Not remember how you must
have lifted it to your lips.
Only hear the cough—a wound
of gravel and gauze born
far from the ocean & which leaves me
imagining that last hospital night,
what it must
have felt like finally to run
out of breath,
and no one listening.

 

I did not mean to be thinking of you.
You, too, always hated this job.


Embrace   / Thomas Page

The doctor left you in the room in tears 
saying that if all else fails in the dead 
of night that it would be the sum of fears
that if you were to die that night in bed 
then it wouldn’t be a surprise, he said 
in a manner so clinical you froze
thinking of everything inside your head—
I remember how long you held me close.


You turned to me when the shock loosened gears 
turned in your head. Take your brother, you pled, 
home so you all can sleep in our home years 
settled in the dirt.
Your face was all red
holding back the severity that spread
deep in your eyes trying to not wet throes 
as our own hearts were beginning to shred— 
I remember how long you held me close 


Gingerly walking over to you with spears
in my gut, knelt down to embrace you stead-
fastly, you whispered soft prayers in my ears,
your arms trying to cleave cleanly with thread
me to you that I could maybe have led
you away from all of the rubble those 
realities piping wet poisoned lead— 
I remember how long you held me close 


O princely doctors, whose words sharp as sheers
upon a precipice they don’t mince prose
the way you cut briar roses with shears—
I remember how long you held me close. 

Summer Blagoveshchenck, 1828  / Sarah Paley

(mistranslation after Pushkin)

Calico cats, centipedes, monkeying goats, dog,
NOT funny, humble bumblebees taking
their morning prambles and blitzing Bluebells & anything
NOT red. The thrush plays harp strings –
B to not so minor C to B because he likes a timeline
yet tomorrow’s hero trills
B crescendoing to a howl that resembles the express
from Tiadavostock to Irtusk
Screaming through fields of cabbage and barley. Tick-tock,
station masters shapes appear and mock...
ButImissmyplace! Six months ago none of this
could happen but the passing seconds...
No, not C! Anything but C in any key. Mellow
a penalty not spoken
No, I’ll repeat for the silent spider, no kangaroos can
hop de hop near this clamor.

Hope  / Amy Snodgrass

(Thank you, Carolyn Herman, for the prompt!)


Things I both love and hate:
speed bumps
Ziploc bags
saddles
lorazepam
K-cup coffee makers
calluses on my toes
wind


Things I only love:
those birds passing overhead, looking like petals swept up in a dance
this close silence tempered just enough by distant monkeys howling
the constellation of freckles on my daughter's cheek
an assuaging of my fears by any means
all the chances I get to leap, literally or figuratively, with my son
light reflected in water
a horse’s forelock


Things I only hate:  
Plenty, but I will give them no platform here.


How wonderful, wonderful, to re-invent ourselves.
You can always stand up, even if everyone knows you as a coward.
You can (of course!) begin to flood the world with kindness even if 
you have been known (for years!) as the bitch. 
You can choose to assuage someone’s fears (mine, if you like) rather 
than stoke them. 


Listen.
Ride bareback.
Go barefoot.
Buy a glass French press.
Curl into the skirt of a sequoia until the gusts soften into breeze.
Invest in a Bento box and forgive yourself for the rest.  How wonderful, wonderful. Wonderful, and just right. 

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 19

Doom Scrolling / Haley Bosse

How many                   hours of the day                      am I supposed
            to let the soft animal              of my body
smash itself                 against the world?                  How
                        does anyone               survive more than a single moment
of wet sparks searing             across the folding                   of their brain?
            Today, I watched a shrimp search                  through its horde of tiny stones,
                        taking each into its mouth      and sucking quickly                 before letting
what couldn’t serve it             fall away.                     Look,                                       I said,              
I can even see              its heart,                      searched,
            Do shrimp                   have skin or                 cartilage or                  something
else protecting them?
                        Some days, I don’t remember                        to fear
how much                   I haven’t seen.


every dream i can remember  / Jess Bowe

women washing hats at the stream
at the stone wall, lining hats
in the sunlight, lining men’s 
hats in the morning, hats bathed
in river water, hats brimming
and stacked in the morning of war.


tunnels in and out of small white
houses, village tunnels, tunnels
built by women, mapped by mothers,
guarded by traditions of secrets,
elders at the mouth and door
of each tunnel, mountainous hallways,
mud and plastered tunnels, voices
carried, final note of the root
generation kisses the head of each
first note carried through the tunnel
like blood like blood like blood
through the body.


see them from here, top of the hill,
see them from here, dirtied foreign lights,
see them from here, out of sight,
see them from here, no distance 
is a safe one, no silence is a favor,
no quiet is without sound, 
cars and bodies perpendicular
marking lines of ruin across the map. 


the safest place is with each other.
the safest place is with a woman.
the safest place is a covered crown.
the safest place is a tunnel
  of mothers and grandmothers
carrying ahead of us torches
and stories our mouths
keep swollen and armored.


North with the wind in the left eye  / Joanna Lee

--for Aloka, the Peace Dog, on a successful recovery

 

 

toenails click
weary miles

 

velvet paws
threadbare

 

asphalt
longings

 

heart tattoo
quiet

 

find the path
never lost

 

furled wagging
to spring

 

opening
purple tulips

 

in January—
namaste.


Commiserate  / Thomas Page 

You’d think that 
you’re 
the only person on
Earth who has to deal
with the unbearable, crushing weight of another person entire existence
on your 
shoulders like the beleaguered Atlas groaning 
when the world asked him 
to turn winters
into the summers of youth.


You’d think that this is a brand new 
experience—a vision of your eternal torment for one sin
like the vole pierced by the shrike
who dared to venture out into the clear day—
pierce your heart
whenever they 
ask how you
are doing dealing with everything that is heaped 
onto your worn shoulders—
a cynocephalic saint in river water.


You’d think
that you’re as alone as hermits
chasing away golden demons
or silvery promises 
whenever you pray
for times like these to evaporate like smoke
from steaming thuribles 
swayed slowly 
in a rubricked, Roman rite that you 
never wish to hear their name as the intention.


You’d think that you say

           

and drive
far away to a desert resort and sleep
all day in the stale, airless hotel room
and order all day 
margaritas 
too watery, too full of salt, and too expensive 
to justify this personal time to yourself 
later.


You’d think that you could sometimes 
sleep in after the morning glories open up fully
and birds roost 
before the world realizes you’re not dead and buried 
able to wash dishes, plates, cups, spoons, and forks
and clean toilets
that are somehow pulpier they were
the night before when you 
said 

                      

You’d think that you’d be
appreciated for all the work you do around here
especially since 


has decided for the both of you that they’re
too busy to help out with the care of
the only one y’all
have left in this cruel world that gave y’all
only two to care 
for your whole lives.


You’d think that you’d never
be understood by the rest of the world 
because it’s 


and expected but never really talked about 
in polite society because it’s a downer
to talk about terminal care with those who avoid
their
loved ones who are suffering 
before their very eyes. 


Sloth  / Sarah Paley

Let us now turn our attention to the Sloth
who lives and dies in the trees.
Let us do justice to him.
He is scarce, solitary.
He inhabits remote and gloomy forests
surrounded by snakes.
His neighbors cruel ants and scorpions,
below him swamps and thorny shrubs.
He has no soles on his feet – none.
His countenance wormwood.
Does he ask for our pity?
If he knew our thoughts
he would outstretch his arm.


anxiety / attack  / Amy Snodgrass

what what / to Xanax or not to Xanax / what what / coming on / from an inner realm of blood / a volcano or a wave pool / or something else–it’s me, right?–that begins with an unseen shift / a subtle rumble / tumbles then shakes something loose / something / what what / is wrong with me / I’m scared / what what / to know / to not know / spoon crashes / ringing in my ears / silence ringing no / silence bouncing off membranes / sending that shudder / its neuron push / and go / what what / and go on / do it / remember / standing there by the bench / by the Charles / then again / under the Bluff Park overpass grasping the chainlink / walk walk away / pounding the road / walk walk / fall / curling on the kitchen floor / just a two-liter Sprite / what what / cool tile / for days / yeah but Susan Sontag / and Lorelai Gilmore / and Joan Didion with her migraines / all get me and that’s / what what / I need / to feel ok / when I get the what whats / what what please just / get me

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 18

On the Brightness of Pain / Haley Bosse

Like a peach pit rattling loose
In your pocket, overalls
Several days unwashed, wet 
From creek forging
And sweat soaking, perpetually
Drying and re-soaking,
Silk of saturated skin rubbing
Raw on the split seems,
Fingers curled into rough tools,
Face tilting in the blister
Of the sunlight, cloud bursting,
Break in the trees biting 
At the roots of your eyeballs, 
Sharp creak and rustling,
Every call of an animal,
Much too small and alive. 

sadie  / Jess Bowe

i’ve read that circles 
don’t exist to perfection
in form, yet you, held

up to be seen, first
light of my eyes — new round face
a slow-blinking sun.

mathematical 
equation pulled from stardust,
i’d sit with you, glass

between hand and Love. 
seventeen days of praying 
for air to fill you. 

i laugh at infinity,
electric beneath your hair. 


Not pictured in this image  / Joanna Lee

How through the long afternoon we sit
in a back booth at our favorite Mexican joint holding our eyes

 

against the little vestibule that serves as entryway.
We head out only as the daylight burns itself off,

 

turning our noses to the sky, the wet smoke of snow
maybe to come, the prayers traced on our breaths reaching

 

out into the young night like slight child’s fingers—afraid
of what the darkness touches, eager

 

to find a solid door between it and home.

When they don’t know what “terminal” means  / Thomas Page

Reviewed test results with patient // & diagnoses // & care plan // & new medications // asked patient what his preferred pharmacy was // he nodded // explained that the dosage would upped // based on the recommendation // of the cardiologist // he nodded // asked if his living will was up-to-date // he nodded // patient asked if he needed a referral // I explained that the surgeon would probably not do the procedure // due to his age // & risks // & potential complications // he nodded // said that he also thought // that it wasn’t necessary // asked if he had chosen a proxy yet // he nodded // said that his eldest had volunteered // to make any decisions regarding that // that she had asked him // to outfit his house // with ramps // & said // no // I’ll be fine // asked if he had any final questions // he nodded // & said // no // I’ll be fine

Five Ones  / Sarah Paley

When it’s cold we wear long johns
and over them snow suits.
Thus padded we have trouble moving.
There is comfort
and discomfort in it.



We step like astronauts out in the snow, crunch through the crust
and sink into the soft stuff below. We. make our ways to the bank
of the Mohawk River, breaking the pristine plateau into one path
with two narrow gullies – five left feet in one,
five right feet in the other.


One will be sent out as a probe on to the ice. If safe, one will go ahead
with a shovel creating corridors that form a giant maze.
Two are instantly graceful – one stumbles,
one assumes a racer’s stance,
one pops an imaginary starter’s pistol.



