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 April are Maureen Alsop, Bob Bradshaw, Sarah Carson, Stan Galloway, Ava Hu, Sergiy Pustogarov, Nat Raum, Daniel Avery Weiss, and MK Zariel.
If you’d like to volunteer for a 30/30 Project month, please fill out our application and warm up your pen!
April - Poem 12
The Bridge contd/ Maureen Alsop
I think of the older spirits who want to come and enjoy the folly. I think
of the sea turning in its angles and projections against us. You asked
how might i become u?
On wonder of recognition to my life at this juncture
The rippling surface of the dream—a courtesy, a fraction
and a flip-tide—the closing and opening of my soul in all
the ways you were alone/ unstoppable/ this grief/ this,
your grief or mine/
On wonder of recognition in my life at this juncture
You recede. Recognition recedes, the ebbing now.
Hair / Bob Bradshaw
At 20 my hair
was shoulder-length
like Il Magnifico’s.
Soon it was longer
than Raphael’s
or Botticelli’s curly locks.
Everywhere
my long-haired friends
and I talked art.
In a few years
my younger neighbors
looked at me
as if to ask,
"Why are you here?
You’re old."
Now? In my 70s
I'm as bald
as a frog.
Yet when I look back
on my days
in Haight-Asbury
I never worried
that I’d shed my hair.
Or grow old.
Wasn’t youth like a lover
vowing never
to leave?
What happened?
What always
happens.
In old age
don’t we always
ache
for the one
who got
away?
The Death of Catreus / Stan Galloway
News of death is never convenient:
postponements must be arranged
daily tasks delegated
supplies marshaled
travel details mapped out
chaos wrangled.
No time to mull the circumstances
rumors that it was my uncle
that Catreus was nothing but a pirate
Such wild stories should be dismissed.
Leave the guests to Helen.
Make the trip to Crete and back
as quickly as a stork
Then return to pick up pieces
put life back in order.
Early Spring / Ava Hu
*
Substitute the sound
of a flute for bird call.
The river rings
the bells of haiku.
The mind of a river
is here and now.
Ringing temple bells
break air,
shake leaves into essence
a listening.
*
imprecise efforts at welding / nat raum
we were supposed to be gold, supposed to be a david
rose and patrick brewer kind of love, where we are both
the flashy dramatic one and the voice of rationality
in tandem. what i mean is i thought this was real, despite
signs to the contrary, because i am trying to trust people.
we were supposed to be new cycles, not endless barbecue
dinners where i find out lies by omission. you said open up.
it’s safe here. i was okay to still fall asleep and dream of locked
doors, triple deadbolts. the light of the morning sieves
through clouds, silver at best. never was i precious enough.
There, the Apalachicola River unspools / Kirsten Miles
Cutting through the tupelo apiaries and the sundew.
You found your Helen, or perhaps she found you,
a woman whose heart beats in the same green meter,
mirroring your passion for the Florida I remember.
Together, you two returned me with my daughter
down the glass-clear pulse of Wakulla Springs
the same waters where, as a toddling child,
I first followed your boots and had my eyes blessed open.
You brought the wilderness to my door,
an orphaned bear cub tumbled
with a four year old in a thin nightgown on a wood floor,
fawns cradled like kin, you never let me get away
with childish selfishness.
Your voice like no other, wise, both bold and restrained, quick to laugh.
You, who marched me, awkward, into an officers' ball in my first gown,
wept together over The Yearling and wept again
with my children over its tender breaking heart,
knowing that to love the wild is to know its cost.
It was always a matter of looking closely, wasn't it?
From my first rain soaked hike in the pacific northwest
to name the swifts that spend their lives in the breezes,
in the mud of a paleoarcheological dig in Savannah with my daughter
returning to the Spanish moss-drip of the Florida panhandle,
a 300 year old dwarf cypress grove in Tate’s Hell
finding a miracle of access at Rish Park to give her back
again to our beloved Gulf Coast waters.
More than my first book of natural history,
than names of flora and fauna,
you gave me the gravity of the earth,
a world never empty
the holy, tangled history of the dirt.
Now, when the wind leans into the pines,
I’ll gaze through a pair of your eyes,
mine forever open,
reminding me that we are only as deep
as the things we stop to notice.
The Lament of Cognito Amor / Sergiy Pustogarov
as we climb to the top tonight--
a slow and steady cranking fills the air:
the turning gears creaking and groaning pause the world.
we have reached the initial plunge,
as we stand above it all for a single moment--
we see the land below spread out for eternity--
a circus laid out for the amusement of the rich,
unchecked without precautions for the masses--
ready to send millions hurdling down a roller-coaster.
the ride holds no basis in physics,
but rather claims the pursuit of a thrill for the few:
for death counts no longer matter this time.
jump down--
set off your paraglider, and hope
you will each the ground in safety.
watch as the cars fall off the tracks.
reaching up your arms in angst--
and wait.
catch--
one soul, and then another;
as many as these feeble hands seek.
breathe--
and do not die during this time
from a plummeting track upon your neck.
oxygen
will only assist the others,
when you have put on your mask.
Hypothesis / Daniel Avery Weis
He is alive in my dog's eyes.
He is alive in clay.
He is a microbe,
a macrobe,
and a bathrobe.
He is alive in my printer, where he
drinks from the ink cartridges, he has
peeled off the curtain he used to hide me
from the view of his indulging in his
favorite things alone
(cover the eyes of your children—joy
comes creeping in).
He is alive in a text box, which is an urn.
He is alive in the “fun guy” of the fungi
in a bad joke.
He is alive and playing pool (he is also
riding the balls like circus balls and guffawing
at how silly this image is).
He is alive in a suspicious rendition of für elise,
composed by my dog, which is the sound of
his heartbeat beneath the fur.
He is alive in between unstoppable forces and
immovable objects.
pathways / MK Zariel
my life is a reflecting pool full of algae and pollution
you can only figure out who you are by combing through
distortion, through the endless drift of people-pleasing.
i just gave a reading advertised as a midnight event
that turned out to start at 7pm. i felt a little guilty
despite myself. i will get hate mail from the militantly nocturnal
and then i'll wake up, knowing it was another anxiety dream
for nobody. artificial light reflects on the ceiling, the window
brightened only by distant neon—the entire Midwest a collection
of houses that look like each other. copy and paste neighborhoods
and you have a doom spiral, a human cost, a wayward rippl
that floods through everything. it's easy to procrastinate
when everything you're trying to do leads back to personal growth.
i don't want to heal. i take a deep breath. i want to have healed.i take a shallow breath. i cancel plans, smile despite myself,
make other plans, walk through liminal spaces only to get yeled at
i want to have been loved and i keep walking.
April - Poem 11
The Bridge contd/ Maureen Alsop
Fluid-submerged-angelic sun, within the rapport
of our language, the sun—?
Stagnant sun, surreptitious and cold. Tall, toppling,
tariff-ridden sun, what rooms
did you keep? Patterning back across the sea. Coralita
Flowers & Hibiscus Vines strangle out the light of this
wedding: the sea’s photograph, a blotted impulse,
bric-a-brac, deception.
Love In The Dentist's Office / Bob Bradshaw
My dentist leans over me.
She’s a voice behind the light.
When she takes off
her face guard,
she’s perfect—
like her smile.
I run my tongue
along my teeth, stones
ragged as a reef's.
I blush, ashamed
that my mouth
is so common.
I want to talk about Van Gogh
or Wuthering Heights
or….Jane Eyre
but words like "gingivitis”
pepper her vocabulary.
As a rebuke
she hands me a mirror.
"Do you see?”
Before I can ask her
to elope with me
to Fiji,
she hands me
two bottles
of mouth
wash
Agamemnon’s Engagement / Stan Galloway
Brother, you will think me fickle –
Nothing new!
That sister –
Clytemnestra –
she’s got brass
I go hard just seeing her
send a servant cringing to the stables
or survey a room along her subtle nose.
I’ll have her –
I know she has her eye on me –
and I’ll take her
to heights she’s never known –
she will ogle what’s beneath this armor
beg
for more.
You take the other –
I will be your advocate
but know you’ll have the poorer choice –
you will be bound to Sparta –
better that though than you living
in my shadow back in Mycenae.
As brother-kings, we’ll have everything we see!
Annunciation / Ava Hu
*
You are yellow
with pollen.
Counted apple seeds
in your palm.
Hymns stain
your lips.
A moth-winged flower
opens.
A single pistil
emerges
from the throat
of the flower
sticky,
potent.
When I shift beyond
the mind—
the blossoming
heavy, sweet.
A lifeboat,
a song.
*
Wakulla Springs / Kirsten Miles
i .
heels drag the sandy bottom
holding against the slight current
little waves lap along her cheeks
in the shallows
trickle into her ears
between her lips
hair sways with the slipstream
teasing toward the deep outflow
As though there were no terror
in a hole
ii.
the glass-bottomed boat a portal
the crystal surface colorless as air
suspended over wintering manatees
billowy eel grass darting minnows
the shadow of the massive spring
her father is a bright stroke against
the dark cave mouth
she is a small softness leaning over the rail
her skin a contracted shudder
iii.
this fear is not a wall
but a map’s beginning
she watches him clear the deep
finds the rhythm in the spring’s slow pulse
this is the floor of every cavern she will later crawl
the depth of every ocean she will one day cross
learning how to stay afloat
iv
fifty years later adrift
once more downstream
her daughter spies a least bittern in the reeds
manatee and calf swim alongside
pale shadows over those same green channels
minnows dart in the eel grass
night herons crowned in black
rise in a croak of surprise
no glass portal to reveal
the water’s liquid biography
urban sediment an opaque erasure
ghosting the spring’s mouth
The Secret of Us / Sergiy Pustogarov
i wonder if you miss the secret of us;
all that we held within our bosoms
at just nineteen years old.
skinny dipping in the river down the way--
and laying on each other’s chest after
puffing away at a pack of malboros.
we spent hours laughing together,
while our lips became magnets for each other;
and we laughed thinking about if mom ever found out.
we were mesmerized by the peach fuzz trailing on our chest,
while our hands stayed tangled together:
and we told ourselves this was forever.
when all along we knew this was just
a teenage fever dream,
that lasted every weekend for six months.
but it could never give us more than
a few days of solitude,
with the sun setting in the background.
and when the winds turned harsh;
my mother finally figured out
i was down by the boys all the time.
she slammed my bedroom door shut,
and screamed my name as a fag in the papers;
just to make sure i could never love again.
but i still taste your lips every time
that i hit a malboro drunk at the end of a night--
fifteen years later.
imagine you dance on highwires / nat raum
the issue is not the walking of the tightrope—it’s the strength of the net that catches you when you fall. you could balance for hours if only you had learned to trust nylon. too many things called themselves strong and then tore before your eyes for your liking. you know how to look for where the weak spots are. no one believes you. you are the kind of helpless you swore you could never be, wide-eyed in the presence of a spotlight and all these witnesses. you stand on only your left big toe. nobody claps. you skip and skitter to flute-notes and lose your footing. everyone gasps. deep down, you know even if you can’t find the places where weaving wears thin, they are still there, waiting to drop you one last time.
Poem on Fire (Read the News or I Will Cook Your Notebooks) / Daniel Avery Weiss
Your books are booking the book
burnings (your kindle is kindling).
I am going to microwave your mother
board. Pressing “add +30sec” is the key
board. I have taken your word salad and tossed it
out the window. Your five syllable words are
defenestrated.
Deleted your oeuvre, retyped it in Microsoft Word,
and exited without saving.
I have found your latest collection and eaten it,
page by leathery page. It was signed. I ate your name.
