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symbiosis
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editors-in-chief
adriana hazlett
caroline hunt
anna opalsky
kathryn reese
design editors
sarina feng
gabrielle gonzales
hinano kato
joy ma
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submissions editor
emerson thut adviser
mia boardman smith FRONT COVER untitled by Jackson Ford
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preface
Symbiosis seems only to exist between the crumpled, often-defaced pages of science textbooks. Perhaps an image of a sea anemone comes to mind, its waving limbs providing a safe haven for a community of clownfish. Or maybe you think of the life’s work of an oxpecker, as it feasts on the little nuisances of ticks and parasites on the back of a rhino.
But perhaps the true meaning of symbiosis is much larger than the space between anemone tentacles or the bumps on a rhino’s spine.
Three relationships exist within symbiosis: mutualism, commensalism and parasitism. Good for both, good for one with no harm to the other, and good for one but bad for the other. These relationships run through the fiber of our beings — they are as old as life on earth, for there is no life without the interactions between identical and differential forms of life. Yet we see the parasitic relationship as particularly evil. Perhaps instead, the worst relationship is none at all — disconnection, dissonance.
Symbiosis seems, then, to be all the connections we experience — the good, the bad and the seemingly insignificant. It comes from the will to connect, or perhaps the will to keep opposing forces from breaking fully free from one another. So this issue of FirstFlight, we encourage you to explore the harmony existing between the trees and the shade in your backyard, the dissonance resulting from the clash of the pavement and the dirt, and the ways that all the species of the earth either reject or embrace coexistence. We hope you find your own symbiosis.
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Where does it come from, that urge to throw one’s phone out a ten-story window? Where does it come from — the subsequent inaction? And those tears shed on a bus stop bench as blurred faces whiz by unaware? Who in the quiet room knows you’re in love? What do we do with the cacophony of unfettered sounds, sights and feelings that characterize our lives?
Dissonance denotes today’s earthly experience. It’s seen in the apathy of a world that keeps turning when we ourselves are shutting down. It is in the routine of the clock, the hours spent staring at midnight ceilings, or the minutes spent staring at morning cereal bowls. Cats howl, neon signs buzz, you call, and no one is listening. It is the rejection of understanding, commonality — the overhaul of ancient symbiotic relationships.
A bird that tries to make a nest atop a lamppost will be continually dismayed by the metal structure’s inability to hold the twigs intact. Skyscrapers will continue to loom dispassionately over sweating, languid human bodies. Sunbathers on a beach will scorn the rising of the tide, climbing higher and higher up the beach in an attempt to escape the relentless lap of the waves.
What, then, does this leave us with? Not a nest, but mere sticks. Neither pure joy nor pure sorrow, but inertia. Not harmony, but dissonance.
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Undone
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“cat got your tongue” by Tristan
Uppole![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/d82f8f00d30cab6600ed07c2f15bfc1b.jpeg)
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my mother buys lotto tickets every sunday and keeps a bowl of wishbones on the kitchen sill but she won’t get more treats for our old, sick cat.
I think she’s counting on something.
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my cat’s getting slower — don’t know how long she’s got. we’re so gentle with dying things yet i’m sure i feel her ribs break under my fingers when i hold her.
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can you blame me for hanging on?
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i can still remember that day last May — willing good words into your mouth as if a fool’s hope would keep the light in your eyes kind. like it was before.
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my memory of you is the birds she left on the stoop — fast beating wings fragile bones fleeting things. they’re safer now but at what cost?
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i realize what was there has long since gone, but she was so kind, even to those she despised and it felt good to pretend, even when i gutted what little was left with each attempt. drying fish on the line no comfort to her or i.
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i am my mother’s daughter but if you want the truth, there’s little on which i’ll rely.
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The World Has Failed...
by Aryam Manasrah![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/986416d0d5f8c674e687beff7888f177.jpeg)
How can one side of the world live happily and deserve every effort of their joy and pleasure while the other half is just looking for a way to survive and live all together?