If there is wind we unfold the old sheets carried under our bulky arms,
one grabs the top and bottom corner, the other one the opposite corners. We stretch
our arms wide and make sails – catching gusts
to propel us to the big island
and beyond.



Four = two human ice boats.
One chases after them, gives up
and makes
circles
ever
widening.

The Smoke of the Copal   / Amy Snodgrass

after Jim Simmerman’s Twenty Little Poetry Projects 


The howler monkeys can be heard over the sound bath tonight: my former lives
swinging back around. I isolate the sounds perfectly and pour each one
into its own glass beaker. I smell hope in the smoke of the copal and watch 
its wisps spiral. The mint I unwrapped in the car lingers on my tongue.


The beads on the pillow given to me look lovely but feel rough and pull my 
hair like taffy if taffy carried a syringe. I taste the prick and flinch. Francis next
to me catches my eyes in question but the rules of La Senda are clear: silence, 
introspection, eye closed. I smell despair in the copal and watch its wisps come 


at me in revenge. For what, I don’t know, but I think one of the monkeys 
could clock it. I need to find the right one since our dinner depends on it.  
Quero uma garrafa de água gelada. The sparkling beakers of promise sit 
in a line filled with my past. One could chug them like poison but this is 


not that kind of story. Instead I latch onto the smoke of the copal and wisp
my way out of the dome. No one notices la chintanita is gone, because 
of the rules. All eyes will remain shut, all souls will keep introspect, all
voices will continue in silence. The promisingly predictive monkeys watch


my swirling self approach. (Do not believe any of most of these lines.) 
The trees absorb me before I even come close to the howlers. “They
have moved on,” the trees say. “Let them go. The revenge was a mirage.
You have come so far to become it and it is no longer. Look ahead, 


walk on.” Back on my blue and beaded pillow, I smell love in the smoke 
of the copal. The beakers have been tilted and spilt by unseen paws.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 17

On Staying / Haley Bosse

Today, the poem
is just waking up. 

Just now, the poem
crossed the bank

at the end  
of the night. 

For a breath,
the poem is not

a pole
through the stomach

of the roadside
or the shadows


hunting mice
through the wet wheels

on the asphalt. 
The poem only traces 

light beams, unending
through the fog and

today, you are still
the poem

and no one
has to sing. 


to dwell: a found poem / Jess Bowe

with lines drawn from Where Two Worlds Meet — Janet Nohavec

break the sound–
bells, rain, waves.


between breaths, 
climb inside 
the air. 


house every detail 
you can hold.


Dear Abby  / Joanna Lee

   --to Abigail Spanberger on the day of her inauguration

 

I work across the river from the Governor’s Mansion, where the jet engines and cannon fire are hardly noticeable over the noise of customer chatter and espresso grind. Parade or no, the James keeps rolling along to the same quiet questions, people are dying just crossing the street, ICE is shacked up at a hotel down in Midlo, and the country as a whole is the scariest place I’ve ever been. Day over day, time stitches its quick way through our hands. They are coming. The signal fires are lit. So, what I want to know is this: hypothetically speaking, if you were the first woman governor of a blue state in a nation barely holding itself together, would you bar the door between a stranger and the night, a shield for the disappeared? Would you fight the fear of silence with the last breath of a mother’s ribcage? Would you cross the river, for me, stand shoulder to shoulder as thunder breaks and the banks rise and dawn rises in doubt?

 

Asking for a friend.

 

            ---RAINED ON IN RICHMOND

When they don’t know what “hospice” means   / Thomas Page

The patient’s family nodded when I reviewed hospice protocols // they seemed satisfied with the care that we were going to provide // patient’s daughter asked for more acetaminophen for the patient // told patient’s daughter that he was already prescribed aspirin by Dr.— // & that patient had received 325 mg with meal // asked patient if he wanted to see the chaplain // patient asked for a priest // explained that the catholic chaplain is only chaplain // Fr.— does his rounds on thursdays // suggested that daughter call patient’s local parish today // she scribbled down a number for the parish on a napkin // & asked how often I would be checking in on patient // explained that nurses come around as much as possible // & that what we focused most on was making patient comfortable // patient asked me to open window // so that he could feel the air waft in // patient’s daughter asked me when patient was expected to be released

My Mother’s Decisive Assertion  / Sarah Paley

I assert most decidedly that I am dead.
You may hear my voice on your phone.
Though I am not there, only in your head.


You may see me in gestures or something you read –
be jolted by my presence in your bottle of wine.
I assert most decidedly that I am dead.


Shopping for your son you stop to look at a bunkbed
that he’s too old for. It’s just the one I had in mind,
though I’m not there, only in your head.


When you talk to yourself is it your voice or something I said?
Never mind, who cares? Except for you and me, no one.
I assert most decidedly that I am dead.


Inscribed title pages, carrots, otters, vodka, sea gulls,
locks the kind that let water in and out not the kind
with keys. I’m not there, only in your head.


Give me the benefit of the doubt, the break I need.
I will not call, I will not write, I will be gone
and I insist most decidedly that I am dead –
it’s only you. Still, I am there, in your head.



after all the unbearable footage  / Amy Snodgrass

unsure how I can write 


a poem tonight     I’m too


afraid


anxiety eludes 


metaphor


but metaphor 


chases       stomach gliding the ground

      

anxiety begins


from a regenerating and 


shifting/shifty center 


it begins on a frozen and evil-strewn street swarming 


it becomes an unheard-of snake writhing in 


me     unseen


from the inside pressing out


on my blood 


on my breath


it coils up many-tailed


one wraps


my throat sharp aloft  


another nudges my right


hand


in gentle fury


a double agent it hisses 


wriiiitte

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 16

A Maybe Ode to the Lips Mouthing Along to Protesters’ Chants / Haley Bosse

But no ode to the officer. 
No odes to joining what has been shown
Again and again and again
And again and again and again
To want to kill my neighbors.
So ode to the police officer’s neighbors,
Who are also my neighbors. 
Ode to their tears, watching 
Masked men take our neighbors.
Ode to the dream where 
My neighbors bring back 
Our missing neighbors. Ode 
To nights where no death 
Steals the dreams of my neighbors,
Though we don’t get many 
Anymore, calm nights 
Where my neighbors 
Walk slow through the clouds
Of warm jasmine lifting
From the trellis of our neighbors,
Nights where anything seems possible
Or at least present,
All of us breathing
Wherever we are and not
Being suffocated or shot
Or stolen by men who hide
Their faces. When I still dream,
My neighbors all have faces,
Though I’ve been told 
That it’s not possible
To imagine anyone I haven’t met,
To love anyone I don’t know.
I don’t know
How many of my neighbors 
Have been taken. I don’t know 
How they’re being harmed
Behind fences and walls and beyond
The reach of cameras as I sit awake
All through the night and don’t dream. 
I am awake and awake and awake 
And awake and awake and awake 
And my neighbors are not here.


and also / Jess Bowe

i am here. blue sheets. two 
windows. baby, asleep. dog 
rearranging on the downstairs
couch. night moving further
in to the center of my circling
thoughts. i am here, and also


in the part of an ocean i can’t name
where hands turn to nothing
and humans go from god to shell.
whalesong is caught by a cave
untouched, held deep in the jaw
of the earth. i am here, and also


in the streets on a road 
where a father taught his son
to balance without caution
where a father taught his son
to make friends with every fall,


is the sound of birds
and no bird to be seen,
brick to brick to brick
the bounce of a whistle
trills a long night ahead.


i am here, and also
i can’t bring myself
anywhere but places
that appear to be drowning
in deep water,
swimming with sharks.


somewhere in the mouth 
of the Dark emerges 
language, ancient, stitched 
across the belly of sleep.


Point of Entry  / Joanna Lee

I’ve only once been to Minnesota.
A medical school interview,
an ancient history. Early December,
snow falling for the first time.

 

The light of it, slightly pink in the dusk,
flakes like thousands of tiny God fingers
brushing down on a hard planet.
The hospital parking lot fluorescing

 

pools of warmth, a familiarity.
We know each other, it said. Be welcome here.
So quiet, you forgot to be afraid.
Goosebumps of hope like only the young get.

 

So much wonder between that moment
and this, God taking the snowglobe
of their grand experiment
and giving it a good shake, and now

 

you can’t look away /you can’t not
write about it, even at such a distance,
so many unknowns: the slickness of time, its trembling
recitations of history and promise—

 

What if I had been there still?
What if it had been you
waiting at the door, boots on the mat?
What if it hadn’t been snowing,

 

no God fingers, no ice?
What good could we have done/can
we do/what good is a poem anyway
against batons, rubber bullets?

Knight-Errant  / Thomas Page

A knight errant; his own wandering page
must take ahold of his blades and sabers 
when he goes to fight the wyvern. Some sage 
words of remainders bound the page’s labors 
to tarry over yonder to neighbor-
lands in a quarry for some forgotten 
symbols of battle; cymbal or tabor 
rallying the knights in indigo’d cotton
dyed with oxidized blood running rotten 
down their sides; a mimicry of their Lord; 
passion to strip the old world of jotun.
A page comes to his old knight’s body gored.
A knight errant whispers blood in his beard:
“It is everything that I have e’er feared.” 


Litany  / Sarah Paley

The other day I was telling my son about an order of monks who lived circa 600 AD who catalogued and ranked everything. Everything on earth and in heaven, They’d sit at their tall desk and arrange and rearrange their lists all day, every day.

Seraphim,
cherubs,
treetops,
bird’s nests,
green…

and so on. All the way down to

toothworm,
toenail,
maggot
plague

As I explained my son interrupted: “That is the perfect job for you.” He’s right
but what he doesn’t know is I’ve been at it all my life. I start upon waking and go
till sleep. Sometimes even while I sleep.

Just now,

a man pushing a dog in a baby carriage


This job of mine has no end. No one gave it to me. Judge, place, sort, Judge, place,

sort.
leaf of a scarlet oak
older gentleman tenderly holding his wife’s elbow
the whorl of pigeons above the steeple
a sharpened pencil,
the lone hellebore on 10 th street
man asleep on sidewalk with no shoes
coffee cup lids
stickers on fruit
my attitude
a sudden memory of his/her death
ICE agents dragging a woman from her car
famine
war….


It doesn’t have to be done but it’s done.


The Antecedent of It is Grief   / Amy Snodgrass

Take it with you when you ride.  
Rub it into your saddle to condition and protect.  
Then let your sweat and the rainwater dissolve 
it over time and carry it far away to the sea.  


Let it, as you paint a snail, become the yellow you dab 
onto the antennae, creating the reflected light you 
see when you remember her hands. It will live there 
on the page, holding her in place in golden drops. 


Let it, as you draft in your notebook, be teenytiny 
letters, written for fun, to see if you can 
read them later: like a code, private just for you.


Let it, as you stand in her kitchen, flow through 
your cracks like olive oil through penne, softening 
and loosening them for all that will come. 


Let it laugh at that penne metaphor.  
You know she would laugh, too.  Hear her.


Please: turn those tiny messages and pasta metaphors 
into poems. Believe you have a gift worth giving. 
Let it be that belief. They have the same ending anyway. 