I cooked a reduction of your sonnet and now
there are six lines. I wept
at his wily grave and grieved my grieving father and
gorged on a yellow star. Eat this poem when you are done or we will be
disintegrated.
I need you to at least pretend you’re helpful / MK Zariel
a toddler points at a sculpture, saying someone couldn't have made that
the paper-maché gleams under museum light, crafted by someone
uncredited. i tell them that every object they've ever seen is a made thing
and much of it used to be trash. they look amazed, then underwhelmed, then
eventually distracted—the pasted-together dead trees shine with the certainty
that only art for toddlers can. it has one job—to impress without being destroyed—
and i know the damn feeling. i used to be trash too and then i was a girl
and then i was an object to project ambitions onto and then i was a useful idiot
and then i came out. every trans kid is a made thing—sculpted by
the relentless pulling-at-threads, intuition soft like a whisper
i can never tell if i'm having identity revelations or just
making something out of nothing—but hey, isn't that what art is?
the kids continue to gossip, this time about a girl in their class
who they call crazy. instead of telling them to be respectful i just smile
hey, i am too, but i'm pretty fun, right? nobody laughs.
i hope someone pieces me back together into something more beautiful.
April - Poem 10
The Bridge / Maureen Alsop
PAX it stands in my mind. I call her back.
Reenact the day
But you can mitigate the spirit only so many times
Attack Of The Giant Ants / Bob Bradshaw
I skidded to a stop, mere feet
from THEM!
—monstrous rust
colored ants swarming
in the middle
of the road.
I couldn’t
see anything, the things
crawling over my car,
my hood, peering
into my windshield
with huge, fiery red
compound
eyes.
A huge hiss!
They’d punctured
my left front tire
with their huge jaws!
Far ahead helicopters
were circling a brute,
its antennae
waving angrily.
I turned the radio on.
“Everything is normal.
There were reports
of giant ants,
but the reports
proved false.
There is no need
for concern.
If things change,
the public
will be notified. The pregame
for tonight’s Dodgers game
will return shortly.”
Menelaus Upon Missing Helen / Stan Galloway
Did I not know:
not with the mind
no words or tones betrayed her –
instead, in my very liver
dread that precedes any utterance
her need to bathe
to travel
to sleep apart
live life in pieces of her own
spend time on her own diversions
all the things she tired of sharing with me
Flirtatious looks abounded
Then the words:
You’ve got to let me see
where this thing with Paris goes.
And now she’s out to sea
thinking all life’s eddies will be smooth
that oars dipped in the water
leave no pain
that unspoken promises can’t simply drop behind
not seeing there the seeds of fire and sword.
Ark / Ava Hu
*
We vanish
under waves.
Salt on the skin.
The earth swallows you.
The marrow of cypress
reddens the water.
Lamentation, the bending
of boughs.
Have we lost favor
with the gods?
Plant, wind,
body and bone.
The moon crashes
into the earth.
Salt enters
the lungs.
Is there still time
to build an ark?
*
Twin Hazelnut trees / Kirsten Miles
leak leaf-light through
a century of rain
crowns splayed and wide under
light of the sky’s blue weight
roots explore an architecture of dark
seasons moss a language of limbs.
Stellar’s Jay’s perch—that blue spark of noise—
all sapphire and arrogance
chickaree darts a jagged thread
through latticed branches
deer fold themselves into our shadow
noses damp against the mulch
breath rising like a slow, white prayer
and they who stand— arms stretched high
where the sun breaks into coins
think to name the way we endure.
a story in the branches
reaching out to touch the wind
the work we do in secret
the ancient braid of wood on wood
the two of us, tangled at the bone
in the quiet geometry below—
how two people, a century gone, once stood
with mud-stained palms and a single bucket,
turning the soil until it tasted like a promise.
planted us side by side
now gone names softened by moss
the compass points of a life
tucked our feet into
this dark pocket of the earth.
now a single knotted pulse
The Barbell / Sergiy Pustogarov
man and woman in the gym.
girl straightens her hair in the mirror.
man flexes his biceps.
the man laughs with his girl,
plotting their next move.
then reaches around her front
to tussle the hair,
she had just laid down.
he smiles.
returns to the bench.
the girl turns around to say
i hate you.
i read the lips because
i can’t hear.
no other words were legible
during these deaf moments
in the gym on a monday night.
they turned back to the benches,
smiling.
i said
i hate you
to the barbell
just to return and smile.
i looked in my own mirror
and told the demon next to me,
i hate you
just to smile again.
auto-destructive asphyxiation / nat raum
cw: BDSM/kink
a hoe phase would break me and heal me
all over again, emphasis on the fission, but i think
i’m oversimplifying it. i wouldn’t have envied
myself in past timelines, peeling off a black oxford
in the understated amber streetlight streaming
through a mt. vernon window frame—back then
my body didn’t belong to me, but the night
and the bottle and the hand around my throat.
i’d say i could be the same shell of myself, but i am
one already, just a different flavor. i have gone
so long without touch that i bristle at the thought.
i know which thumb i want to trace my trachea—
that’s the problem. i never draw blood from the hand
that sustains me. i just want to choose the hand.
Parco / Daniel Avery Weiss
Graffiti in its homeland,
swaddling the aqueducts,
cooing lullabies to the great
dead snake. Porco
dio, it whispers. Porco dio—e
vaffanculo, Meloni. On the other side,
umbrella gyrates slow across
the pasture, interrupted by slippages of
collapsing Roman tufa.
Down, down, down, they must have
thought—we all go
down in history, rust or
ballad kill us.
I need you to at least pretend you’re helpful / MK Zariel
I say out loud to a computer while running on
six hours of sleep and no hours of rest,
after the crushing realization that finals week lasts approximately
ten weeks. i still don’t know how to feel sane
nor is that a standard to aspire to, or so
a very earnest work of theory says. i melt down and call it liberation.
i look into my todo list like a collage—a planning thread full
of difficult personalities, a shame circle, a harrowing truth,
a heart-to-brain-to-deflated-heart for people with more
commitments than named feelings. i need you to at least
pretend you care, i say to most institutions, knowing full well
that they won’t. in a way it’s easier when structures
are abhorrent enough to almost penetrate
the glassy-eyed sheen of assimilation—i wish i could take comfort
in knowing that even normal people see this as a problem. i can’t.
i still pretend i’m helpful.
i need you.
April - Poem 9
untitled / Maureen Alsop
Who’s Grumpy / Bob Bradshaw
You’ll need to speak louder.
Car alarms outside
are always going off.
Don’t get me started
on the nurses.
Pill pushers!
That’s why
narcotic agents
aren’t allowed
to visit!
The vegetables?
Salty mush!
And the meat!
Well, the flies
don’t complain.
And my room? Stuffy?
I’d sleep better
in a morgue's drawer.
Why complain?
Don't others somewhere
have it worse?
But, dear, if you could
do something about the clouds?
They’re never
positioned right—
too much light
gets through.
Some days
too little
Helen Contemplates Infidelity / Stan Galloway
Orpheus had Eurydice six months of the year,
sharing her with Hades,
but holding her,
delighting through the summer in their personal adventures.
Sharing wasn’t his idea
but true love let strict monogamy
be reluctantly released
to have her half time.
So why should Menelaus grumble
when I have a stout servant in the night,
knowing I’ll be taken for an hour rather than two seasons,
knowing I will love him no less in the morning,
knowing he can have me anytime I choose.
Pollinator / Ava Hu
*
They are marked by
red canyon.
God of the subterranean,
god of the yellow bloom.
Their feet, wet
with marigolds.
Do they watch to see
if Orpheus looks back?
Their bodies press
into flowers.
*
Tawney’s Cave / Kirsten Miles
The squeeze is the gate
palms pressing powdery dirt
toes pushing the slip
of her twelve year old body
the world has already
begun to demand she stand tall
but here the only way forward
on her belly
into a cool dark air
the hiss—a sharp, white secret
escaping the brass vessel strapped
to the crown of her young head.
She is a small moon in a throat of limestone
a quiet lever of bone and light
carbide headlamp cutting light into the opening
cavern lined with glistening limestone teeth
walls draped in flowstone’s velvet hush
knuckled spires rising here and there
tasting the ancient
damp breath of the earth
unlearning the sky
A tiny figure jeweled with droplets hangs
before her, a reassurance of life
in this world
of rock
some things
require us to get a little bit lost
in the tight spots
before we can finally
stand up and breathe.
massage boards for heaven / Sergiy Pustogarov
i’ve bought a thousand massage boards
trying to break the knots
that turn my neck
into stiffened old oak boards.
i’ve worked with reiki
trying to release the fears and woes
my muscle store as frantic pains.
worked with god too,
raising my voice from the beams
of an ancient farmhouse.
pleading for help to guide this soul
toward that desired haven;
while rewriting the lie
that heaven is reserved
for a three-word prayer-
whispered from the deathbed
of one who spent their precious breaths
killing a thousand smaller lives.
i’ve spent my savings
rewiring my nerves,
teaching them not to flinch
at those souls who wreak havoc;
still awaiting their free pass
through the pearly gates.
and sometimes,
when i’m bent over in the living room,
ass up, breath taught,
trying to untangle myself again:
i hear saint peter saying
welcome home,
you blessed broken heathen,
who never knew which question
unlocked the perfect gate.
so you asked them all.
you sought every path
through redemption’s burning traps,
hoping to one day it might be enough
to let your body
finally rest.
wind's howling / nat raum
a mourning dove, cataclysmically close
to back porch, throats gentle coos
into a starched blue sky. we had alley
doves on eaton—fittingly, i only knew
how to mourn when i lived there. still
i peel layers of myself imbued with you
off of my skin, trying to remain convinced
i am better off. still i know not how
to exist without you, the music of our shared
ecstasy or the ensuing stretch of misery.
sometimes i see myself as a parasite—
head buried in blood vessels, thirsting
until gluttonous coma arrives and i expire,
fall to forest floor, and learn to crawl again.
Seven Haiku for Early Spring / Daniel Avery Weiss
Sweet milk—
the cherry blossom
greets me.
We splay ourselves
in the dew,
the roly-poly and I.
The crane stoops low.
A snap, a splash—
a salmon.
Gull on the rocks,
heckling. An icy tide
envelops our toes.
Ice—
steam—
a toad's breath.
Magnolias.
A thin rustle of wind.
Petals.
Under the beech tree,
ants fluttering
across my lap.
how to navigate writer's block / MK Zariel
look up a themed call on the internet, find a thousand
variations on "sad" and various texting abbreviations,
say screw it and write another political screed
about being trans. (indie lit is a reflecting pool
into which one pours trauma—) say i'm done
and get rejected. say it's beautiful but not nearly
comprehensible enough—say where are the explanations
of why exactly you're doomed. (an inbox is a void
into which one sends praise and extracts money—)
tell an editor that you want to see trans joy represented,
tell Instagram that you want to know who you are,
tell nobody. join an organizing project and explain poetry
to three people, go to a reading and explain anarchism
to yourself. when people ask if you're an artist or an activist,
nod, wink, change the topic. (a college application is a series
of narrowing questions—into which one combines twelve practices—
into one cohesive brand—) talk to teenagers, explain everything
to everybody. look up a poem on the internet, look for an accessible one
for a friend who thinks poetry isn't for her, find neglected websites
and opaque verse, worry she's right. say screw it (because you're still trans)
and try to at least jot something down.
April - Poem 8
untitled / Maureen Alsop
Candy Cigarettes / Bob Bradshaw
You’d roll your tube
of candy lipstick
over your lips,
trying to look as sultry
as Brigitte Bardot
with her pout.