Why must we always state a country’s level such as first, second and third?
Why can’t we all be humans and feel and defend one another?
Where is the humbleness and self reflection of how our world works to be the status quo?
They are based on true stories. All these stories together do not scare me or make me not want to believe it is truly happening as much as we all look around, surrounding ourselves with fake news, propaganda resources and living our lives like nothing is happening anywhere else. Choosing the side of humanity, choosing the side of harm rather than cause, choosing to be the change so no one in the world has to live like this.
While everyone can say there are no answers to changing how the world works, there is nothing we can do so that everyone can live in peace, so everyone can find food and water essentials, so everyone can experience the same happiness and joy they see fit rather than what anyone else says. The fate of people’s lives should not lie in other people’s hands, controlling it, holding power to it anddirecting it like a puppet’s show.
The world has failed... us.
As I slowly started to think and get lost in my head and thoughts, I became deranged from the outside. Women were taught to never think or use their heads in our town or country.
We were meant to be ordered and only ever be mens slaves. No such thing as equality, much less being a rebel and leaving the country for good. Too much trouble, too much chaos, too much fuss.
“Cerealfor Breakfast” by Lily Goldenhar
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morning tanka
by Adriana HazlettLo, I long to know
The way you like your coffee, And the morning air In sheets you and I sweetly
Lie, while I breathe in your hair.
evening tanka
by Adriana HazlettA dusty green night Seeps through the honeyed window. Ever low since so, Don’t have to say it in words, I know it, always, in turns.
We were surrounded completely by sharp rocks and just in front of us, you could see hundreds of demolished ships, from massive vessels to tiny rafts. My eyes shifted to the floor of the sea. The burly waves and murky water made it hard to see but it was clear regardless that there were thousands of bones scattered across the dead reefs. My heart sank and filled with agony as I pictured all of those lives lost out here. I could almost hear the screams and cries of men, children, and women mixed in with the crashing of the salty water. But yet something in my gut was pulling me tightly to keep moving forward. It felt like there was a misty filter on my mind telling me I’m safe here, and this is where I will feel at peace, this is where I can forget everything that’s happened.
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The Taunt of a Dying Wish
NOW-clock
by Adriana HazlettDown the half-twilight hall
I’ve seen an hour-less clock —
At each needlepoint stands tall
The word “NOW,” black-scrawled
In this clock I lay to rest
All the beat, beats, beating of my chest
There within, my heart aligns
With the hazy reel of time
There is the before —
Holy men in the green, winter and bread
And, tender, the after:
Death — sweet, dark, full of breath
But now, oh, now
How to keep the cherry blossom’s cry
Or the gray morning, the crystalline sky —
Keep in a breast-side locket
The essence of an hour gone by?
How, oh, how
To seeds of permanence sow
Before I let the prelit dawn
Run milky, thin and dry?
Days fall like petals
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Once pure marigold Now a paled primrose you lay Such beauty was sold To besiege your foxglove loves Whose vines ensnare your decay
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Dear Whale,
by Claire Zhou![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/71da4844b50f1a85e6d8b227b398d7e5.jpeg)
I imagine your ponderous body suspended underwater, your fins like spokes on a wheel. Belly up, you pass through the sunlight zone poise untainted by death. One unhinged jaw agape in a silent whistle. Two jet black pools for eyes cloud to century eggs I can cup in my hands. Three-chambered stomach, bloated by bacteria. Four limp fins rocking to tidal waves like an abandoned ship. Pray tell, blue whale, what are you thinking as you fall further from heaven?
Does your colossal body, once swallowing tons upon tons of creatures, now acknowledge underwater snails, mere specks of sand? Eels and rubyspira tear at your flesh. Liver, lungs, flukes, and heart, all tissue wrenched away.
