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THE LAUREATE
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Editorial Board
WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY
Editor in Chief: Bella Loe Proulx
Assistant Editors: Rachael Hogan and Valeria Cusumano
LEE HONORS COLLEGE
Faculty Editor: Becky Cooper
Faculty Advisor: Jennifer Townsend
Dean: Dr. Irma López
Assistant Dean: Anthony Helms
THE DESIGN CENTER, GWEN FROSTIC SCHOOL OF ART
Art Director: Paul Sizer
Design: Audrey Dobbs, Teal Szymchack, Ava Curran
The editors wish to thank Western Michigan University’s Carl and Winifred Lee Honors College.
Mission Statement
The mission of the Carl and Winifred Lee Honors College is to provide an exceptional undergraduate experience for high achieving students, to inspire in our graduates a thirst for the lifelong pursuit of creative inquiry and discovery, to provide our students with the skill and passion to address critical challenges, and to foster personal responsibility informed by a global perspective.
The Laureate’s mission is to provide undergraduate students at Western Michigan University a medium through which to publish their works of fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and other creative works. The Laureate strives to be a professional and engaging journal that appeals to all.
Letter From the Editor
I would never call myself an author or an artist. A student who writes, perhaps, or a hobbyist, but never an author or an artist. I truly hope that the students included in this journal might bravely consider their own accomplishments, and allow themselves to bear those titles of author and artist. Included in this edition of The Laureate are some of the most brilliant pieces of student work that I have ever had the chance to see. These artists were gracious and patient throughout the editing and revision process, and I hope that they can be as proud of themselves as I am for their achievement.
This edition of The Laureate is brutally personal and human. The artists wear their hearts on their sleeves and aren’t afraid to speak about themselves, their lives, or their passions. They inspired me to truly take up my role as editor-in-chief and to show my heart through the journal too. Every single person who worked on this journal has left a part of themselves with it. I hope to now be able to share these small pieces of myself while I thank those who left theirs first.
First, to God. I wouldn’t be anywhere without your constant provision in my life. I’m not afraid to say that I love you. Thank you for this opportunity to show my fellow students the gifts that you’ve given me.
Second, to my wonderful mentor and captain of this ship, Becky Cooper. You are wise and patient. You made every step of this process an easy one. You are so encouraging. You’ve challenged me to grow and you’ve helped me to be decisive. Thank you for trusting me with this job. Likewise—to our incredible editorial eye, Jennifer Townsend—thank you for your decisive nature and quick wit. You are an integral part of this process and team. Thank you for helping me coordinate creative events and for being my touchpoint for all things administrative. Thank you for continuing to be a mentor to me.
Thank you to the Lee Honors College for supporting student creativity, for Dean Irma López and Assistant Dean Anthony Helms for their excitement for the project, and for allowing us to so consistently use the honors college for events and meetings.
I’d also like to thank my amazing assistant editors and social-media runners, Val Cusumano and Rachael Hogan. I’m so glad that I got to know you both, and I have really appreciated your input and help during the toughest parts of this process. I hope you continue to pursue your own creative goals and return to editorial work again! You both have the knack for it.
My last “thank you” goes to the wonderful students and faculty of the design team: to Paul Sizer for being willing to jump through so many hoops with us and for his direction of the project and the team—and to the artists themselves, Ava Curran, Audrey Dobbs, and Teal Szymchack. Thank you all for your creativity and for coming up with such visually striking ideas. The Laureate would not be the same without you.
Finally, to the readers of this journal, I hope you allow yourself to go on the journey that the artists included have presented you with. I hope you allow yourself to connect with each and every one of them—to see their heart and appreciate their talent. They are all incredible individuals. I, for one, cannot wait to see where they go next.
BELLA LOE PROULX Editor-in-ChiefThe heart of The Laureate Journal lies in the students who submit their work. Sometimes, the journal receives a smattering of works with no throughline, but sometimes, the story writes itself.
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The 21th Edition of The Laureate is one that delves into trauma, depression, anxiety, and grief— but ultimately overcomes these trials and shines in healing and hope. The structure of the journal places the heavier things at the beginning, to take the reader on the journey that the students themselves provided. As the journal progresses, we begin to see more and more light and healing. More freeing of thought and mind, and more peace at the end of darkness.
There are many pieces showcased in this edition that contain difficult subject matter, but I truly hope that you don’t skip over them, and choose to take the journey that our Broncos have laid out for us. It is one of forward momentum and hope through our losses.
If you find yourself in a similar situation to some of the heavier pieces, please don’t be afraid to reach out to loved ones or professionals. Know that you are loved deeply— and that you are strong enough to weather the storm.
We hope you enjoy the incredible works of these students, and thank you for your support.
BELLA LOE PROULX Editor-in-ChiefAngie Bissonnette
Ryder Dietz
Angie Bissonnette
Angie Bissonnette
Ryder Dietz
Madeline Roberts
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Josiah Zuiderveen
Lydia Cowan
Emma Hampel
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Angie Bissonnette
Angie Bissonnette
June Pearson
Lydia Cowan
June Pearson
Nora Pluth
Madeline Roberts
Kostandi Stephenson
Kostandi Stephenson
Lauren Williams
Madeline Roberts
Nora Pluth
Amaya Gipson
Amaya Gipson
Lauren Williams
Josiah Zuiderveen
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Madeline Roberts
Grace Cieslikowski
Deep Water Devotion (transgender sailor evocations)
Sunday, May 2, 1999
A Needle Through the Eye of an Apostate: Baptism (un)faithful Humanity
Submission 2 Magazine
Instructions to The Coroner
Submission 5
What’s Taken, What’s Given, and What I Choose to Remember
Emma Hampel
Shelby Vaughn
Ryder Dietz
Rian Johnson
Lydia Cowan
Shelby Vaughn
Madeline Roberts
Rian Johnson
Lucas Harbaugh
Mira Marino
Josiah Zuiderveen
Nora Pluth
Nora Pluth
Josiah Zuiderveen
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Nora Pluth
Madalyn L. Rockwell
Lucas Harbaugh
Lucas Harbaugh
Lucas Harbaugh
Jenna Staszak
Lauren Williams
Emma Hampel
Emma Hampel
Josiah Zuiderveen
Kostandi Stephenson
Lauren Williams
Mira Marino
Nora Pluth
Mira Marino
Crossroads
Note to Self
FTM
Venus’ Arms
a bubble bath
The Oppression of Depression
Submission 4
The Stages of Emily Doe
The Meadow
Flower Picture
Burning Trees
Highway at Night
Before Sunrise
Chasing the Heart of Music
Astigmatism
Yellow Yarn
Becoming Consumption
Salt Flat
Scribble Out
Philadelphia Alley
The Wind
the moral code of horoscopes
Memory
The Artist
Dreamy Rivers Flowing Under Bridges
A Lady’s Broken Heart
spoonful of sugar
Flower Print
Flowers for the Living
Lilac
To be in Morning
To the passerby the day has just begun, morning is fingertips pushed forward in a deep stretch For me the sun refuses to rise, mourning is feet cemented in yesterday
Morning is a generous pour of cold brew caressed by ice, held together in two glass jars
Mourning is a barren mug passed around to a select few, each throat drier than the last While strangers drink deeply from crystal, each telling heightened tales of their own thirst
As though we’re the same
Morning brings golden rays of a new day, a callous gift
Unwrapped, it fills my eyes with salt-stained tears
Trudging along a well-worn path
Mourning is to be deafened by the echoing in your ears
Morning is to be grateful for the ash in your lungs
Each sunrise a cruel lie as it warms your side of our bed
My bed
My fingers reaching out on our olive-green duvet
My duvet
Our life written in the past tense
My life reflected in a cracked mirror
Good morning
From an ad on the radio, a greeting from my neighbor, a text from my sister
The first voice I hear is your absence
Good morning
It echoes back at me
In mourning my memory rots my days, pulling me deeper into the loose dirt
Another morning passes yet I remain rooted in place
The radio spits out music, only you liked hearing the news at 8
Worn out stories turn to awkward silence to chit chat to nothing at all
Black skirts to blue jeans Smiles to stone-faced
To be stuck in
Mourning
RYDER
DIETZCompanion
It was 5th or 6th grade when we first met, Those years, half a lifetime ago. I tried to ignore you
Playing with Legos—destroying, sorting, then building And for a brief moment It worked.
Why did you fill my head with thoughts?
Thoughts of futures, both possible and not.
Inevitably, by the end of each, friends or I would grab your hand. These thoughts plagued by darkness, But I never gave them much heed, For I always believed them to be ordinary.
I’ve never blamed you for all that you’ve taken. Two dogs, a fish, and a guinea pig. My former classmates, members of my family, More of which seem to take your hand with every passing year, Since winter break when I was 14. When my grandmother and a classmate felt your grip.
Thank you for the only thing you’ve ever given me. The ability to love Life and you.
In summer, the song of birds and cicadas
Paired with the dance of maggots and flies. In autumn, the aroma of apples and pumpkins With the feel of mushrooms and dead leaves. In winter, the green pines and red fires
Stark against the white snow and gray skies. In spring, filled with cool rain and colorful flowers
Covering the rotting logs and spreading fungi.
For a decade you’ve kept me company.
In my loneliest moments, I’ve found you there, Silent, unwavering, calm.
I know for the coming years, you’ll follow me. Until the day comes when I can grab your hand And follow you home.