But mostly, as you hike every year up her bluegreen hill, 
let it be in every tree you pass: in the bark and in the roots, in the 
pine cones and the sap, in the glowing char from a controlled fire.  

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 15

living ghosts / Jess Bowe

Tolerance  / Joanna Lee

Sirens
were once  

 

bird-bodied
women if you

 

believe the old
myths, their echo-wail

 

through the nightwash
breaking darkness into

 

startled shards, luring
us too close

 

to the rocks. In this
instance they are distant—

 

a black train through
a black tunnel, headed

 

south, the sound waves
receding or

 

a tide going out:
someone somewhere

 

dying, but not
any neighbors

 

we know.
No one

 

is tying us
to the masts

 

plugging our ears.
Nowadays

 

they’re more a track
in our shuffled

 

trauma
playlist that comes up

 

at least once
a day, a reflexive  

 

audible Father,
Son, Holy Ghost
, white

 

noise colored
red. Someone

 

somewhere is dying,
but a fortnight

 

into the new year
and this city

 

has of yet no
reported homicides.

 

That has to mean something
right? In the cold

 

stillness of pre-dawn,
the streetlight beside

 

the vape shop’s
dumpster holds

 

the light
of a north star.




A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Your Celebration of Life  / Thomas Page

You always reminded me to cut my lines
like the plaque away from my teeth but I was bad
at making a metaphor feel short. Regardless,
I wanted to write about when I was driving
to your Celebration of Life when I saw
a red Camry that had pulled into the left
lane to turn onto Lynn from Gunn Highway.
In the back, with his face pressed against
the window was a child staring intently
at me as I drove past. When we made eye-
contact, the child lifted his hand with
his middle finger pressed against the glass
and sneered at me. Sneered at me, an innocent
man just driving to a celebration of life.
What had I and my dirty silver Focus
done to this nine-year-old child to make
a crude reference to pheasant under glass?
After I drove past, I was miffed at first then
laughed at the absurdity of it all. 




Courage  / Sarah Paley

Harold Smith, the elevator operator
lets the daughters of the dead tenant
formerly in 2A pray out in the corridor
in front of the deceased’s apartment.
“I’m gonna have to tell them they can’t no
more at some point.” he says. “It’s kind of creepy
but it makes them feel better…” Marco
the Super isn’t aware. “Oh, man, if he
finds out...” Harold doesn’t finish the thought.
He shakes the Super out of his head: “You ever
meet Mickey Rooney?... No? I did. He bought
suits from my father’s store.” He adjusts the lever.
The wooden box he has manned for thirty years
opens. “Nice guy.” Sunlight and interlopers appear.

Fussing about in the Branches  / Amy Snodgrass

after Jimmy Santiago Baca


8:15pm: I am still awake thanks only 
to the testosterone pellet inserted in my side.  
The incision itches but I have more 
pep in my step, and I am glad for it.


Stretched out here on my gray couch, 
I allow my arched thickness to send me 
on its favorite ride: the Pride-Shame roller 
coaster. Cresting the first hill, I gaze at my 
children’s art on the wall across the room.


Pop! A wolf howls! A snake meant to be eating its own
tail escapes that fate (Seemingly a miracle, this saving of 
a life more likely happened because of underdeveloped 
spatial awareness.) and an elephant trumpets a stream 
of confetti back over itself onto a triangle holding three 
balloons, all representing, in my hopeful mind, two 
childhoods going well. Happy.


I wear my menopause–loony and beautiful–like a lined 
and woolen cloak. I am equal parts 1) sunk under its weight 
and 2) enthralled with swinging it out and around like 
a detective, superhero, knight, magician. I can be anyone 
I want now!  


I still have to check my son on the tracking app, though, 
to make sure he’ll be home by 9. And my daughter will 
pop out at any minute—I hope I hope I hope—with a story 
and a plan. 


But me? I am being reborn: howling whenever I want, 
dancing under fantastic elephant confetti, no longer eating 
my tail. Who knew? Who knew, all that time I thought 
my children were doing art projects to develop their 
creativity and their prefrontal cortexes when all along, 
they were actually building my future, handing it to me 
on a canvas, setting it on a shelf next to a broken vase 
and a rusted horseshoe, open side up.


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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 14

One More Ride Home from School Together / Haley Bosse

I’ve realized why we’re here.

 

Let your forehead freckle,
rumple of something
I am too afraid to prick.

 

How do you feel
about this thing of darkness
a minute astride?
The scampering heart,
the hitch in the night.

 

Come and look.
We passed your family
waiting at home.

 

Little not-bird,
even beyond,
you have to learn how to swim.

 

I must stop here.

Words scavenged from Charlie Mackesy, Lidia Yuknavitch, Liz Robbins, Kai Cheng Thom, Monica Ojeda, Emma Jones, Christopher Tang, and Shelley Thomas.

a war of one kind / Jess Bowe

tendrils in the back
is what the shaman told me.
like an octopus.


but surely not as 
wise, an animal like him.
surely not as kind.


my insides spiral.
i am every woman with
a blade in her womb,


bleeding on the skirts
of history, silenced as a 
sniper on the roof.


we are the weapon, our mouths
of grenades and poetry.

Every six months  / Joanna Lee

In the elevator of the cancer center parking garage,
a red-haired woman across from us
is giving me the once-over:
with puffy coat & chunky-
heeled boots hiding my mini-dress,
i’m the giraffe in a candy store
holding your hand while we stalk through security
and to the next set of elevators,
only to sit & sit in a darkening waiting room.

 

one thirty-nine over seventy-eight.
your blood pressure before they stick
the tube with the camera up your nose & down
your throat. my eyes slide
between the screen and your face
as if i could catch one of them lying, admitting pain.
your vocal cords a half-frozen glossy pink horseshoe
on the monitor, your voice remembering old scars,
the doctor’s arms relaxing as he leans back
against the counter: nothing new.

 
this time, you do not use the pocketknife
in your glovebox to cut off the hospital ID.
on the way over the bridge, stuck in a line
of taillights like a river of fire so i’ll never
make my six o’clock poetry event, you
remark instead on the sunset.
we both look up out the windshield
at the deepening blues, crimson-
streaked, something to see.  


Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum  / Thomas Page

we all went down after the snowbirds re-
turned to the great outdoors where alliga-
tors and egrets gather in communion
in the cool, salty air of januar-
y. all stuffed in a minivan without 
coats or sweaters, when we arrived at the 
museum i remember how quickly you’d 
went to the ticket counter making sure 
that we’d all be able to look at the 
warbirds in the hangars. the air was cold-
er inside of the metal cage holding 
these birds that, according to your tour, were 
used to the balmy airs far out west when 
you flew helicopters. the sterile, gray 
concrete nearly camouflaged the arti-
facts held down by chains and breaks you asked to 
have the curator to open the ca-
bin doors so that we all could see inside. 


Metamorphosis  / Sarah Paley

Black rocks slick with slimy green, I re-call
and grey scummy soap suds floating back
and forth over us. So many yesterdays
but they flash involuntarily and bid
me to acknowledge a sense of time
and chronicle as it’s not possible to return.

If I could know what I do now I’d return.
I’d return to eat the sunken cala
lily – my first meal- oh so good. And that time
Ann and Adrianne and I ate the Brush-back
algae and got drunk on the turbid
stuff. We couldn’t tell today from yesterday.

From above our watery ceiling we heard: “Yesterday
when I was young…” A song about a man’s return
to his youthful dreams. Ann said it made her li-BID-o
sing. Li-What? We didn’t even know to call
a song a song but suddenly we were off. Back
Street Boys boomed from a dock and Time

after Time made Adrianne cry every time.
We swam in circles and listened to it on days
they played it off the boats above. Back
then three polly-wogs who didn’t return
to the shallows were presumed eaten and called
fish sticks. We’d show up, our tails shorter and bid

them goodnight or good morning. We three bid
one another with wishes for a longer time
together. Adrianne sprouted legs first. We called
after her as she crawled ashore. We backed
away and watched. Then I too couldn’t return,
couldn’t stop the changes. No more yesterdays,

not the ones we knew. And now the yesterdays
are everywhere I look. Rivet, rivet I bid
thee the farewell I didn’t get to return
to say. Changes happen – nothing time
can stop though I can’t stop looking back.
Polly wolly doodle. Any requests? Last call.
Call back yesterday, bid time return.

Letting Go of Grief  / Amy Snodgrass

You glide across the overgrown, root-filled hill. 
Cell phones meant to light the way distort you,
make you enormous, looming to the arching attics
in wavy shifting layers, reminding your daughter– 


barefoot behind you–of her anime, ominous and dark:
“Let’s watch together when we get home. Promise?”
Your mother’s absence hovers, sends tendrils that trail 
wisp-like into your bloodstream, attacking from all sides.


But still and of course you promise. 


You gaze up as canopy arms spread and Orion rises.


Later, home: sand-and-salt-filled clothes
in the washing machine, you fulfill your 
promise, fraught with prophecy and fire.  
You hold her elbow in the cup of your palm.


She crumbles softly into sleep.  As you shake 
a gray sheet out over her, you decide. You put 
your clothes in the dryer.  You will shrink that 
titan-sized shadow into one small glowing square. 


And later, as she rests, you will fold it and store it, 
high up and away.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 13

Everything, After Everything Else / Haley Bosse

Larvae

to—

wing sprout

Dawn—

freckled

with buzzing—

Moon

&—

crunch of steps

well / Jess Bowe

at the onset of curtain-fall across my eyes,
vision, glowing neon and broken apart
with patterned shape and dancing lines–
She calls from somewhere off-planet,
breaking the barrier of Time, swimming
in the canal of my ear, siren song
like Home. and i go, door of ink-swallowed
night unlocked and smiling. down 
the corridor of greenery, the long pool
a mirror angels come to see. drink,
her hands tell me, cupped and full
of cold stone water. ancestors below
the tree, mothers turned mycelium,
arrive to my throat as soldiers
of light and ice-born fire. songs 
known only to my cells echo the chambers
of metronome, cymatic grids
of symmetry bound for my bloodstream.
this is what it means to be well,
i hear me say, sight soft and able,
seven mere minutes against the hardwood.

Haibun-adjacent Semi-Ekphrastic Confessional with Uncomfortable Pauses : When I scroll before bedtime / Joanna Lee

or, tbh, on lunchbreak, or drinking coffee & catching headlines before leaving for work in the mornings, I keep coming back to this picture that doesn’t exist:    I am fourteen. Seated at our kitchen table of varnished blonde           wood, the kitchen lights fluorescing,    the kitchen-yellow linoleum bewilderingly bright.      I am   bawling.           Just back from catechism class,

where we’ve watched   Schindler’s List   in lieu of a Bible lesson.    Bawling.      My face is caught in the cage of my hands, then,          in slow motion,     my hands fall and I’m gaping up at the overheads like they might   have answers.       I don’t            understand. My teenage brain can’t process it  :              how so many were allowed      to die   while others went about their lives, sucked                  their cigarettes, conducted their business.        The trains,   the camps,       that these things                                                                      were                 

while life          elsewhere went on.      It doesn’t compute.                  My mother, the smoke             from her just-extinguished Salem Light curling empty into the air, stands at the other end of the table,            helpless.