And when your carcass reaches a bed of sand, even zooplankton — prey turned predator — suck your marrow. For forty thousand years, you watch them take what they please uninvited guests to this underwater feast. I wonder, great whalehow did you feel? So slowly eaten, so lonely. Alas, you flower, trapped in lightless trenches — waiting like a dropped bouquet of bones.
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Album,DeletedRecently
by Lucie BabcockHere’s a picture of us — C’mon, zoom in, look carefully — See, that’s the hem of those slightly-tooshort jeans I never liked all that much, and there’s the crook of your knee and the wedge of a paperback in your hand, scuffed black parquet and someone else’s shoes stretched
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Alright, swipe over, here’s another one — Hey, are you paying attention? Pay attention — It’s all blue dress and red sunglasses and the curve of your face, facing me. Or facing someone else, more likely. It never really was me, in
Last snapshot — Fine, maybe there are more, who cares — Here’s shells curled in my palm, just a sucked-in breath from dust-to-dust. Sand in the folds of another pair of slightly-too-long jeans, an endless barrage of rocks. You know, the photos are a poor substitute for all the things I could’ve told you. But they’re a hell of a lot more satisfying to
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(you)
by Kathryn Reesei can see the old kumquat tree from my bedroom window and it’s like seeing spring. but when i step outside to greet the season i find that close up it’s far less ideal.
her fruit are puffed up, fat and splitting open with the rains that came, some rot on their stems and fall away and i think nature is ugly, in a way and i’m disappointed but not surprised.
so (i) snap a photograph, which glazes out the cracks and the kumquats return to what (i) expected.
and the fruit tastes nothing like it would’ve but (i) cannot be blamed for what (i) do in pursuit of the picturesque — right?
so (i) pretend it’s what (i) wanted.
see, there’s the thing:
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if you take a picture and squint, you can make almost anything look like yours even what belongs to no one. it’s strange to be owned without realizing. it’s strange to be studied before you’re known.
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Ever-Flowing, Encompassing
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The first hour
Light divided by window blinds
Beddings smelling of morning
I raise my head to look at the clock, its perfectly aligned hands
Then hold myself and close my eyes
The second hour
Worn leather of sofa
Monotonous tablecloth under tired homework
A cup of now-cold water
The clock hand points to the twentieth minute
Splitting the hour into thirds
The third hour
Each carefully cut chunk of time
I pick them up and examine them as part of a whole
Then crawl back to bed
Drowsy mind
Blurred the passing of moments
The seventh hour Strange
The sun disappeared
I thought I spent only a fourth of the day
How has it been halfway already?
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The ???th hour
The ever-flowing, all-encompassing
They say
Time is flipping through pages
I need to write, write the next thing
Before it catches up —
The 58th minute
I’ve found a solution
Just need to split up time more
I can then control, minute by minute
My life will no longer be spread thin
So thin it dissipates into the surrounding air
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The infinite moments
I spend all my life to dive down
At this instance
To get a glimpse of the unfolding eternity
Come away from the broad and the vast
Into the cleaves of every moment
The twenty-third hour
Is that the chirping of birds I hear?
Light comes through window blinds
To cleanse my soul of night
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Time slips away from hands
Yet I have no right to complain about its scarcity
untitled by Lila Swortwood![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/92b26f2bcb00f2c888b23160984a5d73.jpeg)
when it rains
by Claire Zhou
in summer, my dad says he loves the rain — only, he grew up in a clay house, walls engraved by ridged fingerprints. I imagine him like a hermit crab, shoulder-deep in mud, looking for a hairbrush as water pours through the grass roof. When he was six, the mud
house’s walls ached, softening the more it rained, until they decayed from the inside out. But—
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the rain sprouted daffodils and hyacinths and bush clovers
he wove into flower crowns. In spring, he watches the rain from beneath the balcony. Coffee cup in one hand, Dad shows me how to peel weed leaves so they tinkle when I twirl the stem — a chorus of bells. His farm-worn fingertips gently pull petals.
