Ceremony – a poem by Olga Khmara

Ceremony

A speechless conversation
Between two tea bowls on one tray.
The earth exhales
And sighs relief
When the water fills the latent leaf
And unfurls the tension.

On the tray of elemental pillars
The parched one is united
With the giving. Rotate it,
Then gaze into my tea bowl
As it contains the soul
Print of its holder.

The tea bowl might look modest,
Though it fits the sea that’s warm
But wild; the wood that’s firm
But bending, and light that wakes,
Yet fades unless you notice
The big things in the smallest.

Olga Khmara is a Belarusian poet. Her work explores nature as a living witness. Her poetry has appeared in BirdLife Norge and is forthcoming in Sky Island Journal. She works as a nature guide.

Avia, St. Peter’s Square – a poem by R.H. Russell

Avia, St. Peter's Square

First they scanned as nuns, impaired by habit
With struggling gait given to mortal wonders
On glazed terracotta perch a trio of seabirds, bellwethers
Bedeviled a bit by the fumes, white and final
Yet of great tidings — the Throne of Saint Peter:
Their plumes told the groundlings and their Facebook
Familia that Collegium Cardinalium, least its
Youngest electors, had stoked ultimate fires
While troubled winged trinity of errant herring gulls
Mince about atop Pontelli’s jeweled lockbox.
Votaries to votes, then those to smoke, elate a conclave—
Wings of angels flit across the ribbed ceiling
Sealing its pastel cage of flightless cardinals.
So the flock gathers, flounces, sheds feathers
Arancione webbing, mystery lifted, pronounces
Aloft a new dawn to an unsettled congregation
Lost amid shadows marbling the piazza
Craning necks crossed by the mumbled perception
As soft vespers descends and the seagulls depart.

R.H. Russell grew up in New England, which he continues to call home. One of his poems was recently honored by the Inkwell Writer’s Alliance of New Hampshire; he has published in both 2025 issues of Touchstone, the journal of the Poetry Society of New Hampshire, as well as in the online journal Snakeskin.

At the Cloisters – a poem by Gretchen R. Fletcher

At the Cloisters

In a place of ancient peace I wait for my friend,
rub my hands over columns carved by other hands

that long ago found peace under ancient European soil.
A benediction of fountained water flows over stones as rain

drips on cosmos, fennel, and medieval healing herbs.
At the Trie Cloister Café my friend sheds tears

on uneaten focaccia, breaks the present peace,
drowns the soundtrack of Gregorian chant

with her litany of fears about the future.
Look! - I say. Across the way

a young priest lures sparrows with bread
in an outstretched palm

steadied on the stone wall,
restoring peace to the ancient setting.


Gretchen R. Fletcher won the Poetry Society of America’s Bright Lights/Big Verse competition and was projected on the Jumbotron while reading her winning poem in Times Square. One of her poems was choreographed and performed by dance companies in Palm Beach and San Francisco, and others appear in datebooks published in Chicago by Woman Made Gallery. Her poetry has been published in journals including The Chattahoochee Review, Inkwell, Pudding Magazine, Upstreet, Canada’s lichen, and online at Poetry Southeast, SeaStories, and prairiehome.publicradio. Her chapbooks, That Severed Cord and The Scent of Oranges, were published by Finishing Line Press.

Mountain Pose – a poem by Lori Zavada

Mountain Pose

On the teal blue accent table inside the sunroom,
an orange votive flame belly dances in bendy heat.
The tiny light centers my morning meditation,
starting at the root chakra,
working its way up to my monkey mind,
when an almond-eyed squirrel stops me.
Standing in a ring of lilies beyond the pensive flicker,
feet hip-width apart,
prayer hands to his heart clasping an acorn—
practicing gratitude before eating the meaty seed,
the white swath of his belly expanding, contracting,
and me admiring his perfect mountain pose.


Lori Zavada is passionate about free verse poetry, and sentience is a common theme in her work. Her down-to-earth approach strikes a balance between creativity and accessibility. Her work is published in Of Poets and Poetry, Emerald Coast Review, Silly Goose Press, The Lake, Gyroscope, Macrame Literary Journal, and Wild Whispers Poetry. Find her latest co-authored collection of stories and poems on Amazon: Awake in the Sacred Night: Stories and Poems.

Cloacina – a poem by J.C. Scharl

Cloacina

Roman goddess of the sewers; considered a cult of Venus.

Toilet goddess,
gentle guardian of filth,
how long you’ve kept your shy chthonic cult
intact, stewarding your wealth
of swill and piss.

