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delicious new poetry
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Nov 29, 2025
'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Nov 29, 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Nov 29, 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Nov 28, 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Nov 28, 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Nov 28, 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Nov 28, 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nov 28, 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Nov 28, 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
Nov 28, 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Nov 28, 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
‘in the glitter-open black' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 31, 2025
‘in the glitter-open black' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'poet as tarantula,  poem as waste' — poetry by  Ewen Glass
Oct 31, 2025
'poet as tarantula, poem as waste' — poetry by Ewen Glass
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'my god wearing a body' — poetry by Tom Nutting
Oct 31, 2025
'my god wearing a body' — poetry by Tom Nutting
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'Hours rot away in regalia' — poetry by Stephanie Chang
Oct 31, 2025
'Hours rot away in regalia' — poetry by Stephanie Chang
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'down down down the hall of mirrors' — poetry by Ronnie K. Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
'down down down the hall of mirrors' — poetry by Ronnie K. Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'Grew appendages, clawed towards light' — poetry by Lucie Brooks
Oct 31, 2025
'Grew appendages, clawed towards light' — poetry by Lucie Brooks
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'do not be afraid' — poetry by Maia Decker
Oct 31, 2025
'do not be afraid' — poetry by Maia Decker
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'The darkened bedroom' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Oct 31, 2025
'The darkened bedroom' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'I am the body that I am under' — poetry by Jennifer MacBain-Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
'I am the body that I am under' — poetry by Jennifer MacBain-Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
goddess energy.jpg
Oct 26, 2025
'Hotter than gluttony' — poetry by Anne-Adele Wight
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 26, 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Oct 26, 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'black viper dangling a golden fruit' — poetry by Nova Glyn
Oct 26, 2025
'black viper dangling a golden fruit' — poetry by Nova Glyn
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'It would be unfair to touch you' — poetry by grace (ge) gilbert
Oct 26, 2025
'It would be unfair to touch you' — poetry by grace (ge) gilbert
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'Praying in retrograde' — poetry by Courtney Leigh
Oct 26, 2025
'Praying in retrograde' — poetry by Courtney Leigh
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'To not want is death' — poetry by Letitia Trent
Oct 26, 2025
'To not want is death' — poetry by Letitia Trent
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'Our wildness the eternal now' — poetry by Hannah Levy
Oct 26, 2025
'Our wildness the eternal now' — poetry by Hannah Levy
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
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What if the earth is asking us to be still?

June 29, 2020

BY LISA MARIE BASILE

Tune in with me.

I think about the people who will populate our future, and I ask the sky what they will see, what they will be told — through our actions and words and hunger. Will we become their ancient gods, whose lessons are bleak and hellish? Will they see how hard many of us tried and how we hoped?

Will our mythos be of hyper-consumerism, racism, lovers who are not allowed to love, bodies put into categories, plastic, the poisoned fruit, the unbearable dullness of constant performance, the addiction to the avatar, the plutocracy, the oceans crying into themselves, the sound of the air cracking against the ozone? Will all of our wounds still be present?

When I think of the people of the ancient worlds — and their gods and their cultures and their arts — I wonder what they would have wanted us to know?

Did they hope to impart a message of beauty, art, and nature? Of storytelling and culture?

Did they think we would destroy one another and the earth they danced upon in worship?

What happens to everything when we sit in the sea? Do we become a primal beautiful thing?

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There is a presence that is being asked of us. Do we hear its sound? Are we the people who tolerate abuse? Are we the zombies of decadence, the digital void that consumes and hungers through screens? What if we were embodied for a day? Would we hear the great chambers of our heart, and the hearts of strangers, and the vines and sea beings we came from?

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There is a constant scrolling and feeding. And it’s because we are hurting. We are disconnected. We are oppressed. We are poor. We are sick. We are not seen by society. We feel lonely, a loneliness perpetuated by hyper-connection.

How else do we live without turning to the void, which provides us beautiful and loud things to buy and be and shape ourselves into?

How do we live without abusing our neighbor, without stomping on their chest?

What if we could remember ourselves? How miraculous we are? Would we remember to be generous, to heal, to say hello? What would it look like if we all stopped pushing for a moment? What if we let the wind move us?

Positano

Positano

I feel sometimes I am a ghost. Liminal, floating through the world, eating the world around me — media and fashion and ideas that are not my own, not aligned with my values or my traumas or my soul.

I am out of time with my own soul. I am in 2020, but my heart is in the ocean eternal. I want wind and shorelines. I want fairness and justice. I want to experience beauty without the billboards looming. I want to read a book in the sunlight, and see my neighbor have the same opportunity.

But my neighbors — and your neighbors — are dying, are being murdered, and our ecosystems are gasping in our wake.

La Masseria Farm Experience

La Masseria Farm Experience

There are days that are so beautiful, so soft and real, that I have hope. These are holy days.

In Campania Italy, I have a holy day. I sit in a small stone pool. I think of the drive through the mountains from Napoli, where Pompeii stands, its breath held, looming over its land. How it preserved the stories of its people. I think always of what is preserved, what is lost.

But in the little pool, I am alone. The bed and breakfast is quiet. Tourists are out at Capri or Amalfi, the staff are napping during siesta, making pesto, somewhere else paying bills, talking on phones. I hear the hum of a generator, street dogs barking, the starlings that fly over me back and forth, definitely flirting.

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I whistle and they zip over my head. We are in conversation, I know it. The earth wants me to know it sees me, wants me to see it. I am here and nowhere else. I am completely alive. I am made for this moment; we all are.

And after the late dinners of fried fish, I walk back to my room, alone. I am greeted again by the tiny birds who flutter in and out of the domed entrance, cherubs painted across the ceiling. I think of time and nature, and its concurrent obliviousness and suffering. I think of my privilege, and what I can do to preserve these stunning things.

I think of my body withstanding 100-degree heat. How I talk to the creatures in some liminal language of love. I think of how we could all be good to one another, so good that we could all have holy days.

I think of my flesh as the wine of this land. I feel the Mediterranean and the Tyrrhenian Seas in the palms of my hands. I am so alive and grateful and awake at the altar of these moments I cry for the nostalgia that hasn’t come yet, that I know I will feel. That I do feel. I am both past and present. But mostly, I am now.

I walk up the road to a farm and am greeted by a family whose hands have nurtured and translated the earth for centuries. They climb the trees, show us the olives falling. We see the farm cats idle in their sunlight, their fur dotted in soil. They are languid in pleasure and warmth.

I lose myself in the lemon trees, smell their peels; I am blessed. I step into the cool room where they keep the jugs of Montepulciano and cured meats. A cry in ecstasy is somewhere within me.

After a long day of pasta made by hand and more wine and strangers inviting me to their table and then limoncello, I walk home to my room. I am drunk on the connection. I film the walk, then stop. I do not want to capture everything; some things just exist between me and the earth. I won’t share.

La Masseria Farm Experience

La Masseria Farm Experience

My room is called Parthenope. It is etched into the wooden door. When I open the door, that is the threshold, the portal. Parthenope is a siren who lives on the coast of Naples. I imagine her body clinging to the continental shelf, her hair entwined in shell. They say she threw herself into the sea when she couldn’t please Odysseus with her siren song. Or maybe a centaur fell in love with Parthenope, only to enrage Jupiter, who turned her into Naples. The centaur became Vesuvius, and now they are forever linked — by both love and rage. Is that not humanity?

She became Naples. She became forever. Her essence is water, is earth, is the mythology of what happens when people are cruel and jealous and oppressive. Is this the message the sirens are singing? To be tolerant? To normalize cruelty? To fill the void with empty media, with images without stories?

Lubra Casa

Lubra Casa

There is always something that could destroy us, could rid us of this existence. A virus, a volcano, our own hands.

We are temporary, so quick and light and flimsy. We are but a stitch of fabric. A dream within a dream of that fabric. And yet. Here we are, becoming the ancients, carving out a way toward the future. We visit volcanos. We mythologize the earth. We drink wine and capture beauty. But then we turn our backs — on the proverbial garden, on one another, on our own bodies.

What if the earth is asking us to be better? To be still? What pose would we hold? What shape could let all the light in?

