Refinishing – a poem by Diane Elayne Dees

Refinishing
 
Less than half an hour after I tossed it 
to the curb, my table found a new owner. 
A man stepped out of his truck,
carefully lifted it into the cargo bed,
and drove away. The table was old,
its parquet finish worn, its top marred
by an unknown substance,
and it no longer suited my needs.
I wondered, as he drove away,
where the man would take my table.
I guessed that he would strip, scrape,
clean, and sand it, then apply stain
and give it new life. I imagined 
it would find its place in someone’s hall
or entryway, or behind someone’s sofa.
And now I wonder: Is there a curb 
onto which I can toss myself,
for I, too, am in need of having years
of trauma, bad decisions, worries,
and regrets stripped away. 
Is there a curb where God picks up souls,
removes layers of psychic toxins,
and applies a stain of pure beauty,
sealed forever with a clear coat of love?
I ask because I am in need of refinishing,
and I seek new life.

Diane Elayne Dees‘s poetry has been published in many journals and anthologies. Diane, who lives in Covington, Louisiana, is the author of the chapbook Coronary Truth (Kelsay Books), and has another chapbook forthcoming. Diane also publishes Women Who Serve, a blog that delivers news and commentary on women’s professional tennis throughout the world.

If – a poem by Mary Kipps

If
 
If I hadn’t woken up at 2 AM, worried
about my aging mother’s care,
if I hadn’t gotten up and headed
out to the hot tub, coffee in hand,
to weigh the tasks that lay ahead,
if the night hadn’t been so heavy with heat
that a swim in the pool 
seemed in order,
if I hadn’t walked to the pool steps 
but dived in, 
if there hadn’t been a gibbous moon
shining on the shallow end, and
if the air hadn’t been so still, 
I might not have noticed
something moving in the water.
And I wouldn’t have run for the pool net,
dipped it under the wild thing
paddling with the last of its strength,
scooped it up and ferried it
to the corner of the yard
that backs to woods,
laid down the net, and stepped away
so as not to add to the fright
of the black and white creature
who still has some purpose
to fulfill in this world.
 

Mary Kipps is a US writer whose poetry has appeared in literary journals and anthologies around the world since 2005. She is also the author of three Kindle eBooks: All in VeinA Sucker for Heels, and Bitten: A Practical Guide to Dating a Vampire.

Hibiscus – a poem by Kiriti Sengupta

Hibiscus
 
I’ve to leave.
As long as I’m alive, 
I’ll clean the muck off the earth. 
My pledge to the newborn: 
I must make the world liveable for you. — Sukanta Bhattacharya*
 
1
 
The vow ceased with his death. 
The world expanded. 
They never missed a chance 
to cram her to misery. 
Can we be of help? 
 
2
 
Feed the earth water 
she flows in abundance. 
Allow the planet to breathe: 
the air is her consort. 
Free her from plastics—
they choke progress.
She endures the mess 
her wards make. 
 
3
 
Can I become a tree?
As I rampart the sinew 
with my root embedded 
in her tissue, I’ll bloom
like a hibiscus: 
the blush will endorse
my bloodline. 
 
4
 
Infestation ushers in
a day of buried majesty.
I wish the flower could turn 
into a coral basking in sunshine. 
Mother awaits the levitating saint.
 
 
 
 
 
*An excerpt from Bhattacharya’s celebrated Bengali poem “Charpatra” (“Certificate of Exemption”), published in 1947. Translation is mine (KS). 

Kiriti Sengupta is a poet, editor, translator, and publisher from Calcutta, India. He has been awarded the 2018 Rabindranath Tagore Literary Prize for his contribution to literature. He has published eleven books of poetry and prose and two books of translation and co-edited six anthologies. Sengupta is the chief editor of the Ethos Literary Journal.

Scenes from a Small Town in Winter – a poem by Daniel Bowman Jr

Scenes from a Small Town in Winter

The holidays just over 
and the tree taken down, 
we’re having our first real winter weather—
ten degrees and snow. 

I step out on the porch
just before the eleven o’clock news.
Everyone in the house is asleep.

Wind clangs the street signs on the corner: 
Elm and High, though
most of the old elms are gone, 
and “high” but still on the flood plain,
as I learned last spring
when it poured for two days straight. 