17
We sit silently on the bus
Sleep gathered in the corner of my eye
I slowly scribble answers on a worksheet against the vinyl seat
The soft hum of music slips out of your earbuds
As your fingers trace the title of your latest library discovery
Your homework is safely nestled away in a bright green folder
You always come prepared for class
Sharpened pencils peek out of the top pouch of your bag
A lunchbox laden with stickers anchors your notebooks in place
Hidden in the front pocket of your blue backpack
Thoughts and prayers are folded gently
Shielded in the hollow comfort of a faded hand-me-down
Inside your bag you marked your name with sharpie, dotted the i and crossed the t
A dog tag for the modern age
Lunchtime then lockdown, the countdown begins
It’s time for hide and seek
5. Take shelter under an old desk, your last line of defense
4. A bowed head embraces your knees, fingers locked clasping the nape of your neck
3. The pounding of your heartbeat
2. The inhale of a shaky breath
1. Ready or not here I come
We sit waiting
For the push of a locked door
The crack of steel piercing through the air
A blanket of our friends’ bloody bodies to carpet the floor
We sit waiting
For a familiar voice to say it’s over through a muffled intercom
For the crisp ringing of the bell and our teacher’s reprimands, the bell doesn’t dismiss you, I do he repeats For the next class to begin, for this day to end, for the cycle to continue We sit waiting
I sit silently on the bus
Today no one said I’m sorry for your loss I pull your stained backpack closer to my chest You tried to come prepared
ANGIE BISSONNETTE
Hide and Seek
ANGIE BISSONNETTEOur Kingdom
Pink and purple beads sing as they bump together with my every step
Charm bracelets vie for attention as my wrists follow my words
Cheap clip-ons over your pierced ears, so we can match Pink for you, Purple for me
Memory clings like clammy hands on monkey bars
Desperate to hold on a little longer
I place a silver rhinestone crown on your head
A coronation for the queen
This was before
Before your deep brown curls fell away
Replaced by scarves of luscious greens and royal blues
Armor of color to beat back the inevitable
You are going to war, while I watch from the battlements
Advisors in white robes speak in riddles
The king paces from room to room
A Countess brings a burnt casserole to the castle
I gather my council, call in confident markers and clever colored pencils to plan my counterattack
Gripping a rose-colored crayon, I sketch on a smile
A shield of fiction protruding from my lips
Cross out my eyes to hide the droop in your eyelids
The slowness in your step
Plaster on a pleasant disposition, keep your eyes closed and a smile at the ready
This is how a princess helps
This is how a princess fights
But your battle was that of a queen
Your body the battleground
Once you lost, all colors retreated
Leaving a pale white flag blowing in a pitch-black sky
You lay to rest in a little black box
Dressed in a layer of dirt deep underground
My closet consumes my princess past
Packed away in a little black box
A coffin for our colorful kingdom
RYDER DIETZ Puppet Master
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Soil loosened up as Jake poured water onto it. He had kept track of the weather to make sure he could dig a deep enough hole. The night the weights dropped in his apartment there had been raging storms followed by two days of dreary rain followed by three sunny days. A bit of water at night was all it took to create the perfect digging conditions. Dark clouds covered the stars and moon and served as a reminder for how little time he had. Five days ago the storm had wound strings around him. The weather tried to be his master and Jake only obeyed out of necessity. The strings had been pulled into tight knots, though slack remained. If he could dig his holes and get out of the forest, he would be free of his so-called puppet master. Every string would be severed.
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He emptied an entire can of Febreeze between the two weights he brought out with him, currently hidden beneath bushes. Jake pulled the smaller but heavier weight out of hiding. It was the same way his father had done whenever they played hide and seek. He set the weight next to the hole. It could wait to enter because Jake had to inspect the hole first. Leaping down, the smooth walls blurred for a second. Six feet deep.
This hole was the first of its kind. It wasn’t like the holes from his childhood, made with his sister on the beach. Buckets of sand were used to craft the biggest sandcastle. His sister might still go to the beach but he wouldn’t know, they hadn’t talked in years. The hole wasn’t like the one he sat in during middle school to watch the stars with his father. Jake had kept the constellations in the back of his head but the city’s light blocked out nearly every star. He wondered if his father still stared at the sky. Holes that weren’t even like the ones he dug in high school to hide from all the bullies. It didn’t matter what the holes were made of, blankets, dirt, or straw. They formed a shield. It proved to be worthless against their words. Nothing like the hole Jake made with his boyfriend, curled up to be away from the world while his favorite band played in the background. Music was loved, memorized, then lost. The strings burned his fingers when he tried to fill the quiet. The holes Jake dug as a young adult were secrets. The first one buried the worst mistake he ever made. Accidents didn’t make for good enough excuses. He knew there’d be more of these holes to come, commanded by the brewing storm above.
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Climbing out of the hole, the first weight sat waiting for Jake. He wrapped both hands around the straps to slowly lower him into the hole. No sound came when Jake let go. Laid to rest beneath the petals of his boyfriend’s favorite cherry tree. Dirt and flowers would act as his blanket for eternity. Only a trunk to be a marker.
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With the hole now erased, Jake repeated the process. A rotting log was fine enough for the second weight. He found no need to check the depth of the second hole. Crooked and crumbling, much like the apartment he currently called home. A far cry from his old, country-side home, perfect as the first hole he dug. He tossed the weight in. Jake covered it in whatever rot was lying around—evidence of struggle now deleted by mushrooms and dead leaves.
Light filled the forest as lightning struck a tree and left nothing but a blackened trunk. Jake then noticed the charred x that spread away from the roots. Drops of rain began to fall as the slack of the strings vanished. For a moment, Jake struggled against the taught strings and tried to ignore his puppet master. Rain came down in torrents and gave him his next command. He gave in as the strings started pulling him back to the brightly lit metropolis. There was one more thing to bury tonight.
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MADELINE ROBERTS Submission 1
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Queendom
The first lord’s woman was made out of paint, She never spoke and never ate.
The second lord’s woman was made out of sand
She would crumble at the suggestion of his mighty hand.
The third lord never took a woman but a man.
The three lords gathered to flaunt their objects of love to the land.
The first lord brought forth his lady feign, and they danced until it started to rain. Then he hung her on the wall, by her throat, and went about his day.
The second lord didn’t bring his lady sand
Her wrist was not to hold but to grab she was prone to slipping his grasp she will escape whenever she can.
The third lord brought nothing more than a stubborn dream, clutching rosary beads like they could save him from anything.
Untitled
I’m not the biggest fan of viewings. I know they’re supposed to provide closure, and I’m sure for some they do. I don’t want my last memory of you to be your body. I don’t want it to be you dead, in a casket, shrouded by flowers and tears. I’d much rather them stay as they are, even unfinished. I’m fine with “we need to call again sometime” if it means I get to hold on to your laughing over the phone. I’m fine with it being an “I need to drop this off at her house sometime” if it means I get to remember you leaving your jacket at my place. I’d rather you be sometime than never and if I don’t see you dead, you can stay sometime forever.
JOSIAH ZUIDERVEENAfter Two Men In Love
Jericho Brown
27
Holding the same feelings
but making different choices. Still our two hearts long and mourn for the same losses, same desires,
Same understanding of the pain these roads are made of.
Traveling across the distance these paths have put no distance between our feelings. We are still perfectly understood.
To feel this connection, Is BLISS
Is AGONY
Is letting your soul sigh with relief at his siren’s song While chains forged by your own beliefs Remind you there will be no happy ending. Quenching and staining in a single breath.
Sharp and sweet. Should not be [ ]
Wish to be [ ]
Knowing this longing cannot be fixed.
I see you. Don’t go without seeing me Please. Stop.
The Woman in Me is Tired
The woman in me is tired.
The past girl in me is tired
The future mother in me is tired
My mother
My grandmother
Her mother
Her grandmother
A generation of the drained
Our delicate bones weak From shouldering the world
The woman in me is tired. The stretch marks
The catcalls
The pay gap
The silenced voice
Having little power
To change it all
The woman in me is tired. For my future daughter
For her future daughter
I want to protect them
From a world of:
“Boys will be boys”
The woman in me is tired. But I’ll keep going on
Because the world
Will exhaust a woman to death
Before they see a man yawn.
Watching Mom
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EVENT: unfortunate.
RSVP: not needed.
WHERE: streets. parks. bars. alleys. hotels. stores. schools. churches. homes.
WHEN: dark when it’s night out. morning when it’s light out.
DRESSCODE: no makeup, no skirts, covered chest, covered shoulders, covered knees.
REGISTRY: tasers, seatbelt cutters, pepper spray, whistles (available in pink).
MADALYN L. ROCKWELLNot An Invitation
“Sara, will you marry me?” The question hung in the air waiting for the correct reply, the penthouse apartment surrounded with his expectations and my doubts. My life was built around answering Ethan’s questions correctly. “Are you seeing anyone?” “Can I have your number?” “Are you a virgin?” “Do you like that?” “Do you love me?” Say yes, say no, say what he wants to hear.
With each answer I lost another piece of myself, my body an unwilling shrine of devotion to him. Every morning I enfolded myself in the scent of Chanel No. 5 mixed with the mango shampoo he picked out for me. My expensive pastel clothes, minimal makeup, and long blonde curls that I straightened every morning were all dictated by him. Every choice deliberately made so I could be perfect. I opened my mouth to answer, and his words poured out.
“Yes, I’ll marry you,” I replied.
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As soon as I said it a knot began tightening in my stomach, my heart sped up and I could feel tears building. I bit my tongue to force my emotions in place and was greeted with an unsettling taste of iron. Blood began to pool from behind my teeth, pushing against my cheeks and rising to the roof of my mouth. Pursing my lips together, I tried to keep it contained and hoped that the droplets that escaped were mistaken for lipstick.
I felt the blood thickening. Racing to the bathroom, I opened my mouth, hoping to discard the mess that was bubbling up. The arrival of something smooth and sharp stood out amidst the liquid drowning me. Reaching inside I discovered my front tooth had been uprooted. As I stood staring at it, more teeth started to spill out. One after another, my hands frantically tried to push them back in place, but they slipped through my fingertips until handfuls of them fell to the floor. A crisp clinking sound as each one connected with the porcelain tiles. I tried to scream but the blood silenced the noise. A desperate gurgling sound was all that I could muster as tears ran down my face. My heart pounded faster and faster, the beat drumming underneath my skin, dislodging it from my chest and rising past my lungs. Slowly inching its way up my throat, each pulse vibrating through me, stealing my breath and pushing more blood forward. My fingers clawed at my neck as I gasped for air that would not come, until I felt a thick round weight land on my tongue. I quickly spit it onto the ground and watched in horror as my severed heart continued to beat.
How long had I been in the bathroom—seconds, hours, years—I don’t know. The pounding of my heart, the clatter of fallen teeth, and my gasps for air
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were all I could hear, all I could see. Just then, a knocking on the door began, growing louder and louder, matching the sound of my heart, pulsating on the floor. The mess, the mess in his house, the mess I had made. My body began to shake as I imagined his anger at discovering the scene.
