Keepsakes – a poem by Jennifer Susan Smith

Keepsakes

in Fibonacci sequence

Kept
shells
gathered
in Gulf Shores
rise from my nightstand
mist squallish dreams in saltwater.
As hailstones pelt my window pane, I taste ocean spray,
ebb to decades ago sea coast;
the loon we rescued
is airborne
in flight,
soars
free.

Jennifer Susan Smith, a retired speech-language pathologist, resides in Rock Spring, Georgia. Her work appears in The Mildred Haun Review, Appalachia Bare, Troublesome Rising Digital Anthology 2025 Collection, and Sunflowers Rising: Poems for Peace Anthology, among others. She holds membership in Chattanooga Writers’ Guild, Poetry Society of Tennessee, and Georgia Poetry Society, and serves as chairman of Alpha Delta Kappa Pages and Pearls Book Club. Jennifer earned a Master of Science Degree in Communicative Disorders from University of Alabama, an Educational Specialist Degree in Curriculum and Instruction from Lincoln Memorial University, and a Creative Writing Certificate from Kennesaw State University.

How to Endure These Dark Times – a poem by Diana Woodcock

How to Endure These Dark Times


Because the birth of this Earth
is nothing more nor less than miraculous,
I’ve placed a pot of red impatiens
on the deck next to the red feeder
full of sugar water—both for the Ruby-

throated hummers who spend summers
here with me. For the Downy wood-
peckers and wrens, I’ve inserted
a suet cake into the wire basket.
And for the finches, I’ve hung up

a thistle sock on one buddleia limb.
Now I wait, anticipate
their arrival, praying for everyone’s
safe passage and survival.

Beyond the realities of climate
crisis, genocide, ongoing
colonialism, political
division, I make the decision
to celebrate my sense of kinship

with all that exists.
This is how to endure
these dark times:
Focus on one Yellow-shafted
Flicker pecking about

on the lawn. Before long,
you’ll forget everything else
as you watch him/her grazing
and finding just enough
sustenance for her existence.

As for my own,
only when I glimpse
life’s sacredness revealed in
non-human creatures, do I
sense the Creator’s presence,

and ascend into the hill
of the Lord to be absorbed
by His/Her holiness as I witness
one tiny Blue worshipping
at the honeysuckle.

Diana Woodcock has authored seven poetry collections, most recently Reverent Flora ~ The Arabian Desert’s Botanical Bounty (Shanti Arts, 2025), Heaven Underfoot (2022 Codhill Press Poetry Award), Holy Sparks (2020 Paraclete Press Poetry Award finalist), and Facing Aridity (2020 Prism Prize for Climate Literature finalist). A three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, she received the 2011 Vernice Quebodeaux Poetry Prize for Women for her debut collection, Swaying on the Elephant’s Shoulders. Currently teaching at VCUarts Qatar, she holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Lancaster University, where she researched poetry’s role in the search for an environmental ethic.

Wildfire Sky – a poem by Kimberly Beck

Wildfire Sky

I probably shouldn’t be
out in this storm of
smoke and ash, probably
shouldn’t be on this paved trail as it follows
softly the curve
of that ribbon, the gray river shining beneath
a mirror of wildfires and
cinder.

But where would I be without this place?
I pause on the shore to watch
as the mallards fly past, their
collective portrait a collage
of emerald, and pine, and
falling rain.

And behind me, a raven lifts from the pale hands
of an aspen tree, his wings leaving trails of ink
across the sky in a crosshatch pattern of
parchment and fountain pen.

I probably shouldn’t
be out here, I know, but
give me just a few minutes more
to listen for You.

Kimberly Beck is a poet from Washington State. She can often be found at a local therapy ranch, caring for a very special herd of Norwegian Fjord Horses. Her work has appeared in Solid Food Press, Ekstasis Magazine, The Penwood Review, Clayjar Review, and more. She is also the author of a poetry collection called Chiaroscuro.

Egyptian Priest Watches the Desert – a poem by Patricia Nelson

Egyptian Priest Watches the Desert

I see what the gods have meted out
and feel a longing,
a thirst that opens like a leaf

to all the sunken things that ripple
in this hot, white shimmer.
The unquiet harp of the sand,

its peaks so beveled that
they blow in grains around me.
The ending of a mountain, edgewise on my skin.

In the sky the lighted objects roll,
leave on the ground their different darknesses.
The canted shapes I use to measure

the many sizes of time.
Then I don't regret the smallness
I am made of, or the unlevel gods.

Patricia Nelson writes Neo Modernist poetry from the San Francisco Bay Area, USA. Her new book, Monster Monologues, is recently out from Fernwood Press.

The Cactus – a poem by Theodore Davis

The Cactus

To continue down this road would doom me
to untraveled, barren land without end,
but as long as I’m longing, I can breathe
with the engine and the joy that’s behind
me, like exhaust. The road becomes unpaved
onward on. This journey is for the saints
in their sleep, in their rest, till they’re awake.
My poor ride glugs and chugs, a reprobate,
driving while I’m burnt by tears hardening
on the dash, for I can love an object,
like I love the cactus still sharpening
on the shoulder of the last sacrament.
By now our broken city yearns for salt
that we sprinkled on it, raw and felt.

Theodore Davis is a poet and musician from Des Moines, Iowa whose work explores how formal meter can swing. His poetry has appeared in Ink Lit Mag and The Limestone Review.

The Bridge of Believing – a poem by Dolo Diaz

The Bridge of Believing

At first belief is a thick cotton cloud
opaque with tenderness, soft throughout.

Certainty is a heavy stone,
weighing down the plow,
helping dig the soil,
dragging the blade down.