While you printed the air
with your fake kisses,
I’d open my pack
of chalky sweet
cigarettes.
The packs came in covers
similar to Dad’s
in King’s, Round Ups,
Stallions, Jolly
Winstons.
I’d smoke a cigarette,
halos wafting into the air,
as I imagined
James Dean
lighting up,
Natalie Wood and the future
loitering around
his Mercury Coupe.
Our future was a drag race
I looked forward to.
For now it was enough
that I looked cool.
James Dean
cool.
Examining Natural History / Stan Galloway
Pliny claimed,
There is a wild beast,
the oryx, who steadfastly watches
Sirius rise, then sneezes, as in worship.
I’ve seen the oryx
a hundred at a time
in Kalahari grass
preparing for the dusk
– none watched the sky –
perhaps one watched
shadows underneath
acacia trees for lions
it’s pickaxe horns
formidable defense
when threatened as a herd.
Black-backed jackals
give scant concern.
The rare strandwolf
has not been seen
in generations.
The Dog Star holds
no secret lure or talisman
despite its brightness.
The sneezing is more likely
from the chaff and dust
stirred up by winter’s Cape Doctor
cold and dry.
*my paraphrase from Pliny’s Natural History, circa CE 77.
Forest / Ava Hu
after words from Waorani leader Nemonte Nenquimo
*
Stories are living beings.
We, the river, we
the river. The river
we wash with the ash
from burning trees.
Mother Earth
will
not be saved.
She does not need
to be saved.
Jaguars crisscross
asphalt.
Give back the blood of the land.
Bones of our elders.
Give it back.
Stories are living beings.
Whistle of the piha.
Chant of howler monkeys.
The highway accelerates
destruction.
A god wakes
in the trees.
Put your hands
over your ears.
*
End of the World / Kirsten Miles
narrow strip of resilience
a thin green blade
one hundred feet above the ocean’s
slow rhythmic exhale
air vibrates
a hummingbird rises
salt-stung vines in the hush
on the edge of this great, vertical silence
we gather on this precarious spine
without boundaries
strangers form
a small huddle of breath and expectation
low murmurs blend with the tide, whispers in fragments
inky slate blue sheet of the Salish Sea
lapping the bluff’s sheer base, shifting with
a slow, muscular inhale
ocean softens into pewter
we stretch our eyes, wait together in the star struck dark
for the first thin wash
ghost light across the sky
a pillar of light pulls itself down — pale shiver of violet
more like memory than color
the sky finally yields
vertical curtains of emerald drape across the horizon
a rhythmic spilling
waves of fuchsia gyrate and whorl above our upturned faces
silhouettes against a solar panoply of voices
older than the earth under our feet
Oh Brother Where Art Thou? / Sergiy Pustogarov
solo goose,
no v formation,
no honks,
a single speck
in the blue,
not a painting
across the
sky.
just shoot
from any
side.
the goose flies on.
you missed
the only target
in the sky,
and dropped lead
into mere liquid.
water.
ripples.
no wings.
even the
frogs
stay hidden.
nature knew
you
were shooting
something
into its world.
just lead,
sinking
down.
we never
found the
remains.
haiku for the one getting away / nat raum
you loved me like ash
loves a beige sofa cushion—
stains are permanent.
God B / Daniel Avery Weiss
less America!
Go Dbles Samerica!
Godble Ssamerica!
G Odblessa Merica!
Godbles Sam Erica!
L And Ofthe Free!
Landofthe Free!
Land ofthefree!
La Ndo Fth Efree!
Land
Ho Meoft He Brave!
Homeo Ft Hebr Ave!
H Omeofthebr Av E!
Home Oft He Brave!
Hom Eofth Eb Rave!
A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again.
Awholeci vili za tion willdieto ni ght, n evertobe bro ughtba ckagai n.
Aw hole civiliz ationwi lldi eto ni g ht,ne v ert obebro ugh tbac kagain.
Awh olec iv il izat i onwilld iet on ig ht,n evertobe b r o u g htbackagain.
Awho leciv ili zat ionw ill diet onight, nevert obe brou ghtb ackagain.
who will die night, never to be brought back again.
on boundaries / MK Zariel
a text chain is a contained brutality, a collection
of sharp winds damaging each structure until
you can't even notice what's left and what remains—
logistical drift like the air slowly growing toxic,
like a thin layer of smog that remains unexplained. i have been
a people-pleaser for a long time—beware my verbal fillers
the award i'll likely win for a thousand repetitions of the accursed phrase
i'm fine with anything! a text chain is a poorly contained waterspout
and i an drenched in the remains of my dignity. did you know that "sure"
actually means "please don't"? did you know that i am somehow a
worse texter than ChatGPT? an email is a wind-swept plain full of
death traps buried under the sands, the rare oasis only found
when one procrastinates. do you love me anyway?
April - Poem 7
The Peace / Maureen Alsop
A ceaseless salve, the river’s light, a holy
spoken name—the sun’s
acidic touch.
At daybreak
the sea is an open mouth. Surf—
another language.
Ashlyn! / Bob Bradshaw
The moment I shuffle
out of this YMCA
I see Ashlyn
sprinting to me,
and my heart’s doors
start popping open!
My heart tosses aside
its keys. My arms
fly open like shutters
to take in
the morning sun
that is my granddaughter
once again.
Distillery / Stan Galloway
When we become fine wine
through ageing and confinement
our spirits strong as oak barrels
with mint or coriander splashed across us
the bitter almond of forsaken amaretto clinging
the sweet-sour rot in a strawberry daiquiri’s aftertaste
the aroma of the morning beside you,
then I know we have survived
life’s hangover
two hundred proof.
Forest / Ava Hu
The Amazon forest is nearly gone.
*
This is the burning season.
What once streamed runs dry.
Trees cut down
and raised as churches.
A man survives
with two hearts.
Spirits. Smoke.
Forgotten gods.
The hum of chainsaws
and gunshots keeps rising.
God comes
with mud.
God comes
as an outlaw.
Does God open
a seed in ash?
Who will remember
the names of trees?
*
Ode to a sun dog / Kirsten Miles
diamond dust flickers
suspended to the left
of a low hung sun
shattered rays slung
round her phantom halo
unbidden color a
smeared blur of ice filaments
flickers through leaves
yaws across the gloam
as Route 20 winds down
towards the James River
black lab wedged hard
and hot on the floorboard
brown eye rolls up
waiting for the mouth feel
of a stoney creek
The way his torso leans
head cocked gaze
holding me fast
as if knowing that wheel
can lure us into
a final curve
untethered
bright rays curtain across
the windshield
that time we turned into a
grassy hill sailed across
yellow tickseed
rolled
rolled rolled
each floating
object
A loose texture of
rarer bodies
In the blue air
Down by the Meadow / Sergiy Pustogarov
we danced through a meadow
down by the creek--
acting
like not a single care
could affect this
teenage heart.
we fished for minnows
thinking
our crackers
would turn into their favorite food
the second they bit our hooks.
we danced shirtless
among
the twigs and rocks.
teasing one another
if we would dare jump
in the freezing waters..
we were happy together
searching for fish that never
saw our
bareback strokes,
or dared to bite our clothesline
fishing poles.
that never happened:
but i dreamt it after
i cried myself to sleep
every night in the basement.
what a catch / nat raum
After “What A Catch, Donnie” by Fall Out Boy
my thoughts are nightmare fuel, metacognition
for insanity’s sake, and my self-esteem paints
itself the same shade. i am forced to believe i am
the protagonist, eventually—my raisined ego
resists it, but there is no other excuse to explain
the way in which things are constantly happening.
my body breaks down lactic acid, double-time. cracks
groan in the meat of my neck and shoulders. shhhh.
i goad myself to unlock my jaw, push posture
straighter than the parenthesis of early kyphosis.
it all adds up over time in the sense that nothing
is actively coming for me—it is already here. i don’t
do the therapy work during sessions. it happens
on the outside, day by day, convincing myself that soon,
things will be different. someone will see i am a catch.
Of my student's second class in pottery / Daniel Avery Weiss
Yes, sweetheart. I am really bald.
No, I have not always been bald.
Oh—yes, I am really—yes, very bald.
Yes, I can help you center. Can you try to do it yourself first?
That's okay. Effort is optional. No, I am not going to put my hat back on.
Yes! Excellent. The walls are great. Looking good.
Position your hands like this. Pressure between.
Slow the wheel down. Good.
Yes! I mean, what would you do if I said no? What if I simply said, “No, I'm not bald, actually.”
Touchè.
Pressure from the bottom of your hand.
Forward. Lean in. Yes! Yes!
No. I am not.
win condition / MK Zariel
gender is a TTRPG and i’m the problem player, says a meme—
and in some twisted way i find it accurate. i am transmasc as in
late on a weekly basis, as in responding to every conflict with some
version of well, actually. butch as in optimized, except when i’m not,
as in overwhelming and quiet all at once. i’m here to tell a story
until i break down and decide to troll everyone instead. to be trans\
is to never have had a gender role model beyond caricature
to be unmoored, unaligned, a changeling in human form—
bilateral dysphoria creeping like foreshadowing like an aura
like a warning. gender is a video game and i am a glitch in the system
ask me to make a character and i’ll choose
the pixelated edge of the screen. the three genders are
boy, girl, and NPC—and I have been all of the above—
and i have tried to flirt with all of the above—and i have never
broken character when i need to. i have minmaxed my pronouns
to hell and back, and still never found the one that feels
like a critical success. will someone make a name generator
for those whose genders are a mystery even to them?
April - Poem 6
The Bridge / Maureen Alsop
Everywhere are clouds and currawongs, pale rockeries
hung with pine shadow. The wind thickens the sky,
forgets winter. You speak as ally—she was lovely you said.
Openness Alma, the sun—a mutilated rose, galactic purple
at the seam—you bury the sky
in water, in bloodwood, in ironbark.
Or stringybark or grey.
The bridge collapses in purple fuzzweed, rosella and musk okra. It is not
in your time now. Sleep’s infused regalia, your fortress—
also gone. Your identity is exposed in this space
in crossing and uncrossing. And now
the force of the sun is a bridge
You are only figuring out its power, the pressure held between spaces—
continuous, fused. Sequestered sun
wreathed in blanched roses, Shakespearean sun—sweet, sagacious, tragic.
Why I Want To Be A Painter In My Next Life / Bob Bradshaw
What poet has a studio
bathed in sunlight?
Or canvases
lying about?
A poet’s murky room
offers what?
A gooseneck lamp?
Who wants to watch
a poet write?
But a painter?
Now we’re talking!
Isn’t it always the painter
who gets the Jill Clayburgh,
the Elsa Zylberstein?
Why shouldn’t I love
a Salma Hayek?
Pollock couldn’t draw,
or so his mentor
Thomas Hart Benton
claimed.
I can’t draw either!
But I can pour paint
and splatter it!
Like Manet’s Olympia
my favorite model will wear only
a red hibiscus.
Maybe I should frame
my poems, hanging them
on my walls?
Then would a painter—
or a poet like Frank O’Hara—
wander in to comment?
“This one…
could use some color…
orange maybe?
Or maybe add
SARDINES
to it!”
Thanks, I’ll say,
I’ll fix that. But, say,
do you know
a dark-haired waitress
or a can-can dancer looking
for extra pay?
All they’d have to do
is lie on that couch.
Naked, of course.
“Of course."
Night Hike / Stan Galloway
I turned the page and the river opened. –Maureen Alsop
When I read breadcrumbs dropped along the trail
I knew someone was crying out:
I can’t, alone!
crumbs shining bright enough by moonlight
for me to follow intermittently
until a perturbation of pigeons
probably as dusk fell
swallowed up that voice
and now lay sleeping in a spruce line
stomachs talking to each other.