The ancients knew
no man can rule the sewer.
That is a woman’s place. That waste land
needs a careful hand to stir
the lonesome goo

and smooth the way
down gently sloping tunnels
through the dark, that dark through which we all
must come. You love the runnels
and all the clay-

brick oozing walls.
You love chunky dishwater
and laundry scum; you love the bloody
drainage after a slaughter;
shit, spoor, and all

belong to you,
Purifier, forgotten realm’s
prudent queen. O lady of the mire,
how you have loved your squalid
children! You, who

see the wreck of
living things, know that nothing
can be made clean from afar. It takes
hands deep in the muck, scrubbing.
You know that love

must go down, in-
to the stinking guts of earth,
and make even them holy. Midwife
to the endless afterbirth
of life, come in

with your strange toil.
Teach us not to turn away.
Teach us to gaze at every cast-off
thing, sit down by it, and stay,
and not recoil.





J.C. Scharl is a poet and critic from Royal Oak, MI. Her poetry has been featured in some of America’s top poetry journals, including The New Ohio Review and The Hudson Review, as well as internationally on the BBC and in several UK journals. Her criticism has appeared in many magazines and journals. She holds a BA in politics, philosophy, and economics from The King’s College in New York, and an MFA in poetry from Seattle Pacific University. She is the author of the poetry collection Ponds and two verse plays.

Going to Alaska – an essay by Naomi Bindman

Going to Alaska

I’m grounded, no matter how fast I’m going, I can come back.
My legs may take me far away, but my soul will come back home.

~Ellen Bindman-Hicks, “Night Leaping”

My daughter Ellen should be thirty-four now. When she was a toddler, I opened a daycare in our home. For many months the children played a game they’d invented called, “Going to Alaska.” Sometimes they traveled by plane, sometimes by train, sometimes they rode in a sled, sometimes they walked. Underneath the kitchen table, in the well of the half-pulled-out sofa, or on the lid of the sand-table were some of their imaginative vehicles. Many animals and dolls accompanied them to Alaska. It was a game full of excitement where ideas emerged organically, in call and response, like a song.

The children always asked me to play, but I’d usually just reply,

You’re going to Alaska? Have a nice trip!

Beyond that, I had discovered my participation would immediately throw a damper on the game. Occasionally, I’d try again, squeezing under the table with the kids, their eyes joyful.

This is a plane! one announces, We’re going to Alaska!

I wonder, “Is it my turn?” So I say something dumb like,

What are we going to do when we get to Alaska?

The kids look at me. Pause. One picks up the thread again: We’re going to Alaska!

Okay. Try again. Make plane sounds.

Me: Look out the window at the clouds!

Again, no takers. The game fizzles out, to be resumed another day.

What am I not getting? It occurs to me that to learn the rules I need to shut up and pay attention. I begin to listen to how the children play the game.

We’re in a train!

We’re going to Alaska!

We’re going to a museum.

There are gonna be bears in the museum—and dinosaurs!

There’s airplanes in the museum!

Let’s go to a fair.

Yeah! Let’s go to a fair!

There are cows at the fair. Remember the cows at the fair?

Let’s go to a restaurant.

We’re going to a restaurant!

We’re here!

The children climb out of the train and play restaurant for a while. Suddenly the game makes sense: I see how I’ve been missing the mark. My adult ideas about what Alaska is—what creatures live in Alaska, how people actually get to Alaska, and what one might see out the window while traveling—are far outside the children’s real life experiences. My attempts to impose my own sense of realism missed the point. What’s important is going.

The going can be to anywhere, by any means. And it can be simultaneous. The ideas of one child don’t have to fit with those of another. Once the kids get there, wherever there is, the game is over. The excitement is rooted in the game’s action, its flexibility and the room it leaves for each child to fill in details with their own imagination. My attempts to play had stifled all of these. I’m surprised they’d kept inviting me back.

Not long after my revelation, Ellen sat on the floor of our mudroom pretending it was a car she was driving.

You sit here, she told me, patting the floor.

I sat.

We’re going in the car! she announced happily.

For the first time ever I did not ask what we were going to do, but responded:

We’re going in the car!

Ellen paused, looked at me carefully, then her face lit into a huge smile.

* * *

Ellen’s life ended in a car crash days after she’d graduated from high school. In that moment my world ended. I was left to continue on without her, trying to preserve the music, art and poetry she had created in her seventeen years, trying to not let her memory fade, to not let her disappear completely.

I had no guide for this. I was not raised in a religious tradition. My family is Jewish, but secular and intellectual, so I did not have faith in an almighty to anchor me to a hereafter, or a certainty that our physical separation is just a pause. My mother’s life was taken when I was thirteen, and I had held her memory close, writing to her in my journal when becoming a new mother myself, consulting her when facing difficult decisions, but still I had no firm belief in an afterlife. Despite craving these conversations, I often felt that I was playing pretend to comfort myself. And yet. The glimmer of possibility of something more remained and would not allow me to dismiss it completely.