This is what I played with, he says softly, when I was a kid. How funny it is watching him watch the rain.
“Another Day” by Serra Ten Holte![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/08ac36f68496a68a923f3ce887543332.jpeg)
harmony part II
Sometimes, staring at the back of a car, it becomes a face. For a moment or two on the drive home, the headlights look just like another person’s wet eyes. Or sometimes you look into a bird’s eye and know, with sudden conviction, that you’re alive, and the bird is alive, and the two of you are alive together.
Strike a certain chord within, and there is unexpected harmony. Windchimes sing because of the craftsmanship of the chime and the wind itself; take one away, and the harmony could never be heard.
But harmony is found in other realms too. It is in the kinship felt between an old bridge and the vines clinging to it, thriving on its weathered skin. It is in the suspension of the body in flight, when we for a brief period feel the same lightness a bird might. The forest and the city look the same, and so does the fog seeping out the cavity of your chest. There is a commonality of experiences, sensations and desires — symbiotic relationships, both good and bad, are respected. Harmony is the glimpses of pure human nature that insist on being seen and acknowledged. It is in all the world’s natures, whether that be the nature of the plants and vegetation that sustain us, or the nature of the animals we once came from, or the inherent nature of humankind, of our minds and experiences. When all of these natures are allowed to be nature, to be natural, perhaps we find harmony
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To you, who came after:
Do not judge us by our statues
Words of frivolous platitudes
Our Forgotten memories in solitude
Wrought from concrete and iron
To you, who came after: Do not scorn us for our passions
Our violent conflicts and rash actions
To you, who came after
by William Brown![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/607d403c95938d9c799e4407fde57d62.jpeg)
For we are young, immature minds reactions
Unable to know any better
To you, who came after:
Do not claim pretentious sagacity
With all your sagely audacity
For you know too, see We come from same origins
To me, 10,000 years from now: Take not my hubris or arrogance
Nor sorrows or penitence
But find solace, some evidence
From lessons born in old blood
To me, 10,000 years from now: Remember the path, once tread, Words, we once said:
Remember Me, Lest I be forgotten.
“Arctic Tern” by Sebastian Searcy![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/46e05d377f35cb23a90ad40af1266344.jpeg)
It was clear before the fog set in The fog that catches and eddies around my tall standing head
Whose receptors live too close to the phantasmagorical moon to hear anything (just the impersonal static of obsolete radios hums in me)
I wait to be cleared of the muddle once more
For it to fall beneath my feet like atomic ash
I wait for it to become the sustenance that sprouts the lurid tulip beds of April
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I wait for it, whilst lying in the vast grasp of your arms, to distill into an elixir for my consumption (but it only expands until it collects into a dazzling enormity)
And it lays above my head, naked and rotten
It hangs over me like a stagnant pond and I remember what it feels like to die It dilates to the outer edges of the cosmos and becomes all that there is (and I resemble coastal bluffs choked by the overcast sea)
she reminded me of a snowflake, whose beauty i longed to observe up-close. i’ll never understand why she melted at our first touch. humans tend to destroy the things they don’t understand.
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fleeting frost: the melting beauty
by Joy MaEnvy
there’s amber seeping onto the horizon — i’m watching the day crown through the night — and as the spirit-scented wind turns my eyes glassy, i don’t feel quite alright.
by Kathryn Reese untitled by Jiayan Zhangif jealousy eats away at you then i was cannibalized long ago. i’m a hollow and strung out human because the citrus skies write poetry that i could never speak, and the sea sings only for herself and flowers spring from between your eyes,
and i weep for the beauty of it all.
