Posts for June 20, 2023 (page 8)

Category
Poem

Asleep again

I often im wonder what death is like

Here is to hoping it’s like falling asleep in the back of your parents car. 

The street lamps pepper through the windows, your favorite song on the radio. 

Your  eyes are heavy and your body is warm and the sound of the air conditioning is lulling you to sleep

“Go ahead” your mother says, looking over her shoulder lovingly. 

you feel yourself slipping, laying your head on the cool windows kiss 

“I’ll carry you.” Your dad promises 

You know fighting it is pointless and you smile your sleepy smile 

Slipping  into that comfortable place where evrything is warm and safe.

Where you don’t fear anything. 


Category
Poem

Transfiguration

With time, I aim to resurrect            
the full breath discovered
in my singing lessons, 
my exhale becoming your inhale


Category
Poem

when i have the energy

when i have the energy 

i’m gonna back up 

all those files 

and get back 

to you 

 

when i have the energy 

i’ll make time 

for what really matters
 

i’ll take care 

of the dishes 

as they sprout from the sink 

like weeds in greener pastures

when i have the energy 

i’ll let you know 

why i don’t have 

the energy 

any
-more 

 

i’ll make sure 

you know 

how i feel 

when i have the energy 

i’ll make those appointments

i’ve been talking about 

for years 

 

go see a doctor 

so i don’t let the internet 

diagnose me 

with less energy 

 

(so they can tell me 

my stomach hurts 

all the time 

from the spicy food)

when i have the energy 

i’ll go back to queens 

and hit up that halal truck 

that doesn’t open till 5

when i have the energy

i’ll finally write my first collection
of poems
novel
screenplay and stand-up routine 

 

i’ll find a better job 

than serving ungrateful 

fucks complimentary champagne 

while they complain about their steak and eggs

on an absence of sleep

 

when I have the energy 

i’ll finally get into a routine 

so I can stay consistent 

with the world

turning

into something
it didn’t want

to be 

 

when i have the energy 

i’ll smile at a stranger 

on the train 

when they pass 

instead of looking down

at my white button

-down stained 

to shit 

while i slip 

into some (un)kind of american dream

 

when i have the energy 

i’ll pull your ashes 

out the closet 

and scatter you a

-cross

the burn

-out stars 

 


Registration photo of Ariana Alvarado for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Rite of Passage

It is a rite of passage,

To travel up the dusty, broken stairs
To the second floor
of the once abandoned barn
to see the noose,
The old basketball hoops,
The spray painted pentagram on the floor
Left by someone your age
Many years ago. There are holes
In the floor, so you get to your knees
And look down them,
Greeting whoever is there below.
No camera captures a picture
Better than mine:
The October light dying
Through the slats in the boarded windows,
Dust undisturbed for who knows how long,
And in a few hours, an open sky of stars,
Begging you to ask them
What this world holds.
 

Category
Poem

Too Late

As usual

I’m too late
Put it off and push away
Hoping for room in the day

Mind awaits
Not magically execute
No drive to present when due

Intentional?
It would seem apathetic
Confirming I’m pathetic

What the fuck?
Deny apathetic intent
Knowing mind and heart are spent 

Equalize
Reviewing the equation 
As, fear drives procrastination

And alas
It remains me with the night 
It remains; fight against light 


Registration photo of Sam Arthurs for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

What The World Has Become

I wish the world was the way it was
before all of this hate covered us all
like a blanket; suffocating and heavy
leaving us in the dark without a way
for us to see where we are going or
how we are going to get there either 

every day more gun violence, taking
innocent lives; nowhere is safe now
killing in church, in school, at work
because of skin color, beliefs, and 
all the things that make us unique
they have weaponized our existence
religion; race; sexuality; no safety
to be found anymore, no hiding

the world was never perfect, ever
but at least once upon a time we
didn’t have to be so afraid to live
my heart hurts so badly, for all
the people who have to live with
the pain of what we have become


Registration photo of LittleBird for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Light

Wrapped in warmth and your blue sweatshirt,
am I waking from a dream?

I watch you from the next room,
past rumpled sheets and tear-heavy lids.

Slatted sunlight on the skin I last touched.
Even now I breathe you in.


Category
Poem

the release: a grief lyric for lumumba TRIGGER WARNING: death of adult child

the release
a grief lyric for lumumba

we made our way toward the waterfall, abbie and me, our phones lighting the way down slick, stone stairs. i carried the ornate box with your cremains. abbie held the screwdriver. i’d have to unscrew the bottom, the only access to the plastic bag you were in.

in the frigid november air we kept our heads down, the circles of our phone lights no match for the inky dark. we trudged beside a crowd of chattering moonbow seekers, none of which were likely to say goodbye to their child that night.

the bustling throng in the upper observatory obscured our view. all we could see before us was wet, rock wall. i couldn’t let you go in that crowd, so we changed course, toward the lower observatory where few had gone. 

to keep from falling, our gazes never strayed from the slippery, stony steps. when we’d gone down as far as it were possible to go, a thin metal rail stood before us. when we lifted our eyes we saw was magic.

there she was, cumberland falls, that grand lady, dressed resplendently in a gown of falling water. at the sight of her i drew in my breath, stunned by the wonder. it felt as if my heart would beat out of my chest.

as magical as that, above the lady’s cascade, a perfect arch of glowing white, like a halo, lit the lofty night. the moonbow i feared i wouldn’t see, like a welcoming smile greeted me.

though i’d never seen her, this waterfall knew who i was and what i’d come to do, and all at once i knew her, too. if nature ever equaled divine love, mama god in nature had come, and asked for you, my son. 

my fear of your ashes vanished. abbie gave me the screwdriver, and turned her iphone flashlight toward me, so could see to for what i’d come to do. mama waited patiently while i loosened the screw, my fingers, numb from the cold. it was hard, but you do what you gotta do.

in one swift motion i pulled the plastic bag out, and set the box on the wet ground. i held your ashes to my heart, letting myself feel the weight, and how they shifted in the bag like sand. everything around me faded: abbie, the rest of the crowd, until there was nothing left but you, and me, a waterfall, and a moonbow. i held you for a long time, cradling you, as my tears mingled with a soft spray of water. 

i undid the twist tie, and heard the clank of the metal tag attached hit the ground. with every bit of tenderness in me i opened the bag. i dropped my head. it was time to say my last goodbye before i released you. now i lifted my head, mama waterfall, in her white gown, stretched her arms toward me, saying “mama, it’s time.” 

i took a deep breath, leaned over the rail, and poured what remained of you between her stone feet and luminous skirt.

“goodbye, son. i love you so much. you belong to god and the ancestors now.” and to mama waterfall.

“thank you, thank you, thank you,”  i whispered into the night, for letting me be lumumba ayinde ade bandele’s mama, and for mothering me tonight.

i took a deep and healing breath, knowing you are one with nature now, and i will find you in the breath of the wind, the blue of the sky, and in the slanted, silver rain, and every time i visit mama waterfall, in her fine mist i’ll feel you touch my face, making my heart a waterfall.

my heart is a waterfall, flowing deep and wide, and wild.


Category
Poem

High Tech Hauntings

Daily, the internet delivers
my ghosts to me. Dad

leaning on his walking
stick beside Sandy Pond. 

Mom and Maggie cooing
over me, a swaddled infant.

Mother’s Day, Father’s Day
produce an avalanche of the dead.

Now every day is Samhain.
The dead return to visit

their loved ones, post
comments on Facebook.