I tried intuition – where would I have gone next?
guessed where each step felt sound
and listened for the whisper
unsure whether I now led or followed.
When I saw glimmers,
made out come join me between branches
smelled distant rain, I quickened to the riverbank
and heard my own voice echo.
untitled / Ava Hu
Humpback whales breach
the shoreline.
Turn toward your god.
Call the waves.
Humpback whales breach
the shoreline.
The sea recedes.
The sea races forward.
Humpback whales breach
the shoreline.
Underlined,
dog-eared pages:
you must change your life.
Driving to Hurricane Ridge contd / Kirsten Miles
Blue-black drupelets shine across
the peninsula Himalayan blackberries thrust
past native plants through every crevice swelling
drought ripened bounty pronounce
July in every vacant lot
moss and mycorrhizae sweep
brilliant greens fan
across lawns and rooftops
loam the throat
traces of rainforest once
a moist blanket caressing this hill
no to the silence of dust
clouds from the inside out
feathering our nostrils
flaked across fawns and hazelnuts
and lilyponds and spotted rabbits
under the truck on E street
next to the house whose yard has
disappeared into a sea of lavender
Icarus’s Reward / Sergiy Pustogarov
the sun reminds me that icarus never got his reward
for flying away from the rest of his brothers.
a pomegranate bleeds only when its home is ripped apart,
its siblings split across the dishes in my fridge.
maybe he should have tasted something first,
staining his face with an already broken family,
before lifting his wings into the sun.
the containers in my house sit
unopened
everything i save for hope
learns to rot.
i have neither pomegranate seeds
nor waxed wings.
let’s play a love game / nat raum
in the sense that i have never known
anything but pushing pawns around,
the morning after as my goal, and queenly
i am not. it’s all strategy—risk directly
proportionate to reward. i have never
claimed to be a saint. my voice rasps
at the first sign of spring and that’s when
i haven’t dragged an errant cigarette.
i’ll be lucky if i can breathe tomorrow
but that’s not the point. i’m the pawn.
i’m the embodiment of divided by zero,
so much nothing i am become void,
destroyer of romance. (if you keep pressing
the same buttons, they’ll go numb eventually.)
O / Daniel Avery Weiss
k so it's 9
pm right and the lights
just died, be
cause of the storm, they
went to light heaven it's like
heaven plus or like
heaven lite the
free version or
something so the candles are
out you know and we
swear
like truckers when there is a
leak later but any
way he's in the dirt and a rock
has his name on it the wet's
got the urn all
wet
running on the process / MK Zariel
an erasure poem of college marketing emails
April - Poem 5
The Sun's Uneven Rays / Maureen Alsop
When I Was Your Age / Bob Bradshaw
my college was a Mustang,
and its radio schooled me
in surf music:
The Rip Chords, The Surfaris,
Ronny and the Daytonas,
The Astronauts,
The Rivieras,
The Breakers,
The Ventures!
In my beach town
romances collapsed
quickly,
the way a wave
knocks you off
your board.
A new kind of dance
popped up
every week:
The Jerk,
The Frug,
The Watusi!
Guys and girls
lined up--
in front of cafes
and surf shops—
like 45s on the jukebox
waiting to play
when I was your age.
Music was never
loud enough.
And like Louie Louie
love was in the air
everywhere.
There was no need
for a calendar;
summer was never ending,
sure to replace fall
winter, spring--
when I was
your age
Signature / Stan Galloway
And in my dream I practice cursive writing
as if I were in second grade again
but I am not because in dreams life whorls
instead of marching linear –
each S in uppercase stretched higher
as if growing into puberty
seeing girls trying out their B’s
new letters none of us had known
every letter hooking to the next
until a magic spark enlivened ignored places
mixing up our P’s and O’s in strange but pleasant ways
and suddenly I sign my name across the mortgage
knowing I will pay for this throughout my life.
Ceremony / Ava Hu
*
Holder of ceremony.
Cloud swallower.
Wielder of swords.
Eater of black oil.
You burn the grass
beneath our feet.
The memory of the sea
recedes.
The earth will turn
with or without you.
Do you know how to call
the spirits?
Barnacles crack open.
Mussels loosen from the rock.
The memory of the sea
recedes.
Do you know how to call
the spirits?
Who will remember
the names of trees?
*
Driving to Hurricane Ridge contd / Kirsten Miles
above the Juan de Fuca strait
otters dip in the curve of Ediz Hook and
the girl at Tongue Point sleuths
tide pools for orange and purple sea urchins
crimson sea stars, blackberry stains
on her hands her aunt pointing out tentacles
anemone reaching inside a mussel
on the high ridge
in the lower parking lot
faces turned to the star studded sky
the boy on his blanket slightly bored
between each Perseid streaking
between the screen of sky and void
Soft cries rising around him with each new spark
wondering which will open a world
he recognizes
or which he doesn’t recognize but falls
flaming from his lap
Simulation Garden Party / Sergiy Pustogarov
- After the showcase Simulation Garden by Anna Huff
crystal shatters.
boulders crack.
clay breaks.
insects burrow.
rotting smells.
nostrils furrow.
churches mourn.
blessings fail,
still chant,
hold hands,
walk softly,
to light.
the crystal flower
held in your hand
gives simple decadence in a solemn day.
the stars
no longer
blossom.
we
broken people
cast veils
over shaking
ancient shrines.
letting bugs
burrow into
cursed blessings.
in the back
computers clack.
games buzz buzz
simulation garden
hosted by the gods.
.
afterwards i sat in the grass
let does dig to grass and into soil.
let flies dance on my arms,
and a drone fly above.
i still didn’t know what to call
this deity i had stood within.
sprung / nat raum
we all surround the bradford pear spittoon
of pollen vomit and watch ochre dust percolate
while horseflies emerge from hides. this is to say
it’s april, and my eyes itch. i’ve decided i want
to be the movie theater popcorn machine—
seems like a good life to me. i’d like to be doused
in butter and grease and change kernels to fluff
at will, say this must be how jesus felt. instead,
i take Ls the way i used to down chilled shots
of tequila. let’s get one thing absolutely clear:
you’re in their dms. i’m pissing in a pitchblack
bar bathroom. we are not the same.
Doggy Dementia / Daniel Avery Weiss
to be seen / MK Zariel
i almost passed out in public today and looked
desperately awkward doing it. blurred spots, distorted faces,
and still i mostly wondered what everyone would remember of it.
the spots were blue-green like the inside of my eyes, pulsating
like a heat map. i thought i was going to die
for absolutely no reason—and that would be a weird way to go
passing out in the middle of a crowded indie bookstore
in a city to be loved and discarded. sometimes i feel like
one of the many worn-looking pins on the zine rack—
easily taken, easily lost—like a flyer for a punk show
that nobody actually went to, in the end. i didn’t realize
anarchists were regular people until i was one. i didn’t
realize i could stand normally until i was being told quietly
insistently to focus my eyes. what comes next is underwhelming:
a text chain, a flyer on a wall, a conversation over food, a series
of unspoken questions. there’s nothing so precarious as multiple
flavors of Midwest Nice converging. i’m too polite to ask for help
and you’re too polite to ignore me when you see that i need it.
April - Poem 4
The Day - contd / Maureen Alsop
The twilight is an abstract char in the mind of the sentinel.
Our Mission, Babe / Bob Bradshaw
I long for a future
as optimistic
as those early Sixties,
Alan Shepard
climbing into his
Mercury capsule
--and history.
Remember, babe,
how we watched
his capsule drop
by parachute
into waters off the Bahamas?
I wish we could book ourselves
on a Time Machine,
dropping back
into our early life
together, the splash
we made!
Watching old videos of us
I wonder how
our world
could have changed
so much in so short
a time?
Wasn’t love always
our life's mission?
Isn’t it still?
What’s the urgency?
Won’t our lives, babe,
soon pass too
into history--
like Shepard’s
15 minute
flight?
Helen Advises Infant Hermione / Stan Galloway
Sleep now
Ignore the swords of men clanging
against each other in one hallway
after the next
Men think swords rule
But here’s the secret –
that little tickle where you pee –
that has more power than
the Harpe of Perseus
than great Xiphos swinging in Achilles’ hand,
or any dozen swords together here in Sparta.
Men will cross oceans for what you hold,
slay harpies, change themselves into
another man or
woman or
beast or
coin just to taste
the pleasure you hold
between your thighs.
Such is the blessing and curse of
being born a woman.
Don’t let it trip you.
Use it to turn men like a top and leave them
dizzy laughing crying out for more.
Remember, it belongs to no one
but yourself.
Pay attention as you grow.
I’ll show you how it works.
Revelation / Ava Hu
From mid-February through early April about a million migrating sandhill cranes stop at the Platte River.
*
Path, revelation,
embodiment.
When sea ice melts
we lose reflectivity.
The sandhill crane moves north
at the onset of spring.
Dogwood, star-faced,
cherry in bloom.
When the ice melts
we can no longer reflect.
They lean in wetlands,
one leg, then two.
We lose reflectivity,
the ability to let go.
Some turn their heads
or tuck them beneath a wing.
Some stand in a creek
while they sleep.
No compass.
No path.
Changes in sea ice
become extreme weather.
Lilacs loosen
and sway.
Some birds wander
or settle on the ground.
How big are you
compared to the moon?
*
Driving to Hurricane Ridge - cntd / Kirsten Miles
Her
young crown
cones upward ninety feet
an evergreen furrow into pale blue skies
shallow roots slip twenty feet across the street
to a curb edging an immaculate manicured lawn where
in a chair on a porch underneath thickly forested mountains
His slow drawl finds my ear a receptacle for nostalgia
reminiscing at seventy nine —there were no jobs
when I graduated here from high school
I was afraid to go into the forest. People
didn’t come back, most people didn’t want to send
their boys to work in logging, so many deaths in the trees—
At the library, three local women from the
Lower Elwah Sklallam tribe rise before us to debut
a book celebrating the cedar forests of the park
share their first fishing trip to the river since
the dam came down, their children
dip cedar canoes in tribal rivers
for the first time in their lives
their deep radiance and joy
drawing water from
all our
eyes
sonnet beginning with a line by 3OH!3 / nat raum
just another girl alone at the bar
is my actual gender; stop the tape.
it is thursday and i’m genderless,
sexless—still better than fridays in love.
and lust takes me places i wouldn’t go
with a gun. i am back where i started
without even a fraction of my youthful
glow, and still i expect history not to
repeat itself. i think of the owens’ suitors
in practical magic (1995), doomed
to something sinister. i think there must
be a version of the same curse placed
on me, where i am the cause of death
every time. test it at your own risk.
Search of a Mole Rat / Sergiy Pustogarov
no one understood why she crawled
with her head buried in the sand,
snorting like an anteater
after every five steps.
constantly gazing forward,
just under the cusp of the living.
she went on for years like this,
forgetting life kept going.
the feet of a thousand people above
stomped all over the tunnels
she had created to bypass
boundaries made by others.
crack went the sticks under their feet,
pop went the soil around her,
until there was no more movement
underneath their feet.
no more air pockets formed
in the wake of her journey.
she had fallen still that day.
her face buried in the dirt,
bones eroding into dust.
she had never quit the search.
never stopped mourning
until her body sank into her lover.
Sub / Daniel Avery Weiss
The backpacks trundle in packs of mom-kid-mom-kid.
Eyes meander to the steel manufactory, the windows,
the brown drips of essenced age, all the things
that silently mythologize life in the context of steel.