I’d gone to the hardware store 
that dark morning to see about a Shop-Vac 
for puddles in the garage. 
Two men in Carhartt coveralls argued 
over the last sump pump. Each declared 
he had more rain in his basement 
than the other, five feet or more.
Both knew the last pump
lacked the horsepower they needed,
but what choice did they have? 

I look out over the Rose of Sharon, branches
pruned at perfect angles
by my father-in-law back in October.
He can be hard and imprecise with himself
but tender and scrupulous with shrubs.  

The empty bird feeder sways back and forth
from the redbud’s bough 
like a broken bell tolling for nothing.
A faint blue light shines from some point west.

Daniel Bowman Jr is the author of A Plum Tree in Leatherstocking Country and Notes from the Spectrum (Brazos Press, 2021). A native New Yorker, he lives in Indiana, where he is Associate Professor of English at Taylor University and Editor-in-chief of Relief: A Journal of Art & Faith

Secret Prayer 14: Are You Still Sleeping? – a poem by Philip Vassallo

Secret Prayer 14: Are You Still Sleeping?
after Matthew 26:45 and Mark 14:41
 
He was human, like you,
frightened and lonely,
feeling abandoned,
or your mother the moment
you would not move in bed
as she tugged you to awaken, 
fearing He had called you home,
or yourself, when friends
just stood and watched 
as you encountered a savage bully
or, worse, your darkest self
stunned by the spectral sight
that you, only human,
know He is God.

Philip Vassallo, an American of Maltese ancestry, is a writing consultant and the author of The Art of On-the-Job WritingThe Art of Email Writing, and How to Write Fast Under Pressure. His poetry, essays, and fiction have appeared in many publications, and his plays have been produced throughout the United States.

Salutations to the Divine Bee – a poem by Sudasi J. Clement

 
Salutations to the Divine Bee
                        (after a Hindu chant: The 108 Names of Devi)
 
Om You whose compass is the sun
Om You of impeccable hexagon 
Om Round-dancer
Om Waggle-dancer
Om Yellow-faced avatar 
Om You of a thousand looping miles 
Om You, loaded, low-flying slow
Om to the One who needs no passport 
Om to the One who departs her hive at sunrise
Om to the One who empties pollen-baskets
Om Glittering tibia
Om Colony
Om Aggregate
Om Division of Labor 
Om Stingerless drone 
Om Nurse-bee
Om Baby 
Om Honey
Om You of bountiful eyes
Om You of striking proboscis
Om You of Yeats’ bee-loud glade
Om You of Beatrix Potter’s Bubbity Bumble
Om You of beckoning petals
Om You asleep in saffron bells
Om You asleep under snow 
Om Tears of Ra
Om Bhramari
Om Ah-Muzen-Cab
 
Om Aristaeus
Om Melissa 
Om Matriarchal clan 
Om You of haploid and diploid
Om Supersister
Om Vulture bee
Om She who enters a carcass through its eye
Om Delicacy of toad and shrike 
Om Tawny miner bee
Om Orchid bee
Om Cellophane bee
Om Forager 
Om Leaf-cutter 
Om Builder
Om Scout
Om Guard
Om Robber bee
Om You breaking into the capped cell
Om You ferrying stolen honey to your hive
Om Gymnast
Om Acrobat
Om You who have solved the problem 
            of the traveling salesman
Om Forewing
Om Hindwing
Om Gold-dusted swarm 
Om Bijou helicopter 
Om Delicate mechanoreceptors 
Om You who carry a comb wherever you go 
Om You carefully grooming your antennae
Om Stubbled fur
Om You who are adapted to both chewing 
            and sucking
Om Cucumber bee
Om Blueberry bee
Om You of thistle and rose
Om You, Supreme Alchemist 
Om to the One who sips Maraschino-factory runoff 
Om Hot-pink honey 
Om Consort of the Queen 
Om Queen 
Om You of countless eggs 
Om Wallace’s giant bee, big as a thumb
Om You of the 37-year disappearance 
Om You of slender waist
Om You of amber-striped abdomen
Om Puddle-drinker
Om Sweat-licker
Om You in our birdbaths
Om You patching cracks in the hive 
Om You on three pair of legs
Om Great banded furrow-bee 
Om You, last of your kind 
Om Bombini
Om Buzz 
Om Fuzzy bum
Om Humblebee 
Om Haphazard bumble
Om Drowsy hum
Om Maze-master
Om Tree-nester
Om Seeker 
Om Stinger
Om You who are free of delusion
Om You who are ever at peace with your devotees
Om Caffeine-lover
Om Tipsy neighbor
Om Picnic Crasher
Om Backyard Flashmob
Om Iridescent surprise 
Om Field Pixie 
Om Jewel of the orchard
Om Bee-heart
Om Bee-breath
Om Ragged-winged elder bee 
Om Slow-wave slumber
Om Sleep-deprived stumbler 
Om You on the rim of my bowl 
Om Bringer of Luck
Om Keeper
Om Kept
 
