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Showing posts from August, 2025

Larry Fagin

DOING whatever  I feel like  doing for the rest of my life  would be nice. Meanwhile, there is a  meanwhile. Where is  it?

The Journal by Cid Corman

I shall go out again and find a tree, trees, pines, mountains of pine If my silence succeeds in song, you will hear of it from the winds.

Dylan Thomas

For out of a house of matchboard and stone     Where men would argue till the stars be green,   It is good to step onto the earth, alone,           And be struck dumb, if only for a time.

George Lucas

We are all living in cages with the door wide open.

Don Miguel Ruiz

You are immortal; you've existed for billions of years in different manifestations, because you are life, and life cannot die. You are in the trees, the butterflies, the fish, the air, the moon, the sun. Wherever you go, you are there, waiting for yourself.

May Sarton

I lift my eyes To the blue Open-ended ocean. Why worry? Some things are always there.

Beau Taplin

Human beings  are made of water— we were not designed to hold ourselves together rather run freely like oceans like rivers

Edna by Todd Dillard

My daughter is bored so I tell her silverfish are neither silver nor a fish, but a spoon-dull insect that loves kitchens bathrooms the mouths of children. " Silverfish! Silverfish! " she squeals, the word peeling from her lips and crawling down her legs. She watches me knead the day's dough and asks if Kleenex are used to clean necks. The TV says a crane collapsed off 34th and she wants to know if it's because the crane was thirsty. Some afternoons we visit the neighborhood pool and even though she can barely swim my daughter isn't afraid. She's so unafraid it makes me afraid. She loves it when I pick her up and throw her as far away as possible. She loves to paddle back and scream Again! Again! But she loves it most when I swim away as fast as I can, when my back becomes a shore she's trying to reach. My daughter's named the pool Edna. Sometimes Edna helps her reach me. When it's time to go my daughter says, "See you soon, Edna." Every d...

Peter Ho Davies, from The Welsh Girl

Maybe it's a kind of freedom too. To stay home.

A Few Quotes

"And when I turned to face grief, I saw that it was just love in a heavy coat." Shannon Barry "My brother used to ask the birds to forgive him; that sounds senseless but it is right; for all is like the ocean, all things flow and touch each other; a disturbance in one place is felt at the other end of the world." Fyodor Dostoyevsky "Maybe you've spent some time trying every day not to die, out on your own somewhere. Maybe that effort has become your work in life." Donald Antrim "Caring for myself is not self-indulgence, it is self-preservation, and that is an act of political warfare." Audre Lorde "And the world has become merely an unknown landscape where my heart can lean on nothing." Albert Camus "May what I do flow from me like a river, no forcing and no holding back, the way it is with children." Rainer Maria Rilke "How wild it was, to let it be." Cheryl Strayed "The first rule is to keep an untroubled ...

Everything Never Comes Your Way by Nicole Stellon O'Donnell

Picking Cranberries The week after you arrived, I took you cranberry picking on the trails close to town.  You told me about your husband, your clenched jaw, the damage the pressure had done. I picked, fingers pulling, cooling against hard, dark berries. Buckets filled, sun slanted through the birch. That afternoon our words puffed visible from our mouths, and I knew what it had been for you, arriving more difficult than departing. I reached for your bucket and poured in my berries. I can see you in your kitchen in December, the short day peers in the window while your hands break open the bag. One square of pale sunlight on the sugar, measured, waiting.

Short Film Starring My Beloved's Red Bronco by K Iver

Tupelo, MS Crop dusters have gone missing. Storm Clouds, missing. Every  owl has gone missing. Entire foothills. There are no dogwoods  or foxes to miss them. Radio towers are missing. An archive has  always been missing. Unmarked graves have not been missed; have been missed to death. Downtown is missing, the hardware store where Elvis bought his first guitar. The songs he robbed from juke joints. Original names for the dirt have been miss- ing a long time. The namers have not been missed; have been missed terribly. A gospel just went missing. A gospel took all the blood it needed for its metaphor to work. My lover went missing today. My lover went missing fifteen years ago. When neighbors spoke to him, they spoke to someone else. I found his old letters  missing from their hat box. Each penciled word called from my mother's chimney. The brick said nothing.

Spoon by Richard Siken, 2025

I grew up next to my stepbrothers, not with them. They were a dozen years older and already in their own apartments when our parents married. I was twelve. They were tall. They gestured with their arms when they talked, taking up space in the kitchen. They were biceps and shoulder blades, always talking above my head. They leaned in doorways. They leaned on the furniture, always coming from something or going somewhere. They were always touching things or pressing against them, deciding if they were solid or if they needed to be fixed. They were comfortable, powerful. They didn't worry about things. The world had made a place for them and they were intent on filling it. It made me petty and sore. They would drop by the house to borrow money or fix a cabinet door and they they would disappear. I was smarter but they had stamina. I was good with hypotheticals but they knew how to get things done, real things, with actual tools. They weren't going to take me to the movies or teach...