Oil swims in pools of yesterday’s rainfall in the parking lot,
separating into ribbons of chrome rainbow,
and an ambiguous imports warehouse assures
Donde importamos nostalgia
and by that they mean
there is no there there.
In class, they throw pencils and tease the sub and,
as if bespectacled, steal glimpses of knowledge.
There is one flag in the room, sore with
the total stillness of the air. Oppressive.
They sneak little loves through snickers at the
pledge of their silly, no uproariously funny, allegiance.
There is so, so much here here. The children steel themselves.
O, how a flag weeps at the disembodying chaos
of a paper airplane
flying right there,
right past it,
right there and beyond.
self-portrait as a preschool art project / MK Zariel
paint me in cut-out yarn for people who can't yet
use glue without spilling something. i am a crushed & battered
yet meticulously folded piece of cardboard here. i have
no small parts, sharp edges, inherent hazards—just monochromatic neon
and the as-yet-unknown. i had an identity in the way a plastic gem does:
a self-in-quotes, a radiance in the sun, a gleam
that dulls, that falls, affixed to a shaky foundation—fabric scraps
from someone's unused napkins, recycled cardboard, wasted time,
elaborate masks. i am an origami swan with charred edges. i am the
prettiest goddamn modeling clay you've ever seen. i am a medical
incident waiting to happen when somebody swallows nonfood—i don't know how i feel
about medical help anymore. i don't know if i am who i was
when i was five. they say life is what you pay attention to, but it might be closer
to what you consume, what you deny.
April - Poem 3
The Day contd / Maureen Alsop
I turned the page and the river opened. Thin pages, subaqueous and fetid, a
continuum. The eye of the storm crosses the bay at midday.
The trees remain unsettled. Buttercup blue waters collect beneath the roving papers,
an inconclusive thesis. The tyrant sun. A revolting sun. Navigation itself is research,
trial and error, a means of breaking and returning.
A cloud is a misappropriation of desire, a subtext and sometimes a desire.
The spirits here were woeful. Absolutely woeful. The reflection of ideas rather than
choices.
I am writing a series of postcards to you. A mindless compass without stamps,
seriously, I am getting these together.
Kidney Stone Blues / Bob Bradshaw
My CT shows a stone
teetering on the edge
of my uretha canal.
I obsess over it.
Like a monster in a fairy tale,
it grows bigger,
--every night-- till it’s a boulder
rolled down from a glacier,
stuck in a ditch.
“It can be painful—
like giving birth,”
my doctor says.
So, shouldn’t my wife
be the one carrying
this damn stone? I ask.
“You’re funny.
Women must love you,”
my doctor says.
What do you mean? I ask.
“You have a tiny stone.
Yet the thought of it
wandering down
your uretha
inflicting pain
keeps you
from sleeping!
But your wife
is looking at pushing
a boulder
out a straw
when she delivers!
When she screams
what will you
advise her?
To man up?“
My urologist
shakes her head.
“If you feel pain,
you can’t bear,
maybe you should
ask your wife
what she would do.
Don’t be surprised
if she offers
helpful words like
Push!
Push!”
Tenth Birthday / Stan Galloway
Sunday nights we’d race home from church
to catch the end of It’s About Time,
or Land of the Giants
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
or Time Tunnel –
shows about astronauts and science
in a topsy-turvy world.
At 10, it was no different than at 9 or 8,
except my birthday was a Sunday,
and Apollo put a module on the moon.
Human history hit a high-water mark
and I was blowing out ten rocket engines
on a cake that lasted maybe for a day.
The Mountain / Ava Hu
*
Quickly, a bobcat darts.
Mist closes after it.
Everything broken
mends
if your mind believes
there is no mind.
Do you become invisible
in the mist?
Do you hold
what disappears?
The evening star
breaks open.
You break open
a brush of light
across the purple
mountain.
*
Driving to Hurricane Ridge / Kirsten Miles
I
4:00am, immersed, posting a poem by an interpreter
for asylum cases, still lingering in warm sheets
hygge rising around pattering fingers
a wooden crack breaking the hush
under the window a yearling spike
rubs felt off his finger-
sized horn on a fallen
branch under the pear tree
a watchful six point tries to lock
racks then wanders off
unable to get a purchase on the
one slight point
A doe and her twin fawns seek shade
under the cave of the western red cedar
boughs draping a massive sward around
the picket fence, just past the mailbox
one lone root gently lifting
a ridge on West 11th street
Morning News / Sergiy Pustogarov
in the morning dew drops kiss my feet as i dance with the golden butterflies.
in the morning
i dance with
dew drops
my feet
kiss
golden butterflies
dew drops
kiss
butterflies
i am not a monsoon, but a summer storm / nat raum
ire takes over dusk. bruise-grey
clouds replace chalked orange
skyscape. this is a fraction
of what surges veins, anger
spiking adrenaline like lightning
zips its way through a cloud.
i’m a cliché. disrespect marked
my forehead, bastard child of ash
wednesday and carrie (1976).
i no longer believe in honorable
shades of grey. you either bleed
or you’re dead.
The Raccoon / Daniel Avery Weiss
The headlights unfurl from the blackness
one thick, suspicious glare. Pupilless and very near to rabies
not being a metaphor. I have seen them
wild and hungry, clawing at each other,
a scattered family in a marsh on the Gulf, snapping turtles clad
in a zebra's disposition. This is
not that: this is in the garbage,
equal parts frozen and furious,
and bewitched by my sad, untrashed life on this earth.
You are right.
There is more trash than I know what to do with.
I eat it every day. Do share.
They skitter away, spitting
primal squeal and swearing vengeance against
every wall and all the grass. Perhaps I will join.
fluctuations / MK Zariel
a text message poem
my anarchism stems in part from a hatred of imposed order.
i hope this wasn't too weird to talk about.
she kept getting flustered when i complimented her
he is on the board of a fucking startup. it is terrifying.
i've gotten to the point of asking everyone i know if they know people in milwaukee.
we all have our contributions.
this may sound strange but you're really good at explaining this stuff
can i send you a poem?
i love being your resident anarchist friend
this is less about logic and more about how my bodymind responds to things.
your fight scene was iconic
i know casting decisions are final, it just worries me.
he wrote it in 3 minutes and didn't care
i could create a homebrew flashback condition
the discord is nuts right now
i hope you get chosen
April - Poem 2
The Day ctd / Maureen Alsop
Below the equator above the 26th parallel and the Brisbane Line[1], I live in a space of my own choosing.
I’m working through a “third state”[2] of consciousness, organically seeking subtext, solitude. Working between image and experimentation. I expose myself. In this, I expose betrayal.
An anatomy with
___________________________________________________________________________________________________
[1] The Brisbane Line was a division designed in WW2 wherein the whole of the northern region of Australia would be abandoned in the face of catastrophic attack. Comforting for one living in Far North Queensland right?! I don’t want so plainly to announce my who and where, but suffice it, I am both American and Australian. Though in both countries, I’m confident, I would be most obviously considered as an American. I will try not to judge this. To introduce myself to one “why” I am here in this situation of 30/30, I’d like to thank Tupelo for their support. Tupelo kindly published some visual poems some years ago:
https://www.tupeloquarterly.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Alsop-Witness.compressed-copy.pdf
I like to support those who support me. I’ll leave it at that for now.
[2] The idea of a “third state,” here described through a found reference to a war ship; “war ship” and “worship” are two continuums of American heritage. To me, the “third state” is better defined by the theta, or dream state, also possibly that momentary decomposition shortly after death. At the moment, as at every moment, there are many destructions afoot. I am human, thus wounded, let’s go with that, hey?
My Father Shaves / Bob Bradshaw
An early memory of my father?
A towel around his waist,
he holds a shaving brush,
as he stands in front
of the bathroom mirror.
The walls crawl
with droplets of water.
And Dad’s cheeks?
They are slopes
lathered in clouds
of foam.
With his brush he dabs
a dollop of cloud-stuff
on my left cheek,
then stands back, like an artist admiring
his morning’s work.
His index finger
draws a cloud-trail of foam
down my right cheek.
Shall I shave you, son?
I nod, yes! And carefully
(blade closed) he scrapes
the cloud-surf from my face
with his blade.
Go show your mom.
She’ll be proud to see
how much you’ve grown up!
and I race off with
the good news.
One Sock / Stan Galloway
between washer
and dryer
lies unfound
for weeks
missed but
looked for
in wrong places
mate set aside
unable to cry out
also lost
because alone.
The Widening Field / Ava Hu
Make it stand out
*
Who am I
a witness
to green entering
everything
dervish of myth
and pollen
we fingerprnt canyons
dust climbing light
we fngerprint the bruise
of rain on white jasmine
belly of a cloud
expanding with breath
which line unsettles
the field?
Who will be the water
who lifts the boat?
*
untitled / Sergiy Pustogarov
i have started planning my morning around my time on the toilet.
i know it will take me anywhere from five to thirty minutes
every morning when i get up to do my business,
and so i wake up thirty minutes earlier than i want to;
just because i know that my body doesn’t always love me, and somewhere
inside my bosom, the gears are not completely turning in synchrony.
i know this isn’t normal, and every two years i know it will get much worse--
throwing me into a housebound fit of nausea and constant pain, but it’s life.
and i’m too scared to go to the doctor to figure out what could be wrong
with me, and my anxiety is too high to get the tests they want of my insides,
just to be able to say what’s wrong, and what my final verdict will be. what medication
they say that i should shove down my throat to let me get up thirty minutes later in the day.
so i just tell myself that it must be ibs, because it’s a magical little thing that
cannot be easily identified; and it kind of fits all the symptoms that i’m having;
and it’s not as bad as colon cancer. well, wait it could be that, i guess.
and i’m sorry, but i have so many issues running through my mind.
you see the thing i didn’t tell you at the beginning is that i am a medical student--
i know more things that could go wrong with your body than the average person.
and somehow that sometimes sends me into a tailspin, wondering what i’m struggling
with today when i wake up thirty minutes earlier, just to sit on a cold porcelain throne.
and i guess it could be colon cancer, because i do vape-- and there have been a hundred
different studies that show the tobacco i’m slowly inhaling into my lungs
is somehow connected to the rest of my cells; causing them to turn all beserk,
and never really know what they are doing inside my body
it could also be some other disease like crohns, making every meal i eat a dance
with the devil. never knowing how it will affect the rest of my day, and how long
i will be sent back to the seat of durge, to pay my respects for simply eating.
but i’m still too scared to get that colonoscopy that in the end could show nothing.
so today i end the day by telling myself it’s ibs all along,
and plan to get up thirty minutes earlier tomorrow.
--this is ibs—
blacking out at my first phillies game/nat raum
scarlet and powder blue are now phanatic-shaped
blurs in the back of my retinae. surfside tastes
like stevia so i stomach the whole can in sacrifice.
i know i’m a good friend—that’s not the point.
i giggle from behind the phils’ dugout and pray
they dig themselves out from five runs down
despite my loyalty to baltimore’s baseball birds.
we take the train back up broad, take fishtown
iced teas to the face and shots of beef broth
to boot. sometimes i still don’t believe myself
when i run it all back, and i’m not just talking
about this afternoon, chilly but sunspeckled,
shitfaced in a way that doesn’t burn the house
down. i watch thereal housewives of new york
and everyone says ramona’s an angry drunk.
i watch southern charm and they say craig’s problem
is not the booze, but the fury which lies closer
to the surface than most of us are comfortable
with. i also mean myself, my own disdains
and demons once gasping like goldfish, begging
for their fair share of oxygen. the last oracle card
i bought said dance with your shadows; they are a part
of you. i sip dirty martinis with mine now, certain
dark and light are close enough to hold each
others’ hair back, if it came to it. i smoke mystery
blunts outside the bar. i come to bent over a toilet,
more mess than pillar, but still alive. sometimes
i have to remind myself that i am still alive.