LISA MARIE BASILE is the founding creative director of Luna Luna Magazine, a popular magazine & digital community focused on literature, magical living, and identity. She is the author of several books of poetry, as well as Light Magic for Dark Times, a modern collection of inspired rituals and daily practices, as well as The Magical Writing Grimoire: Use the Word as Your Wand for Magic, Manifestation & Ritual. She's written for or been featured in The New York Times, Refinery 29, Self, Chakrubs, Marie Claire, Narratively, Catapult, Sabat Magazine, Bust, HelloGiggles, Best American Experimental Writing, Best American Poetry, Grimoire Magazine, and more. She's an editor at the poetry site Little Infinite as well as the co-host of Astrolushes, a podcast that conversationally explores astrology, ritual, pop culture, and literature. Lisa Marie has taught writing and ritual workshops at HausWitch in Salem, MA, Manhattanville College, and Pace University. She is also a chronic illness advocate, keeping columns at several chronic illness patient websites. She earned a Masters's degree in Writing from The New School and studied literature and psychology as an undergraduate at Pace University. You can follow her at @lisamariebasile and @Ritual_Poetica.

In Art, Beauty, Wellness, Social Issues, Poetry & Prose, Place, Personal Essay Tags italy, lisa marie basile, social media, being present, earth, love, humanitarian issues, global warming
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Body on Pause: Miscarrying During A Pandemic

June 28, 2020

BY PATRICIA GRISAFI

I decide Fiona Apple’s Fetch the Bolt Cutters will be the soundtrack to this miscarriage. As I get my things together—mask, extra mask, gloves, bottle of hand sanitizer, plastic baggie stuffed with wipes—I wonder if my album choice is cliché. Almost every critic has loved Fetch the Bolt Cutters, gushing about how it feels made for a quarantine.

The procedure to remove the dead fetus from my body is supposed to be about ten minutes long. I get on the M15 bus after a fifteen-minute walk and survey the passengers sitting quiet and masked in their seats like a de Chirico painting. Then I make a playlist called “Miscarriage.” The songs are “Newspaper,” “Under the Table,” and “For Her,” all songs about patriarchal abuse and trauma.

This is my fourth miscarriage—sixth if you count chemical pregnancies, which the doctors do—but I’ve never had a vacuum aspiration before. All my procedures have been D&Cs under sedation. However, with New York City hospitals full of COVID-19 patients, my best bet is an in-office procedure. I am disappointed I won’t be knocked out.

In the waiting room, three heavily pregnant women fuss with their phones. I think of my two-year-old son at home, getting ready for nap-time. My husband sends me updates on the situation: “he’s chattering too much,” “oh, he’s quiet now.” I miss my husband’s presence in that room, thinking of past surgeries when I emerged from sedation with a newly hollowed uterus to his embrace. But he’s not allowed to be here—patients must come alone. No husband and toddler in tow during quarantine.

I miss so many things, frivolous things. Sharing a morning muffin with my son at the dog park. Sipping margaritas with a chili salt rim on an outside patio. Wandering into Rite Aid for no reason. Perusing the shelves at the local bookstore with a cup of coffee. Family walks that don’t feel limned with disquiet.

The procedure will happen while I am laying down, my feet in the stirrups. Later, a lab will test the “materials of conception” from this pregnancy for chromosomal abnormalities. I won’t have to see what comes out of me—not like there will be much at eight weeks. “Embryonic demise” probably occurred at around week six or seven after the grim ultrasound when the doctor reported a feeble heartbeat and a too-tiny fetal measurement. I’ve been fixating on the fetus slowly dying inside me and then on my body as harbor for its corpse.

How can you not think about death during a pandemic? Since the day our family began sheltering in place, I had been carrying the small hope of that baby. On March 7th, I was inseminated in one of the anonymous rooms at Weil Cornell, my husband holding my hand as they threaded the catheter in. Afterwards, he played a heavy metal version of “Toss a Coin to Your Witcher” on his phone, and we laughed.

My first son was conceived this way—with the help of science after infertility flooded my body with doubt about my ability to have children. I dutifully went every other day to have my blood taken and my vagina probed. Between my first struggle to keep a pregnancy viable and all the subsequent losses, I found myself thinking about my uselessness as a woman in a world without medical intervention.

“In ancient Sicily, they’d have thrown me in the prickly pear bushes, maybe burned me. Maybe I’d be the village witch, like Strega Nona—except hated,” I had said, thinking about how much family meant to my genealogical constitution. A woman who couldn’t have children was a problem. A curse. She had done something to deserve infertility. Send her away.

My paternal grandmother did not want biological children, so deep was her fear of dying during childbirth. She even found a child to adopt in New Paltz, where my grandfather and she had a one room cabin for summers. My grandfather wanted his own child, and I imagine him saying no to the adoption and then forcing himself inside her and making my father.

This is not history, not fact. It’s my brain winding around the possible ways my family made a family. My grandmother didn’t have her only child until after eleven years of marriage—unusual for Italian Catholics during the 1930s. My mother tried to get pregnant for eleven years, submitting to every experimental procedure in the ‘70s and ‘80s until I was born—also an only child.

When my mother and I fight now, I think about what she put her body through for the slim chance of a child. Is reproductive trauma something the women in my family share, a story they’ve only been able to tell through their live births, a story otherwise hidden in the deepest parts of their selves? What kind of woman volunteers her body for this kind of repeat torture?

I’m ushered into the procedure room. The doctor gives me a Motrin. I’ve brought my own Klonopin because I’ve been on them forever. I wonder if I should take two instead of one. I take one.

The moment my feet hit the stirrups, I press “play.”

“Are you okay,” the doctor asks me.

“Yes,” I say, because I am a good patient but also because I know this must happen.

The doctor and her assistant try to shove metal accoutrements into my vagina with delicacy. It’s never pleasant, the speculum. Then there are the tubes. Then there is the anesthetic, which makes me feel high and chatty for about three minutes. I want to babble on and on about my child, to remind them I’m a mother and not a collection of losses.

Fiona Apple’s frenetic warble pierces me as they start the procedure. I try to focus on that voice, a voice that arches and peaks and trembles and breaks. A voice that is fragile but strong.

As the pain begins, so does “For Her,” and I think about the man who pinned me down and came on my face while I screamed and cried. I can’t help it. This asshole hops onto my nerves at unexpected times. I dig my nails into the fleshy cradle of my hands as Fiona sings, “Good morning, good morning, you raped me in the same bed your daughter was born in.”

The doctor finishes up. She’s been telling me all along how good I am doing.

“Rest for as long as you want,” she says as the last instrument is removed.

I haven’t shut off the playlist. Liz Phair’s “Fuck and Run” randomly comes on, and I feel like laughing and crying at the same time.

It takes twenty minutes to hail a cab. Finally, one stops. It is a van with a plexiglass barrier window, and I feel grateful. I open the window with my gloved hand. They’re garden gloves, the kind I use to repot the easy plants I keep killing in my apartment. I hear the whipping of wind on the FDR, the thrum of pavement under the wheels.

My son is asleep when I quietly step into the apartment. My husband holds me tightly.

“I’m so tired,” I tell him, like a child who wants to be taken care of. “Can you tuck me into bed?”  

Whenever I have a miscarriage, I feel like a failure. The eggs too old? The lining of my uterus not thick enough? The questions are endless. The disappointment hangs like a heavy curtain.

During a pandemic, it’s worse. There’s an irritating urgency and a paralyzing fear about when we can start to try and expand our family again. The fertility clinic will eventually reopen, but when will the world? When will it be safe to travel for blood-taking and hormone-monitoring? For poached eggs and harissa? For play dates and bang trims?

In the meantime, I make cocktails with lemon and whiskey. I draw owls for my son. I shave my armpits but not my legs. I stare out the window. When my husband and I begin work, I put on Peppa Pig and plop my child into his high chair.

But my professional life suffers for the love of being around my son. I stop to pet him, fetch more goldfish crackers, kiss his head. And then I want to sleep, like the protagonist of Ottessa Moshfegh’s My Year of Rest and Relaxation. Sleep right through the plague, sleep through the fear, sleep through future fertility treatments. Wake up like Giambattista’s Basile’s Italian Sleeping Beauty, a surprise baby suckling at her breast. Forget that Prince Charming raped and impregnated her while she was unconscious.

Pregnancy destabilizes your sense of self. It changes you. In some cases, fetal DNA remains in our bodies long after a child is born. This phenomenon is called microchimerism after the mythological creature composed of many parts, usually depicted as a lion with the head of a goat and a tail trailing off to a snake’s head. If a pregnant woman is not a chimera, I don’t know what is.