 

 

As if a sky can
be empty,         all those questions
rising up to God

Limericks for Lowly Caretakers  / Thomas Page

I once knew a man who was very smart 
who memorized foreign verses by heart. 
He ate seven buckets of table cream 
and washed it down with beers like a stream. 
He got up passed me and let out a—


Regal gadzooks and blasted bazookas 
how could I ever imagine these days 
that I’d be the one taking care of ye
under a yellow fog smelling of flea 
that eats what those Spaniards call—


I’m not the only one who’s been affected
by these ghastly attacks orchestrated. 
The problem in this household is severe 
enough that it’s been a request sincere 
that I write about those poor—


Every day it’s been “Oh, Tommy, my son,
the one who writes about sadness for fun,
please write about our daily contritions 
based on the one’s various indigestions 
give rise to the thick airs that always stun. 

Doubting  / Sarah Paley

Do I remember frozen trees screaming in winter?
Blueberries filled with blood in summer?
Inhaling tulips till I understood their way of thinking?
Were the apples in DeVoe’s orchards larger than my head?
Did the earthworms have faces with actual expressions on them?
How did Mr. Hill learn to speak to the raccoons he kept in the parlor of his double wide?
Can it be that Mr. Rosen, the school bus driver, tied me to the pole behind his driver’s seat
and stuffed my ears with wax so I might resist the sirens?
Was the Matterhorn in the woods just up the hill from the house?
Where did the fairies get the tiny axes to destroy the twig ladders I so carefully built?
And caterpillars purring? Could that Scarlet Elm really raise me to the clouds above?
Was that old sleigh in the Ten Eyck’s barn pulled by ghosts of horses?
Possible? Probable?, that Parson, the cat, saved my life? More than once?
There was a boa constrictor in the hayloft – that is certain.


The Attic  / Amy Snodgrass

Yesterday, a moment:


Sitting on the couch, my son on my left, my mom on my right, our row of laps 
under the super-soft purple microfiber blanket we have all loved for years.


she wants to be eating napkins, the word for edges isn’t what she meant, her students are going to buy those square purple things over there to use as spoons, that white yellow thing is coming through the rectangle the wrong way because it’s too easy, and her father is on his way to pick her up from school now and she can’t be late. 


I lean my head left onto my son’s shoulder, finally 
the right height.  I am getting drunk on Sierra 
Nevada with its new yellow label that I hate.
I am thinking how others might see this as a 
beautiful three generational moment.


the keyhole is the perfect place to pour coffee, the circle on the wall should come down because it might fit nicely on her fingernail, the black turny thingy isn’t enough so we should buy more because the bagel needs one, and wouldn’t that be nice?


My son and I breathe together, heads 
touching, eyes not. He breaks first 
and leaps up the stairs and away: “I’ll be back!” 
The blanket can not be thick enough. 
I think I am tuning her out, but her words 
go and go and go in and in and in and do 
things to me, things I do not like.


the squiggles, no, the polish, yes, the prophecy, and the juice can’t fit in the rainbow, probably because it’s so cloudy with all the stripes, and can she hold my hand for just a minute?


These are the types of moments others tell me to treasure.  
Instead, I treasure that photo on the coffee table:

5-year-old me in front of our pull-down attic stairs. 
Scrambling up, fast and sneaky, I always found 
a dark triangle of silence: joyful and free. 
Of course, in the summers it was sweltering up there: 
just one tiny window, sealed shut. It must have been 
dreadful and claustrophobic. But in my memory, 
it is always cool and dreamy with nooks. 


Maybe the owners now would let us back in, let me float her up that ladder. 
Maybe the bat shit crazy could stop, just for one night.  
Maybe I could tell her how she is like that attic: always safe, and now a dream.


We could share an ice cold Sierra Nevada with the original green label.
After a while, she would understand what I am saying, and through 
the circle on the wall, we wouldn’t see the rainbow so much as hold it.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 12

Why do you think it’s okay— / Haley Bosse

The snow half-obscuring 
Your face, red glow
From some car’s taillight
Left running with the door open,
Pulled a foot into the road,
The smoke from the tailpipe
Whisked away like someone
Cares about us pausing here
Halfway up the hill
In the nearly deadly dark, like
If there was anything
But the cold
And the snow
And your unknowing smile,
We might not make it
From this moment
To our bed, six years
From now and far
From Boston,
Further north and somehow
Wetter, at least a thousand
Drops of rain
Having slid from your skin
And to the earth by now,
Taking with it the aftertaste
Of sweat, 
From fear,
Climbing, fear again
A morning lost
Underneath the covers
Birdsong and the drum
Of water on the carport
Beyond the foggy window
Sometimes I wake 
Slick with salt 
And worried 
I’m standing in that snowstorm
The wind spiraling 
Around us, unsure
If the flakes are falling
Or rising back toward
The clouds and 
Whether the next moment
Will drive what’s frozen here
To breaking or
If it’s not enough.

the pause between / Jess Bowe

i stop asking my children to save the world. 
i ask them to bring strawberry tops 
to the chickens. i seat them at the table 
with the old stories. i turn off the tv 
and wonder out loud what the trees 
in the corner of the yard might be dreaming. 
i bring them tea and good news and forest-floor
trinkets and apologies to their bedside.
i invite them to the show
of birds and gift them orchestra tickets 
made of sunrise and wet dirt and we listen 
and cry at what we almost missed. 
i recite mother teresa with my hands in the soap, 
we wash the dish 
because we love 
the one who uses it next

i stop asking my children to save the world. 
i ask them to notice the sky. to say hello.
to offer the presence of their eyes. to give
attention to what moves them. to stay 
a moment longer in the room 
between inhale and exhale, to give 
to the day what lives there. 

In this picture  / Joanna Lee

we see the backs of three figures, their shadows long against the leaffall and the setting sun. there seems a heaviness to their footsteps, a purpose in the way they hold their bodies, leaning slightly forward, not turning to look at the camera. it is a cold day, or so one supposes from the hoods thrown over their ears, the pale cast to the fast-sinking sun. what we don’t know is where they’re headed, other than a general westward direction. we don’t know their names. why they walk. why the camera has captured them, as if there were something important to this sunset, this grouping. the bareness of the trees is unremarkable; almost, to the framing of this shot, an afterthought. there is no Icarus falling. what, then? we can only suppose they mean something to the shot-taker, the unknown fourth who follows. that this is a family outing, perhaps, or a fistful of friends. some shared resolution in the solidarity of their tread. as if they are on their way to a new chapter that surely will end better than the last one. as if they can get close enough to the dying sun to grab its violet skin like a cape to wrap round their chilled fingers. as if they must reach Valhalla before nightfall. something intimate and ordinary. as if they’ll never have this moment, this precise, unfiltered moment, again. as if that were something worth remembering.


Saganaki  / Thomas Page

we would always go to that greek res-
taurant by your house overlooking 
the bay and arroyos and jacaran-
das people would overwater with ber-
muda grass and english bushes trimmed with 
roses. our server would place by the 
window looking over the chinese bu-
ffet that’s not as good as back then. you’d be
facing the window with a big drink dark
as homer’s seas as your finger pointed
to your preferred appetizer sa-
ganaki served with pita wedges no-
dding as you pointed with certainty 
that they served it best here with the special
liquor they doused it with before flam-
béing it. the fire like a column of sun-
light brightening your face in a warm glow. 


What If Cheetah Forgot How to Tie Vines Together?  / Sarah Paley

Tarzan would sink. He’d scramble and flail. Everyone knows
that’s the worst thing to do if you’re caught in quicksand. Of course,
he knows that too, but he’d still reach out and there’d be nothing
to grab on to. He’d sink and the bubbling quicksand would smooth
and calm over his head after it had swallowed him completely.
Oh! What a terrible way to end.
Jane would swing home from the waterfall with her wet perfect
thighs and damp tussled hair and wait. Eventually she’d worry.
She’d do their special call – yodeling into the forest canopy
but there’d be no reply. There’d be no sign of him –only squawking
birds rising into the sky, alarmed at her alarm. Sooner or later Cheetah
would come home but Cheetah wouldn’t be able to explain.
All that jumping up and down, shrieking, running in circles, and slapping
his head could never make clear what had transpired. Cheetah couldn’t
tell her how sorry sorry sorry he was that he forgot how to tie a knot. After
a while he’d hang his head in shame, sit in the corner, and refuse the bananas
she offered. While Tarzan, petrified, reaches for heaven forever.
Oh! What a terrible way to end.


Why You Shouldn’t Buy a Motorcycle  / Amy Snodgrass

Because in Spain, there is a walled city, with a tiny store 
sort of hidden behind a series of milky stone pillars.

 

You will find it someday as you 
wander the narrow cobblestone
streets with someone you love
and you will buy a miniature clock–
gold with black inlays– for your father, 
like I did for my father so many years ago.


The inlays will look like flowers, but later 
–after eating tapas at Siglodoce and kissing your 
    love under the vaulted arches of the cathedral–
you will gently unwrap it and set it on your 
hotel nightstand, and you will do a double take. 


You will see there are skeletons etched into the mix, 
peeking out from behind the golden flowering 
vines: skeletons so tiny you will almost miss them, 
but suddenly they will be all you see, those sneaky bones.


While your love hops in the shower, you will 
call me and say, “Hi mom, so, funny story– 
I accidentally bought Dad a skeleton clock,” 
and we will laugh long and hard about it: then, and again, and
from time to time, over the course of our long and beautiful lives.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 11

Morning Star & Evening Star / Haley Bosse

You cloak and so
You hold, gazeless
Without radar, rotless
If only rock, a single
Hand outstretched
Across your surface,
Circling smoothly
To grip, unshaking,
At the wrist. 

Written in response to this interview of Dr. Vicki Hansen by Alie Ward: https://www.alieward.com/ologies/venusology

time spiral  / Jess Bowe

(a fibonacci poem)

on
the
carpet
dusky pink,
imaginary
angel beside me as i cry;
remembering: pink dusk, sitting with a small lost girl.

On Cellblock C, a meditation  / Joanna Lee

“De poeta y loco todos tenemos un poco”

            --SM

ando por algún lado
y no me encuentra—
I’m walking somewhere
unable to find myself

 

the fear—erased from existence
and forgotten forever

 

wrists freshly wrapped
in gauze, the dream

 

of America in their hearts
asylum a world 


away
every person here suffering

 

looking for light,
the bright, blue sky, the sun glaring

 

they are haunted
each voice ribboned

 

with a dark melody of pain
no touching,

 

eyes scared,
caged

 

Out the window a large, black bird
my heart, a stone thrown hard into the sea

 

They want you to know
your silence will not protect you (1)

 

Dear Children,
please forgive me.