Bison Gallivanting in South Dakota / Daniel Avery Weiss
He is as breath
on fire
a sort of fan
a shovel into some
thing seeking
a soul
oh,
what dirt
reconcile / MK Zariel
i’ll leave it to you to see me
in the cold yet glowing light of a Wisconsin winter,
in the reflections we ignore, in the way
neither of us feel a single thing without
questioning it first. come and make small talk
at the edge of a cliff with me—update me
on your transition goals while we watch the world burn—
make me wonder if we have original characters
or just shadow selves. you feel like safety
and home to me, a person for whom safety
and home are mixed bags at best. i can’t decide
how to feel about that. i’ll extend a casual
invitation, a shy smile, nothing more than an
ill fated event and a gossip session after,
soft light, quirky memes, the infinity of time.
you don’t like to talk about the future. you don’t
talk about things you don’t respect. i’ll move on
or pretend to—watch your smile like a curated
cottagecore aesthetic, watch your selfhood like
a beautiful fortress, watch you build walls
made of desires as-yet-noticed. you once told me
i was your only real friend, and i was equal parts
horrified and impressed.
April - Poem 1
The Day / Maureen Alsop
the dream cut into the heart of her belonging, she entered the
lagoon, welcoming a rose—blossoming at the ocean’s depth—
she entered the sea and survived the dockyard hands /the dockyard men /the hands of
men
her sister survived by war paint
seen to be unseen
My Black-capped Chickadee / Bob Bradshaw
She’s more welcome
than the Golden Oldies
flying from a radio
into my yard.
A little scholar
she sports
a black cap
as if she’s
graduating today
from kindergarten.
Put out a box
of wood shavings
and she’s happy
like a toddler
discovering
LEGO.
And she’s always
ready to snack,
her black bib
tucked under
her white
cheeks.
I leave a seed
by the bird bath.
Like my daughter
she watches,
cocks her head
as if I’m tutoring her
in French.
Voila!
I say to her and her heart
flutters wildly
in a burst
of wind
and she’s off!
singing
“Hey Sweetie!” “Hey Sweetie!”
—as if even
at her
young age
she knows life
is short!
Batu Khan / Stan Galloway
ancient voice
beside the Dnipro
soughs through
silver birch
insists this dirt
this rain
each breath
is hexed
always will be
coveted by
outsiders.
*Batu Khan led the siege of Kyiv in 1240.
Revisit / Ava Hu
*
The earth shakes her memories
into the shapes of falling flowers:
folded wing of chrysanthemum,
hooded iris unfurls.
The dark universe
we open and close
the burn of wildflowers,
the glacier melt.
We are the black-ribboned
song of Orpheus descending,
the ascent all depends
on how you hear it.
A Day for Fools Like Me in April. / Sergiy Pustogarov
I close the front gate,
The warm wind cajoling around my shoulders.
It’s ninety degrees outside
With blazing sun.
The summer crock of toads meets my ears
As the world sheds its winter coat
And leaves start to peer around the doors.
April fools!
Tomorrow will be thirty degrees again.
A lizard runs out in front of my foot,
I pounce to grab it and admire all its beauty.
The tail comes off,
He keeps running.
April fools!
The mystery always seems to get away.
I get in the car,
Turn on the racket under the hood
And start driving.
I turn onto the freeway
And past the sparkling water,
Its glisten reflecting back through my eye.
A spark of hope finally awakening,
The world will finally keep on healing,
And the light will keep on shining.
April fools!
We started another war today.
Ahead I see a puddle
A reminder of the soft raindrops
That watered the earth the morning before
Granting passage to this beauty now
April fools!
It’s just a mirage on a hot day.
It just keeps going on,
Every day a new horror.
The world somehow isn’t awakening in joy,
It’s still in pain like all along.
April fools!
I thought humanity would do better,
It seems we never learn.
instructions for fortification via upcycling the body / nat raum
A haibun after Sadee Bee
bloat lungs like steaming balloons which float through the late
summer skyscape. tie esophagus at the top and allow to collapse
inward. wipe crusted sleep from corners of eye sockets; cut feet at
the ankles and replace with wheels. submerge fingers in the gristle
of grey matter. begin to sculpt. cast a spell across the night, stars
shuddering in both anticipation and supernova. smolder brighter,
soar higher.
the city can only
see you before you’re about
to die, recycle into dust.
The Kidney Stone / Daniel Avery Weiss
I consulted my dog yesterday about the weather.
In his old age, his legs have shifted
purpose: no longer for walking, now only for the ache
of incoming rain, premonitions of petrichor
twitching his inky black knob of a nose. He will not go outside now
if the great oracle of his musculature simmers
clouds into raindrops. How very omnipotent, I wonder,
that perhaps his legs themselves demand rain, a gift earned with age
and so exhausting to wield that he can only spend his days
lounging, unmoving, on the couch. Gods need their rest, after all
is said and done, what remains is a drenched backyard, grass
like wilted spinach, the life cycle of dirt to mud made manifest,
and he is right. My dog is right, and I, too, feel futures
in my gut, each step closer to them less premonition
and more kidney stone assassinating its way through
me—oh, to be Merlin, missileless mut, blind, deaf, head in the sand
by virtue of age alone—is this his superpower? Flight
from it all? Stupefying glare of his mortality
holding him fast and hard to whatever home, home,
home this is? Something rotten haunts
our days, you and I, whose bones we
frantically teethe.
How our bodies hurt that we face a future
that faces us, looking back at its dismal birth and howling,
How did we ever let that happen? It was in our bones, we
poor dogs, and we could not stay inside.
My dog—he has cataracts, eyes like frosted glass—and
when our eyes meet, uncertainty flails between us
until something bites—he looks away, or huffs, or I hear the news.
To tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, glaring steadfast at the blood and iron,
Hello.
My name is Daniel, and my world is ending.
Shake my hand.
Let's talk.
a politician posted on Bluesky / MK Zariel
for Trans Day Of Visibility. i was supposed to feel seen,
i think, but i shrugged and kept scrolling.
i don’t feel visible so much as in-progress, a forgotten footnote
in the drafts folder of my brain. social media screams out
a resonance for trans survival, for the way we will likely all venmo one another
the same tired chunk of money, for the mutual aid graphics, for the
pithy quotes, for nobody, for the small talk
we’ll make with a well-meaning cis friend, asking
what they can do to support us. it’s grey and desperate
here in the midwest, the sky changing hues like the pronouns
in my bio—snow melting and reforming only to blossom
into a short-lived false spring. today i reached out to an ex
asking if she felt visible yet. she didn’t respond. today i woke up
feeling resolutely normal. today i was trans, but i wasn’t
entirely sure what that meant anymore. since when did the simple fact
of having never felt like a girl create a void to be filled
with labels, with litanies, with the question of whether i should just
be the first person alive to transition in both directions at once.
transmasculine lesbian fits like the new outfit you buy
at the peak of summer, wondering if maybe you’ll feel
like a different person. being visible makes it hard
to be anything else.
March - Poem 31
IF WE KISSED, WE COULD TAKE OUT THE PAST FROM EACH OTHER’S TONGUES / A Cento composed by Susan Hankla
With lines from and by Kathleen Bednarek, Myoma Bibi, Susan Hankla, Amy Haworth, Christina McCleanhan, Elizabeth McGraw, and Alexis Wolfe.
The shades are drawn on the work,
after trying on the silver of a night.
I'm sat in my little kid closet;
the dog's barking begs a long story.
Poverty chickens squawk; by all accounts
there were no worms anymore.
Awake at the spark, my friends always talk of tomorrow
What does yesterday melt into?
There's a line of ladies released from lies.
Was the sunset that spotless like really pure peach,
when the sea is filled with wrappers glinting in the light?
I miss keeping company with cleanliness, unbuttoned cuff
holding snot. I am all mouth stuffed with sky, and hardtack prayer.
There is rarely applause for the girl who colors her cat blue.
I'll make of you a sorryfish, a photo of a ripped photo;
grass painted in shades of prozak, I'll sing the scripture of my grief.
Think about something else: I'll put peas in the orzo.
I am from bridesmaids' dresses. Shalimar on pure cotton cloth.
I am a monkey near the out-of-tune piano.
Rewild your soul: there is a prayer between your thighs.
We are mountains, my lips in your hair: A taste of the feast that was promised.
It's not about what you wear, but how. Dandyism is a thing, Y'all.
I used to walk into a new city, feet clad in jelly shoes, but now I carry
a wicker basket of hot pepper jellies, the only one to take the story with me.
March - Poem 30
A Closing Prayer / Kathleen Bednarek
Prayer survives in the mouth.
It survives despite the book
being partially burned.
And blooms back in muddy ash
from a mistake of fallen tears.
A patchwork of pages,
known by its ply
of edges and shadows.
Words spoken in.
A hand upon the cover—
peace—you are beloved.
Incantations pressed
by repetition upon sand
from the Indian Ocean.
All I can give you is finite.
Grains of continent flung back
to the emptiness of space.
This hymn of a star’s collapse.
Shared with time,
desire falling in on itself.
Encouraging our passage
to be sung, let us complete
silence taken in, heard through
a window in the heart.
Black Grief / Mymona Bibi
I'm at that stage of grief
where black lakes spill
out into black land
on black days and under black moons.
Once upon a time
there was a line between sky
and water - I remember wading
through blue bodies.
Now the world is darkened
with ravens and sinking
is easier,
my voice is dying,
becoming another black sound.
As loud as the last time
I sobbed in the back
of a taxi,
as loud as the dog
barking at the rising tides.
I want what he wants.
To make art from swallowed pride.
To find stars in the black sky
Every few years I make a list of jobs / Susan Hankla
people have that no one would ever imagine existed.
1. The people hired to carry the trains of heavy designer gowns
at such places as the Met Gala, or on the Red Carpet the night of Academy Awards.
2. The people who wash all the cat and dog dishes at SPCA.
3. The person or persons who assemble things you buy online:
such as the under-the-desk printer caddy, or the teak shower bench
which weighs close to three-hundred pounds.
4. The person or persons who knits sweaters for Teddy bears for Etsy.
It's time for the dance-break for words: whoever invented this phrase deserves a medal:
"You can't dance to every record." It's a real stress-reliever to hear it.
An ekphrastic for poems that are classics, such as "One Art" by Elizabeth Bishop,
or E.D.’s "Because I Could Not Stop for Death."
A public service announcement: stop using the word "iconic". Please just stop using it.
Certainly, everything can't be iconic. A couple years earlier, in overuse was the word, "ironic."
And FYI: Dandyism is a thing, y'all. Look it up. Try it on if you are male identified.
We women need to smile.
A poioumenon is a written work that tells the story of its own making, such as
"I May Destroy You" by Michaela Coel.
I'll keep you posted when I think of more things I think you need to know.
Conclusion / Amy Haworth
(A cento from my March poetry)
A boy on his bike
won’t be shut down, torn down, talked down
by majority votes won
I weep for the girls
healed
with shadowed lines
And I realize how easy it could have been to say
“I see what you are, you rodeo clown”
rolling it over, tasting it, teaching my mouth to say it
I am from sea shore and man 'o war
when I was your everything
Today could go either way
but the spring, when it comes, tastes like sunshine
We were made to forge trails
immersed in beauty so loud
you’ll notice it tickle your back
Gen tle
Ghosts or angels — who would know?