Grabbing his monogrammed towel perfectly placed on the middle rack, I fell to my knees to hide what I had done. My hands trembled as I washed away the blood on the floor. I threw my discarded teeth in a plastic bag and hid them in the back of a bottom drawer. Yanking handfuls of toilet paper off the roll I frantically wrapped up my beating heart and threw it in the trash can, a dull clanking sound rang out when it hit the bottom. My head jerked back to the door as the knocking grew louder; my breath grew more ragged. I chucked the stained towel on top of the bloody mess and closed the lid. I hastily sprayed Chanel No. 5 into the air to mask the scent. My eyes darted around the spotless bathroom; it was beyond reproach. I opened the door to find Ethan waiting for me. His short dark hair perfectly in place, off-white trousers paired with a crisp tan button down. The sleeves meticulously rolled up to showcase his arms. He looked like a dream.
“Are you alright?” he said. Breathing carefully, I shook my head yes.
“Where’s your smile, pretty girl?” A question he asked me every time my perfect facade started to slip. Keeping my lips pursed tight, I forced a coy smile. He smiled back, showcasing his perfect pearly white teeth, “Good, you’re prettier when you smile.” He slid a diamond band around my finger. I stood before him silent and smiling, as blood continued to secretly fill my throat.
But a steady beat kept creeping out though the bathroom door, muffled but undeniable. My eyes darted back, willing the sound to stop, willing it to continue. Ethan forced his way inside, throwing off the lid and revealing the mess I’d tried to hide. Slowly I stepped back inside. My legs following my eyes, perfume filled my nostrils as I stood before my discarded heart and stared.
Suddenly my body acted without thought—I pushed Ethan aside and bent down on one knee. Gently, my hands reached down and picked it up, watching it beat as its blood ran down my arm. I turned it over in my hands, only to be reminded of the ring still on my finger. I slid it off and watched haphazardly as the diamond steeped in blood fell to the bottom of the bin. Slowly, I stood back up and walked out the door. An absentminded smile reached my lips as my eyes stayed glued to the beating in my hand.
A Bloody Proposal
I don’t know how long it’s been since Noah dumped my body into the Atlantic Ocean. I never heard his speedboat flying across the waves. I didn’t see the stars that guided him on his covert mission. I didn’t feel his hands when he lifted me up and hoisted my body overboard, and I didn’t hear his sigh of relief as I vanished from view. But I do know everything changed once I hit the water. I’ve seen the sun rise and set, felt my fingers prune, my skin wither and pale, my wrinkles become more defined. The waves beat my body against the rocks, slowly scraping away my skin and draining the blood that had settled in my feet, legs, and hands until there was nothing left. The ocean threw me against coral reefs and seashells leaving imprints and scars all along my body. Until I completely belonged to the sea.
But once my old body had been discarded, I became something new. A great tail consumed the lower half of my body. Obsidian and blood-red scales enveloped it, spare the solely-black bottom fin. My fingers webbed together; my skin grew translucent, an echo of the moonlight. My eyes became dark grey, and my teeth sharpened to points. My pitch-black hair was in constant motion, dancing along with the current. The biggest change was my voice. I heard the shift in my mind before I ever opened my mouth. A warm melody coursed through my empty veins, providing a new lifeforce I could cling to. A tingle in my fingertips, an exhale of breath, the ease of floating and the force of crashing waves all in one song, one melody that poured out of my lungs.
So, I sang, over and over again to surround myself in its warm embrace. But while I sang, I couldn’t help but think of Noah, of our two-bedroom apartment in Manhattan and the warmth of waking up in his arms. The goldfish he gave me on my birthday and the tightness in his shoulders when I laughed too loud. But most of all I remember that last night. The slight panic in his hazel eyes when I pulled out the stranger’s earring I found in our bed. The moment of silence right before he called me crazy. His screams were so indignant that I wondered if he was telling the truth even while I gripped the proof he was lying. Every night I thought of Noah and every night I sang my song.
One evening I heard the low humming of his boat vibrating through the current. His scent of sandalwood and mint mixed with the crisp air, and I knew he had come back to me. That the song had brought him, that I had brought him. I began to sing as I waited for him to come closer. Noah stopped the boat once he reached me, silencing the engine. My song accompanied by the rhythm of the waves filled the air.
“Swim with me,” I said softly, as I began to move away from his boat. His eyes were locked on mine, and I watched him jump into the sea. Following my voice deeper into the open water. He swam slowly, burdened by the weight of his clothes. The silence following the music was jarring and confusion began to spread on his face.
“What’s wrong? Aren’t you happy to see me?” I asked.
“What? What’s going on—who are you?” Noah said.
“Don’t you remember me? Don’t you recognize me?” I said softly, a thin layer of sweetness barely covering the venom in my voice. He stared at me.
“A-AAlina?” His eyes widened in horror.
As we spoke, I began urging the waves into a whisper of a whirlpool. The water began to rise and swirl around his feet keeping him in place.
“What? What’s happening, Alina? What are you doing?”
“Don’t be so sensitive. Aren’t you happy to see me? After everything you could at least say hello.”
“What is this? What are you doing? Stop! Somebody help me!” His voice sounded raw as the water forced its way into his mouth. He spat it back out only to have it pour back in a moment later. His legs kicked frantically to keep his head above water while his arms flailed wildly as panic overcame him. The waves grew stronger and pulled him further and further from his boat. A dull smile spread across my face while the spark of a memory consumed me. His smooth hands on my throat, the leather on his watch shoved against my cheek as he squeezed tighter, crushing the breath from my lungs. His knees dug into my sides as I squirmed. My voice betrayed me as I begged him to stop.
“Stop! I’m sorry, please Noah!” I begged.
“Are you calling me a liar? You think I’m an idiot? Just a lying idiot, is that what you think I am?” Noah screamed.
“No! You’re right, I’m sorry. It’s my fault. I know you’d never hurt me. I know you would never cheat. It’s my earing. I must have forgotten, I’m sorry!”
“Why are you making me do this? You’re crazy! I deserve better! I deserve better than this, better than you! After everything how could you do this to me!”
I wasted my final breath on an apology to him. That was a lifetime ago. Now water surrounds his throat by my command, and I circle him with a small flick of my fins while his arms and legs lash out like a trapped animal.
“You’re so dramatic, I forgot how emotional you get,” I said coolly, as I repeated the words he always said to me.
“Alina, I don’t deserve this, I’m a good man. I loved you! I love you! Stop it! Make it stop!”
“You’re acting crazy, can you calm down?” I said with a smirk. I liked the warmth of his words on my tongue as I stole his lies and poured them into the air,
twisting them with his panic. It felt good to be on the other side of it.
“You wouldn’t hurt me—you can’t hurt me! You love me! Alina... Alina! I’m sorry! Okay? I’m sorry! It was an accident; I didn’t mean to!” Noah screamed.
The louder he became, the less I listened. The less I said, the more he screamed. I loved it. I swam closer until my lips were an inch away from his and I could taste his fear. It was sharp and bitter, but I wanted more. I opened my mouth and began to sing again; I felt his body exhale and go limp. I felt his heart slow. His muscles relax. He felt safe, he felt loved… a smile crept onto my face as I lunged forward. My webbed fingers gripped his arms, finally plunging him deep into the water. The shock in his eyes was beautiful as he desperately tried to hold his breath. He was squirming under my hold, but I was stronger now and grasped him tighter. I wanted him to look in my eyes and see the air he had stolen from my lungs, I wanted to watch him as I stole it back, to feel his panic as he realized he was going to die, that he was going to die because of what he did to me. My face was inches from his as I watched him begin to run out of breath, his body shaking as water began to seep into his mouth and down his throat. But I didn’t want him to just lose consciousness, to fall asleep, to feel the warmth and disappear into the blanket of the sea. No, for the first time in his life he was going to do something for me. We were going to do what I wanted. He was my gift to the ocean as I had been his, and the ocean demanded blood—or maybe I did. I yanked one of his arms into my mouth. I took a deep bite until I could taste the iron mixing with the salt water. I dragged Noah back up to the surface for one last gasp of air—there was no reason to make this quick.
I watched his blood float around the cool crisp water, moving along with the waves calling to different sea creatures, letting them know there’s food to be had. When they finish his bones, he will sink onto the seabed to be separated and scattered on the ocean floor for little creatures to take what they want. To be consumed, used and eradicated until he disappears completely.
I used to be afraid, wanting to belong, desperate for a family, to find my place in the world. I was desperate enough to pretend that a nice apartment, a 25-cent goldfish and Noah were my home, but now I have found my real home. The memory of him tasted like chalk in my mouth. Dry and foreign and yet the memory of the taste remained. The tides embraced me in the dark, a harsh cold that protected me, that brought me new life, a second chance at a new voice. As Noah disappeared into the darkness that voice began to grow louder, this time with a hunger. The sound that had replaced my beating heart throbbed loudly inside me, drumming out a rhythm, creating a new melody in my gut. The pounding of that call, the taste of salt and iron lingering on my lips consumed me.
As the sun began to rise it winked at me, specks of light shining on the ocean’s surface, like an old friend who carries my secrets from a past life. With morning came another boat. I felt the humming of its engine before I saw it and smelled the sweat and sunscreen of the two men aboard. The warm caress of my song began to wrap its way around me, tempting me forward. Noah wasn’t the end; he was just a taste, and I was starving. My eyes locked on the boat.
I opened my mouth and began to sing.
Deep Water Devotion (transgender sailor evocations)
I am my own object of scorn, and your servants see this, Lady Sea. So as I sailed seeking your counsel, the sharks found me repulsive, and the sirens turned away.
Now, surrounded by your presence, I ask that I may find comfort: either in your wisdom or your watery judgment.
I’ve sailed far from safe harbors in hopes that you’d show me something true. May I see my future, my lady?
May I find something worthy of enduring misfortune and woe?
I leave my fate to the whims of your water in hopes that you’d teach me who I am. When Seasoned Sailors speak of The Ocean, their voices tremble and their sea legs shake.
I’m not afraid of your dangers, my lady.
To live as I do now is fate worse than death
Your allure charms me.
On land, my facade of a face would fool mortal men, but it is false and you know this. My reflection inside you shows more than I can say, more than anyone may ever see.
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I’ve got the makings of a Seaman: The tenor voice, the barrel chest.
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But I want something else, your essence calls to me in ways they’ve never heard.
