8/26/17

Healing Hermann Hesse - Buddy Wakefield

Hermann wants to eat nicotine sometimes. He asks
for a lot. He paces space to make himself nervous
because some people are better at surviving than
living. If you wanna get heavy he'll teach you. He
knows it. Spends his time falling from the weight.
Got a lead brain. It's a battle magnet. He carries it
around by the guilt straps. Don't laugh. You didn’t
see the size of the blizzard that birthed him. Fits
of snow. Cotton rocks. Whipped white bullet stretches
pinned with chips of teeth to his habit of crying for help.
He doesn't land well. Hates landing. It reminds him of not
living up.

Listen.
I know there were days you wanted to die.

Days you misplaced all the right words then waited
to make sense once everyone here stopped watching.

Nights you let them beat up your body in bed
because redemption was still alive in you howling.

Uncompromising.
Gathering strength.

Happiness
is too far to fall.

Felt like ecstasy
when they pounded it out of you.

Those days of dead weather high strung out together
and spoke for you.

You told everyone here it was a good life,
smiled and waved back into the wails of your wind fight,

into the parts of the past that haunt you,
all the days you weren’t being yourself.

It’s why most of the past
still haunts you,

Milk Worder,
Mr. Self Murder.

Hiding is not an option for people
so good at showing up. You show up.

It is okay that you showed up missing.
We’ve all abused ourselves

then looked over
the wrong shoulder about it.

Call it Fatherlock.
You were picked like this.

I know you hate the hope.
It’s all the hope that makes you stay.

And you stay so far off the ground.

Hermann will not bow down to gravity. Falling
he catches up to himself midair just before the ground
smacks. Pullthroat, they call’im. Sharp turner. Nothing
touches the ground here.  Ground is at capacity.
He sees that. He falls back. He patches parachutes
together with a kite knife.  It's big enough to raise him
in the updrafts where he hides himself away in angles
of air outlined by his knack for believing that this life
is gonna work itself out.

8/12/17

On Being Captain of Philadelphia's Top Ranked 1996 Academic Decathlon Team - Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz

We had a problem with Talisha.
She was known for being a bad highlighter.
She would highlight everything.

She told us she highlighted only
what she felt was important but it seems
she felt everything was important.

The academic team would sit around and
have conversations about how to address
Talisha’s highlighting problem.

Do we keep her away from team materials?
Do we have an intervention? Someone suggested
giving her two differently colored highlighters,

in an attempt to teach her the difference
between selective highlighting and a free-for all.
Turns out, two highlighters made her problems

worse. We were finally forced to agree
that we’d all just have to accept Talisha’s
highlighting issues, because we needed her.

She was our regional Teen Jeopardy champion,
and was the only one who knew anything about
Victorian Literature.

Sometimes, when I hear stories about other
people’s teen years, I feel like they are talking
about some exotic country,

one I know I’ll never visit: the slang they used,
the boys they kissed, the nights they snuck out,
the parents they’d upset,

all the things they had to worry about
and all the things that they never ever ever
had to worry about.

8/11/17

Depression, Too, Is a Kind of Fire - Taylor Mali


I’m an idiot because once
before we were married she asked me whether I knew
that we would not be having children
if we did get married, and I said yes.

And because she knew I was lying,
she asked if I was really okay with that.
And because I’m an idiot I said yes again.

And once during a fight, not married
more than two years, she said she felt like my first wife,
and I, like an idiot, assured her that she was.

She worked out at the gym five times a week
and smoked as many packs of ultra lights,
and I’m an idiot because when I asked her why,
She said, Because I hate myself and I want to die.
And I laughed and said something I don’t recall,
something completely and utterly insufficient.

From the roof of our apartment,
I saw 40 or 50 people jump from the towers
on a Tuesday morning—we used to be able to see them to the south,
just as, to the north, we can still see
(and by “we” I guess I mean now just me)
the Empire State Building,
which still steeps me in gratitude
because I’m an idiot—
out of the smoke with arms flailing.
And I swear I saw a perfect swan.

And I was going to write a poem
about how fire is the only thing
that can make a person jump out a window.

And maybe I’m an idiot for thinking I could have saved her—
call me her knight in shattered armor—
could have loved her more,
or told the truth about children.