I hope you live next door,
(No one here will I know in a year)
As if I knew,
Mother of Good,
the ladders are being burned.
Here's What Makes Sense to Me / Christina McCleanhan
Grief sleeps in the throat.
rouses…peeks…
ragged breath passing—
a golden witness turning darkness
Joy lives in the eyes.
Self as writing prompt / Alexis Wolfe
imagine you are falling
place a penny under your furred tongue
marry a liberal Jeep Cherokee at the local courthouse
sing Bonnie Tyler’s Total Eclipse of the Heart into a spinning
orbital sander, shatter your grandmother’s Churchill china watch
their baby blue rosettes fly, spit cherry jello down a goose’s
throat, kitefly a tumbleweed on your bichon frisé leash,
crawl on hands and knees the reeking leek fields
adjacent the Auvers-sur-Oise cemetery,
vandalize red the grand canyon
change your tax-filing status to Derelict
ding-dong-ditch Marina Abramović
March - Poem 29
Lyric to Goodbye #1 / Kathleen Bednarek
It sounds like spy code,
but here’s how the song went:
Yellow mailbox, this is redrose bush.
& these are your blue eyes
& your idea about tomorrow.
I have a surprise, it's behind my back.
They’re closed tomorrow
& yesterday.
So I can’t remember
how to return it.
Where there's a surprise, there’s something
completely unknown—
what is it?
I’ve returned the outline of that moment.
In the shape of what you
could only make—
(Tape ends)
By accident / Mymona Bibi
I left the door unlocked and the keys
on the floor by accident.
I thought we were free with our
toes in the water, free from accidents.
There is a scar you forgot to touch
and a story I forgot to tell about that accident.
This birth between the night and day
was to be a miracle, always an accident.
I slipped in a puddle and saw your face
in the clouds, all by accident.
A fear of drowning is a fear of playing
and these fears were not built by accident.
Let us kiss beneath stars until they fall and burn
my skin, we are not the last accident.
FROM THEIR JOURNEYS / Susan Hankla
World tilts on its axis / Amy Haworth
Second world war could have gone either way
A matter of days, hours of difference
Today could go either way
A matter of decisions, powers of difference.
Yesterday was currents of people
marching as one, a
Calibrating force
A matter of unity, none cower in deference.
In Longing, I Root / Christina McCleanhan
Poetry is juiced from the orneriness of our gut.
Today, I drove a road I learned to miss yesterday…Kinniconick was pooled at the place where March always visits... hands on the wheel… air softened by old bark and dried leaves…I drove by instinct… I went to my grandmother’s cemetery… sat on her tombstone, to be close to her plot of earth. I willed her to speak… scold my disrespect…waited for her to claim me as her own…cleared sticks, stepped on soft ground…it’s good the ticks are not hungry this early in the season...I forgot to wear socks.
Our history got caught in the river tide.
On the way, I passed through my grandfather’s town…there was no music…at the four-way stop, I found a voicemail…played it until the tires bounced onto the railroad tracks. His death made my bones ache… for the first time in six years, the summoning to visit ghosts was louder than my fatigue…I was prepared to sit in silence…Instead, I spoke to the one who designs my days. I asked Him to love me…let me be useful…show me what to build with the sorrow I hold…His answer was a symphony of lawnmower, birds, and wind.
In silence, what is carried rests.
March - Poem 28
Feel vs. am / Kathleen Bednarek
Everything is changing.
The tangerine is softening.
The tangerine is softening there.
Pulling from the waxed light of its porous
surface so much like still life. Pulling
moisture reserves inward,
into the cellular structure of its white
threads and pith.
Fibrous, elsewhere split apart
by the teeth of expressive monkeys
and a separate catbird.
Taken in
and cast aside, the bitter rind
rolled in dust
skin up.
FOUR INSTANCES OF CELESTIAL INTERVENTION / Susan Hankla
On that flight to the manuscript conference
in the Berkshires, the red sweater
featured on the cover of my poetry book
sits down and flies beside me. We arrive
to see Yankee Candle's HQ, "The Scenter
of the Universe."
Christmas one year after Mother died,
on December 26 I call suicide hotline
just to talk, but no one answers, so I call
the number for vets, and Dreama picks up.
Hearing her Appalachian voice slows
my racing pulse.
When I see the male lead's distinctively thick
mustache in the movie Chicken with Plums,
I email Lincoln Labs at MIT and my lover
answers it after forty years. A connection never
broken, because of the red thread that binds us.
Waiting outside an Italian restaurant,
in a downpour in Littleton, our first sunset
at Frost Place, like the magician's dollar bill
centered in an orange, folded typing paper in a bush
catches my eye; it's the poem I've been looking for
so very long. Eight poets gather to eat, each served
one at a time, as if there's but 1 plate, 1 fork,
1 knife, 1 spoon.
Broken Sleep / Christina McCleanhan
Raise a glass of milk,
cry out, “here here,”
go to bed.
She was taught to barter by
strangers seeking commodities
sculpted by her personality and flesh.
In the beginning, lived her smile.
In her smile lived the truth.
As she ran, the panting wind
left her parched.
Good water left by tepid people
trailed sediment along her throat.
Once, twice, she coughed.
When her throat did not clear,
their hands were still
out of reach.
She understood.
Ugliness made them
feel helpless. What is
seen in the dark is not often
forgotten in the light.
Can I be enough, she thought.
Stay calm, stay still
have the wisdom
to wait.
I still can't speak for the wreck / Alexis Wolfe
I still can’t speak for the wreck / windless field / closed window against worn sky —
I want to lick creek bed
after creek bed after creek
bed dry, until
little red flowers sprouting
into brightness
March - Poem 27
Preparing for the Gala / Kathleen Bednarek
Believe me and I do. I do speak of restoration, of apokatastasis, rather than apocalypse. I believe and I
act through the distribution of genuine care exacted in small acts of kindness, holding a brass
candelabra picking up the refuse of a history that haunts us, trudging, jabbing the cold ground of its
mistakes and treachery so others may attain comfort rather than receiving the fast food bag of no
choice, only apathy, or other poor roping mechanisms terrorized by their faces looking into doom
mirrors. We need each other just to open the cellophane on a pack of cupcakes or gather the
measurements of the sprinkler system greening the desert. It’s wonderful the systems mostly work
seamlessly—the streetlights determining the timing of the fish market delivery truck. The snapper’s
fresh, thin, pink halo eyes on ice stored in cardboard looking up sideways at us who they will now
enter though never understand, nor us them, though by saline sensation fed into our bodies formed by
millennia of ocean. Delicate flesh to go with the wine. We who wander in parties of preferences who
are thrown into finite lives pointing to count attendance. We enter and stream like shiny naked ghosts.
Come heal me with your deadest cells/ Mymona Bibi
golden shovel after Candace Lin’s g/hosti exhibition
The street is full of our regret until the trains come
to pick us up and hold us, our knees bump as we try to heal
our wounds from the arrow of time. you and me
watch the tunnel close in, we’ve never breathed with
our eyes open so the darkness is home, damp is your
memory. we burst out the ground and our bodies are the deadest
after mutating and clutching the differences in our cells.
The Painter / Susan Hankla
had easels stationed
all over her house
and at each one
ice cream bowl-sized ashtrays
full
of her cigarette butts
bearing lipstick kisses,
briar rose.
After she was gone
tours
of her house still went on,
except now she no longer
could give hugs
to greet us.
Nobody
dared empty
her ashtrays,
even then.
in memory of Nancy Witt
82 / Amy Haworth
My dad on his e-Bike
is eight years young
I drive his car
slow
mid-morning light,
mom and son in the car
10 minutes earlier, he made his own plan
called it
"I'll meet you there",
Wind and joy
alchemizing aging
Now
feels the creep of a car
Steals a glance to assess,
his eyes on the road,
My smile rises, its genesis
in heart's canyons
birthplace to the most extraordinary
lightness and love
Please—my joy pains in his purity—
can I always have
this moment in time,
see it in frames
freeze it forever.
If the world answers prayers
let me never forget
how happy he is
just
A boy on his bike.
Something to Consider / Christina McCleanhan
The only roof worth the dime it costs is made of tin.
Down the rain slides, and sound is carried
throughout the waiting rooms below.
Volent thrashings from pelting rain- the roof
shelters man from nature’s temperament.
The roof exists in a place of repetition,
and on occasion, a pause.
Rust-rimmed bolts, dry, caked dirt live a quiet existence
near the missing edges, birds nest around the gapped soffit.
Summer is told through expanding beams,
through winter as harsh air settles into the corner stillness.
The roof, sturdy and competent, intact or in pieces,
protects the chair, the bed, the family without cessation
until broken by an angry element—
water, fire, wind.
Renewal is dependent, resting in the hands of its owner.
Courage is irrelevant—collapse is anticipated.
There is a crack, a loose nail,
and a leak traveling to a box of photographs.
The subjects -soon to be forgotten.
What can be used to repair the loss? Not the roof.
A tiny human cries for peace, for understanding, and
who will bring comfort? Not the roof.
But unroll a cot, seek refuge from a damning heat,
a blistering sun, and you will be shaded
by its commitment.
The rain does not ask the roof what it remembers.
The roof would not hear the rain if it did.
The roof lives in a space of bracing, shielding, and rest.
Disappointed, lately keep telling myself / Alexis Wolfe
tilt lobe / open gullet
featherling awaiting slackblue-black
jagged confetti swirls out
instead
forgive me the party, it was
unintended
my ears burning red
you thinking
of me again?
March - Poem 26
Feeding the Goats / Kathleen Bednarek
Nothing that can ever be accessed
is being disposed of at its center
through your life
Like the sunlight known only by darkness
People have said various things to me
to escape their own confusion
I give them my shoelaces &
somehow they have found a hunger for
candy
Live and Die / Mymona Bibi
We live with all our passions,
desires, memories,
exponentially changing
begging for consistency.
We ask so much of each other
so that we can blame all this
disappointment on something
that breathes.
Let's not mix our life with our world.
Those two that hold each other
from different bodies.
Skies are emptier when we forget
the places of those two
in our minds and souls,
like the street in 2020.
We both looked out-
life and world fused together.
Now, we're lucky if our skin
sags-
gravity is nothing but time passed.
Let's stop it all for a second.
Let's float.
People Invisible to History / Susan Hankla
can still have a good time.
Their music, played in kitchens after work
in the late hours, going all night
in their improvisational juke joints,
they make make-ups: lyrics thought up
on the spot, fresh songs and adding on.
You'd think I know all about this, firsthand,
but it's from meeting someone who wrote a book
on Mississippi delta blues. The man most focused on,
a gravedigger, made clay skulls with flash-cube eye sockets
and field corn teeth. Said, they're ashtrays.
His skulls live in collections
in American Folk Art museums.
The live music is what I want to witness.
Only one white man so far has accessed
–he's good people and he's written down
the "make-ups", mostly filthy.
It puts me in the clouds, said
James Son Ford Thomas,
Music is judged by feelings,
not by faith.
For Bill Ferris,
who introduced me to what is hidden
Broken / Amy Haworth
The x-ray showed
your shattered bones
healed
with shadowed lines
And I knew
one day
we'd come back to this
to mine
hope that a heart
broken
in 1000 pieces
will also
return
full
range
of
motion.
When We Art / Christina McCleanhan
plant your feet in play—
release the honest note
simple but exact
The thing no one ever tells you about being creative is how red hot your heart and loins and breast and muscles feel when you plant your feet and write the truth in simple but exact terms, and release fire in play between yourself and another actor.