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Their songs speak of besting you and undoing a mermaid’s garments. Their bravado fills their hearts as their lungs fill with water.
I do not join in these shanties but instead, drink of your water, bathe in it, cursing them for their insolence.
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They care not for your water, they are as salty as brine. But I suppose you’ve punished them for that.
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Your edict plagues their journeys with raging rapids and tidal waves, Your embrace fills their lungs and causes their speech to cease.
Their eyes are full of fear at the mention of your name, Your ferocity is well acquainted with them.
But your stillness my darling, your stark beauty, your expanse is unknown to them, but it is known to me.
Make me in your image Lady Sea, let me know beauty as clear as water, With real value wells below and wells within.
Let my isolation be not in vain, that I’d be true to myself, be truly myself, right down to the vein.
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Let me inflict pleasure and pain like your rough cragged bergs of ice And the gentle lapping of your evening tides.
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Sunday, May 2, 1999
The Sunday of the ceremony
The rigid pew Against my back
The lily-white taffeta and chiffon dress Mother made me wear
Pastor Aaron read: Hebrews 13:4 About giving yourself To God
I had Nothing left to give.
Pastor Aaron Called the little girls To the pulpit
Nausea gripped my stomach As I walked forward
Wrapped up like a pearly present One he would unwrap
Like he did every Sunday
His liver spotted hands pressed silver Into my palm
I slipped the purity ring onto my thumb The only finger that would fit I feel the engraving:
“I am my beloved’s”
I remember thinking: I am no one’s.
A Needle Through the Eye of an Apostate: Baptism
Everyone is staring at the back of the house, standing up from the pews and looking towards the pool. It is a used saltwater fish tank, water opaque and glass smudged. All the churchgoers have on their Sunday best—darned suits with visible creases and dresses with old tags still attached. Everyone is faced towards the baptism pool, ready for its murky waters to cleanse someone’s soul.
The Bishops move into the aisles, searching for someone. A vessel. A volunteer. Everyone is ready and willing to be picked like an apple from a tree. But there is one boy who is not standing. He has his eyes closed. The boy sits next to the dignified Mr. Pyle, a boisterous man who is the spirit of the church. He is not the Pastor, but he is a preacher for his family and community. The boy’s eyes are closed to shut out everyone’s thoughts, especially Mr. Pyle’s.
Mr. Pyle shakes his son awake. For a moment the boy jolts in alarm, his eyes wide, scared and at attention. Mr. Pyle bores into his son, before pointing at the baptism pool. The boy obliges and begins walking, wanting desperately to not meet the judgemental gaze of the house. His shoes are untied. They detest the boy for this. Apples rotten before they fall.
The baptism will do him good.
The Bishops stand at the corners of the baptism pool like tall spires surrounding the tank. The boy, dressed in white now, stood pretending to sleep, standing on a stepladder near the pool. The Pastor stands and speaks, words trailing away and fizzling out like flies to a bug zapper. He closes the book and taps the boy’s shoulder. The boy turns to run and is pulled under, grip of the Bishops, hot and tight. He falls and disappears in the water. The water is calm, but the boy is thrashing. They are trying to drown him. He can’t get any air. He is still. Moments pass.
The Bishops’ sleeves are wet.
Eventually, the Bishops pull and raise him up. For the first time in all the House’s Sunday services, Mr. Pyle’s son is awake. It is a miracle. Rejoice.
He stares out into the crowd, Mr. Hartfield meets his eyes.
Mr. Hartfield is ecstatic. For ten years, the boy was claimed by sloth, but no longer. The boy’s eyes are full and awake. Mr. Hartfield breaks eye contact.
But it isn’t Mr. Hartfield the boy is looking at. The boy sees someone separate from the crowd and separate from himself—he sees Us. We keep looking at the boy. The boy’s face is locked in an expression of alarm and his eyes are wide. The overhead lights reflecting in his pupils crash into the iris like discordant cymbals. He sees the truth and through bathing with God knows who he is, who she’ll be. There is no difference between his tears and holy water. He stares at us, seeing us for the first time. He is exhausted. He breaks eye contact and chooses sleep. The bishops have to catch him before he falls back into the water. Rejoice.
(This is an excerpt from a longer piece.)
NORA PLUTHI. The Church
You belong here! They said But not that part
A promise they did not mean Because who are we if not liars?
This sanctuary is for everyone
The ones who know The ones who don’t Caught in the in between
You belong here! They said But not that part
The part they say in omission That maybe My Vocation isn’t a husband But marriage nonetheless
Forgive me Father for I have sinned
After I am clean
Pending penance I run to the Father Back to the altar
If You have given everything
How could I not give You this one thing?
Or is it something You gave me?
Come as I am.
Just as I am.
II. The Community
You’re accepted here! They said But not that part.
That part that governs my heart Informs my decisions
Thought I was ill informed That I survived unscathed
I lived it
I sought refuge with you From the place I find refuge
I am accepted here But only if I fit the mold
And where I am promised community I am met with emptiness Jokes meant innocently found guilty in my heart
Who was I to think I’d find acceptance here? To think the flag actually meant progress.
My complaints are met with reminders Like I don’t know them oh so well
In Animal Farm I learned We are all equal
But some are more equal than others.
III. the aftermath
the heart of it is simple the issue is plain more than the homophobia that precedes every joke that seeps into every conversation more than intolerance more than expecting me to be the same as every queer person you’ve ever met
maybe to escape the boxes they built we built cages instead.
at the heart of it is humans. too dependent on our own pleasure we forget about everyone else’s too focused on our own comfort we neglect the comfort of others
it’s not blame i find although it’s tempting in my selfish ways
and i’m not just peaceful but not just mad
it’s humanity. your own and mine. it’s not God who told me i don’t belong
it’s not the promise of progress that told me i’m not accepted its humanity.
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2
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Magazine Mouth
You wet your lips before you lie A habit I once found charming
So easy to read, a children’s magazine Nothing you could keep hidden
Now I wish you were a novel Written beyond my comprehension
As you kiss me with a Freshly moistened smile
Pest(icide)
This bastard buzzes, bitches
Boisterous beating of wings
Bounce off battered walls
Bruising my brain
Clammy cupped hands, Catch creepy creature
Its chassis cramped and caged
Like a king in check
I press together perspiring palms
A practically imperceptive squish
The putrid noise is paused
Perfect, peaceful placidness
At last, lacking life
I take a long look
At little limp legs
A lifeless liquid lump
At once I see now still
Its wings are iridescent
Even under these fluorescents
Shattered stained glass in the sun
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nowhere to go but home took a right turn for the wrong reasons and left my dignity in the dust
expensed gas and common sense for a short-lived sojourn into the past i wonder if the light glowing in the window is still yours
it’s not my place to know anymore, but i’m outside your door, soliciting an end to my tortuously torturous ignorance
apple pie moonshine told my eye to find you, sold a bourbon-lacquered lie that you are still the bullseye to which my steadfast heart will fly
when the saccharine whiskey finish diminishes in its cloying toying with my frozen-amber ambiguous logic, i turn the car around, swallow the burn of yearning in my throat and return to the regularly-scheduled brain sound of my abyssal wallowing (so profound is my grief that it reaches down to subaqueous levels of effete fealty)
the obligation to remember that you exist is the worst hangover there is
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NORA PLUTH The Gray
I live in the gray
The space of not knowing Floating in the in between
I think in gray
My thoughts a contradiction
The peaceful confusion
I rest in gray
In the ambiguity of life And the peace of today
I grieve in gray
Where tears leave trenches I am reminded Of how much I loved
I love in gray
Never giving everything Afraid of losing it all
I laugh in gray
In the joy of this moment And the knowledge of it
I find in gray
Who are we if not gray? Who are we if not broken but whole?
I am the gray
Nothing at all
And everything I want to be
Soft-Spoken
I hide my words behind a pair of lips
Zipped because no one is listening
So quiet, that others think that I’m whispering
I’m a warm afternoon blowing in the wind
Their seeds planting yellow weeds that won’t stop growing
I’m soft-spoken
Not too loud or too quiet
The sound of low thunder at night when it’s drizzling
I’m soft-spoken
I speak like the wind when no one hears it
Then sound like lightning when others least expect it
I’m soft-spoken
And there’s nothing wrong with this Just means that in the end, I’m more mysterious
Silence to you, is peace to me
Your lack of words gives me energy
This fast-paced world is often blinding
Reminding of how silence can set you free
An internal relief
From the ones who speak
For their words are too noisy
The quick mumbles of tongue and cheek
Replaced with a gentle heartbeat
And thoughts to keep me company
Silence to you, is peace to me
Carefully observing
And quietly listening
A mindful break from our loud reality
AMAYA GIPSONSilence
down on every knee begging to be your only need the harder i fall, the higher you rise and you’re towering twenty feet, i’m grave-deep despondency set the blame to rest on me, my fist held the shovel in a death-grip, my albatross to bear and bury beneath a flame-fractured cross closed coffin of our relationship, mahogany cacophony of togetherness interred into dirt that doesn’t care who won (you) who lost (me)
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i hosted a funeral every day for seven months in hopes that you would show your face, send a condolence card or a thoughtful bouquet, attend the rites i conducted every night in the aurifying glow of spotify
the worshipful candles crowded about your then well-tended altar dwindled in number as the dog days of summer howled to life, flicker of their icy-blue flames wavering in the face of light-stifling canine cries
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you never came and so i left you behind and nearly died trying
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JOSIAH ZUIDERVEEN Instructions to the Coroner
After all of life’s grand adventures are finished Burn my body on a pyre like Vikings of old My soul has journeyed on to brighter things
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Don’t take me to a cemetery. Too cold and monumental.
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Gather the dust and place me
Here…..
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Among high grasses and trees. Spread my coal-tempered ashes to ride wind-worn hills. Put some of me in a water bottle, Ride with me one last time.
There…
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Where I went to rest my bike amidst the coolness, Under the bridge where water rushes through this magic cove Is where my powdered-carcass can ride the stream
Let me watch over that place still And I will cause the wind to gently ruffle your hair
Blowing away cares and fears
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Then walk
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Among the dunes and rocky waters
I shall call to friends I ran ahead of My soul shall sway with song singing
“Come, spend time in this magic cove, And walk this windy sun-grass, Or sit on the gnarled, broken trunk
Listening to the swirling waters under the trees. Where the wind caresses your tear-stained cheeks
Let this wind hold you in your sorrow
Till you are ready to rejoin life’s adventure without me.”