 

 

 

All text found from Hope on the Border: Immigration, Incarceration, and the Power of Poetry by Seth Michelson

 

(1)quote attributed to Audre Lorde

Grief is a thing with barbs / Thomas Page

I suppose it never gets easier with each passing day. I remember when you broke down next to the cans of chicken noodle soup when someone asked how you were doing. It ebbs and flows like the tide full of red blooms and seaweed clouds. Whoever said it is made of wings never had his head on a goose down pillow trying to let the electricity of the mind calm down after a terrible night—the ohm-lessness of it all. 


The barby ball that sits like a lumpy frog in the throat is hard to express in words, at least to someone who hasn’t experienced it. There is a gentleness to grief in the poems we all read in high school that doesn’t seem to be real, at least to someone who experienced it. Grief is not as gentle as the moonless night over the dead calm of a tranquil sea. Grief is more like the bite of a rabid dog that comes at you from behind. 


The weirdest things will make someone sad. I remember ugly crying as a child over a dinosaur left on the shore on some t.v show. When you came to figure out what was wrong I could only babble “dinosaur—abandoned—sad!” 


My throat closes up, 
the chlorophyll-less leaf 
fades into speckles.

Aubade  / Sarah Paley

I wake at night not sure that you will come
and when you do I question why and how.
Your pink hues, your optimism, your mum
face announcing a new day. Really? Here? Now?
Wake me with blood, surprise me with sirens,
howls from hell, or thunderbolts from heaven.
There’s no room for this new norm– unless –
you were never kind & I was never blessed.
Blessed not by some god but by a fragile
golden rule that has fled along with reason.

My friend Maggie gives me a one-word prompt in early January 2026 / Amy Snodgrass

Gamers? Maggie, really? Gamers are people I know nothing about. 


Well, I know they have amazing chairs, almost too comfortable and too clever to be for real. I might recommend they wear bluelight glasses. But I don’t know–maybe they have that covered.


I know my students roll their eyes when I ask them to transition away from their favorite gamer on YouTube and to refocus on the task at hand.  They must be getting something out of it.


In my ignorance, I assume some gamers need rehab for the addiction. And I also imagine some of them make a shit-ton of money. I feel like this is true, though, for lots of us, gamers or not.


I worry about the crazy lights and the glorified violence and the speed of all the flashing, and of course, about the evolving human brain. But, then again, I worry about a lot of shit for no reason.


Once, a long time ago, a student of mine named Ledio tried to teach me the differences in play between a first-person game and a third-person game, making connections to the content of my English class. I liked him and I understood his points, but I just kept getting so motion sick—more and more with every game—so we had to stop. I recently heard he is now a college professor, so that’s cool.  


Since then, my non-gaming lifestyle has kept me pretty much tied to my limited views, my fears, my assumptions about gaming and gamers. You know what, though? Gamers probably feel pretty much the same way about my poetry writing, my hiking, and my middle school teaching, right? If they think about it all, which is doubtful, but will vary from person to person. We’re different beings doing our things, slowly revolving through our days.


I really don’t know anything about gamers, Maggie, my friend.   


But I do know the only way out of our current mess is for people to say to other people things like“I’ll take a Dramamine before we start, so I can really focus and understand,” and “Your interests are as valid as mine,” or even the most obvious: “Your life is as valuable as mine.” Your life is as valuable as mine. Your life is as valuable as mine. Your life is as valuable as mine. Your life.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 10

Norway Spruce / Haley Bosse

This year’s new growth gone 
From near-translucent 
To wintermint
And reaching toward 
An almost-unreal shade
Of what only comes 
To pine,
Branch extended 
Just a hand’s reach 
Off the wooden railing,
Warped and disconnected 
In the corner,
A wobbling danger 
For each day it’s stood,
The diving board from which 
My mother’s dog once leapt
And hovered for a moment
Before landing, 
We suspect, 
Among the branches
And wiggling her way 
Into the duff below. 

Every new year, 
My grandmother bemoans 
The looming death
Of the tree, 
Its roots stretching 
Even now, 
She insists, 
Into the foundation, 
Rasping softly
With their mindful creep,
One wrong move 
Enough to send us,
Trembling and uncaught,
Into the earth. 


songbird / Jess Bowe

Around the corner
of the beech-lined trail, gray
feathers kiss the wind.


Nest-fallen Wren sleeps
a final time on the roots,
the forest pulling


her body further
in for inevitable
embrace. I fold green


around her lived-in
wings, one yellow for joy,
star-flower for Thanks.


Somewhere over the rainbow,
I sing her into the grave.


Grief Ghazal  / Joanna Lee

All this cold, fragile grief: we’ve been there, waiting for the rain—
smoke that doesn’t clear, a god who doesn’t care, waiting on the rain.

 

January dark comes early and school bells mourn an ending
as a child cries somewhere, waiting in the rain.

 

Bare heads and covered faces, our fingers
tearless searching eyes that stare waiting in the rain.

 

We become prickled, hard, cactus skins in starless night
our hearts dry as despair, waiting on the rain.

 

A prayer for those who flee the fight; two
for those who stay to dare, waiting in the rain.

 

Tell me, brother—how will history remember us?
we were just, we’ll swear, waiting for the rain.

 

Where will you find a poet who can sing us through to morning?
lost on a road to nowhere, waiting in the rain.

 

Conestoga / Thomas Page

It feels like everyday I’m driving a conestoga 
whenever you point out the same ponderosa 
although we don’t live anywhere near any jatropha
or see along the beach a mimosa. 


Whenever you point out the same ponderosa 
while asking me if we have any more samosa 
or see along by the beach a mimosa
dreaming of what it must be like to be a mariposa.


While asking me if we have any more samosa 
which may be filled with some scabiosa 
dreaming of what it must be like to be a mariposa
you can point out the arboretum’s gloriosa.


Which may be filled with some scabiosa 
although we don’t live anywhere near any jatropha
you can point out the arboretum’s gloriosa—
It feels like everyday I’m driving a conestoga. 


Boobs  / Sarah Paley

To you, the boys and men who cared so much
when I was a mere stripling girl
about the glacial progress of my Bazookas.
I’d like to apologize for my ingratitude.

Your concern for my slow bloom
boomed off the brownstones in Park Slope
“FLATSO! HEY FLATSO!”
“You ain’t even got Mosquito Bites.”

“You walking forward or back I can’t tell.”
You cared so much and let me know.
Where were my Hooters? My Twin Peaks?
My Knockers? The Gals?

One boy didn’t share your worry. For a few weeks,
or maybe a few days, Darius was my boyfriend.
We’d lope in unison to the park. His arm around
me not searching for nonexistent Tatas or Melons.

This was around the time my best friend Rachel’s
Dream Team appeared. Oh my! Magnificent!
Outsized – like Barbies. You chased after her to snap
her bra strap from behind. She had to swat you away

or be escorted through your throngs like John, Paul, George
or Ringo. It was too much for Darius who disappeared,
maybe in search of some Golden Orbs he could flatter.
And then one day, it seemed to happen overnight –

your chorus changed. “Hey girlie, how’d you know I love
Milkshakes!” “Bouncie, Bouncie!” the construction workers
said in rude rhythm as I passed by on my way to school.
Who, ME? Yes, they were here. Ripening Newbies.

And Darius reappeared but too late. I’d moved on.
He exclaimed and explained to anyone who’d listen
“I never woulda broken up with her if I knew she was
gonna sprout Tits!” And now, half a century later, a still

unfinished woman observes that shy girl as she trudges toward
womanhood, folding into herself, amidst your boosterism
for her burgeoning Boobs. What do I see from this impossible
distance? I see an unsung hero. I see Joan of Arc.

escape   / Amy Snodgrass

a found poem


mind the sparks of your candle:
heaving with malevolence 
deliriously intoxicated
shaded with a heavy cloud
of delusive assurances


I begin to shrink:
I hardly know what to hide
and what to reveal
and must whisper 
bitter things 
of atmospheric tumult
that writhes and yearns


amazed at the blackness 
of spirit transmuted into bits 
of folded paper: resolutions 
formed in the hour of fear 
of the approach of what is coming


ah! the sparks of your candle: beautiful wild 
vindictiveness in its white cheek
the lights flitting to and fro
kindling a spark of spirit
the commencement 
of delirium to beguile me
with the spectre of 
a hope escaping 


                   into the free air
      now clear and still


Source material: Emily Brontë‘s Wuthering Heights 

With the exception of a few minor changes for verb tense consistency, all words are directly from the book, reordered.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 9

Leaving Urgent Care / Haley Bosse

For Renée Nicole Good 

This is for every
Fleck of glitter
Exploded from the pocket
Of my hoodie, 
An unexpected birth
Of yesterday’s excitement,
New year hatching 
Six days late,
Almost enough 
To keep me 
At the sink for hours
Washing hope 
From the planes of my palms
And scratching 
Too rough 
Under the overhang
Of my pinky nail.
I could have stayed
Another minute 
Or an hour with the water,
I wouldn’t have been ready 
To see her blood
Across my screen. 
In poems, you almost
Never see a person’s 
Name exactly as it’s called,
Across a kitchen
By an exasperated mother,
Or written on their day of birth,
Or written on a grave. 
In so many ways,
She was living 
A queer dream under tyranny, 
Dropping her child
Off at daycare, 
Holding her partner’s hand. 
Renée Nicole Good. 
One more person
We shouldn’t have to march
Without.
Every word she scattered
Into the air,
Let us clutter
With their closeness,
Pray we’ll never
Wash them clean.


7 minutes after the heart stops / Jess Bowe

lights on the brain’s map
show in god’s polaroids: Love
in every background.


In the Year of the Fire Horse  / Joanna Lee

I am stuck in every tonight
somewhere

 

between the second
and the third

 

law of thermodynamics, burning
both ends even

 

while I know there’s an end
to the middle. come walk with me

 

in the cold, slipping on darkness
while our eyes

 

are tuned only to the stars, imagining
oceans. we’ll count out

 

each constellation until we’ve run
out of breath, lie down

 

in the wet grass and
laugh and laugh. when the sun

 

comes back he’ll
find us there still, hand

 

in hand, lighter
than we’ve ever been,

 

solving the equations
of this world’s messes

 

with fingers smeared in river mud.
we won’t fear dying.

 

we won’t lose sight.
we’ll make a plan to seed

 

small kindnesses
into the unused crawlspace

 

between heartbeats, sit back
to watch them grow.   


Song of Yourself  / Thomas Page

after Walt Whitman


I know every facet of yourself 
or, at least, what I assume
and you’ll shall assume that I am too
far gone to really celebrate every version of you
the versions you think you’ve hidden from me 
and the versions you carefully crafted for me. 


You who spent the summer evenings walking around the cityblocks 
looking at each strand of graffiti-spray 
discovering that each dollop of paint 
was an extension of that artist’s own lifeblood.


You who spent the autumn afternoons gazing upon the leaves 
looking at each dying fleck of maple and oak 
dissecting that each fiber of leaf 
was an extension of that tree’s own lifeblood. 