When I was younger and learned about viruses for the first time in science class, I was terrified. There is still something about a virus that frightens me. I’ve had the chicken pox, I’ve had the flu. The first time I had a wart on my finger, I cried for days. The idea that viruses never really leave, that they exist inside of us in various states of dormancy or activity forever, made me afraid of my body’s uncontrollability.

I think about bodies constantly now—permeable, malleable, capable at times and utterly useless at others. Sacks heaving in and out. A contemptible, fickle uterus. Contracting or relaxing the pelvis as fetal tissue is aspirated. Mouths releasing clouds of germs. The touch of my child’s hand as I guide him on makeshift Pikler triangle made from the side of his crib propped up against the couch because we can’t go to the playground anymore.

“Mommy, hold hand, please,” he says extending his chubby little paw, attempting to make his way down the ladder.

“I’ve got you,” I say.

We soldier on.

The last song on Fetch the Bolt Cutters is called “On I Go.” With its repetitive lyrics about repetition set against atonal cacophony, it feels like a woman scraping at the walls of her mind, her body, the apartment she’s trapped in while a pandemic rages outside.

"On I go, not toward or away

Up until now it was day, next day

Up until now in a rush to prove

But now I only move to move.”

It’s not a pleasant listen. Maybe it feels too sharp right now, prodding at a wound. But I understand what’s at stake, the overwhelming desperation to have agency over life only to find the attempt futile and give up. Or perhaps it’s a kind of triumph—reclaiming the conditions of one’s journey.

The day after my procedure, I walk gingerly between the bedroom to lay down in silence and the living room to lay down in chaos. This is the choice I can make. There is no real movement, no escape except for short, nerve-wracking walks on the East River that are actually practices in weaving and swerving. Time feels suspended—our family on pause. My body on pause. My life on pause.

Right now, I only move to move.

Patricia Grisafi, Ph.D., is a freelance writer and editor. She writes about mental health, popular culture, film and literature, gender, and parenting. Her work has been featured in The Guardian, LARB, Salon, VICE, Bustle, Catapult, Narratively, The Rumpus, Bitch, SELF, Ravishly, Luna Luna, and elsewhere. She lives in New York City with her husband, son, and two rescued pit bulls. She is passionate about horror movies and animal rescue.

In Personal Essay, Poetry & Prose, Social Issues, Wellness Tags miscarriage, Patricia Grisafi, trish grisafi, body
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pink-clouds

Poetry by Lauren Saxon

June 26, 2020

BY LAUREN SAXON

22

after Fatima Asghar’s Partition

I am 22 & have not been hugged in a long time.

I am considering the English language—

how it gave us both the word hug & the word embrace. 

do not mistake them for one.

            I love her. I love her.

                    I will always be this way.

my mother, I fear, will not attend my wedding.

my father is selling the house—

it was to be kept for legitimate grandchildren only.

I am no stranger to my parent’s arms.

I still call my father’s cologne, home.

I am proud to have my mother’s smile.

still 

       my parents hug 

       only the parts of me that they can embrace.

I am certain my body would feel differently.

I am 22 & have not been hugged in a long time.

I watch my parents greet me from a distance.

it is clear that they have missed me. 

when my mother wraps her arms around me,

I cannot feel them.

I am standing behind myself,

     keeping two white gowns from touching the ground.

when my father wraps his arms around me,

he does so on borrowed land.

it is possible to be hugged & not embraced.


the proof is right here in my breath.


I will always be this way.

SUPPORT LAUREN SAXON BY DONATING VIA VENMO: @Lsax_235

Lauren Saxon is a 22 year old poet and mechanical engineer from Cincinnati Ohio. She attends Vanderbilt University, and relies on poetry when elections, church shootings, and police brutality leaves her speechless. Lauren's work is featured or forthcoming in Flypaper Magazine, Empty Mirror, Homology Lit, Nimrod International Journal and more. She is on staff at Gigantic Sequins, Assistant Editor of Glass: A Journal of Poetry and spends way too much time on twitter (@Lsax_235).

In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Lauren Saxon
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Summer Poetry: Courtney Cook

June 25, 2020

BY COURTNEY COOK

We Skipped Spring this Year

Suddenly, the blare of August, waves above 
the asphalt. There’s a ghost hanging around 
my bedroom leaving hair on my pillow. I notice: 
a second toothbrush beside the sink, fingerprint 
bruises on my thighs too big to be my own, 
a condom in the trash can. I can’t finish a cigarette,
try to pass them to no one but air. Where’s 
the other mouth? To erase a memory as it unfolds; 
to desire that. Isn’t it strange, the way the world 
continues to expand after an end?

Summer

Cicadas burst     under my bicycle tires       pressed   into stone
they scream     high-pitched        lobster boiling     they cover
the walkway       die      beside the orange blossoms       petal softness
an offering       buzzing        on the ground       like fighting brothers
their exoskeletons still      clinging      to bark    summer transparent 
sliding over the world     everything sticky and sweet          fleeting
the cicadas who emerged from hibernation        calculated        days to fuck
and gorge themselves       before   morning brisk      or     rubber
comes to kill them      to end something before it really began
a return to a world without them,             the waiting again.

Support Courtney Cook by donating via Venmo: @courtney-cook.

Courtney Cook is an MFA candidate at the University of California, Riverside, and a graduate of the University of Michigan. An essayist, poet, and illustrator, Courtney's work has been seen in The Rumpus, Hobart, Lunch Ticket, Split Lip Magazine, Wax Nine, and Maudlin House, among others. Her illustrated memoir, THE WAY SHE FEELS, is forthcoming from Tin House Books in summer 2021. When not creating, Courtney enjoys napping with her senior cat, Bertie. 

In Poetry & Prose Tags Courtney Cook, POETRY
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Quarantine by Leslie Contreras Schwartz

June 23, 2020

BY LESLIE CONTRERAS SCHWARTZ

Quarantine

The lights in the bedroom flickered off and on. I lay in our bed listening to a heavy thumping coming from somewhere, quickening. In a half-dream, I created the idea of walking to the door and shouting, Who’s doing that? Even the thought of it was tiring, and I rolled over with eyes half-closed, lucid enough to be afraid to sleep but longing for it with the same urgency I longed to take a deep breathe without pain, or to be able to sit up with my lungs feeling crushed. I tried to fill my thoughts without something other than the every second of half-breathing, the crushing and stupor.

Was the sound growing near? Was it a foot banging a door, my daughter running circles in the living room, feet pounding in a rhythmic pattern? Was it the neighbor at some task again that required loud repetitive pounding and screeching? The questions were something to latch onto in my mind. I entertained them.

A slit of light broke from the bedroom door and my son crawled in beside me, wrapping his small limbs around mine underneath the coat of blankets. He was whispering but I could not hear because of the thumping. Who is doing that, I said. I slept.

My husband woke me to feed me soup, water from a straw. I sat up in bed, the room bluing. Our five-year-old was jumping on the bed, adding a beat to the drumming that started again when I opened my eyes (though I was sure I heard it in my sleep). It had been weeks since I’d left either the bed, or the couch, laying, blinking, and when awake, staring through the window, at a wall, at one of the children’s faces. Breath came as if through a tiny sieve, which I gulped in small pockets. You’re here, the doctor said this morning on the phone. Be grateful. So the air like fish eggs, like the meager rationing in the form of pills. Sucking, coughing, my chest strained and ready to snap. Nebulizer hush and burr. Inhaler sip. Eight more times. Times seven. Again. Times sixty days.

The world shimmered in blue, the faces of my son, my husband and our girls, cast in that same blue. One morning or one night, or the next day, or the night that was yesterday and before, tomorrow, I dreamt of running at full speed down our street, past the school, toward the bayou ten blocks away. The banks were filling with rain, ready to break over the edge of the concrete embankment, and I ran so hard every part of me ached and knew that this feeling, familiar, happened yesterday, today, and tomorrow. I woke up wheezing and choking. The thumping in my ears, my own heart racing, like I was running, every second running.