When Ellen’s life ended, my need that our essences remain somehow connected beyond our physical beings, became acute. Though I could not believe she was flying around with a golden trumpet, I also could not ignore the slightly surreal moments that feel like visits. My intellect tells me wishful thinking. My heart says otherwise. My struggle between hope and reason an ongoing ebb and flow.

My therapist, an energy psychologist, suggests I might to try to speak with Ellen through him. Struggling to suspend my disbelief, I say yes. Glenn asks me to concentrate on Ellen’s voice in my mind, then he closes his eyes. I close mine as well. The room fills with the soothing sound of water trickling in the tabletop fountain.

Ellen wants you to know she loves you, Glenn says after a pause.

Everything falls away. She is there, smiling before me.

I love you too, honey! I miss you so much! There’s so much I want to tell you. Like, David ate with the cat fork—I didn’t have the heart to tell him. We would have laughed so hard!

Her smile shines even brighter. Then her face becomes serious.

Mom, I don’t want you to be sad.

I know, I whisper. I’ll keep trying.

Ellen fades from my mind’s eye. Glenn rematerializes in front of me.

If you picture Ellen’s love as light, what color do you see?

This I’m not expecting.

Purple, I answer without much thought. But then, No wait. Gold? Hold on.

I close my eyes again. The light divides itself, revealing an entire spectrum.

All colors, I reply slowly. Her love is all colors of light. I see the whole rainbow.

I carry this gift with me. It offers a beacon through the interminable darkness. Rainbows appear everywhere. Iridescent reflections in street signs, shimmering in drops of dew, dancing in the spray of a fountain, even painted rainbows on store signs, on a boat’s sail, or a whirligig spinning. Everywhere the colors of light: Iris dipping her pitcher into the river Styx, sprinkling it in the clouds, turning sorrow into beauty.

Whenever I reach the point of deepest despair, some sort of rainbow appears. I see sunbows, mistbows, moonbows. I wonder if they’ve been there all along, but only notice them now that I’m learning to pay attention. Each feels ethereal, like a link beyond time and through space. I want to believe this. It is difficult.

I have moments where it seems obvious: of course there is a dimension beyond this. How could this one lifetime be all there is? Where does this thing, this spirit, our essence, the spark called “Life” go? Where does it come from? Sometimes it seems clear that all our energy is connected and there must be another, or many, levels of being. But at other times that just seems like a comforting fantasy, a foolish fairy tale, and it’s really all completely random. So I continue to swing back and forth between skepticism and hope.

* * *

The sky is dark, the clouds swollen. I stand on the rock in the fields where Ellen and I often walked together, where our family held a ceremony to celebrate her life. The trees in the distance bend and sway in an undulating mourning dance. Finally I speak to the swirling sky.

Honey, Grandpa died this morning. I hope he wasn’t too scared. I hope he is with you. I hope there is more. I want this all to make sense.

Directly above me, the low cloak of clouds slides apart, not sideways like curtains, but the way a camera’s aperture spirals open, revealing a brilliant blue circle behind the veil that had obscured what had been there all along. A stream of blue light pours down on me. I stretch my arms to it, palms up, accepting the magic. The magic and the mystery. The blue beam moves around briefly, then the mantle of clouds slips closed.

There is a knowing that goes beyond what can be understood with the mind.

I have never been to Egypt or Mount Everest or Alaska or the Moon. That doesn’t make them not real. So my ability, or inability, to comprehend dimensions beyond this physical realm is irrelevant to whether or not they exist. A friend recently told me of seeing her dog playing happily—hours after having buried her. My friend concluded sheepishly: It felt like a visit, but maybe it was just my mind.

To my surprise, I heard myself respond: Your mind is just the conduit.

Years ago, another friend described connecting energetically with her newborn across the room. “I’d wake up, and if I put my consciousness at all in the direction of the baby, the milk would let down. And other times I’d hold myself separate, almost like a meditative state, and I could hold a little acupuncture on the energy thread. And then I could let it go. And then the milk would let down.”[1]

If energy can bridge short distances, why shouldn’t it cross larger ones, like dimensional planes, like life and death, as well?

“Dying is the opposite of leaving,” poet Andrea Gibson offers in their Love Letter from the Afterlife. “When I left my body, I did not go away. That portal of light was not a portal to elsewhere, but a portal to here. … Why did no one tell us that to die is to be reincarnated in those we love while they are still alive?”[2]

Every night I whisper to Ellen’s photo the bedtime mantra I said to her for years: May all the forces of the universe protect you. You are the love of my life. The girl of my dreams.