MADALYN L. ROCKWELL Grove(l)
I wanted to tell them all
How beautiful you looked
With the moss tangled in your golden hair
With the bees brushing past your cheeks
How soft it was to lay against your chest
With all your ribs shattered
Like laying on pebbles under soft cover of snow
Your skin just so unblemished
With its rubbed rashes the size of Honeycrisp apples
An orchard across your back and legs and arms
And the pool of bile leaking about your waist
Perfection could never be a place
Betrothed to you, its person
Betrothed to you
I could only wish I might rot with you
And our teeth like pebbles
Might scatter near your rusted spear
It could never be
You are with me in every word that dies on my lips
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I could never forget
The cold of your kiss
I am your graveyard
MADELINE ROBERTS Submission 5
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59
I’m writing this to let you know I’ve reached baseline
The place I always talked about visiting
On those cold winter nights when the wind blew so hard against the window, I thought it would shatter
You asked me once how I would get there
Given my heart was empty and my luggage was full But I didn’t have an answer
So, I ran.
As fast and as far as my legs would go and when they gave out, I crawled. The past was hard to carry but I kept it with me until I collapsed. It was in that moment
While I lay, face down in the dirt
When I had no way of moving forward
That I could finally rest in the present
I thought of sweet tulips, of stars, and then I thought of you. Terrible, awful, uncomfortable you who spit venom at me like a snake
See this is where I left you
In a memory so far away that I cannot recall
How your eyes looked or the shape of your face
This is where I left you
On the floor of your kitchen
Re-reading this trying to figure out
Exactly what you did to hurt me
This is where I left you
Alone.
Just as alone as you made me feel
On those days when I hated myself
This is where I left you.
Not physically, I’d already done that but, mentally
‘Cause I had forgotten all the things I wanted you to do
And all the things that you did not want to do back
Then I realized that the weight I had been carrying for minutes, hours, days, months, for years was not something I needed.
And I wept
Like a widow who has decided to move not on, but forward. To leave the place now too small for her growth.
For my growth.
So, I let go.
Of the pain, of the promises, of the hate, of the doubt, of the memories, of who I used to be and suddenly,
I could breathe
I could stretch
I could crawl
I could sit
I could stand
I could run
I could fly
GRACE CIESLIKOWSKIWhat’s Taken, What’s Given, and What I Choose to Remember
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SHELBY
VAUGHNNote to self
Just to let you know self love isn’t selfish
It isn’t rebellious
Self love isn’t narcissism
Or a defense mechanism
Self love isn’t abstract expressionism or some kind of uncertain fanaticism
Self love isn’t negligence to the people of your element
Or what some people would call “arrogant”
Self love is a cross section to the direction you need to be in connection with
And although we may have imperfections it’s okay because it is a reflection of who you are, human
Self love… is loving the authentic you
Such fondness for yourself can be interpreted in different ways
For me it might be dancing in the mirror unapologetically
For you it might be wearing something that makes you feel (fearless, gallant)
You see Self love, is personal
It’s a journey that you and only you can take with yourself
And on the way you might run into bumps called insecurity and hopelessness down the road
And maybe even potholes titled depression and loneliness
And yet it is an experience.
A voyage to better days
An awakening of confidence you haven’t quite unlocked yet
But I promise,
When you get to the end of your destination you will find that
The love has always been there, you just needed time to see it
Self love is
Self love is like a flower in the rain
Or a needle in a haystack
Sometimes it’s hard to find at first
But once found it’s rewarding to see
The thing about self love is, once you obtain it, just a small piece of it. It grows forever in your heart.
Once you start healing those aching wounds of neglect, misery, and rejection, you will soon bloom into the human you’ve once always wanted to be.
Self love is loving yourself
Loving your body and soul and spirit
And hey, maybe even your hair
Self love is ultimately the best love.
Self love is, well… I´ll leave that up to you
RYDER DIETZ FTM
Her smiles were long extinct Before he came. She was made of years of trials While he was made of an instant. Before him, Everyone knew of her. From her white bleached tipped hair To her silent voice. Before him, She had a role in choir And a place in a lane. After him, She was assigned to history. Her friends quickly turned into his. Her teachers now taught him. Only her family could not see him.
She tried to be an ocean, To drown him, who had taken her place.
Her skills had been copied by him, To which he added more. Both competitive swimmers, Only he was a lifeguard. Though he may have briefly sunk Inches ‘neath the surface, He soon reached the beach Of the puddle she became.
He turned to her and knew, Only one of them could be. First, went her name. Broken and mangled, Its bones were made into his. Second, her hair was shorn, Made to match his. Third, he unwove her clothes To make his own. He bound her chest and stained her hands, Marred her skin and stole her voice, As he did not yet have his own. Lastly, he let his hands and feet turn to claws, His teeth sharpened into fangs. Tearing apart what lay before him, Letting what remains melt into him. He walks away from the scene, Not a trace of guilt in his heart. He puffs out his chest at what he did, For it was his right.
RIAN JOHNSON Venus’s Arms
Psalm 139:14
I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderfully Made…
He made me out of Parian Marble in the likeness of myself when I emerged from the foam of the sea. My creator captured my likeness from the details he gleaned from my stories. The way my hips melted with the curve of my waist…The way my breasts sat up perfectly on my chest…The way the marble was able to mimic my perfect porcelain skin…and even then the sculpture pales in comparison to the impossible depth of my beauty. Alexandros of Antioch molded his idea of feminine perfection into a 6 foot 8 inch tall statue that, in his mind, was the ideal standard for divine feminine beauty…in his mind, I was his Venus.
He, along with most men, decided what would be the epitome of beauty for all women to strive for and really saw no issue in making the standard for a body and gender he was not born in…my question is…when he made his creation without human error did he forget that humans have error?...Did it slip his mind that the standard of perfection was ever changing and not something he alone could determine…Better yet…did he discover the same peculiar irony that the world has discovered when not even the goddess of beauty can reach the standard of beauty forged by man…And that when I was found on the Island of Melos, I too fell short… quite literally, actually, for when I was found I had no arms…and the world would grow to love me because of it.
I’d like to think of human self esteem as a soft, malleable piece of clay. Something natural that can be easily manipulated when in the hands of man. There are so many outcomes for this piece of clay and each outcome is different—as the artists of this material vary. The misconception about self esteem is that everyone expects their piece of clay and its finished product to reach perfection. The original lie.
Beauty is in the eyes of the beholder but beauty can never equate to perfection considering everyone beholds beauty differently. I learned that when my body hit the ground…the hard way. One may be superficially and objectively beautiful on the outside—to you, but this may not be what that person believes or what they have heard about themselves. So what happens to that piece of clay that believes they are lesser than the other pieces of clay they compare themselves too?
In my journey around the Sun, I can unequivocally say that a constant battle in my life is having to accept the fact that there would never be a box I would be able to fit in. Many have said that standing out becomes me—
In my mind I’ve wondered if I ever had a choice.
(This is an excerpt from a longer piece.)
LYDIA COWAN a bubble bath
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small popping against your skin the water now clear the drip drip drip of the faucet ice cold
against your toes
you see your body in the water a light blue tint of flesh
you see your:
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stretch marks
scars
freckles
cellulite rolls
greasy hair
wrinkles
body hair
bruises
pimples and unpainted nails all cocooned in the lukewarm water you don’t hate what you see you don’t love it
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you accept it.
you emerge from the cocoon the diamond rivulets running down your flushed skin
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you unplug the drain a tornado of water released in the pipes the drip drip drip silenced.
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you pick up the now empty plastic bottle from its place on the shelf the label worn from over-usage
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the soapy liquid for sensitive skin has finally run out
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you aren’t happy you aren’t sad you accept it.
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because you can take a bath without bubbles now.
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69
I just don’t understand I’ve never understood.
How your friends don’t notice that you’re feeling down and depressed Just wanting to feel something more than hopelessness.
How your family won’t even be there for you when you open up to them. When it feels like more of an interrogation than a discussion of feelings, my feelings
Mental illness doesn’t discriminate.
I am a young black woman that suffers from depression, but we don’t speak about that one... Society tries to sweep it under the rug. And when I talk—no when we talk about it, we’re considered weak Angry.
We’re told to shut up and suck it up.
Like we’re supposed to be able to suppress our feelings away, conceal them from the public, and never speak about them again. Or when we speak about it people think that we are lying, overreacting, and dramatic.
Like we don’t get depressed like there’s no way black girls can be depressed. I am tired of feeling this way.
I’m tired of waking up screaming and crying because it feels like this thing called life is beating me
This thing called life is eating me away. And we often don’t have a place to go.
A place to let emotions free.
And I just wanna be heard.
I want to be a great wife and a good mother
A good sister to my big brother
And I want to be a strong black woman too.
SHELBY VAUGHNThe Oppression Of Depression
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The Stages of Emily Doe
Acknowledgments
In order to tell this story properly, I must acknowledge those involved–All those who thread my pain together in the blanket that kept me hidden, to those who poked holes in the blanket’s thick wool to let the light hit my face. Some faces I still remember, and others will be burned in my hippocampus until my body meets the ground. It’s important to note that without those people who made me experience what hell feels like, I would not be who I am…but it is because of the people that made me see the possibility of heaven that I am still here.
“The Land of the Free” doesn’t function without bondage.
I would first like to acknowledge the state of Kentucky. A place that was never meant for colored kids with big dreams and big hair. I would like to acknowledge your ignorance in choosing to live as a confederate state long after The Civil War. You overlooked that Jim Crow died and continued to quietly push black people into too-small enclaves out of ear shot—where our screams overlap one another like the bodies in slave ships. Within these enclaves we have learned how to protect each other but your southern pride is built on being a threat to the enclaves you created. You had a hand in my abuse by making the playing field uneven 400 years ago for my ancestors, brothers, sisters, me, and all of our descendants. Without you, I wouldn’t have gone through all that I did…I wouldn’t have learned how bad systemic hate could affect me and therefore I would have never found my passion in life. Thank you for choosing to be ignorant so that I could gain knowledge. I would also like to acknowledge the systems in place that made it possible for sexual abuse to thrive in the same environment children grew up in. I remember you the most in moments when I reflect on conversations where girls were always made to be more responsible than the boys that would end up hurting them. You taught us to keep our hands, thoughts, minds, bodies, and pain to ourselves…if we were the owners of vaginas. You taught us that boys can be boys…that the code of conduct for how they played with toys was the same as how they were allowed to play with girls. Reckless, wild, and with no boundaries, you gave them permission to never grow up or think of others and how their actions could affect people and you let them sit in playtime on and off the football field while we were forced to grow up…because
they are boys. Because of you I have the hands of several boys tattooed into my skin and in my brain and for that I can never thank you enough.