At the insistence of my husband, I sat outside wrapped in a blanket and feeling shorn. I watched my children play in the front yard while the light flickered through the leaves of the tree on the lawn. Underneath the world—or was it beside it, along it, between it? (There was no relative space to pin it)—I saw the pulsing of blue, an under-color to the kaleidoscope of reality’s rough imagery—my son’s kid sneakers of black and red and white, flashing lights when he jumped, my eight year old’s plastic sandals, both of them dangling off the edge of a spider swing, their small hands flayed out and waving. The laughter, her sigh. Underneath it all was this color, not an earthly blue, blue of ocean, precious stone or gem cut into rock, a sky flanking a horizon. No. This blue which was not blue was the color of sacred, deep, with a center to it, blood of childbirth, the whitened lips of the dead, the infant’s purple wail—all of it mixed together, long and unraveling, a cruel silence with a terrifying bell inside.

I rested my head back on the chair and stared at the sky that was no longer the sky. I blinked and felt close to that color—this underwater, the blue eggs, blue veins on an infant’s foot, the black feather of a blue jay that feigned blue, the blue mouth of a glacier. Was this what ran parallel and twinned to our lives, a universe linked with a battered rope to this one, where I had died, and hanging by a thread to the universe where I lived. The giant bell in its cruel silence behind the blue, and my rollercoaster heartbeat readying me for the terrifying drop to the ground. I longed to hear the bell. I would not share it, only save it inside my body, and never, even to my worst enemies, tell anyone the sound it made that killed small parts all at once with a blow. I opened my eyes, feeling heavy. I had already heard the bell. I had already imagined my children without me. I sat feeling the holes of it, growing cold. Light overhead grew brighter until wind threw the branches together, a dark shadow enveloping our family. Spin faster, I said to my children. Do it again.

SUPPORT LESLIE CONTRERAS SCHWARTZ BY DONATING VIA VENMO: @Leslie-ContrerasSchwartz

Leslie Contreras Schwartz is the author of Who Speaks for Us Here (Skull + Wind Press, 2020), and the collections Nightbloom & Cenote and Fuego (St. Julian Press, 2016, 2014). Her work has appeared in Gulf Coast, Missouri Review, Iowa Review, Pleiades, among other publications. She is the Houston Poet Laureate.

In Poetry & Prose Tags FLASH F, Lyrical essay, essay, Leslie Contreras Schwartz
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jr-korpa-bKl5zsELMNc-unsplash.jpg

Poetry by Elizabeth Theriot

June 23, 2020

BY ELIZABETH THERIOT

The Fates ask where the Underworld went with its lake of ghosts

Summer left a grave of black cherry pits and twisted stems. Autumn waits on the sidewalk, down the stairs, to burn leaves and smudge the city in its smoke. We’ve sat in this between blinking sleep from our eye, collecting all the seasons’ fraying ends.

Banishment: when the soul wants to dig itself up.

Someone said not to write soul in a poem. Someone told us catastrophizing was the right verb but catastrophe is grey funk beneath our nails, a catastrophe on the scalp, caking pores, a layer of grit. We drink Windex until our eye sees clean.

Exile: where the body chooses to bury itself.

Circling the Dog-Moon Heroine 

(a story in fortunes)

Throned in leather Hierophant waits 

two fingers double-

pillared. Speaks 

binaric code like, 

this is what my centuries have created. It is good. 

It’s real good. 

Hierophant wipes BBQ 

palms on the couch 

waits for someone else 

to clean it up. 

Someone always does, who likes the couch, 

cares if it looks pretty. 

Hierophant waves 

fish-spine gold

and cleanpicked 

(fondant crown a-dripping)

His eyes Abrahamic, like

not my fault 

sad shrug. Keys crossed on the carpet. 

All the while ma folds 

laundry, and your ma too. 

//

So here goes the fat 

yellow moon shedding skin at the crossroads :

dogs shocked by 

sharp girly moon, 

tails bristle like 

terrified of dew, plush ears 

underfed and curling. Ma curls 

your hair with a hot wand. 

Sunflowers fat-bubble 

along the wall. Whose blood 

on the rocks? Ma straightens 

your hair 

with an oiled spatula 

and the cinderblock towers 

go sizzle in-

between.

After all the hullabaloo 

you’re a baby again, Age of Aquarius baby 

crying, little Bacchus baby 

the deferential horse 

in globs of playdough sun,

baby body WHEE between horse-blades,

jazz-hands like 

a birthday gift, red feather 

in your jelly ringlets 

and Ma

with a quick wrist-snap 

folds laundry, unfolds laundry to make the beds.

Muse Epistle 

Scars below my skin are proof

you were gestated—raised, fed—

divinatory cradle—grown in minutes, 

warm between my painted toes.

And the petals opened:

Water empty like bitten

skin around nails, my palms 

stretched into pollen and flame—

candle pyre altar spelled the same.

You should have warned me

when I loved 

as fetish-tucked-in-drawer;

your long gone infancy; 

eyes dripping 

in caverns you devour 

songbirds 

then crawl into bed, unsocket 

my limbs and dab glue 

as ointment—

slow burn, elegy, I

have let it happen.

Elizabeth Theriot is a queer southern writer with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. She earned her MFA from The University of Alabama and is writing a memoir about disability and desire. She is a Zoeglossia Fellow, and a teaching fellow with the nonprofit Desert Island Supply Company. You can find her work in Yemassee, Barely South Review, Winter Tangerine, Ghost Proposal, Vagabond City, A VELVET GIANT, Tinderbox, and others. She lives in Birmingham, AL.

In Poetry & Prose Tags elizabeth theriot, poetry
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RED DARK LIGHT FLOWER

Poetry by A. Martine

June 23, 2020

BY A. MARTINE

grapevine gossip

from time to time i look up a man i almost

dated to test my intuition’s mettle

the addendums i append to my search

varying only in their extremity

firstlast + jail

+ serial killer

+ murder

can’t help but probe, set stiff set stiff

for the soft spot in my duodenum where

my foresight rests, and try to prove

it wrong, and my other senses too

that my bloodhound ears didn’t register

what they think they registered while he

was threading me metal spools of sparkling

ovations, so sharp they gashed when handled

all that talk of redemption, all that

tell me what scares you, for i am scared too

trifectas the two-pronged truth, my beast

recognizes in him a wholly deeper beast

softspot screams the very first song i, newborn

woman, heard offered me: runrunrun for the hills

can’t help but silence it, set stiff set stiff

or maybe it’s admission to that club i’m

rescinding, the one that standardizes

ambidextrous horror — we’ve all dated a creep —

until it, too, internalized, feels like a dinky

pinch, duodenum subdued to ruination

from time to time i google a man i almost dated

and am stunned to learn he hasn’t killed anyone

yet

and though i am momentarily comforted, assurance in

others’ inner workings set stiff set stiff

my softspot-foresight promises, wasn't all in your head, you just wait, you just wait.

Hecate's Wheel

Convinced it tasted of soot and salt,

time and again I tried to bite off

the ink-blot stain on my tongue,

responsible, surely, for tinging

everything I drank with its essence.

That is, until I understood. In Senegal:

we inkblot tongues are soothsayers.

Anything we say comes supposably true,

contrapasso dispelled indiscriminately.

Should a wordsmith like me be thirsting for

that kind of omnipotence? I hope

to be one of the good, really good ones;

but buzzing bees in my elastic throat, I

know I go both way with words, have

only mouthfuls of cursepells to offer.

To blazes with intent: I thought I wanted love

to feel like something belonged to me.

Why did I say: i know when my flaming

lifeblood hits the floor and bursts

outward like ember petals, I’ll be

incandescent, the epicenter of disaster,

too fierce for love, too good for love.

When said love deserted me, I spent a violent

year supine on the coal floor beseeching

Take it back, I take it back I take it back.

I think I am one of the good, really good souls,

but it never occurs to me to say good, and to

wish for good. I cannot plagiarize what I’ve

never known. At the suggestion of pandemonium,

my inkblot tongue comes alive.

I could kill this liar with a prayer.

Even when my malice maimed the cruelest

boy I knew, omnipotence like the

resounding crack of a whip—

Again!

Again!

I was Doubting Thomas, if he were a woman who’d been

taught and taught to disbelieve. A maelstrom

thrashed in my palms, and I still underestimated

how fearsome, how formidable

I could be.