But depression, too, is a kind of fire.
And I know nothing of either.

8/10/17

LENS - Andrea Gibson


I’ve been practicing gratitude.
I’ve been skipping entire weeks.
Practicing a wider lens. Listening
for the bully’s heartbeat
Hearing it in my own chest.

I’ve been remembering the time I cried
in a cloud of tear gas at a peaceful protest.
How I decided I was too soft to last,
and then I decided to be softer.

I’ve been remembering way way back
to the moment they told me Jesus walked on water.
How I knew whatever I’d grow up to believe

I would never try to wrestle a miracle
away from anyone’s reason to live.
I’ve been remembering how I wrestled a miracle
away from your reason to live.

If only shame could wash me clean,
but that is never how healing works.
Nobody ever won anything from anyone
thinking the whole world was out of their league.
I’m sorry you know

what I look like when no one is looking.
I don’t expect anyone to believe
in justice and forgiveness at the same time.

If it’s any consolation
I feel like a ferris wheel in a snowbank
twenty years after they shut down the park.

If it’s any consolation I’ve been living in my head
whenever anyone tells me I have a good heart.
And I think about you. I think about you. 

8/8/17

untitled 8 - Mira Gonzalez

it is 2:05 in the morning
your foot on the brake is preventing the car from drifting backwards
he is kissing you first deliberately
then in a lazy or confused way

you know he is trying to communicate something important
and maybe he has wanted you for a long time
but his tongue is moving around your mouth

you begin to wonder if he wants to kiss you
or if he wants to push his way through you

you can see his bedroom window from where you are standing
he is climbing over fences and unlocking them from the inside
he says ‘go up those stairs and turn right’

you swear that you would have loved him a year ago
and every day since then

you are waiting at the top of his stairs
you don’t know where to look or what to touch
you are thinking about the ‘check engine’ light in your car

you are aware of certain things while he has sex with you
helicopter noises through an open window
a bottle of blue cough syrup
street signs indicating the direction to an eastbound freeway

he is strong and gentle and you wish he was only one of those things

he is tracing his fingers across the edge of you
everything is quiet other than a barely audible sound
in the space between his arm and his shoulder

he says ‘why are you sighing so much’
you say ‘that is just how I breathe’
he says ‘you don’t want to be here’

5/24/17

HEAVENLY CREATURE - Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz


For Missy


I remember the day you showed up at the bus stop:
quiet, pale, a thick veil of dark hair, we stared

at each other through overgrown bangs. We were just
beginning our dry sentences at Baldi Middle School.

In those days, our jeans would be tattooed weekly
with the coded names of every boy who flicked

his eyes our way. The backs of our hands became
necks and lips for practicing on. I once even

doused my backpack with my brother’s cologne,
a sad effort to at least smell like I’d had a boyfriend.

Walking around your housing complex, we’d stare
through the windshields of every man who drove by.

We thought of our bodies as dangerous chemicals,
our breasts as match tips waiting for love’s flinty gaze

We were sure all the boys around had firecracker hearts
just waiting to explode. And look, I know I know I know

I am not telling the whole truth. Things in your house
were different, were not right, were accepted because

maybe no one knew any better, or maybe they did
and didn’t care. And whenever the whole dark truth

would spill out, I remember I’d gather my features
into the center of my face, unable to figure out

the right combination for my concern, for fresh alarm.
I’d forget how to sit, how to blink, breathe. It’s true,

sometimes you look back and all the things
you should have done rise up like volcanic islands,

whole civilizations, whole existences, whole lifetimes.
But what did we know then? Fourteen, I took

the hammer of my dumb tongue and tried to tap
comfort into your impossibly small ears,

your impossibly small fists. We were kids,
and the future was our dependable escape plan.

We’d be gone soon, so you had just better suffer through
it all now. We’d be gone, so until then, I tried

to make you laugh. I’m sorry I never realized
I could’ve unlocked your exit earlier, that I

could’ve released your story from the shogun
of my own throat. The letters you send me now

are like postcards from that hopeful future:
you are okay, you are alright, with no return address.

So this poem is a telegram to let you know that
I still think about you, that I’m still proud of you,

that when I remember you, I always remember you
as beautiful.