While all of this was happening, my father gave me the nickname “diamond.” He wanted me to know how a woman, how I, should be treated. It is because of what you put me through and what you made acceptable that I will never forget how a diamond is made, priced, and valued.
Thank you to all of my female classmates who may have suffered the same fate as I and still hide in the night of silence. I want to acknowledge your presence on this earth, for you, too, live. I write for us all. Thank you to the teachers that ignored and overlooked this abuse and all of the perpetrators who perpetuated it. You made survivors. All of you made the pain visceral, but there are beings who made it disappear.
I would like to acknowledge my parents. The two people who made me out of love and have never shown me anything less. Now while you may not have had all the tools to save me from a world with no rules, you loved me enough to guide me while I was temporarily blind. There will never be a love to replace what I have in you. Dad, watching you love Mom in a way that comes as a sacrifice to yourself everyday has made me see that I should never lower myself to chase after the cracks on the sidewalk when I could run with my head held high on streets made of gold. Mom, you are a warrior with armor no one but you can fit. And you still have room to love me in a way that can heal the sick. To my sisters, we have grown up feeling one another’s pain as if we shared the same body. We share the same thoughts and burdens. While I may have felt alone, I was never by myself. There is no greater gift than having siblings who are your best friends.
I want to acknowledge the strong Black and Filipino women on my father’s side. You taught me what it’s like to be bulletproof and still vulnerable. I have learned of the power of duality through watching you. That power now lives in me.
To my Therapist, you encouraged me to speak, and without you this story would have died with me. You are my hero.
To my Alexa, you are an inspiration to me, and to this world. You have inspired me to speak on behalf of the girls who life broke…but you have had a hand in putting me back together. You made this story a broken masterpiece. I will forever be grateful to you.
To my Joel, who loved me before I was aware that love had a definition that applied to me, you gave me a reason to find healing and in you I have found freedom. Thank you for showing me that love should never have a price tag. You are loved by me forever.
To my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, you deserve all of the acknowledgments. You made this journey for me when you crafted me in my mother’s womb, and you knew it would come to this moment when it was time to share the journey with others. I used to believe there was a moment in time when you chose to not look at me, in writing this I have been able to feel you in every single moment oxygen fills my lungs. May your will be done with this piece and may the systems that failed me learn from The Pharaoh Ramses.
Let my people go.
(This is an excerpt from a longer piece.)
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LUCAS HARBAUGH The Meadow
The man stood looking from his window. It was a wide view from his 6th floor apartment. It showed an out of place, hilly little area, with scattered trees and overgrown wild grass. The kind of place perfect for a picnic with a thick blanket he often thought, only if it weren’t for his apartment complex built directly in front of it. An old brick building with small rooms. The building was originally used for the making of textiles, but with a few added walls it was converted. His room was a little sliver of space, about five feet wide on each side of his door and only about 13 back. A place someone might refer to as a hole in the wall; a dingy, slightly decrepit hole for that matter. The floor didn’t join properly in spots, leaving thick ridges where pieces came together roughly. Often, he would catch one of his toes on these misjoinings which slashed and bruised them. Richard came to always wear shoes in his apartment because of this, only taking them off when getting into bed by dangling his feet off the edge and reaching down to forcefully pull them off. He’d then leave them neatly next to each other.
The walls of his apartment were covered in a thin white plaster, with most parts having given way to show the faded, reddish-brown bricks behind. In places where the plaster wasn’t completely gone it was cracked or chipped, with little bits of dust falling from the walls every time a knock was made against them.
While some might call this place rustic or industrially charming, he did not feel the same. He felt as though this place was a cold, cluttered, and out of order mess. That it stood only because brick never falls, and the poor must be assigned to a place that some property manager would call “rustic.”
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That rustic label he hated. It had driven up the price of rent, as it’s a word that hipster kids couldn’t help but marvel at. The idea of living in such an apartment, stationed comfortably outside the city but not far, so crime could not be heard in the night and overpriced coffee could be enjoyed on the streets during the day. All with the added, and most important benefit, of being able to tell their friends they were a part of it, the city life. The man grew annoyed with the whole concept. Though he wasn’t much more than a kid himself, 23, but convinced he was wise beyond his years. The type that had no need for frivolous endeavors, or pointless interests.
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He carried himself poorly. He slumped his shoulders and hung his head when he walked. His dark hair contrasted with his pale skin, and covered part of his forehead on one side going down to his eyebrow, where it then crossed sharply up to the other side of his head. He was a stockily built man, not obese but on the cusp, leaving wrinkles in his shirt where his body had settled into. He often spent time trying to iron these out with his hands after standing up, embarrassed of their representative impressions. Dark, half-moon rings rested under his eyes at all times of the day. These rings were caused by his unsound sleep; at night he was constantly circled by anxious and angry thoughts like vultures picking away at his mind. Pulling his brain from his skull and throwing the pieces where he couldn’t find them.
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He turned from the window and looked into his sunlit apartment. Seeing his bed in the corner he thought of lying in it. Spending the day staring into his pillows, folded over blankets and under them, as he often did. An appealing thought but his mind was too overwhelmed at this moment to assign himself to that position.
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“It’s too quiet in here,” he muttered to himself. Silence felt like an inescapable void to him. Silence brought those circling thoughts which he would rather avoid. Often, he filled the emptiness with music to drown out his panic, music which would throw him into fantasies of grandeur. Fantasies where he would be a world champion boxer, coming back from the jaws of defeat during a fight he was supposed to lose. Or a man who lives in the forest and speaks to animals, having dinner with them in giant trees, and loved by all. He would drift away, far from the cracked walls of his apartment, giving him a sense of freedom for the minutes or moments these fantasies would last. He cherished these moments and grew angry when he could not conjure them. They provided him with a company he rarely had.
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He rarely left his apartment and despite his hatred for it, he told himself it had everything he needed. A small bathroom opposite his bed, with stand-alone shower and toilet stuffed against an always chilled plaster wall. This wall was one of the few in the house that had no exposed brick, while still being laced with jagged cracks throughout. When he sat on the toilet, he always envied this wall. How the stale covering remained unbreeched by the course brick beneath. The only thing in this apartment he admired was that wall.
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Next to the bed was his kitchen, hosting an electric oven with a stove top that took forever to heat up. Two small cutting areas stood on both sides of it. Next to the right-most cutting area was a sink, and next to that a black refrigerator, barren of anything on its magnetic surface. Dusty wood cabinets encircled the area, on bottom and top, holding various boxes of sugary food or quick, ready to make meals. Other than this the room was empty; it had no room for much else. Opposite the kitchen was a long barren wall, which was the most destroyed inside the space. He hesitated to put anything against it, as it constantly expelled powdery plaster
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at any rumble or step, creating a thick dust on the floor conjoined with it. Every time he brushed the wall it covered him in its ceramic residue, which clung tightly to his clothes. Once, Richard tried to clean the powder off the wall but in the process knocked more plaster onto the floor which cracked and turned into dust upon hitting the ground, filling the air. The wall ended up being in a worse state than before he attempted to clear it off, affirming his belief that things are better left as they are.
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He spent most days making food then quickly cleaning after, so that everything was back in its designated place. Pots above the stove, boxes broken down and into the trash, and pans stacked neatly in the compartment beneath the oven. It wasn’t the sight of the pans being out that drove him mad, but the thought of their areas being filled with nothing. Empty cabinets, sitting without purpose.
The man, while staring into his apartment, decided against his bed and against making a mess in the kitchen only to put him in the throes of cleaning. Thinking of possibilities, and the angst associated with the number of them, he decided to do nothing. He decided today to sit sternly on the floor.
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Many times, he tried to embrace the silence, figure out why he could not handle it. But these attempts never lasted long, he always convinced himself there was something pressing to do, or to learn that was bigger than himself. The man believed he was one insight away from freedom, and often looked for this insight in an endless stream of videos. Videos he couldn’t recall hours after viewing them.
Looking to the floor he found an area where he could fit his plump body without being on top of a mis-joined section. Decidedly close to the window, but with his back turned away from it, peering into his room toward the door and his bed. He sat only slightly out of range of the thick dusty shore of plaster on the ground next to his battered wall, trying to ignore its persistent presence.
“I’m sitting here, ok. Now what,” he thought in a plea for stimulation.
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He felt the warm sun from the window behind his neck. “80 degrees and sunny,” he had seen on his phone this morning, acknowledging that it was going to be beautiful. Now he felt the heat taunt him. He turned to feel it on his face, and slightly pressed his hand to the window. Feeling its invigorating projection of heat, he put his face to it as well. The heat on his cheek from the glass provided the sort of stimulation he sought. It was a relief from the view of his white-walled, asylum-like apartment.
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He then realized how he may look from the outside and darted his eyes down. Quickly he peeled his face off the heated glass, looking to see if anyone may have been watching him, laughing at him.
No one was there, just the empty, hilly field. Sun danced off the rolling hills, making the tops glimmer a golden color. From his perch he could see some of the finer details of this meadow. He noted how the thin grass with wild dandelions and other wildflowers he could not name seemed perfectly placed throughout.
“So out of place for being on the outskirts of the city,” he thought. “And no one down there, no one enjoying the day. Is everyone in the world so busy?”
“The world we live in takes no pleasure in the finer parts of life. Everyone would complain if someone set about building something in it, but no one cares about it before. It sits empty, day after day, despite its rare beauty inside this constructed mess. This city doesn’t deserve such a place. If I had someone to share that meadow with, I’d be in it every day.” This last thought in his pondering made him pause. He rarely thought of his loneliness, always convincing himself of otherwise, but the unprompted thought had caught him. A rare truth slipped through his defensive mind.