SUPPORT A. MARTINE BY DONATING: paypal.me/martinathiam

A. Martine is a trilingual writer, musician and artist of color who goes where the waves take her. She might have been a kraken in a past life. She's an Assistant Editor at Reckoning Press and a co-Editor-in-Chief and Producer of The Nasiona. Her collection AT SEA was shortlisted for the 2019 Kingdoms in the Wild Poetry Prize. Some words found or forthcoming in: Déraciné, The Rumpus, Moonchild Magazine, Marias at Sampaguitas, Bright Wall/Dark Room, Pussy Magic, South Broadway Ghost Society, Gone Lawn, Boston Accent Lit, Anti-Heroin Chic, Figure 1, Tenderness Lit. @Maelllstrom/www.amartine.com.  is a trilingual writer, musician and artist of color who goes where the waves take her. She might have been a kraken in a past life. She's an Assistant Editor at Reckoning Press and a co-Editor-in-Chief and Producer of The Nasiona. Her collection AT SEA was shortlisted for the 2019 Kingdoms in the Wild Poetry Prize. Some words found or forthcoming in: Déraciné, The Rumpus, Moonchild Magazine, Marias at Sampaguitas, Bright Wall/Dark Room, Pussy Magic, South Broadway Ghost Society, Gone Lawn, Boston Accent Lit, Anti-Heroin Chic, Figure 1, Tenderness Lit. @Maelllstrom/www.amartine.com. 

In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Aïcha Martine Thiam, a. martine
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A Playlist for Summer

June 12, 2020

BY JOANNA C. VALENTE

Whether you’re working remotely, taking a walk outside, or cooking dinner, it’s important to have a playlist that helps you do all of these things. This summer is unlike many, and will be far less physically social, that doesn’t mean we are any less connected. Music has long connected people together, so I curated a summer playlist to connect us all during these warmer months.


Joanna C. Valente is a human who lives in Brooklyn, New York. They are the author of Sirs & Madams, The Gods Are Dead, Marys of the Sea, Sexting Ghosts, Xenos, No(body), #Survivor: A Photo Series (forthcoming), and A Love Story (Vegetarian Alcoholic Press, 2021). They are the editor of A Shadow Map: Writing by Survivors of Sexual Assault and the illustrator of Dead Tongue (Yes Poetry, 2020). They received their MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College, and Joanna is the founder of Yes Poetry and the senior managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine.

In Music Tags music, playlist
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Image created by CANVA (free account)

Image created by CANVA (free account)

Black Lives Matter: Resources, Lit Mags, Funds

June 8, 2020

BY THE LUNA LUNA TEAM

Luna Luna — as a community and a magazine — believes that Black Lives Matter today, yesterday and every day going forward.

We believe that dismantling white supremacy is necessary (and that is an understatement of epic proportions). We do not believe that this is about politics but human rights, dignity, and goodness. We believe in reparations. We believe in educating white people on how to be better and to better support the BIPOC community.

Our team has rounded up resources from Black creators and writers and artists, friends, family, and organizatins so that you can donate, educate yourself and others, and share resources. Many of the links are more general to Black Lives Matters and some are specific to certain cities and resources and organizations.

PLEASE know that this is a living document, so we will continue to add to it. Tweet or DM @lunalunamag and we’ll include a resource, magazine, shop, fund, educational item, or anything else.

Black-run literary mags and lit mags with Black lit digital archives:

Rigorous: https://www.rigorous-mag.com/

Shade Literary Arts: https://www.theshadejournal.com/

Midnight & Indigo: https://www.midnightandindigo.com/

Callaloo: https://callaloo.tamu.edu/

Obsidian: https://obsidianlit.org/

Mosaic: https://mosaicmagazine.org/

*Please tweet us to add to this list.


Black-Owned Bookstores in Philadelphia:

Hakim’s Bookstore: http://hakimsbookstore.com

Uncle Bobbies Coffee & Books: https://www.unclebobbies.com

Amalgam Comics and Coffeehouse: https://amalgamphilly.com

Color Book Gallery: http://www.colorbookgallery.com

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

Black-owned bookstores by state:

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Instagram won’t let me tag more businesses so I’ve added the rest here: NOTE: Many of these stores sell online as well. Call your local store and see if they’re taking phone orders! If you can’t find your state, check the online bookstores on the last image. **Nubian Bookstore is in Morrow, GA, and A Cultural Exchange is in Cleveland, OH!** • • • FL: @darebooks @edenbooks @pyramidbooks GA: @forkeepsbooks IN: @thebrainlair KS: @bliss_books_wine_KC LA: @btlbookstore1 LA: @nubianculturalcenter KY: @wildfigbooksandcoffee MA: @frugalbooks @wisdombookcenter MI: @blackstonebookstore @detroit_book_city @sourcebooksellers MO: @eyeseeme_bookstore NJ: @littlebohobookshop @launiquebookstorecamdennj @sourceofknowledge NY: @cafeconlibros_bk @grandmasplaceharlem @revbooksnyc @sistersuptown @thelitbar @zawadibooks OK: @fultonstreet918 @readwithmochabooks PA: @hakimsbookstore @harrietts_bookshop @unclebobbies @theblackreservebookstore SC: @turningpagebookshop TN: @theafricanplaceinc

A post shared by Mameastou Fall (@blacklitbookclub) on Jun 4, 2020 at 9:13am PDT

Shop/Support/Follow Black-Owned candle shops:

NaturalLannie Essentials 

Thank You Mother Earth 

Passport Seven

Bright Black Candles 

Harlem Candle Co.

Posh Candle Co. 

Pontie Wax 

Southern Elegance Candle Co.

Black-owned Etsy Shops: https://www.housebeautiful.com/shopping/best-stores/g32768555/black-owned-etsy-shops/

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

Black Poets We’re Reading

  • Yrsa Daley-Ward

  • Nayyirah Waheed

  • Claudia Rankine

  • Dionne Brand

  • Audre Lorde

  • Jericho Brown

  • Danez Smith

  • Mahogany L. Browne

  • Camonghne Felix

  • Morgan Parker

  • Gwendolyn Brookes

  • Maya Angelou

  • Rita Dove

  • Lucille Clifton

  • Nikky Finney

  • Discover more here and here and here

    *Please tweet us to add to this list.


Raising Anti-Racist Children: For parents and caretakers of young children:

The Conscious Kid 

Black Baby Books 

Pre-Order AntiRacist Baby board book by Prof. Ibram X. Kendi

Your Kid's Aren't Too Young To Talk About Race: Resource Roundup

Children’s books to support conversations on race and racism

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

Resources For Learning & Teaching:

White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack: https://www.racialequitytools.org/resourcefiles/mcintosh.pdf

Black Lives Matter Educational Resources:  https://neaedjustice.org/black-lives-matter-school-resources/

Black Lives Matter Teaching Materials: https://blacklivesmatteratschool.com/teaching-materials/

Resources for Supporting Black Lives Matter: https://lectureinprogress.com/journal/resources-for-supporting-black-lives-matter-movement

28 Books That Talk About Race: https://www.readitforward.com/essay/article/books-about-race-2019/

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

Black Mental Health Resources:

Black Mental Health Matters: https://blackmentalhealthmatters.carrd.co/

Black Emotional & Mental Health Crisis Unit and Hotline: https://www.beam.community/mobilecrisis

LGBTQIA & Therapists of Color: https://www.lgbtqpsychotherapistsofcolor.com/albany-ca

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

More Ways To Help:

Black Lives Matter Resources: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/?fbclid=IwAR3Ev9AQ901lbHkmE58uzSTf7xbiR_R5mI5SEDATIECqDehh8Gl7mtCVsHY#

https://blacklivesmatter.com/resources/

Master Doc Natl Resource List #GeorgeFloyd+ (CREDIT: @botanicaldyke) : https://docs.google.com/document/d/1CjZMORRVuv-I-qo4B0YfmOTqIOa3GUS207t5iuLZmyA/mobilebasic

NYC Organizations In Service of The Interests of Black New Yorkers || #Underfunded: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1KiP_a-ByEYDnBSzgEotepU4W2RWzmhl7KnWaj2tkxtM/edit?usp=sharing

Support Black Owned: https://www.supportblackowned.com/

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

LGBTQIA Resources

It's Time Black and Brown People Be Included in the Pride Flag: https://www.them.us/story/ipride-flag-redesign-black-brown-trans-pride-stripes

LGBTQ Organizations Combatting Racial Violence: https://www.glsen.org/news/glsen-joins-lgbtq-organizations-uniting-combat-racial-violence

The Okra Project: https://www.theokraproject.com/

*Please tweet us to add to this list.