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Liberty
by Skylar WagnerAllow the clouds pursue the sun down the brumal bluff to cause the crows tenebrous fun unbound of brutal bruff
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Presence
by Skylar Wagner![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/b2417de2d89e6b5461df0ec8bd1064be.jpeg)
It’s erratic, a force none control not here to visit instead your time is stole for an extended stay by an uninvited opponent the lack of light reveals this feeling a moment, often at night while staring up at a field of white your heart begins descent slowly, not of a rock rather a feather perhaps this feeling is nothing at all perhaps a tear is allowed to fall or maybe this feeling was welcome and you invited it extended arms to lead truth to the light through grasps of the dark
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Shorelines
by Kristina WangWhere the sand meets the waters, The unheard tears of the ocean showers over my feet.
My nerves tingle
My toes sink deeper into the sand
I dip my fingers in the residue of the salty weeps,
Distorting the lustrous glow painted by the sun.
My fingers brush through the silky waters, Brushing away the veneer of darkness
Erasing the streaks
Of the past grievances
That the waters echoed.
I shift my gaze upon the horizon.
Where the sun meets the sky, The beam of light inches past the skyline.
The horizon ebbs away the glow of the beacon
The beacon that once was the light to my life,
That held my past laughters and cries
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untitled by Kian Sime
It slowly evansces from the sky, The water consumes every last bit
Until it drowns out of sight.
Where noctilucence meets the eye, The moon glances up from the horizon. The waters calmed
As the orb of soft light rises up the sky, Exuding the radiance of revitalization. It lets out a sigh of refreshful breeze
And extends its arms,
Embracing and soothing the unrestful whines
Of the ocean waves. The waters settle
And hums the gentle tunes of harmony. The moon’s luminous smile glimmers in my eyes
Emitting its excellence
Upon the divine canvas of the night sky.
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My Problem with Commandment No. 2
by Kathryn Reesenature is sacrilege. men wrote in god’s hand that false idols are sin–inferno fated to those who bow to them.
so i won’t.
the holiness of trees is in the sky anyway. i’ll direct my praise upward and reach for branches my hands weren’t meant for.
and i’ll gladly kiss the ring of any wildflower that bejewels my sinner’s life. or build a pyre for the water that laps at the shores of my mind.
you mean i cannot worship the clouds? the ones that puff up to fill the vastness of thy sky? or the ferns that unfurl like fate–like they know the meaning of it all and hold it in their spines?
god is cruel if i cannot worship the sun like she is my mother. god is cruel if he creates beauty that cannot be idolized.
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I Can’t Call Myself a Poet
by Kathryn Reese![](https://assets.isu.pub/document-structure/240405150215-68c224218c1e62c60f5ce35025f378f5/v1/2d5ca01733eda037e95ef1382728c702.jpeg)
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but i try to truth is, we know very little. love comes and shakes us just the same and you think we know what’s what but we’re feigning feelings here so don’t look too close.
truth is, i’m living a plagiarized life (don’t blacklist me for telling). i choke down the mushed up words mother gives me and make them my own — or try to.
truth is, i’m writing this about appeasing you and writing this to appease you and maybe i don’t quite know the difference (lines blurred, cross-hatched, there and back) it’s not my nature.
truth is, you were lied to; everyone is dying like a star. poets don’t do it any better.
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i see home
by Caroline HuntIn the rainbow reflections split through the butterfly stained glass charm in my room — It was a broken night light, Now it’s a wind chime hanging from my ceiling.
In these colors I see my grandmother. The blues reds and greens embedded into the shadows of her painted women. Friends, family, my mother, my father.
Dozens of cats.
Throughout them all, these colors.
In the grey of the sea
The fog and the spray of salt and mist and violence
Yet peace
I see my father.
The anger and ancestral injuries That outlined his face
Like the rings that so-poignantly tell a tree’s history.
The ripeness of some 25 years of living at which his hair turned grey.
And the lightness of his eyes.
In the tinkle of a bell
Signifying entrance in some convenience store
I see my sweet cat.
The shout downstairs that I used to summon him
And the jingle of his collar
When I knew he was coming home.
That is what we all want, isn’t it?
To be the home someone comes back to.
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