He placed his forehead back onto the warm glass, closing his eyes as he pressed into it. His body felt heavy, and his arms settled firmly on the ledge of the window, unmoving. The warmth of the glass no longer felt like a pleasure, but a reminder of what he had said. It was a reminder of the outside, a reminder of that meadow, of how perfect it looked. How dancing around it, arm in arm with someone would feel, and of laying his head on the thick grass, his cheek feeling its feathered embrace. Warmth not from a window but from the earth that the window was built to show. And on the opposite side of his face the un-barriered sun, baking his other cheek.
He immediately peeled his face from the glass and slammed it sternly back against it. Bruising his brow and sending large pieces of plaster from the fractured wall spattering across the floor. The fallen plaster reached all the way to the other side of the short room with pieces catching in the mis-joined floor and others shattered their way over it.
The wall was now left unmistakably different, but to Richard more of the same. It was all broken and battered anyway. Again, he felt more of the deep sorrow as he looked out the window. Impulsively he took his hand and smashed it onto the wall to his left, breaking it more, and sending more pieces of plaster in a rapid tumble down. And again, he smashed his hand, this time slightly cutting it on a sharp piece of plaster. The cut was not deep, only enough to draw a little blood.
The man, maddened more now by the slow trickle from his hand, slammed it once again even harder into the fractured wall, creating a spider web-like indent from where his palm had landed. When he pulled it away pieces of plaster stuck to his hand and others fell to the floor. A thick coat of white now covered much of the floor of the apartment where he sat, and a chalky red covered his hand. He felt a steady stream of blood run down his arm as the cut opened wider from his pounding, falling steadily off his elbow. He allowed it to pool onto the ground but carefully pulled his body away from the steady stream so it would not stain his clothes.
He turned from the sight of his bloody arm and turned back to the window. He pushed his face back against the glass, and once again looked down toward the meadow. He looked at the meadow’s green pastures, rolling hills and tall, uncut wild grass. He thought of the blood he had just seen run down his arm; the steady, deep red stream. Thinking of how consistent it was, how it was the same color from the first drop to the last. But he thought of the meadow, and all the color it encompassed. Green, hazel, tan and brown. Blue from the great big sky. How it all combined to make a full picture, but how his red blood created one solid state as well. But his blood was no picture to him. One was a state of being, separate, but whole, natural in its most true state and came together in harmony. His creation felt whole, but in a bland, tasteless way.
A thought came to him.
He switched his mind from the pooled blood to the view out the window. And with wide eyes he stared out into the meadow. Tears streamed same as his blood did only moments ago, which had now slowed to a trickle. Richard wiped his eyes as the tears perverted his view and peeled himself off the jagged ground. Walking to the door he paid no attention to the splintered floor. His feet found their way instinctively over its cracks, leaving prints on the dust-covered surface as he stepped. When he reached the doorknob, he turned to look back into the still apartment. Dust covered the floor, chips of plaster hung from the battered wall waiting to fall, and a small pool of blood sat stagnant in the corner. The big window beamed sun all over the scene and in it, he saw his reflection. A big smile was spread across his face, and wet patches shone under his eyes. Through his reflection he saw the meadow, and his smile grew. Richard turned and went through the door, leaving it unlocked behind him.
MIRA MARINO “Flower Picture”
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Burning Trees
The trees are Burning! First one in the distance. Then a few more, Leaves turning Yellow orange and red. This cacophony of color every fall. As I walk down this path, they seem alive Moving like a woman with her arms raised Branches raised, to the sun, a dance of fire. The trees are choosing to burn. Now. Here Her leaves turn bright, and the scientist in me says Her leaves are colored because they are dying, suffocating. Somehow, I cannot find sorrow in the knowledge. They fulfill their purpose And in doing so die honored
Glorious colors Red and Green
Like apples, consumed to give life to feeling, the fire-dance.
As I Walk further, Seeing more trees. I am surprised that trees can move so much. Branches raised in dance, exposed. No more hiding, No more throwing shade. Show their heart by all its exposed crevasses. Patterned branches telling twisted, merging stories of personal significance. Their innermost forms known by the world. The trees Are screaming silently. Happy, wild, and raucous. Leaves suffocating, using what little is left What could never last forever and reveling in colors
Mixing hue, and all the different ways to scream the singing of feeling. These moving, shouting, dances are too much for me to take in.
So I sit and stare
At leaves on the ground. Passion spent, some still bright but the rest uniform and brown. Renewal found.
Be more like the trees. Show emotion through your colored leaves Do not let them rot on your branches Whatever was inside, come out, In color vibrant and free. These trees whose leaves have already left still say more. They do not end in fire. They reveal through their expression of emotion their inner working And find a community of trees dancing with the breeze These things can burn but once, only once be felt. And while they were kept green for a time, the time comes when all must be lit up and experienced. Burning in this moment. And so should you with your sorrow-joy-anger filling you to the brim. Learn from the trees. Choose a time with friends or alone To express. Laugh a dance, scream a song, sway in silent remembrance, just feel. Let your leaves burn. Revel in the burning. And learn to live again.
Highway at Night
The roll of rubber slides over pavement. Glimpses of advertisements flicker past the travelers. Stars flint above in a constant reminder of time. Pin pricks grow with time and hurry past without a backwards glance. And suddenly the destination seems so very far away.
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Before Sunrise
Silence.
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Warmth bounces against Night’s cold door. The air pulses as a heart. Before light breaks into streaks of soul, time freezes. As before the first note of music, so the world holds its breath.
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Chasing the Heart of Music
Timing! Tick, tick, tick
You are watched
Tempo! Tempo! Tempo!
Keep the tempo!
You are observed and studied.
The pace! tick, tick, tick, keep the pace!
Not too fast not too slow
The voices of instructors crowd your mind
Adjust the metronome, Don’t play during that quarter rest
Breath here, but never there
you are studied and judged
Here a tad fast there a little behind
Don’t wipe the sweat from your brows and focus
Tick, tick, tick, tick
The note must fit
The lines must align with
Tick tick tick
You tell yourself “Forget the eyes, You aren’t really being watched“
Tick, tick, tick,
One-E-And-a-Click, Click
Just focus on the ticks and the beats
And how from the impersonal ticks emerges a melody
You have heard this melody many times as you have practiced
As you adhere to the tick tick tick
But now the melody is showing its true nature
A beautiful swelling of emotion that expands in glorious majesty
Tick tick tick
Tri-po-lit tri-po-lit quick
How beautiful, how alluring, as high notes sway
And rhythms combine
Telling thought and ideas
Things that mere words always labor to express
The joy and the sorrow and the pain that loves, The happy dance and the frozen trance
All of it here and more.
Your understanding of the world brims.
You hear the music as its composer meant for it to be heard
You see into his soul, As music bridges time and space
You let passion consume you and pour yourself into it
To grow its grandeur
But this perfect music recoils from you.
Shattered, It now somehow sounds
Tainted, small, hollow and mocking.
And you realize the music is less
Because you forget to follow the tick, tick, tick!
You have lost control of the pace
You stopped adhering to all the rules.
All the regulation of the song
The hard things you must bind yourself to summon the true melody.
So once again you focus
Tick, tick, tick
Notes in the right place in the right amount of time
Legato here, staccato there.
No matter how beautiful it is, pianissimo!
Tick, tick, tick, tick
Not too long, not too short
No breath here, mezzo fort’
The world of tick tick tick is joined with
The Composer’s burning inspiration.
And with tempo kept, I open the bridge of notes
That glorious depth of meaning.
Breathing myself into the melody,
The Heart of the Song rebounding, My lungs raising his soul.
As long high notes call
91
The Composer’s response, music breaking walls of time
As it skates across the bridge and back, dancing: Tick Pip-Pickity Tick
Pipity Tickity-Pip Pick
Here two souls meet
To teach a dance in words of sound
Beautiful and sad.
I give my breath, Lungs on fire
Holding two worlds together ignited Here we hold… and weep for the joy of it.
In burning bliss, we persist
This burning bridge of bliss
Burn…….
Tick………
Burn……..
Tick……..
Burn……
Then it stops,
The page has ended.
No more burning, no more written.
All that is left of you joining the music
Is memory.
ClapClap! Clap! ClaC!
This tempo but not your tempo jars you
The observers!
You remember them now.
And you no longer dread that you were watched
By those whose all-seeing gaze looks on your failures and successes.
They who saw, Who learned,
Who will understand the joy:
Becoming one with the heart of music.
Dedicated to Mr. Piersma and Mr. Morrison
Astigmatism
When I see lights I see stars I see dots I see double I see streaks
I see light trails
I see light years
A parking lot
A galaxy
A city street
A cosmic scene
Your halo splintering in front of me
MADALYNYellow Yarn
Stand on the right walk on the left
Not spoken but known by the riders
The tunnel wind staggers me as I coast down
And we wait
The platforms firm beneath my feet too firm to break
People sit waiting for their iron horse to take them away to their lives and out of this place
Hands in pockets twitch from a distant low rumble
low like a growl just forming in the back of the throat
Hands move uncontrollably
The ground begins to shake
Body pulsing to the beat of tearing tracks
The bass of a hip hop song sifts through the air
The ground shakes harder this time
Head thrown back like a plastic bag in the wind
AND THEN
It rumbles like thunder in front of me
Like 10000 drums beating
Like the stomps of a marching band bigger than the world
Crushed by noise and sound
Pounding
Pounding
Like rain clawing the roof of the car
The platform is too firm to break
Yet it shakes violently beneath my feet
Light cascades into the terminal
Too bright
Can’t see
Warning lights flashing
Stay back
Brakes squealing
Wind rushes through my tight ponytail pulled back by force
It’s impossible to escape
Scraping metal fills the domed room
Faces fly past me melted by speed
Hold on Hold on They
rush toward the heaving hunk
as it slows its endless journey
Slowly people now fill the souls’ cavern
It slows
Crawling
Slides to a steaming tired halt
Feel it breathing like it’s alive shuddering with power
Doors fly open
1 2 3
and they run
No glance back
No smile just rush
Quickly on
Quickly off
They sweep through up and out
Step back doors closing
Snap
1 2 3
they shut
contents locked in
It lurches like a faulty ride
hands too clean to touch the sordid metal
People’s faces charge past and desperate visitors race toward it halting as slips by
They fade from view
Light and light and blackness sweeps over the windows like a hand snuffing out candles
Standing room only
Jostled by them as they cry out
Boom. Boom. Boom. The tracks slide under the caravan of metal
Loud air rushes by them
Louder than a tornado
Can’t hear it
But louder than hurricane waves
But louder than howling blizzard winds
crushing them
Can almost feel it through the locked doors
And slow.