You who spent the winter mornings craving up the lawns 
looking at each snowbounded blade of grass 
digesting that each blade of grass 
was an extension of the Earth’s own lifeblood. 


I know the springtime didn’t bring you joy.
I know the springtime was spent alone. 
I know the springtime many cooed at your situation. 


But I know that you are more than that bed in that room in that ward in that hospital in that city that you felt so bound to which you just told me. 


Found in Boswell  / Sarah Paley

He had for many years a cat which he
called Hodge, that kept always in his room
at Fleet Street; but so exact was he not
to offend the human species by superfluous
attention to brutes, that when the creature
was grown sick and old, and could eat
nothing but oysters, Mr. Johnson always
went out himself to buy Hodge’s dinner
that Francis the servant’s delicacy might
not be hurt, at seeing himself employed
for the convenience of a quadruped.


Poetry  / Amy Snodgrass

after Reading “The Wheel Revolves” by Kenneth Rexroth

 

Like insecure but insistent leeches 
on the edges of a waterfall pool,
these buzzing squiggles in my brain 
keep me latched to the silent cruelties 
of my past.  
Oh, I am crazed!


Waking, I never remember
how much I am always 
gasping for breath above 
the spray, so close 
to drowning, unheard,


never understand
how tense with sadness 
I move, trying 
to lengthen toward the light,
never– until I read
the first poem
of the morning


and from the inside out
I smooth
like crackling ash.


Today Rexroth is the one:

 

a single light he writes, 
camping in the rain,
amongst a hundred 

peaks and waterfalls.

 

I listen to him, to his waterfall daughter.
I see their tent. I hear their talk. They tell me
all this will never be again. They tell me


to go on, to stake my own to the ground 
of my own. They wrap my tension in down. 
Singing bird years and stars swarm into my blood. 


The shame I feel 
for those latching, 
leeching squiggles– 


the campfire embers 
catch it. Screaming, 
finally, I become 


a tiny cloud.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 8

caddis 4 / Haley Bosse

Note: This form takes inspiration from the larvae of caddisflies, which create protective shells for themselves out of the natural debris in their habitats. In each of my caddis poems, there is one personal line written by me, the poet. This true line is encrusted in overheard snippets and otherwise found pieces of language debris. Using this form allows me to say something that otherwise feels impossible, under the protection of scavenged language.



how to become lost  / Jess Bowe

find yourself in the forest, in the deep emerald, 
in the dirt of the night and the early 
rainy mornings. find yourself 
when the kids are with dad. 
when the world is quiet for the first time 
since sometime in seventh grade. 


find yourself when sunday mornings are empty 
and made for good coffee and a sunrise 
with a cat in your lap. when you can make 
mistakes and clean them up before the kids get home. 
when you can swing christmas and wrap gifts 
until 2 am. find yourself on a sidewalk on a date 
with yourself, hot chocolate made how you like it 
without anyone asking why, cold 
so painful your hair sticks to the corners 
of your tearing eyes, and yet, never complain, 
not once, because the lights are beautiful 
and people are singing somewhere 
around the corner and the entire world 
has itself unzipped and ready for you. 


find yourself in all your bright ideas. 
in your piles of notebooks. in your dreams 
and time for things like dreaming 
and painting and tv-less bedrooms. 


convince yourself, once, that you’re lonely. 
that you’re ready. come through the front door 
you forbid from any man and tell the cats 
you’re in love. do mushrooms under a full moon 
and when the clouds cup your face, invite him inside 
and forget which moon is yours. 


the nausea will overcome you. 
you’ll learn how to carry life again, 
half divorced, and when your broken walls 
in an already broken home are too shameful 
to look at with someone standing next to you, 
you’ll volunteer yourself for every job 
that mingles with potential disappointment. 


do all the laundry. every sock and tee and blanket. 
watch your children melt into puddles 
and forget to buy rainboots. 
cry in a barnes and noble when you remember 
you loved to read and look at the spot 
you’d sit in when you had time to be alone. 


cry in every empty room, in any empty moment 
left with a hint of your name on it. 
try to remember what color is your favorite. 
what flower, what song, what day of the week. 


write a letter you never finish, and start it nine times: 


dear me, if i ever get out of here, 
please remember this:



Remembering My First Anatomy Lesson  / Joanna Lee

            --after “On learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs1,” by Renée Nicole Good, who was shot and killed by ICE on January 7, 2026

 

  

Never before such helplessness

 

the exact baleful pale green of the cadaver lab’s doors
in line outside and feeling I may as well lie down
beside a body in its sloshy stainless cradle

 

as expect to pinpoint the location
of the medial-most
branch of the brachial plexus
in a strange corpse.

 

Every              
body is different,          do you see?
In a room of twenty,
the nerves will take on new appearances in each, im-
perfect facsimiles of some larger principle.
And so many! veins, muscles, fascial planes, all empty now, yes,
all dead, static, flat like a tire with its air let out

 

but God,

 

I’ve studied this stuff for weeks—late nights,
skipped dates, through Halloween and damn near to Christmas—and still
can’t bring a quarter of it back to life on a dime. The sheer volume

 

of detail drowns me, and I smell perpetually of the dead, pungent vinegar-pink which will haunt
my scrub drawer for decades. Yet it isn’t

 

the formalin that humbles,
but the wonder.
The body thus reduced a miracle of intricacy.
The niceties of our daily rounds revealed
as complex equations in mechanical tension& nerve transmission& chemical signaling. We are

 

amazing.
Our lungs so like ocean
floor sponges, what divine evolution brought us
to breathe? What tinker-minded plumber
fixed the pump of our hearts into four pliable chambers, what
statistical nearimpossibility is every     
single  
thought? each decision a chain of neurons
firing in succession to relay intention
to guts, to muscle, to skin,       quicker than you can blink
To write a poem.

 

To assess a threat.

 

 

To pull a trigger.

 

1 https://poets.org/2020-on-learning-to-dissect-fetal-pigs

 

Inaccessible    / Thomas Page

The world isn’t accessible // at least in a wheelchair // which isn’t fair // because we have to use the wheelchair a lot // a lot a lot // especially whenever we want to go anywhere // that isn’t the kitchen // or the fireplace room // (what she calls the room with all the windows // and // you know // the fireplace) 


I know that it isn’t fun // having me tower over you // as we roll un-merrily along // the undulating sidewalk // full of cracks // and fissures // rocking the red steel chair // into the air // you putting all of your weight // into the left side of my hair // trying to keep you afloat // on the sidewalk // and // me standing upright 


We have traversed over // ungodly huge door jambs // unwieldy accessibility doors // and unseen accessibility buttons // who knew how messed up // the world really is // for those who aren’t ambulatory // trying to navigate // to any public place // under heaven 


EMERGENCY PROCEDURES FOR 2026  / Sarah Paley

Please exit
to the right
of my brain

in an orderly
fashion. Step lively
and mind the gap.

No need to assess
outside conditions
before departing.

Just go.

Migraine Sonnet #4      / Amy Snodgrass

There is a world at the base 
of my head that gets disturbed 
from time to time. I tell everyone 
it’s a migraine and I don’t mean to lie, 


but I think that’s a cover. Things are
alive in there. A cluster of maggots, 
orange with rage, swarms a rat carcass 
that –surprise!– leaps up in still-alive fury: 


claws out, teeth aglow. Then –oh hello!– 
a pool of magma, fierce and mad, in a frenzy, 
and frankly just mean, pours down over the rat 
who fought so hard to survive, over the maggots 


just trying to do their thing. I become the rumbling bubbles of pain– 
I boil wild, I boil free, I spill over– we are gone, gone, me–gone–and the rat.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 7

Hopecore / Haley Bosse

When I tell the doctor I was exposed to RSV, he puts on a mask. 
How I only have to search her name to rewatch Princess Diana hugging AIDS patients. 
Knowing that if I get sick someone will hug me. 
Knowing that the first time I had Covid, my partner hugged me from behind through a plastic tarp. 
The memory of both our masked faces seeding clouds into frigid air. 
The hutch of seeds sleeping in the lobby of the public library. 
The older man googling how to support my trans daughter in the public library. 
Replying All in the Zoom chat: still here!


the erosion  / Jess Bowe

it begins before birth. it begins with a name on your back, seventeen stories high, with others just like you, carrying towers of war and legacy strapped and crushing their wings. it begins before your mother’s skin warms to the touch, before your father knows the weight of his own name. it begins before you open your eyes and see clearly the faces that shape you. they spit it out in ink and it begins, this belonging, this leaf on a branch on a tree in a forest in a world. at five, at fifteen, in alphabetical rows. when you marry and make a trade and do the labor of grief alone in your celebratory gown, champagne and sex and promise in your wedding bed. in the government office. in the paperwork. in the whatever-was-established-before-is-no-longer. in the kitchen alone, one night, forgetting what you wanted before you were told what to want. in the let me do that for you, in the late night tears and all the way down to the bottom of the barrel. in the saving yourself for last because you’re a good person. in the fantasy where you chop off the extra weight and your first name stands like an island. in the aftermath, floating on the back of the spirit who will not drown, whispering over her shoulder as an ancient grandmother would: i am. i am. i am, rootdirt still caught in her hair.

I watch cat grooming videos for solace before bed  / Joanna Lee

instead of writing. because my 
brother is drinking while he
cleans up the plumber’s mess
in his upstairs bathroom while
my dad forgot where he put his phone
and my brother yells at him
for not answering, and he feels bad,
and I make him feel worse by
telling him he should not
indeed tip his phlebotomist
when he goes in for his next
urology appointment and maybe
none of us should talk
on the phone so damn often but
then what would we do but worry?
meanwhile you’re coughing again
through a late dinner and
learning CPR is on my 2026 list but
in truth unlikely to worm its way
high enough into my priorities so
one of these nights in the thin window
we have between dinner prep and bed
some malevolent piece of pasta
is going to lodge itself between
the semi-mobile tissues of your vocal cords
and that will be the end.

 

all the while the number of emails
I haven’t answered multiply like gremlins
between the hours of four and eight-
thirty pm and I’m sure my to-do today
is lying to my screen-lit face and also
Venezuela and Epstein and ICE and
on this day five years ago we watched
—from a hospital bed—while they
stormed the Capitol and I really
should sleep instead of rousing out
those old ghosts because tomorrow
we’ll be back all smiles and pleasant
for another long winter draught
of hours and like the guy who
comes in from the towing company
for his coffee first thing,
we’re it, baby, getting it done without
a break, without breaking, living the dream,
at least someone’s, I suppose,
one of those who believe
it will all come out in the wash,
maybe, or that drinking more water
will solve all our problems. this to say
it could be worse, and really,
I’ve nothing to complain about, but god
bless that cat whisperer guy on IG.  