But the in between is a bridge
where you stand
gently pulling threads of cotton
from the cloud,
contemplating the ponderous stone
that gathers weight on the other side.

The in between is something
to behold and to cradle,
something even more sacred
than the thick, tender cloud.

Dolo Diaz is a scientist and poet with roots in Spain, currently residing in California. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in SLANT, The Summerset Review, ONE ART, Third Wednesday, Rogue Agent, among others. Her debut chapbook, Defiant Devotion, was published by Bottlecap Press. You can find some of her published work at: dolodiaz.com.

Reading the Leaves – poem by Robert Estes

Reading the Leaves

Liz texted me a striking
photo that she’d taken:
a red autumnal maple leaf
lies on a bed of gray leafmeal
decay trash. One old brown
leaf, still well-defined as such
and of a different type
I’m calling oak, just barely
touches fingers with that bigger
central one, whose veins
are forkèd yellow lightning bolts
against a scarlet sky.
Showing at the bottom
of the frame, a few fresh
green and smaller leaves point up.
The picture is astounding
in its beauty, which is enough,
and yet I cannot help interpreting
the image in a personal way,
as one arranged by fate,
whatever that might be:
I’m of the human stem.

Robert Estes, who lives in Somerville, Massachusetts, got his Physics PhD from the University of California at Berkeley and had some interesting times using physics, notably on a couple of US-Italian Space Shuttle missions. Since then, 50-odd of his poems have appeared in literary journals, including The Louisville Review, Gargoyle, Cola Literary Review, The Moth, Viridine Literary, Full House Literary, Masque & Spectacle, Constellations, Tipton Poetry Journal, Anacapa Review, The Madrigal, Book of Matches, and Sierra Nevada Review.

Coherence – a poem by Jenna Wysong-Filbrun

Coherence

After sedation, I wake up in a chapel. My love
has come swelling out of me to fill
the makeshift room of block walls
and curtains like a haze that curls
around us as we sit here, spiriting.
I see us as we are—a Whole of parts—
me in the bed with my heart
beeping through the machines
as I open my eyes, my beloved
in the chair holding me together
along with my purse, the dogs
at home keeping watch
by the window—all here in the vapor.
Even the saltine cracker crumb
on the floor has always been The Body.
It feels like heartbreak and sunrise
and thunder and a drop of rain
falling from the tip of an open flower.
Like in a dream, I know the layers of being
through which Love flows unchecked.
If I hold your hand, it is because Love
carries your pain with you. Listen,
we are always here in the arms of Time—
distinct and one, healed past healing,
loved entirely, beyond knowing.



Jenna Wysong Filbrun is the author of the poetry collection, Running Toward Water, forthcoming from Shanti Arts in 2026. Her poems have appeared in Blue Heron Review, Deep Wild Journal, ONE ART, and other publications. She practices poetry to deepen her awareness of connection and loves to spend time at home and in the wild with her husband, Mike, and their dogs, Oliver and Lewis. Find her on Substack @jennawysongfilbrun or on Instagram @jwfilbrun.

The Holy Calling – a poem by Cynthia Pitman

The Holy Calling

Silhouettes of strangers
stipple the dark field
behind my house
that stretches all the way
to the rocky crags
bordering the sea.
I watch them from my window.
Just enough moonlight
settles softly on their shapes
for me to sense their tension,
their fear, their anticipation.
They must await a calling.
I long to join them in the field,
to infiltrate their eerie tableau vivant,
to stand still and tense
as I await the call that will lead me
from my two-dimensional existence
of banality and indifference
into a three-dimensional life
of abundant joy –
the life I have always believed
was meant for me –, not this life
of cracked emptiness within,
an emptiness whose rusted scales
scrape until they lacerate me inside.
I long for a lush sustenance
made of hope, of faith, of possibility.
I must join the strangers in the field.
Surely they seek the same thing.
I cannot endure much longer
this hollow hunger in my soul.
Somewhere there must be sounding
a holy calling to better things.

Cynthia Pitman, author of poetry collections The White Room, Blood Orange, Breathe and Broken, has been published in Amethyst Review, Literary Yard, Bright Flash Review, The Ekphrastic Review, Third Wednesday (One Sentence Poem finalist), Saw Palm: Florida Literature and Art (Pushcart Prize nominee), and other journals, and in Vita Brevis Press anthologies Pain and Renewal, Brought to Sight & Swept Away, Nothing Divine Dies, and What is All This Sweet Work?

When Gabriel Visits – a poem by Anne Magee Dichele

When Gabriel Visits

Will you be able,
when Gabriel visits,
to quell your questions
as Mary did?

Annunciations happen daily.

So often
Gabriel has been sent
to make this simple request:

God would like to be with you.

It never makes sense,
no details of how or why,
yet Gabriel,
dutiful messenger,

slips through the back door
of your life, unexpected,
offer in hand.

Like the day your sister was dying
and he suggested to have God
sit with you, by her bedside,
if you like.

Too sad and too weary to speak,
you nod

and her dying hours
became, in that moment,
luminous and holy,

the cramped room so heavy
with the breath of love
you knew the invited one
had arrived.

And you knew somehow
all would be well
because
you said
yes.

Anne Magee Dichele serves as Dean of the School of Education at Quinnipiac University. A life-long commitment to daily meditation and spiritual reflection has led to two poetry publications by Antrim House, Waiting for Wisdom and Ankle Deep and Drowning. Two of her poems were recently published in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces by Amethyst Press. Anne lives in New Haven, Connecticut with her dog Seamus Heaney. She is joyous that her wonderful children and granddaughter live nearby.