They stand rushing to the doors can’t go further
And stop.
1 2 3
doors open.
Sweeping terror seizes the car can’t breath for need of air
Two seats stretch open
Sit they urge Sat. Looking.
It crawls forward
It teeters forward
It walks forward
It runs forward
It flies forward
Them.
Noses stuck in books
Heads turned in conversation
Eyes glued to bright screens
Eyes move across the car
Outside seat
Riding alone but next to someone
And she sits needles in hand and Yellow yarn
At her side
She knits a hat.
Ba boom ba Boom ba Boom
Breaks creek metal scrapes hands grab
Becoming Consumption
Gnawing on the aluminum sides of the Domino’s truck, the blue scrapes onto my teeth
My hands beat in metallic dents
Break into dents
Crumple like a can
Sweet relief of Nestle streaming down my legs
Pepsi naval fleet Veteran
I gave up my lower ribs to hold Cheezits in my hands, ingrain the orange salty sand into the side of my face
Speckling like acne Or stars
Back on the asphalt, legs spread, breathing in Sprite as it flows up my nose, it smells like home
Burning
Rupturing with carbonation
Mixing with blood
Shirley Temple
Sodium Benzoate
Calcium Sorbate
If i was never alive i can never be dead
Embalm me from the inside
Wrap my naked body in plastic
Brand me
Bury me on a shelf
10% off
Only for members
LUCAS HARBAUGH
Salt Flat
Ash burn
A hole in the denim
Fray strands get draggged in the dust
Tang of grit sep ting te h, ara eet
Tongue like a bulldog
Swallow the sp.it
99 LUCAS HARBAUGH
Scribble Out
Crazy and ma-nigh-yick
Basqui at, Rode-o dog.
Street kid, Ride the stall ions before the world.
Draw, paint- no skill Young black at, war h-all, knew and used.
Philadelphia Alley
“You never draw water from the depths of this well.”
“What water? What well?”
“Who is asking?”
Silence.
“What silence?”
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- Franz Kafka
In the dark
Echoes tapping against the foreboding, black walls
against the cement; maroon fans across the water
Then swirls and dances down a spiral staircase into the depths of the puddle
The last fleck vanishes with a flare against the roof of the steady, unlit pool.
Shadows kiss, then separate and are gone.
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I could just sit here, on the bus With my heavy head on the icy, hard window And forget the world. Leave this place. I could just allow the wind to seep into my body; Teasing and picking at my skin
Until it cracks and breaks open, And all the evil pieces of me will fly Out the window, And into the air. They will become trapped and snatched, by the helpful arms of nearby evergreens. They will steal the pieces of me and lock them away where they could never catch me. And the rest of me, Would soar. Until the wind runs out of breath, And the pieces of me Fall to the ground Like leaves.
JENNA STASZAK
The wind
the moral code of horoscopes
the moon’s ethereal beauty reduced to a pixelated misrepresentation, an amorphous splotch against a navy-blue backdrop.
its misguided worshippers elevate their phones high in a doomed attempt to deify, failing to recognize the footsteps of their ancestors who also propped up gods in the sky.
we loyally chart the course of celestial bodies, not out of respect, but self-interest:
which of my sins could i prosecute the stars for? what responsibilities can i saddle the planets with rather than cast the stone of accountability at my own reflection?
which mistake looms large enough to blame upon the milky way?
horoscopes have become a weekly court summons issued to the universe: money-hungry stargazers with a surface-level understanding of space and the movements of its inhabitants act as judge, jury, and executioner.
“you overslept? no need for regret, saturn was spurned by mars.”
“you committed vehicular manslaughter? don’t sweat it, mercury’s center of gravity was offset.”
heavenly bodies must bear the brunt of the punishment for our crimes; weighed down by guilt, how do these empyrean things remain aloft in the sky?
soft, the cosmos rain our own pain upon us, hands stained with blood we shed in their names, reaching low just to reach us.
in compensation, we capture blurry pictures to send to friends that couldn’t care less. “such a lovely sunset,” we sigh,
unsympathetic to the sentiment that not only will our planet die, but we are its assassin, hundred-handed with fifty heads, a greek myth risen from the dead to take life.
goodnight moon.
adieu to the sun and its many hues. farewell stars, bid goodbye to mars for me.
even when we kill the sky, we cannot concern ourselves to administer the message in person.
where will we look to for answers when there is no horizon left to implore?
Memory
How great is it to have a memory?
This song is your bedroom, And this smell, That one day in June, And this feeling is like another place, From another time I can’t quite name, But I know was made of friends, and a breeze, And the falling of leaves in a foreign state. And when I am old I may live so full that I will see everything. A kaleidoscope of all my days.
Even without my asking, I have been granted the weight Of your hand, the hum of the fan in that old attic space. So many secrets I would not have known to keep, Were it solely up to me.
Like the snow when it was five feet deep, And how we leapt through it as though we were deer With springs in our giddy feet.
And the sound of gravel
On a warm summer day when you’d pull in the driveway, And you’d come home to me with something sweet You had tucked away.
You would pull it from your pocket
And proudly present it for my tiny hands to inspect. And all those wrappers we would carefully collect. How important that I never ever forget.
EMMA HAMPEL
The Artist
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There is a place, small where the river runs under a bridge Where I dream, and see throughout time
A glimpse of future deeds, A place where dreams shape themselves and are given life. This small place where all around you life is busy with the passing of cars, and people doing busy things
Here……
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A hidden nook in the world. To rest, reflect, and think big thoughts
Quiet and clean, where Michael’s and my bikes rest
By the bench and we stare at the flowing water, Shaded by leaf-rich trees and ever-swaying reeds
Not quite quiet, but never loud. Where the noise
Of cars transforms to a dull hum.
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Pervasive and low like large dragonflies.
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Calm, and wonderful.
We rest here, having reached the far point of our wanderings, And we talk sometimes.
But mostly watch the flow of serenity. Then, when our breath comes easy, Bike up the trail to see the dam. Marvel at the rush of water.
Then we pedal up the hills and ride
Through the only stoplight intersection in the center of town
Back to familiar backyards of Temple Street. Back into the fray of living, Back to the heavy weight of growing up
But back, that water calls to me still, and that calm, That flowing restful place beckons:
I will be here when you need me again.
Dreamy Rivers Flowing Under Bridges
A Lady’s Broken Heart
A heart past broken, still unhealed Laid still within a lady’s breast
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With promise planted yet no yield And ache and hunger without rest
As sorrow stained her fairest face
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And dark and shadow stole her breath
A valiant soldier armed with grace
Did come to save her from cold death
T’was honor brandished by his sword
A softer heart and mind renew
Delivered him her love’s award
A noble prize, triumphed and true
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His lips at last did mend her heart
While wedded neath the silver stars
She finally found her missing part Lo, beauty with no tears nor scars
you fit into me, a spoon nestled into another spoon because we are the same, me and you
my slopes echo your curves and your arcs mirror my contours, each nook and cranny doubled in perfunctory reproduction
we make-believe at spoons mechanically cuddled, paint the perfect picture of an orderly silverware drawer, with everything in its right place and your warmth at my back, domestic
sharpness found in the offending knives pressing in on all sides, but you are only softness, a smooth silver half-moon
condensation blushes across the metal surface, heat of breath leaving an efflorescent impression
spoons because this utensil is synonymous with comfort, a vehicle for childhood’s refreshing treat: ice cream sweating cold sweetness into an iridescent plastic bowl
delivery instrument for sickness’s consistent companion: chicken noodle soup still-steaming, saffron broth’s distinct mildness as predictable a bedside attendant as a mother, compassionate
transportation conveyance for foods intended to be eaten post-dentist: dumpling-pats of pudding in chocolate or vanilla, abstract geometry of technicolored jello; green-brown muddle and lumps of apple sauce, opalescent whip of yogurt rendered in elegant pastels
spoons because i dream of a nondescript sunday morning: you, me, and a bowl of lucky charms, arms brushing as we argue about ducks or something and the marshmallows are soaked just so in milk made a faded pink; most importantly, you are close enough to touch a luxury i promise i will never grow weary of even when your presence is a given rather than a gift
spoons because you are the table at which i sit come day’s end, supportive, a place to lay my head when i can’t stand to make it to the bed
and you are the tea that warms me, soul and body, implement of alternative medicine; i practice aromatherapy through the constant inhalation of your sun-warmed, laundry-fresh scent
three teeny tea scoops constitute a table and sixteen of these little ladles add up to a cup, but one you is all that my happiness’s list of ingredients calls for; an easily-memorized measurement for the mesmerizing contentment that you whip up simply, no oven necessary for you to make me melt— all it takes is the glow of your gaze, heartfelt so much more than a spoonful of sugar for your sweetness knows no depths, vast compassion incapable of being measured in mere ounces but you stir it so effortlessly into this recipe of you and me
spoons simply because i reach for you and you are there: an entire nightmare of a kitchen cabinet could be dedicated to the faulty tableware of my past, but i don’t care about that everyone always denies having a favorite spoon, but what’s the use?
for me, it’s always been you
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Print”
NORA
PLUTHFlowers for the Living
Fresh white flowers
Cut clean from the back garden
Lilies, orchids, roses
I was six when my grandma died
My tears a crude imitation of my brother’s Not understanding but praying Or looking at her somehow more perfect face Even in death a beauty.
We desire to bloom from death
Bring flowers to funerals. Wait for spring during winter
Bouquets to salvage a floundering romance
We are orchids and roses, lilies and irises to those we never knew Flowers for the dead
In memoriam of the people we can’t remember
Always an afterthought
Always a reaction
Always a memory
But I bring flowers for the living Flowers in anticipation Flowers for the future
Instead of blooming from the ruins of death
We bloom into precious life
Hopeful life
I bring flowers for the living not in fear of death
But in the vibrancy of creation
And the gesture of friendship
I react to life the way others react to death
With sadness and shock
And with joy, with gratitude
Flowers not in spite of death
But because of life
MIRA MARINO
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