People Who Keep the Lamps Lit by Jen Shoop

There are people who draw light to themselves, and almost can't help it. They pull out a chair for you when you approach the table: "please,"  they say, gesturing you into it, earnest and unaware of their outsized generosity. They say "atta girl"  to strangers who have just ridden a big wave or run the bases. They fill the hungry heart with pride and do it with such ease, having learned some time ago that there is no economy of compliments. What made them this way? Not the absence of pain, no. More often than not, heartbreak is the holy ground that anoints them. The more of these light-gatherers I meet, the more I believe it's will, and will forged anew each day. They wake up and they call forth an adamantine determination to resist the ease of despair, and to believe that reality is mainly possibility, even when the wicked comes knocking.

Samira Vivette

Understand this: I lost myself for most of my life, altering and diluting my energy to fit in with those who eventually abandoned me. Do you think I'm going to continue to deny or tone down  my essence in the slightest? You're going to see all of me. Love me or hate me. But at least I won't hate me.

Not Just Passing by Hiba Abu Nada (translated by Huda Fakhreddine)

Yesterday, a star said to the little light in my heart, We are not just transients passing. Do not die. Beneath this glow some wanderers go on walking. You were first created out of love, so carry nothing but love to those who are trembling. One day, all gardens sprouted  from our names, from what remained of hearts yearning. And since it came of age, this ancient language has taught us how to heal others with our longing, how to be a heavenly scent to relax their tightening lungs: a welcome sigh, a gasp of oxygen. Softly, we pass over wounds, like purposeful gauze, a hint of relief, an aspirin. O little light in me, don't die, even if all the galaxies of the world close in. O little light in me, say: Enter my heart in peace. All of you, come in!

Logged into Submittable for the First Time in Over a Year

My feelings regarding publication has changed through the years. Although I enjoy writing poetry and supporting other writers through reading their work, I feel I do not want to participate in the jungle of submission and eventual publication. Perhaps I have a fear of rejection—although I have a lengthy Submittable list and Excel Spreadsheet of rejected pieces, so I'm not sure that's the case. Although my time of involvement in the writing community was transformative, I'm not so sure it is where I belong. I met so many wonderful people and found several incredible opportunities. I remember a lot of friction in the community. A lot of competition, which was not always friendly. Like any other group of people, the writing community had cliques and groups that were not always kind and/or inclusive. Perhaps this has changed for the better since I were last involved. Perhaps this is not a writing community issue. Maybe it's me. I feel I have become more isolated since I ste...

Look How Everything

I went for a walk in the rain today, a sort of intentional ritual of healing. I had to cut someone I loved out of my life in order to move forward. I guess I still had hope they would show up. Perhaps a letter or a visit. Some sort of gesture to show they had truly changed. I think it's possible for people to change—I did. But now I am this person; this stubborn, fearful, contemplative, despairing, yet hopeful person who wants someone to grab her by the shoulders and profess their love to her. I am still a romantic at heart. I want, for all the times I baked cakes, made dinner, bought gifts, wrote letters to men I loved, for this energy to come back to me. Is that selfish? I want to be treated the way I have treated men who treated me like shit. Someone who is patient and understanding. Someone who admits fault and shows up with honesty. Someone who isn't afraid to be vulnerable and human. Someone who is emotionally open and understanding. Someone who shows up and is present an...

Tender Buttons [Breakfast] by Gertrude Stein

A change, a final change includes potatoes. This is no authority for the abuse of cheese. What language can instruct any fellow. A shining breakfast, a breakfast shining, no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all. A sudden slice changes the whole plate, it does so suddenly. An imitation, more imitation, imitation succeed imitations. Anything that is decent, anything that is present, a calm and a cook and more singularly still a shelter, all these show the need of clamor. What is the custom, the custom is in the centre. What is a loving tongue and pepper and more fish than there is when tears many tears are necessary. The tongue and the salmon, there is not salmon when brown is a color, there is salmon when there is no meaning to an early morning being pleasanter. There is no salmon, there are no tea-cups, there are the same kind of mushes as are used as stomachers by the eating hopes that makes eggs delicious. Drink is likely to stir a certain respect for an egg cup and more wat...

Coping by Audre Lorde

It has rained for five days running the world is a round puddle of sunless water where small islands are only beginning to cope a young boy in my garden is bailing out water from his flower patch when I ask him why he tells me young seeds that have not seen sun forget and drown easily.

The Rider by Naomi Shihab Nye, 1952

A boy told me if he roller-skated fast enough his loneliness couldn't catch up to him, the best reason I ever heard for trying to be a champion. What I wonder tonight pedaling hard down King William Street is if it translates to bicycles. A victory! To leave your loneliness panting behind you on some street corner while you float free into a cloud of sudden azaleas, pink petals that have never felt loneliness, no matter how slowly they fell.