And I repeat to her the words she used to say to me: I love you infinity groups of infinity, never stops, goes forever and ever.

One night, new unbidden words and a flash of understanding come through me: May we always shine together, grounded in grace and gratitude.

Ellen’s eyes beam into mine. I hear her voice in my mind: Now you’re ready to go to Alaska!


[1]  Rites of Passage: Mothers’ Stories of Giving Birth, Naomi Bindman, unpublished

[2]  https://andreagibson.substack.com/p/love-letter-from-the-afterlife

Naomi Bindman’s poetry and prose has appeared in magazines, literary journals, anthologies, and on podcasts. They won Dogwood Journal’s Creative Nonfiction Award, and received funds from the Vermont Arts Council and Vermont Humanities Council. Naomi is on the faculty of the Vermont State Colleges. Her memoir, You’re the Words I Sing, the story of Naomi’s journey back to life performing the songs of her daughter Ellen, is currently on submission with major publishers, and a film based on the memoir is in active development with a leading Hollywood story development company.

And righteousness looks down from the sky – a poem by Dave Mehler

And righteousness looks down from the sky

The three tropicbirds soar and wheel, wheeling to soar,
wanting speed wanting height—always high, they circle like drones
to get a comprehensive island and lagoon view, which is why
we are here, at the highest point of Aitutaki, dear.

The tropic birds appear to be in orbit around the moon, transfigured,
feathers glowing, lower half of wing and pintail alight,
lit white reflected like moon a softer solar bright, flying below
it still the three appear to be circling in the blue above them a white,
thin high clouds, a day moon.
Some tropicbirds are red-tailed—
Leo showed us three long deep red feathers he’d tucked in the visor
of the Black Pearl above the ship’s wheel, piloting us
around the huge quadrangle of a light aqua coraled sand lagoon
to Honeymoon Island—where we spotted a Hawksbill flying—
blurred beneath the waves—remember?


Now it is time we leave this island—
May my love have such porous limits
bleeding over boundaries, through restrictions.

Dave Mehler lives in McMinnville, Oregon, and is a truckdriver for a landfill near Portland. He edits the online literary journal Triggerfish Critical Review. His full-length poetry collections are Roadworthy (2020) and Bad Is Bent Good (2025) both from Aubade Publishing. He is currently at work on a manuscript of love poems, Cloud Street.

Eventually – a poem by Marylin MacArthur

Eventually


Joy will run through
like ribbons of glue
and sun-caught gold leaf,
binding broken bits
of a kintsugi bowl.

A longtime New Englander, Marilyn MacArthur is a writer of poetry and creative nonfiction who works in human services and actually loves and respects humans. She has been a special education teacher and an activities director in long-term care, and is now a case manager for individuals with intellectual disabilities. A dog person who adores her cat, Marilyn is fascinated with archaeology and linguistics, loves Doctor Who and the Lord, and delights in musical comedies and Celtic rock.

to be still – a poem by Greg Wood

to be still


If you stand perfectly still
in the grasses of the arid steppe,

the moon will appear
as a tiny white dot,
just a drop of pearl acrylic;

her glittering mountains
will become threads of
meandering streams;

lamplit cars along winding roads
will romance as ants, rolling
toward the unknown under
the blinker lights of the stars.

adobe homes of every town will fade
along the slimming edge of dusk before
they disappear. only the bumps and bruises
of mother earth will remain.

yet you will attend to her kindly in your stillest mind;
until it becomes a stream and the moon turned to glass.

then you’ll become the shine and glimmer
of a sycamore in the dark,
arcing like a river toward
the flesh and bone

of everything.


Greg Wood is a southern cosmopolitan poet with roots in Virginia and connections to Alabama and Amman, Jordan. He regularly publishes in Dissident Voice and recently was featured in Ireland’s Dodging the Rain and Britain’s The Lake. Greg is the founder of Skylight, a creative arts outreach program that has touched the lives of many across the United States.

Compass – a poem by Marso

Compass

In a dense forest, trees huddle,
sharing their lineage of light
and companionship,

in the company of things
rooted or in flight,
where everything knows its home.

Our footsteps merge
with fallen leaves—
a disappearance,
not the same as being lost.

Our compass needle nods,
while our pine-needle path
weaves stanzas
into evergreen.

An invisible bird sings along,
with notes like breadcrumbs
marking the way

and we trust

that even roots unseen
somehow know the sky.

Marso writes poetry shaped by years of living in different cultures and by a practice of paying attention to ordinary life.