Please consider donating:

  • George Floyd Memorial Fund: https://www.gofundme.com/f/georgefloyd

  • Fund for Breonna Taylor: https://www.gofundme.com/f/9v4q2-justice-for-breonna-taylor

  • National Bail Fund Network: https://www.communityjusticeexchange.org/national-bail-fund-network

  • The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund: America’s premier legal organization fighting for racial justice through litigation, advocacy, and public education.

  • LGBTQ+ Freedom Fund: https://www.lgbtqfund.org/

  • Trans Justice Funding Project: https://www.transjusticefundingproject.org/

  • Minnesota Freedom Fund: https://minnesotafreedomfund.org/

  • The Bail Project: https://bailproject.org/

  • Black Lives Matter: https://blacklivesmatter.com/

  • Color of Change: https://colorofchange.org/about/

  • Black Visions Collective: https://www.blackvisionsmn.org/

  • FightForBreonna.org: https://action.justiceforbreonna.org/sign/BreonnaWasEssential/


    *Please tweet us to add to this list.

Disability Advocacy and the Black Community:

Disability Advocacy Must Include the Black Perspective: https://smanewstoday.com/2020/06/08/disability-advocacy-must-include-black-perspective/

Donate to Help Black People with Disabilities: https://www.nylon.com/life/black-people-with-disabilities-donations-resources

Info on Incarceration and Policing

  • The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander

  • Policing Black Lives: State Violence in Canada from Slavery to Present by Robyn Maynard

  • Policing Black Bodies: How Black Lives are Surveilled and How to Work for Change, by Angela J Hattery and Earl Smith

*thanks to Sabrina Scott for the above list of books

*Please tweet us to add to this list.

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*EDIT* NEW NUMBERS: IBO is 212-442-0632 and Melanie’s office is 212-788-5900! This was made possible due to tireless work by folx like Anthonine Pierre and the rest of the @bkmovement. Please also follow @changethenypd and @surjnyc. Script link in bio #defundnypd #defundthepolice #blacklivesmatter

A post shared by Eric Hu (@_erichu) on Jun 1, 2020 at 11:18am PDT

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Rp from @lesliemac23

A post shared by Yumi Sakugawa (@yumisakugawa) on Jun 2, 2020 at 4:34pm PDT

Hello,

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Racism is not limited to the individual choices of "bad people". It is structural and embedded into all aspects of society—this includes laws, dominant cultural norms, and our very own consciousness. The actions of Amy Cooper and the police officers in Minneapolis occur within contexts and histories of power and privilege. While social and professional consequences for their individual behaviors are absolutely essential, we also need to understand how individual acts of racism are a reflection of systemic (structural) racism. We hope this breakdown of individual vs. structural racism is useful. #AmyCooper #GeorgeFloyd #Antiracism #Antiracist #BlackLivesMatter

A post shared by The Conscious Kid (@theconsciouskid) on May 27, 2020 at 6:07pm PDT

!

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Hey friends 👋🏼 I have a challenge for you... that involves more than posting a black square and calling it a day. I CHALLENGE YOU to comment on this post to amplify Black voices. Comment your favourite Black writers, artists, philosophers, musicians, poets, painters, business coaches, inspirational speakers, yoga teachers, Reiki masters, spiritual teachers, podcasters, etc. Whatever they create and put into the world. AND I want you to EXPLAIN WHY you love their work. If you can’t explain why, that’s tokenism. Get into why you dig them and why other folx should be paying attention to what they’re doing and creating. Lists are huge and great but it can be hard for ppl to pick out from the list whose work they would really love or what they really wanna expand their mind with right now. Tag them if they’re on IG and if they’re not tell people how to find them. My challenge is for you to comment on this post... with 25 Black voices you want to amplify. Can’t name 25? Post 5. That you can’t name 25 is personal failure sure but/and it is also a massive failure of the educational systems in white supremacist and colonial societies. Be the change. It starts now. And it’s lifelong. I encourage you to put a similar challenge on your page with your friends and in your circles. I’m hoping if we can crowd source this amplification it will go further than just my newsletter list did, and be a permanent resource for people to expand what types of creators work they are looking at. Comment below, you know what to do. And if you’re Black and wanna promote what you do and why you’re kickass please do. Do u accept my challenge?? AN ADDENDUM / SHARE HERE, AND ALSO share to your stories. Share on your Facebook. Share on your page. Just keep sharing. Love on and promote the work of Black creators. Like their posts, repost their work, follow them!!! #amplifyblackvoices #blacklivesmatter #stopracism #antiracismeducation

A post shared by Sabrina Scott 🔮 Tarot Teacher (@sabrinamscott) on Jun 2, 2020 at 10:30am PDT

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Many have asked for a copy of just the graphics used in the background of my last video series so here you go! Credit to @charcubed on Twitter

A post shared by Rynnstar (@therealrynnstar) on Jun 22, 2020 at 11:04am PDT

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THREAD: TAG BLACK HEALERS, BUSINESS OWNERS, BRUJAS, ARTIST, CHANGE MAKERS, ACTIVIST, TEACHERS, AUTHORS, POETS, LIGHTWORKERS,VOICES THAT NEED TO BE HEARD.... comment below ✨(Image via @chloesmartprint)✨ I’ve been following so many amazing souls for a while, these are some of my favorite accounts: @amaralanegraaln @glowmaven @rachel.cargle @elainewelteroth @andrearanaej @girltrek @thegrnwood @tracee_stanley @koyawebb @iyanlavanzant @alex_elle @africabrooke @lajulissa @acevedowrites @sheisdash @yasminecheyenne @laylafsaad @iamrachelricketts @mireillecharper @ohhappydani @allthingsada @phyllicia.bonanno @iamtoriwashington @hausofhoodoo @thehoodwitch @behatilife @thespiritguidecoach @spiritelement

A post shared by Eres Sagrada (@iamjulietdiaz) on Jun 7, 2020 at 7:36am PDT

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In place of writing today, here are just a few #black owned #bookstores in the U.S to buy from. Support #blackwriters, read their work, amplify their voices. Today, tomorrow, everyday 🌟 • • • #bipoc #bookstagram #bookstagrammer #writingcommunity #writersofig #writersonig #blackowned #blackbusiness #supportblackbusiness

A post shared by On Loan From The Cosmos (@onloanfromthecosmos) on Jun 2, 2020 at 8:22am PDT

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Today is a hard day after many many hard days. Here is a little affirmation practice that we hope will help us stay connected with ourselves through this moment. Second image is of the feelings/sensation wheel to help you connect with your feelings. Sending love fam. 💛 #GiveYourSelfPermission #Affirmations #JournalPrompts

A post shared by BEAM (@_beamorg) on May 28, 2020 at 10:36am PDT

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Closing out the first week of Pride month, we remember and acknowledge that Pride started in response to police harassment. It was lead by Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera who were part of the vanguard that resisted police during the #stonewallriots in June 1969. ▫️▫️We stand for them because #blacktranslivesmatter #allblacklivesmatter #pride #blacklivesmatter #blm

A post shared by On Blast LA (@onblast_la) on Jun 13, 2020 at 1:09pm PDT

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A working list of Black-owned cruelty-free beauty brands to support! . ✨UPDATE: YAAS 🙌🏽 keep your suggestions coming! Unfortunately, I've maxed out on mentions in this post. For the complete working list, link in bio! https://ethicalelephant.com/black-owned-cruelty-free-beauty-brands/ . SKINCARE: @nolaskinsentials (100% vegan) @shopjacqs (100% vegan) @elementsofaliel (vegan options) @simkhabiocosmetics (100% vegan) @lovinahskincare (vegan options) @basebutter (100% vegan) @elementsofaliel (vegan options) @unsuncosmetics (vegan options) . MAKEUP: @colouredraine (vegan options) @plainjanebeauty (vegan options) @doubledowncosmetics (vegan options) @septemberroseco (100% vegan) @mariehunterbeauty (vegan options) @muddbeauty (100% vegan) @range_beauty (100% vegan) @lawsofnaturecosmetics (100% vegan) @theprimebeauty (100% vegan) . HAIR: @briogeo (vegan options) @adwoabeauty (vegan options) @lovingculture (100% vegan) @kreyolessence (vegan options) @bekurabeauty (vegan options) @ecoslay (vegan options) @baskandbloom (vegan options) @floracurl (vegan options) @organigrowhairco (100% vegan) @girlandhair (100% vegan) . NAIL POLISH: @dimensionnails (100% vegan) @habitcosmetics (100% vegan) @thecandyxpaints (100% vegan) @ooopolish (100% vegan) @peopleofcolorbeauty (100% vegan) . BODY & PERSONAL CARE: @thehoneypotco (vegan options) @thewellnessapothecary (vegan options) @truemoringa (100% vegan) @oshunorganics (100% vegan) @flaunt_body (100% vegan)