Online Orders   / Thomas Page

after Ocean Vuong


Monday


book on color theory 
book on WWII airplanes
bottle of gray, horse-pill-size vitamins
box of chocolate-covered oreos 
pair of compression socks 


Tuesday 


100 count box of alcohol prep wipes
bottle of sherry 
100 count box of individual eye drops 
bottle of rioja for kalimotxos 
bottle of coca-cola for kalimotxos 
pair of compression socks from a speciality store 


Wednesday 


refill on the sky blue pills
refill on the hi-vi orange pills
refill on the hazy purple pills 
book on WWII tanks 
ticket for an art film showing out of the state 
fast fashion wool-ish sweater 


Thursday 


giftcard to a national movie theater chain 
book on Japanese grammar 
150 count box of hypodermic needles 
medical grade first-aid kit 
10 ounce tube of neosporin
toilet bowl hand grips with stand 


Friday 


refill on white trapezoidal pills
refill on white oblong pills 
refill on white flat-circle pills
refill on white round-circle pills 
tub of green exercise putty 
box of instant Irish oatmeal  

Like a Dumb Man Trying to Shout “Fire!”  / Sarah Paley

That is how I feel trying to write today.
Something there but it’s like smoke in wind.
I might as well tell you about my grandfather Julius,
the bastard from Bobruisk, aka The Pickle King.
His head was like a misshapen potato and his hair
like a worn-out broom. A master of self-pity and guilt,
with a smile reserved for no one that looked like a boiled
string bean trying to regain its former shape.
Oh, and he was also a crook. As slippery as an eel
preparing for his nuptial journey to the Sargasso Sea.
Julius would have pickled the eel and sold it to the Pope
as if it were the body part of a crucified saint.
Actually, I think he did, and I saw it in a little town near
Assisi when I was young and beautiful as a ripe plum.

Out of Body  / Amy Snodgrass

I had another one of those no-drugs-needed
highs on the way to the airport this morning:


I saw a Porsche dealership 
shimmer by and lost my mind


floating
my skin 
dissolving 


hatred for consumerism seething, fear for 
my son raging in competition for his heart


and my soul felt like the book cover 
of A Million Little Pieces except instead 


of clinging to the skin on my hand, all the tiny 
spheres floated out into a bluegreen ether


strips of flashing street lights shot across 
the dark just enough like stars to deceive


all my pieces floated out I hoped into him, 
agnostic prayers of please stay steady on


the thwap of the rubber on the concrete lines
lulled me into such deep and brighter blues


that the hatred and the seething pulled 
themselves slowly up like a tired band-aid


then ripped themselves off that last little bit 
in a squeal of brakes opening my eyes:


no streetlights
   just stars


        and the plane


bringing him back, steady floating and blue

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 6

No Violence Without Harm / Haley Bosse

You waited patient
For your first stretch of seam,
You dreamed of perfect
Settling over you in the night,
Friction smoothing crystals
Malleable and ready to be rolled,
Your body doughed out 
On the counter,
Whole ranges of ancient mountains
Parting at the touch.


salt  / Jess Bowe

i used to run from her,
the fish with my mother’s
name, chasing me through 
waterways of a dream;
the mouth, gaping
and toothless,
sound waves swallowing
my safety— i believed
this was anger as big 
as a planet,

formed in a fist of cells
and sea-life, 
made in the image 
of its origin—

until today, waking up
with saltwater dripping
from the blades of my back,
stolen dolphins circling 
the tank of my ribcage,
their prison song wrapping 
its grip around my bones,
cracking me open 
like a lightning knife—

i’m swimming to an illusory 
shore, sand reaching out
with thirsty hands,
brine pool at the bottom
of my first-born fear.

in all of this thrashing,
thunder and roar 
of fins slicing blue,
my small voice feels 
blindly 
for boat bellies,
for boards 

turning waves 
into tunnels of light. 

Excised  / Joanna Lee

Look, I have cut out the words
to make room for you.

 

We used to say such heavy things,
whole bloodied histories,

 

devilry and romance. Which we stole
from something someone wrote once,

 

a soldier, maybe. Maybe Neruda
who dreamed in train whistles,

 

tracks. The past, though, is never
really past: someone’s dad’s always yelling,

 

there are forever
sirens. The Roman coins

 

tucked in the bottom of my dresser
you gave me over

 

all the years, I see now:
ferryman’s wages.

 

We never know how close we are
to becoming another statistic.

 

Just yesterday, for example, I fell in love
with the gleam of this place;

 

today I fall with its grit.
The same train still passing.

 

You, still
gone.

Getting twenty-seven cards about you didn’t make me feel better  / Thomas Page

How can I fault them
for trying to make me feel 
better about the way 


I had to leave them 
to attend to matters you
had no reason to 


want to happen? I
received a stack of twenty-
seven cards, hand-drawn


“In a better place 
nows” with smeared clouds and wings 
of angels harping 


gilded strings, happy 
with the results of your place.
I force a smile 
and a soft “thank you” 
at the big stack of twenty
seven earnest pleas 


for me to return 
to normalcy. Bereavement 
lasts only a week, 


apparently, so 
I take my twenty-seven 
cards, in purples, pinks, 


and baby blues; dyed 
with markers; colored with pens
to my desk back there. 

I Stop Somewhere Waiting for You  / Sarah Paley

(Sestina for HDP)

Do you remember me doing a som-
ersault for you? My body
curling up in a ball. But you died,
just as all & every
body must. I stopped then, for
what seemed like good but was mere seconds

in the scheme of the afterlife; heavenly bodies
& such. You’re wandering while I try di-
aloging. Remember that Christmas Eve
when you threw a bat at the cat for
taking a shit on your table saw? A sec-
ant! You had excellent aim. Some

sibling, trying to soothe things over for every
one, drew a cartoon of our Mean Dad. First four:
two sons, two daughters. Then me. I was your second
favorite. Later that year in the summer
he, the cat, would reappear. His terrible body
ravaged by living in the wild. A miracle he hadn’t died.

Images & words float up when I stop & wait for
you. Corduroy jackets, ring-a-ding-ding, your rusty sec-
ateurs. You loved moving earth. Hoeing, digging, some
times making us all join you for hours & hours. Everybody
griping about planting saplings we thought already looked dead.
You know what? I am now older than you ever

were. Seems rude & dangerous to say. I want no seconds
taken off my clock. You didn’t either. Though there was some
thing off, wasn’t there? That sadness got your body
to just quit. Street urchin, loved son, card player/die
roller, soldier, port captain, husband, father & at every
turn never resting. Forging ahead. What did you say? For

Christsakes! Yes, often & with your lower lip bit. Some-
where. Are you out there? I’ll stop and sit my body
down and wait till you pass. When I die
I don’t expect to see you. I do that now, every
once in a while. It’s been what? Forty
plus years since you split in a mere second.

Somebody dies every four seconds. 

Solitaire  / Amy Snodgrass

for Louise Glück and my mother


the cards are glossy and slip


count to seven and over again


sliding the three of hearts 
that can save the game 


the quick flip and tap 
is my mother 
reborn into the air 
around me


and I gasp 


synapses grasp and find their hold


this game I decided 
would save me
did not save her
what did I expect?


count to seven and over again


the sliding and scooping start 
shuffle and arc and flaring fan, fast 
and impressive although it’s all I can do
and within that line she sits 


across from me, ashamed


count to seven and over again


and I gasp  
and shut


cutting the cards, a satisfying 
drop sets new plasticity into place


she hovers lightly and haunts
she never ended her poem


the glow of the bluelight dissipates 
into a cushion, cozy and sure


count to seven and try again

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 5

Aquifer / Haley Bosse

Broken ankle, bruising like a peach
And propped in the rot of your bedroom.
Memory of the empty church, chairs stacked
And the flickering light barely grazing your face.

It’s cloudset in the street,
The scrape of your calluses on broken concrete,
The shiver you indulge in the place of desperation.

Between the pain, emptiness,
A gift of atoms, invisible
Unless you attend to them:
The worms surfacing from puddles,
Their wriggle in your palm,
The undersides of dripping leaves,
Greenbright between their veins.

Later, when you clutter with distractions,
The worms call out with inching rustle.
Place your softened feet on pavement,
Trace the shape of emptiness again.


no one young knows the names of things  / Jess Bowe

i wander barefoot through the wind-pressed field, high grasses bowing to the soil, birds glittering in color, high and low, sky to Mother. clouds of every weight and form gather and drift. i pay attention. i offer up my most abundant treasure and gift it to the land. white peeks from just before me, rough and weathered bone in my palm. science asks me to drop a skull into a box. Mystery says decide to not know. i imagine a story instead of a face. i imagine survival and what it asks. i imagine i am not god. i imagine i’m as common as the wind, as ordinary as any leaf left for winter’s bed. teeth and jaw. can i call you friend? can i blur the border between body and light? can i rewind, count inward, become alive in the heartwood at my center? can i become new? i carry remnants of a living i’ve never seen, packed away in my pockets of feathers and stone.


Progress can be beautiful  /
Joanna Lee

There was a moment on the bridge this morning

 

blankly driving south to work
across the river in the leftmost lane
as we daily do when out
of nowhere,
all the small presence of traffic, all
the weight of the coming day, all the fear of failure

 

that tucks itself into my socks,
all the terror of losing you that never really
vanishes
vanished into just the way
the sun smacked the new downtown highrises

 

crimson gold, a gleam like god herself pausing,
entranced,
as she traces her name in light.


Passwords  / Thomas Page

How many ways can I type recognizable 
combinations of your first grade teacher 
or your first pet or where you met your spouse 
before online hackers access your health records?


Your healthcare provider seems to think everyone 
is out to unearth every single note 
between you and the doctor about flu
shots and medications and test results; like, why?


What purpose would there to be to unearth records 
about all the times I’ve administered 
medication your network of doctors 
seem to disagree or even to disavow? 


What is the value of knowing how many times 
you and I have driven together to 
appointments that say the same, terminal 
diagnoses that washes its hands from treatments?


How could someone impersonate all memories 
that are sewn together in these doctor’s 
notes, hewn by the clinical manner which 
your experiences are totaled in those numbers?


Can a person, a patient, be sold for crypto 
on the black market blockchain for some tryst 
impersonating your numerous years 
for some digital exchange of goods or services?


Where’s the humanity in that?