The thing no one ever tells you about being creative is how everything is really about fitting circles into squares-a white elephant seated at a table crowded with personality and greed.
The thing that no one ever tells you about being creative is that the finish isn’t scary—the completion is exhilarating—it is the fear that you will be too dumb or distracted to catch the purpose of the next idea or that its intensity will be inconvenient and in reaching for the uncomplicated you may lose the most previous gift of all, but it is also having faith that whatever we acknowledge or respond to, agree to peel, will come from the poetry often buried deep within the ordinary and mundane.
whatever we acknowledge
agree to peel—buried deep
the ordinary mundane
Singularity / Elizabeth McGraw
It’s 3am and I can’t sleep. You’re up making coffee back home and I toss and turn now with notepad in hand. I read recently that writing comes back into vogue because AI can read it so well it’s easily transcribed and stored digitally. He takes his dozens of moleskins and scans it all in and discovers he’s even more findable. I wish I could scan myself. Hit control F and find what I’m looking for.
Disappointed, lately keep telling myself / Alexis Wolfe
Disappointed, lately. Keep telling myself
branch out, believing I’ve eaten all
the branches. Little tricks to makebelieve I’m younger—
hold my forehead taut and stick my tongue out
while I drive. Living east, I cursed Snowplow Days
and now I miss them—that is how these things go.
In a moment it will look like summer again—I’ll complain
about the salt stains on my camouflage hat and disappear
into some backcountry byway or another. It’s easy
to think you’re the only one sleeping
near an open window. I can’t name a single friend
with health insurance. Keep your extremities inside
the ride at all times. Years and years—that’s how much
time passes. But the moment will take care
of itself—incredible, how we bear alone.
Maybe you, too, are in search of salvation.
March - Poem 25
Poem for Friend Request / Kathleen Bednarek
The last I saw you was fifteen years ago.
We were in a bar on Locust Street. I could barely hear you.
You were with your boyfriend, now husband.
I want to say
we were talking about Philotes, the goddess of friendship,
how her mother is Nyx, the goddess of night. Talking about
how your dad was the first in our neighborhood
to get the internet. Prodigy. How we rounded up
instant messages along the Oregon trail, fetched tokens
sitting cross legged, eating sweetened fruit pressed onto paper
we unrolled while you fantasized about boys.
I sat up in bed. Your face set against a background, a field of tall grass.
I want to say
I ran over to you but I think you saw me first. We were giggling so much
we couldn’t breathe. We were kicked out of the movie theater
while seeing Little Women. We ran away for no apparent reason
from Girl Scout camp, feigning endless hunger and strife.
Does anyone stay on the phone all night anymore?
I type your name. I include the image of a heart which is now
traveling across a space somehow
but not literally, like.
My / Mymona Bibi
hand-holding
heart-pounding
litter-throwing
wall-punching
teeth-kissing
new-kissing
self-hating
self-changing
time-eating
day-dreaming
glitter-spraying
care-rejecting
risk-chasing
night-maring
feet-pacing
city-craving
tongue-cutting
liquor-tasting
friend-finding
bus-taking
street-sleeping
stone-throwing
not-waiting
rough-asking
lie-binding
all-seeing
us-keeping
self-healing
moon-facing
world-making
baby
There are sparkling moments during great sadness: / Susan Hankla
two white-tailed deer
leapt in front of his mother's Hearse
on the way to her funeral.
So cold that December in Greencastle,
in tall grasses, ice encased each blade, and made its blinding
spectacle so that we arrived in a Damascus,
changed.
Geological Chart / Amy Haworth
Born alive on dusty trails
embraced by wrinkled rocks
elite in their impatience for weakness
and fools
floating
in a raft, my rodeo
bronco
S
n
a
K
I
n
g
the Snake River
until I was bucked off
hauled in
saucer eyed
parents’ horrified faces
while (another) bald eagle glided
sheriff of the skies
must’ve been dug from
ancient soil and arrowheads
gold flecks
and thrown by the wheel of
first settlers and log schoolhouses
big bell ringing
in a catacomb of wild things
bare feet blocks in a mountain lake
my chart in the house of Shoshone land
and ascendent wildflowers
immersed in beauty so loud
I lived awestruck ever since.
Peace / Christina McCleanhan
When sleep has gone off to
play in everyone’s bed but mine,
I open the window that serves as
a headboard.
Rain drips down
into clumps of
leaves lying brittle
-forgotten, but gathered- in
graves beneath the eaves.
And. Here I am. Still.
Amidst the poking, wet air- I live.
And. There you are, hushed.
Amidst the calm, waiting air- you breathe.
On a Long Road / Elizabeth McGraw
I hate to stay. I hate to go.
It’s a longing and a loathing at the same time.
Is this what’s meant when they describe being an adult? I’m sure an adult would be 30% less bothered. Taken in stride.
Could the news be worse? Long lines at the airport. Repaving the road in. It’s all a promise for tedium. Go early and you engage with it more. Go late and there’s an entirely new gift in store.
Tuesday is the longest day of the week. It’s my favorite you said at the bus stop. Travel like this makes everything Tuesday. Too far in to turn back but not yet at the turn in the bend.
I’ll take your position that it’s full of hope. Wish me luck on this Tuesday!
Armageddon is an era / Alexis Wolfe
Anyway how’s your heart? a friend
asks my android Fine covered in dust
i always reply—Armageddon is an era
not an event
even the moon moves away
from the earth at an inch and a half per year
splintering light disperses in fractals
creates repeating patterns
At least life will be easy soon J texts
from his grounded flight in Qatar
he is always boarding grounded flights
chasing the ocean like it left him
i am always putting on my work pants,
eyes cut by the sun. there are truths
we find to be self-evident: all of this
was a gift, how I keep forgetting
March - Poem 24
Smoke Ring Ghazal — An Imperfect Ghazal / Kathleen Bednarek
Tears soak through the filter of your cigarette. You try—exhale.
Don’t answer the door if the police come. Fake sleep, lie, exhale.
A total liar. I allow myself to say I don’t know.
Disembark the planet. Vodka. Breathe a stinking driver side exhale.
Under some stars, the car in a snowbank. A mechanically fucked angle.
The solution, rather than the problem. I am alive. Exhale.
Now I want peace under a large breaking sky, completed by doubt.
My face upward, rain falling onto the lids of my eyes —exhale.
I stopped before I ever learned how to blow a smoke ring.
Parting with illusions, I learn to go without, let time exhale.
Saying I don’t know transforms and opens our present future.
I love you Kathy. You too, sister. Forgive each moment. Exhale.
Bibi Garlic / Mymona Bibi
My Sestina / Susan Hankla
After Elizabeth Bishop's "Early Sorrow"
I'm staying up in here, I'm not leaving this house,
b/c this's where I commune best with Grandmother.
I've stayed indoors quite a bit, even as a child,
Her house was lit; she had her dressing table by the stove.
And the piano was against the wall on the other side, like my tears.
What's missing is a copy of the 1954 Farmer's Almanac.
Is this what you want me to do, Grandmother?
I'm afraid I'm not grown up enough, so call me a child.
I just can't get it out of my head how you cried tears
whenever I wanted to go outside in pine needles by your house.
You said you needed to read to me from the Farmer's Almanac.
I've misplaced it carefully, and darkly inside the cold stove.
You say you think it's in the sewing box I've loved since a child.
I think you know I am wicked enough to hide it in your house,
because Mother says I am spoiled, then fall real falling tears
of mine; she's fierce, unlike you best-out-of-two Grandmother!
I really like you & your three-hole notebook kept by the stove,
in the chewed, flaky antique secretary's bookcase, beside the Almanac.
Somebody ill-informed like a cop, would say I'm in a mouse-house.
I roll out molasses-spiced dough and leave it to cook in the stove.
The recipe for gingerbread biscuits we serve policemen who shed tears:
"Those cookies are so good we could throw them up and eat them again, Child!"
But I don't acknowledge appreciation because I'm reading the farmer's Almanac.
She stands near me, sliding out more trays of cookies, my lovely grandmother.
I just had a flashback from literature; shall I push her inside the stove?
Uh oh, can't stop thinking that thought, but that's why books live in this house.
We are educated women, ahead of our time; in that sense I was never a child.
It's probably because I hold reverence for her husband's farmer's Almanac.
William knew when to plant the asparagus, and greens for Grandmother.
Too bad he died the good death in his roses, but that didn't stop our tears.
I can only remember his arms in white sleeves reading the bles-sed Almanac.
I remember he taught me to like sardines and saltines, holding me, a tiny child.
He read for the crop settings, & the storehouse of facts: how to polish a stove.
He handed Grandmother his paycheck; she balanced the 7-daughter household.
I wanted to be Mother's sister, why can't I, I cried salty hot stupid tears?
Yet I wanted to be the 8th daughter; sew me white dresses like theirs, Grandmother!
It's time to make that don't rhyme with corsets, Grandmother'schild!
Here's a house that will live in my tears, in my 5 senses, out of the lovely stove.
But in the end, you know I'll bake her with the Almanac for kindling & live to tell.
Wisdom / Amy Haworth
Who are we when we forget to listen
Not to hear, but commit to listen.
We’re burly bullies when we know it all
Arrogance, the absence of knowing how to listen.
Talked over, interrupted, disregarded
When I’ve been taught it’s best to listen.
Won’t be shut down, torn down, talked down
I’ll speak up, but first -- I’ll listen.
Years it took to have enough to say
Now, mon ami, I see you’re ready to listen.
Assessment / Christina McCleanhan
Of course, there will be chicken, it is Tuesday.
the room, mirror, tabletop trinkets are familiar
enough
hairspray and vanilla musk
linger
between the funeral plans and walking the dog,
pantyhose was rolled down into thick ankle doughnuts,
mourning dress, pearls, and
travel bag tossed on the bed.
I will kiss you as if the brilliance of
sunshine travels on your breath.
I will lift the shades to peer at the
people walking below who
do not care that you prefer a medium-well steak.
You will notice the woman's pinched brow as she
delivers an extra blanket and hope she makes time to
shave and soak away her appetite.
We wait for room service, and imagine how long it takes to
fold towels with new nails.
What is my pillow chocolate worth? Less than three blocks to
a pint of red-skinned potato salad.
Turn up that Charles Mingus jazz, so I know how to
dress myself if the room gets crowded.
Don't come looking for me, either, if I'm wearing sneakers.
So, this is temperature-controlled ambition.
Japanese? Maple? / Elizabeth McGraw
The neighbors’s cherry blossom bloomed loudly last night. It’s crossed the threshold and is telling the rest of us to catch up. That’s you too temperature but don’t turn it up too much. We like a little bristle in our walk these mornings and a whiff of rain as the climate rolls across the earth. The dandelions are taking root ready to be rooted out. The peonies begin their peaks breaking through burgundy against the soil and early clover. In back where we face the north a rolling spring arrives. Tight bursts on the eastern redbud tell a native story of resiliency. Edison lights hang in the maple tree. Bare for all to see. Will the hostas reappear? Will the azaleas bloom? Remember at the native nursery and you asked if the species was local and she replied slowly. Japanese? Maple? Made us laugh. Still.
To Elliot / Alexis Wolfe
scintillating progress
dusted wind
blank window weaves a forgotten memory
what your heart was: dustmote
what your heart was: swollen thumb
tyranny of bedrock
scintillating tomb
make of me a martyred ____
you can be the expanded thing
to witness the tendril alone
shining web whistling alone
tiny wet web alone
to witness
to witness splitting
to witness alone
frozen horsemane shining moss
frost-turning-water tiny web witnessed alone
mist of air
cat’s cry knotted pine
asterisk