A post shared by ethical elephant 🐘 (@ethicalelephant) on Jun 7, 2020 at 2:34pm PDT

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IT’S HERE!! 📣 The WAWO Black Women-Owned Virtual Pop-Up is now Live, and will be running throughout the month of June! ✊🏾🎉 ✨Swipe through to view & follow a few of the brands included! Then, click the link in our bio to access the full virtual Pop-Up, and learn more about these amazing Black-owned businesses!! ✨ The goal of the Pop-Up is to raise brand awareness, encourage buyers to redirect their economic resources 💰, and hopefully make a dent in affecting the long-term economic change we so desperately need. 🙏🏽 In order to amplify the voices and businesses of these amazing women, we’d love your support in helping us spread the word about the Black women-owned small businesses featured in our virtual pop-up! 📱 Please re-share this post, and tag anyone in the comments you think may be interested in participating! We’re accepting applications on a rolling basis through the rest of June! 💖

A post shared by We Are Women Owned (@wearewomenowned) on Jun 6, 2020 at 1:06pm PDT

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🌻 𝟱𝟬 𝗕𝗟𝗔𝗖𝗞 𝗛𝗘𝗥𝗕𝗔𝗟𝗜𝗦𝗧𝗦 𝘁𝗼 𝗦𝗨𝗣𝗣𝗢𝗥𝗧, 𝗙𝗢𝗟𝗟𝗢𝗪, & 𝗕𝗨𝗬 𝗠𝗘𝗗𝗜𝗖𝗜𝗡𝗘 𝗙𝗥𝗢𝗠⁣⁣⁣ ⁣⁣⁣ Pay them for their knowledge, products, & teachings. Book a consult. Share their offerings. Apothecaries + herb shops - stock their medicine!⁣⁣⁣ ⁣⁣⁣ This is not an exhaustive list, there are many many more. Please feel free to add folks I missed in the comments below.⁣ ⁣ ⁣ @___cimarronx___⁣ @blackvervain⁣⁣⁣ @abuelataughtme⁣⁣⁣ @eesahall⁣⁣⁣ @jam_haw⁣⁣⁣ @detentioncentre⁣⁣⁣ @earthmother.medicine⁣⁣⁣ @empresskarenrose⁣⁣⁣ @harrietsapothecary⁣⁣⁣ @moonmotherapothecary⁣⁣⁣ @muthamagickapothecary⁣⁣⁣ @rootsofresistance⁣⁣⁣ @rootworkherbals⁣⁣⁣ @charmainenbee⁣⁣⁣ @atabeychoretomedicinals @inheritblooms⁣⁣⁣ @ayo.herbalist⁣⁣⁣ @branchefoston⁣⁣⁣ @_melissa_smiley_⁣⁣⁣ @altogetherlovelybotanicals⁣⁣⁣ @alysonsimplygrows⁣⁣⁣ @ashnilivingthedream⁣⁣⁣ @auntiepeachesapothecary⁣⁣⁣ @bad.mamma.jama⁣⁣⁣ @botanicallywild⁣⁣⁣ @countrygentlemancooks⁣⁣⁣ @demure_lyfe⁣⁣⁣ @earthmamamedicine⁣⁣⁣ @eternile⁣⁣⁣ @hausofhoodoo⁣⁣⁣ @herbanhealing⁣⁣⁣ @herbknowsbest⁣⁣⁣ @honeydewholistics⁣⁣⁣ @indyofficinalis⁣⁣⁣ @iyanla_plantzant⁣⁣⁣ @klcccollective⁣⁣⁣ @maryamhasnaa⁣⁣⁣ @queenandcrow⁣⁣⁣ @queenhippiegypsy⁣⁣⁣ @radiclenaomi⁣⁣⁣ @raineandriverapothecary⁣⁣⁣ @rarari0t⁣⁣⁣ @ripemoon⁣⁣⁣ @rosegoldalchemy⁣⁣⁣ @sageslarder⁣⁣⁣ @sobandeg⁣⁣⁣ @soularbliss⁣⁣⁣ @the.herbal.scoop⁣⁣⁣ @thehillbillyafrican⁣⁣⁣ @thenattyherbalist⁣⁣⁣ @thevenusianoracle⁣⁣⁣ @wildfirehealing

A post shared by 69herbs (@69herbs) on Jun 8, 2020 at 8:51am PDT

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We’re so excited to announce that our True Wellness Sponsorship Program is LIVE ✨⁣ ⁣ Rooted in our belief that connection to self and spirit is a RIGHT (NOT a privilege), this program invites Black and non-Black POC to be sponsored for workshop attendance by white and white-passing allies.⁣ ⁣ Through this program, we’re honored to offer BIPOC folxs a safe space to connect, heal and voyage into the unknown while feeling held and heard in the process.⁣ ⁣ To get ALL the details on how you can either request or provide sponsorship, swipe through, and click the link in our bio! Design by @ramsg

A post shared by 🧿SPIRIT HOUSE COLLECTIVE🧿 (@spirithousecollective) on Jun 8, 2020 at 12:25pm PDT

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Summer Poetry: Max Kennedy

May 26, 2020

Paramount

you’re a folk fiddle
in a hound’s-tooth coat
you stand eaten
in the hot wind
tumbleweeds cling to your
last words
drain as i cut
the melted rope
holding us together

you always read
faster than you wrote
sang like your mother
danced wildly like your father
in the summertime
fell like me
you talked the big talk
as if
walking weren’t a weapon
where you’ll end up next

cross county lines,
scream double-time—
a paramount decision
the water’s too deep in the well
to crawl back up the side
snakes lay in your bed
where i left my good ring—
lucky for you
i have plenty of jewels
sitting around
waiting to be used

Last year in July


It’s almost July now
Somewhere close by,
Windows shift at night
Hot sidewalks pulse
Through my veins
Somewhere close by,
Scraps of fresh fruit lay in empty cardboard boxes
Crystallizing the gutter water beneath them
In sweet rhythms
That have accumulated in my mind for weeks


It’s almost July now
These streets feel of paper
The threads of my t-shirt
Melt to a tile roof
Littered in pomegranate seeds
And scraps of fresh bread
Taken from market on the corner
Across from that bar we met at,
Something about the weather this time of year
Makes my body think of yours
Remember when we met last year, sometime in July?

Max Kennedy is a recent-ish graduate of SFSU’s Creative Writing program, where he studied poetics and playwriting. He has been published in a few print and online magazines, such as Xpress Magazine, As Of Late, Ramblr Magazine and Yes Poetry's ebook The Queer Body. He works in Los Angeles as a content creator and creative copywriter for top beauty brands. 

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Summer Poetry: Jessica Reidy

May 26, 2020

BY JESSICA REIDY

Sub Napoli: ode to the skeleton bride of the catacombs

In the search for orange
blossoms I dug my trowel into raw soil,
stirred, and felt an aching in the fort.
The earth at Napoli is the blood
of Vesuvius; the dust of mummified bodies
rubbed with oil of myrrh, smoked
by incense; and ripe tomatoes.
Worship these skulls, nameless as children,
their faces shed for their remainders. Pray
to anonymous rib cages so they do for you
what you do for them. A film
of cinder dust coats the long-gone tongues.
I am you, they chanted

in piles of volcanic mud, in blazing
catacombs. In the orange light
petals tumble and crown the bride taken
after her conjugal rites, her cheekbones
sharp and white, her sockets stuffed
with gentian from well-wishers, from pilgrims.
Young women asked her for blessings, find me
a husband—bring me the luck you lost. Does death
give you the broken pieces to give away?
I am you, she replies.
Blossoms turn up their stamen faces
all ash and oil down these understreets.

Jessica Reidy is a Brooklyn-based writer and professor. She is the winner of the Penelope Nivens award for Creative nonfiction, and her work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Her poetry, fiction, and nonfiction have appeared in Narrative Magazine as Short Story of the Week, The Los Angeles Review, Prairie Schooner, and other journals. She’s a Kripalu-certified yoga instructor, offering yoga and creative writing workshops. She also works her Romani (“Gypsy”) family trades, fortune telling, energy healing, and dancing. Additionally, she is an artist and art model working with a number of artists and studios in the city. She is currently writing her first book.