Sonnet for Fred  / Sarah Paley

Wilma goes to bed but Fred puts
Baby Puss out and gets locked out
himself. “Wil-ma!” he screams to no
avail. No one answers – not his friend
Barney. Not Betty or Bam-Bam. He sleeps
outside which shouldn’t be a hardship
for a caveman but it is. It’s cold and he
doesn’t have any shoes and only three toes –
not like he has any to spare to frost bite.
People night think I’m an alarmist for worrying
so about Fred – locked out of his house every
night. Hapless father, for-granted spouse –
he suffers for us all and we switch channels –
hoping he’ll make it to morning.


grace and mud  / Amy Snodgrass

after Daniel Halpern & Seamus Heaney

 

expecting the northern lights
then expecting them to crumble

 

into glisten across mud
that white man and his canon

 

me holding my pen and 
my rage fades to the exhaustion 


of impotence and I cannot hold
but it's time to be getting on with the getting up now

 

and this other white man, well, he’s digging things 
up, out of the bog and me, he lightens my load

 

like swirling arcs of orange so obvious and so rare
hindsight shatters myth into endless renditions

 

and it’s time to be getting on now, getting 
up now and expecting the grace now

 

the grace rising up now out of the mud now and up

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 4

Extant Horizons  / Haley Bosse

Their blue a promise
of elsewhere


as much as proof
of hereness


though you wish
here wouldn’t bother


though you wish
these cousin mountains


would split beneath you
and drop you in the sea


just like your distant
finny relatives


gazing up at the illusion
of bright white nothing


dancing beyond your shrinking bubbles
and then behind your tired eyes.


body heat / burning haibun  / Jess Bowe

new year and i’d like to be
an old me, one still at a crossroads, one
fooled by the costume of loneliness
worn by spacious possibility, the void dressed
up in a bed too big, a carrot in the shape
of a face; i’d tell her to think about 
it, the sense to run, the voice of sunrise
screaming to her bones look how far you can
stretch out your arms!
look, i know 
you’re tired of learning how to keep the heat
on, tired of wearing chainlink over the soft
of your silvering coat. i know you wonder
if your hands will sink into more than sherpa
in the middle of the dark. can i be a spark
of a star, dancing across the backroads?
or a scroll of light, carriage of warning,
constellation in the shape of an arrow
go this way! this is a map from your future,
and an accident has been reported.
you are no longer on the fastest route
to joy. pull over and warm yourself
with kindness. it’s just the cold talking,
and the heating costs are much too high.



the voice of sunrise: 
soft wonder, you are the route
to joy, warm with kindness


Poem to a physicist (reprise)  / Joanna Lee

Bitter texts still sit
gathering the dust of the unrequited
on the lowest bookshelf : Schrödinger;
Einstein;          Dirac;              I wish
I had learned my quantum mechanics harder,

 

 

learned how the waves of us can crash into
one
another
and devastate or

 

leave no trace, infinite             
footprints
whose hum no human skin can feel,
on a beach where God bathes without sunscreen.                               

 

Watching from another ocean,
could you yet teach me
to temper my frequency &

 

bend it
round an ending
that doesn’t land broken
in a puddle
on the floor? or

 

demonstrate, at least,               how to encounter                    elastically:
one vibration smiling across a room, and we both walk away, un-

wounded?

 

Or just (to hit all the classic buzzwords) put time                   

 

in reverse, do this shit over? the homeless cats
that sleep on my front porch
waking up tomorrow to a slightly
different sun.
Higher
math never had a damn thing
to do with love.

Bloodstains  / Thomas Page

I’ve had to clean up blood twice,
scrubbing the red off the beige 
carpet—mellowed with age.
Wouldn’t it be oh so nice
if I never had to see 
you apologize to me
for letting body slice 
or a gashed fleck of toenail 
to flood my clogged pores. Wail
in unison while I ice 
away the labored pain 
while I let floating guilt pang
me. I continue to roll dice 
allowing myself to care 
for you alone like a bear 
lost in the winter. I splice 
triangles of bandaids
over the wound as I bade 
myself to watch the dear price 
you pay for my negligence.
My troubled, labored conscience
remembers the Prince song thrice 
about blood and rain mixing 
into purple life nixing 
all familial deaths    


On My Way to Lunch for Spicy Jicama Salad and Rissoto Nero  / Sarah Paley

It’s grey, grey, grey on Great Jones Street today
with clouds drifting behind a scrim of mist,
punctuated by exclamation points
of dangling yellow traffic signals.
This vague day sets everything in sharp
focus – the red, yellow, green, red, yellow,
green disappear down the Bowery as wet
wheels hiss on the slick black and I remember
the cow pie on a summer day in a field
of golden hay and know that what thou
lovest remains, the rest is dross and what
thou lovest well shall not be reft from thee
and I remember to try to remember to come
back to any small part of you.


River Street Fire House, September 2001  / Amy Snodgrass

for Ilyce


There’s a beach I go to when I feel lost.
Accessed only by a narrow overgrown path.
Black sand with sparkling flecks. Black cliffs 
with ledges just right for swinging. 


We used to be so every-minute-close I would call you if I sneezed.
We always knew exactly what we meant. Now we are worlds apart.  


Our sons have turned 18.  
You taught me how to pump breast milk. 
You found me the right daycare. 
You clipped that car seat right in.


But– even before all that, and certainly 
before all this– we were lost together


on that awful day and in all 
the weeks after. We had no idea. 


Remember that small, two-bay fire station? 
How we found it one night, just around my corner?  


“Let’s light a candle.” 


It lasted all of two minutes: “Ladies, 
we need you to leave now, and thank you.” 


We had no idea how young we were.


I wonder– where do you go now when you feel lost?
Take me someday? You’ve never seen this beach. 


Someday, I’ll bring you. I’ll say, “Remember that time 
you brought me milk during the lockdown?” and you’ll say 
“Remember that time on the bench by the football field?”
and I’ll say, “Remember that time you said that thing and saved my life?


We will swing our legs, soak in the salt, and know exactly 
what we mean: we were, we are, so lost, so lucky, so lucky, so lost.

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Kirsten Miles Kirsten Miles

January - Poem 3

At the end of the lane, a house with staining carpets  / Haley Bosse

At the carving fork’s furthest tip,
The graveyard where my sister shattered stone,
The borders of letters long softened
Into a face tucked away from fall rains 
And gazing down into the fairy circle
Thumping stone by stone 
From our palms into the moss, 
Small weights sifted from the dust 
At the edge of the nearby field,
Plucked from the ever-crowning Earth
And piled by whoever tended the wheat
Shushing as we layered upward,
Ring becoming clicking fence 
And then a leaning wall, 
Any calls back for dinner muffled 
With the fading light 
Weaving through the Old Man’s Beard, 
The drooping arms of oaks brushing sweaty hair,

My sister’s arms cast out to catch the stone
Between them as she fell, 
The snap and scrape of one more body 
Throwing shadows through the shade. 


resolution  / Jess Bowe

out the window, the backyard is barely breathing.
i wonder whether i am looking out or looking in
the mirror between us.
she yawns in the darkened morning
and stretches her pale face against
the sky. i stretch thin
and flat against the night. 


across the hall
i see you in memory, your small body
hollowed with song. it’s been years
since you saved me
from the frostbite of winter,
kept my heart warm and rhythmic.


across the hall, i see you, 
handfuls of tears, a fear so high
i wonder what you might look like
behind its walls as you 
stand there in front of me.


as close to death as she appears, 
a mother’s silence has a sound,
a primal birthing-place of what eventually
crescendos through the orchestra green.


i am a mother 
in the quietest places,
a daughter adopting the patterns
of Her seasons. 


she taps her cold fingers
on the walls of my room, to say:
we wear teeth, even in the snow,
a necessary danger born
of unquestionable love.


Tanka as Dream Sequence  / Joanna Lee

Up at Dad’s

 

Up at Dad’s, the deer
curl heavy into daylight,
their white plumes bright flags
to break his long loneliness
into tolerable waves.

 

Three snows come and gone
before an old year passes
leaving its sharp breath
etched in echoes of regret,
cold hands reaching for cold stars

 

Leaffall of decades
lingers in the woods’ hollows
collarbone-deep like
swimming holes for winter fear,
cannonballed oblivions

 

Not the same, you say,
this season, its bright baubles
that hum and lie flat
since your chest rises even,
and dying feels further off.

 

 

Still

 

My hand holds heavy
to yours in the hospital
elevator, sinks
like gravity each checkup,
each new smirk of a season

 

God’s laughing, maybe
into the wind that howls round
the parking garage
outside the cancer center—
it is always colder there.

 

We take the long way,
valley road by the old tracks,
the way you don’t like
me to drive at night alone,
where I pretend fearlessness.

 

 

Reprieve

 

Methodical plunge
blunt knife into midwinter
red flesh excisions
then tie stems with summer tongues,
make cherry margaritas

 

 

Home again           

 

Yard sleeps, unlovely
and hard in its winter coat,
still-thorned roses climb
past the windows, penciling
there is no escape from rest.

 

The white lights you strung
and taught to shine through the night
flicker a welcome
against the cold long darkness
of a city rigid shut

 

It’s the same, I say,
the loneliness, the cold star
reaching back across
bent midnights to find heartbeats—
to find us, in the moonlight.

 


Later

 

Neighbor’s porch chimes fall
into stillness as you sleep
with untroubled breath;
wind has died just a little—
silent prayer of gratitude

 Dr. Pepper Shot Tips    / Thomas Page

It takes about a month to fill one bottle—
one empty bottle—of Dr. Pepper with shot 
tips. I have to be careful not to pierce 
a hypodermic needle through my fingers 
as I juggle the alcoholic prep pads 
to moisten the germs from your skin. 
Every so often, I do puncture 
the skin I inherited from your side 
of the family—pink and white and freckled—
skin I have to keep shrouded in cotton 
and wool; skin labeled “rice paper” 
by the makeup company; skin possibly 
sold in stores under the label “bruised peaches”
or possibly “plum flesh; too ripe to eat;”
skin that my mother slathered in spf 
one hundred because of your time 
in the ultraviolet rays; the skin I lived
in when I impersonated your mannerisms
when I played the dad in The Pajama 
Game
when my mother pointed out 
who exactly I was pretending to be. 


LOVE  / Sarah Paley

Blindfolded, we know the way. We’re familiar with the shifting
landscape. Our well-worn boots know those overgrown roots –
there just to trip us up. We know the streams with their sudden
drop-offs, slippery rocks, and, of course, we know where the quicksand lies.

We know who lives where and how to find them and there they’ll always be –
at the kitchen table, dancing in the bar, sleeping in the den, hiding up that tree.
The one we climbed together and where I knew you’d never leave.

We didn’t know the steady breeze would turn into a gust and blow away
the permanent, the for-granted and the dear. So much for popping
by for a drink, to shoot the shit, to play canasta, to roast a chicken, to tell a joke,
to sing that song, to tell what only you would get or to remind you of the time…


Intern at LoveMoney Clothing  / Amy Snodgrass

  for Tyreik Prentice


Because money follows love, the website says.
Not because you’re supposed to love money, right? 


I told you about the salmon in Alaska.
You were mad I was gone. Remember?


You are so full of love in a world so full 
of frantic upstream flipping and frenetic 
addict flailing. The salmon. They flap and flip 


like the hands of the man on the corner:
just as red, scales and scabs, desperate, 


not knowing they are about to die, 
both knowing they are about to die.


The man’s name is Chester, you tell me.  
“Chester,” you say, “You come on in, old man, 
and you eat. Eat for free. Eat because I love you.” 


You hold his hands inside yours and they still.  
My heart son, please, when everyone— 


like the almost-dead— pale blood-red— salmon
like the crack-fueled shaking— death of nature’s making


—when everyone is all on about the money


stop—

           hold the fiending until it stills into love


—hold the love — hold it to heal


the obsessive money-fueled drive to death—

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