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Summer Poetry: Emily X.R. Pan

May 22, 2020

BY EMILY X.R. PAN

Missed Dance

I wander over cobblestones

dreaming idly of lips

brought to life in mirrors

Is it a slash of lipstick

or pomegranate seeds

dripping those underworld promises?

Deep inhale night

leads me across a bridge

they say the Seine has a stink

Exhale exhale all

I got was the smell of stars falling

out of love

But rewind

first we met dancing

our eyes made the greeting

I smiled at the long dark hair

the pair of red lips

over his shoulder

He thought my glittering teeth

were for him

they always do

I love this song he said

twirled me like a doll

until I was dizzy and she was gone

In the morning light

my teeth were not the dagger

I kept on me just in case

Under the sun we kicked

our naked feet

across guitar-string grass

He pressed his mouth to my ear

to drink of me

and all I thought of were her silver shoes

Emily X.R. Pan is the New York Times bestselling author of THE ASTONISHING COLOR OF AFTER, which won the APALA Honor Award and the Walter Honor Award, received six starred reviews, was an L.A. Times Book Prize finalist, and was longlisted for the Carnegie Medal, among other accolades. She lives in Brooklyn, New York. Visit Emily online at exrpan.com, and find her on Twitter and Instagram: @exrpan.

.

In Poetry & Prose Tags summer poems
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Summer Poetry: Dallas Athent

May 21, 2020

north carolina

driving thru the balm,

cutting thru the night,

i am a local girl.

i could really live here.

crickets give a familiar sound,

north carolina,

could be anybody’s home, really.

his lap is my house,

when i’m young, i am silk.

he falls in love at 3 o’clock.

and i’m pulling into golden corral,

making memories of a dead dad and buffets.

i could really live here,

could be anybody’s home, really.

montecito hair

is long and ends in a clean line.

it asks for no forgiveness

on the tan girl, tres mince,

who never wants to know u.

:::a palm in the sun:::

florida’s gone

and i’m looking back thru the window.

bye girl. it’s all by your girl.

the things from your childhood:

thick stained rugs,

dewey soda with a straw,

neon fish on a t-shirt,

tapioca pudding,

all of my little ponies,

sink into a tepid sea.

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Summer Poetry: Adrian Ernesto Cepeda

May 21, 2020

BY ADRIAN ERNESTO CEPEDA

Her Pool was Glistening

 

I missed her whistling, 

seductively spreading 

the soft of splashes 

enticing me to follow her, 

my Rosa, her hips already 

glowing in the water, lips 

savoring to devour each 

and every drop, I could tell 

from those shivering blinks 

her moonlit eyes loved softly 

undressing me, slowly, I glimpsed 

the giggling sips of her white 

wine breath, behind me, slipping

I felt her pool was spinning—

I wasn’t ready but she pushed 

me in towards her deep end, 

Rosa’s tongue caught me elongating 

waves as we shared bubbles 

of chlorine even deeper luna 

kisses radiating from her bikini-less 

skin. I could feel her sea diver 

taste buds reigniting underwater, 

deeply intensifying our midnight

swim, closer I felt more than just 

a mouthful of sips, I saw her face, 

the first-time glimpsing Rosa 

spreading her fountains, gushing, 

ready to splash her softest mystery, 

she was my guide, we moved 

instantly swimming deeper—

finally, I listened to her faucet 

eyes tidal me closer; ready, 

wanting— skinny dripping, 

she softly leaned while nakedly 

instructing, pointing to her

softest garden, curly glistening

summer, I could feel Rosa

shivering a whisper—

“let’s go inside…”

Lovers alone wear sunlight

You kiss the back of my legs 

and I want to cry. In the heat 

of her hands I thought, this is 

the campfire that mocks the sun.

yours is the light by which 

my spirit’s born: yours is 

the darkness, as long as the sun 

exists, your name will exist

like a sun-filled window, 

there are souls that you feel 

to lean forward to, your belly 

the sun seed I planted in 

my chest.“Her Spanish 

sounds like sunlight drying 

a wet shirt. She’s delicadeza

She was a pure spirit, easily 

susceptible to emotion, one 

moment she’d be crying, 

like sunshine after a shower.

Isn’t it enough to be out 

walking together in the sunlight?

through a window, which I 

stand in, warmed, the sun 

comes out of your body like 

a fruit. I had been lost to 

you, sunlight, and flew 

like a moth to you, sunlight, 

Oh, your love is sunlight

[But] Is it love, the way 

you toss your head and 

create the sun? If you 

are the rising sun, I am 

the road of blood. And 

there is, for me, no difference 

between writing a good 

poem and moving into 

sunlight against the body 

of a woman I love. Oh, 

your hair is red-gold, red-

gold, your skin is like

sunlight on snow. He 

smiled, and his face was 

like the sun. The first 

summer was pure happiness.

I was experiencing another 

human being, I was barefoot 

in the sand so fine, it was as 

if it breathed beneath my feet.

It was as if I were living within 

soft walls of sunlight and desire.

references above

1  E.E. Cummings, “unlove’s the heavenless hell and homeless home”
2 Shauna Barbosa, “GPS”
3 Jeanette Winterson, Written on the Body
4 E.E. Cummings, “silently if, out of not knowable”
5 from a wall relief on the West Wall in the Chapel of Rameses I
6 Federico García Lorca, source unknown
7 Octavio Paz, “A Tale of Two Gardens”
8 Eugene Gloria, “The Verb To Lick”
9 Gustave Flaubert, in a letter to Louise Colet
10 Jess Walter, Beautiful Ruins
11 Jessie Burton, The Miniaturist
12 Homero Aridjis, Blue Spaces
13 Hozier, “Sunlight”
14 Stimie
15 Octavio Paz, “Motion”
16 Audre Lorde, “Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power
17 Tennessee Williams, “The Mutilated”
18 Madeline Miller, The Song of Achille
19 Liv Ullman on Ingmar Bergman, Liv & Ingmar

Adrian Ernesto Cepeda is the author of the full-length poetry collection Flashes & Verses… Becoming Attractions from Unsolicited Press, the poetry chapbook So Many Flowers, So Little Time from Red Mare Press. Between the Spine is a collection of erotic love poems published with Picture Show Press and La Belle Ajar, a collection of cento poems inspired by Sylvia Plath's 1963 novel published in 2020 by CLASH Books. Adrian is an LA Poet who has a BA from the University of Texas at San Antonio and he is also a graduate of the MFA program at Antioch University in Los Angeles where he lives with his wife and their cat Woody Gold. You can connect with Adrian on his website: http://www.adrianernestocepeda.com/

In Poetry & Prose Tags summer poems
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Summer Poetry: Emily Uduwana

May 21, 2020

BY EMILY UDUWANA

Last Day of Summer

Magenta took my hand

and she pulled me deeper

into the hedges

that guarded

the white columns

of her parents’ suburban hell

and we laid with our hair

spread in halos

over fresh-cut grass,

and we laid in a meeting

of manicured lions

and leafy green poodles

and those skinny pink flamingos

her mother insisted on keeping

in their cul-de-sac front yard,

the yard where we stayed

to see the sun flee on its way

out of Southern California

and where I ran my fingers

over the soft skin

of her inner arms

and asked how she ended up

with a name like Magenta

and where she waved a hand

at those skinny pink flamingos

and where said,

too many vodka sodas,

and where she said,

maybe what they really wanted

was one more lawn ornament.

Sticky Sweet

Your mother brought fresh lemonade

in sparkling crystal glasses

but you dipped a finger in the pitcher

forgotten on a backyard table

and you dangled your nails

over my waiting face,

let sticky sweet droplets fall

on the bridge of my nose,

and you said, she never adds

enough sugar

and you drank deeply

from my cupid’s bow

and from the edges

of my eager mouth

and you said,

that’s much better.

Emily Uduwana is a poet and short fiction author with recent publications in Miracle Monocle, Eclectica Magazine, and the Owen Wister Review. She is currently based in Southern California, where she is pursuing a Ph.D. in history at the University of California, Riverside. 

In Poetry & Prose Tags emily uduwana, summer poems
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