Om Shanti, Shanti, Shanti

Sudasi J. Clement is the author of the chapbook, The Bones We Have in Common, Slipstream Press, 2012, and the former poetry editor of Santa Fe Literary Review, 2006-2016. Sudasi’s poems have appeared in Rewilding: Poems for the Environment (Split Rock Review & Flexible Press), Calyx, Sky Island Journal, Room Magazine and pacificREVIEW, among others. She lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Inescapable – an essay by John Backman

 

Inescapable

Max came back last night, except this time he was orange. He used to be gray, elegant, a tabby with a big voice. Used to be, because now he’s gray and dead, even though last night he looked orange and alive.

The last time Max was alive, a veterinarian was bending over him at one end of an exam room, inserting the needle that would make him not alive. I was seated at the room’s other end. The thing to do, of course, was go stand beside him and say goodbye, but the grief seized me by the arms and pinned me to the chair. That’s the first thing I hate about grief: its grip is inescapable. Not a grip like steel, but more like deep water, like standing at the bottom of a pool, where you try to make a move but the weight of the water slows it to nothing.

* * *   

Second thing I hate about grief: it distorts your senses. Also like underwater. You hear sound above the surface but it’s too misshapen to make out the meaning. You see people doing things but they look all wavy and distorted like a screen saver.

My mother’s death plunged me underwater for several months. One Sunday, during the coffee hour after church, I watched two friends across the room, balancing cups on saucers. From their laughter, the way they held their bodies, I could tell they were having what I once called normal conversation, as if grief had never touched them. You should have joined in, someone might say. Connecting with people is so healthy when you’re grieving. Impossible. Grief restrained me from crossing the room, and even if it hadn’t, I’d never have understood what they were saying, because what they were saying wasn’t about grief and grief was all I could hear. It was, again, inescapable.

What made this ironic was the setting. We’d just finished worshiping one of history’s great escapees, who’d found a way out of death itself. If he could do that, he could have left us an escape route from grief too. But in that coffee hour, he wasn’t telling.   

* * *   

Third thing I hate about grief: you can’t reach the world, but the world can still reach you. It reached me during the week I spent in Florida to sit with my father, who was fading away. My mother had died several weeks earlier; she’d always overshadowed the silent man in our house, and with her gone I thought I’d finally get a chance to know him. He had a different idea: to follow her as soon as possible. Toward that end he ate nothing, drank nothing, said nothing. I spent the week nudging him to stay around, but in vain. The grief this time wasn’t about impending death but an opportunity lost, the last in a lifetime of them.

So when my rental car blew a tire on the way back to the airport, I exploded. I have a plane to catch, goddamn it! Thrown tire jacks, kicked fenders, the vilest words I could conjure. The way I react when the world demands speed and maturity and control and I can’t do any of it because I’m underwater.

* * *   

For a long time I thought my escape from grief lay in orange Max. As the dream went, I had nearly driven off a cliff in a safari vehicle with several people inside. One of them, while scrambling back to safety, rescued a black duffel bag from the vehicle and laid it on the ground. No one paid it much attention till the bag moved. When someone unzipped it, orange Max leapt out and began to run away. He was everything I needed: a role model of escape, the color of fire and life and hope, like the haloes on Jesus’ head in those Renaissance paintings where he marches out of the grave.

My heart fluttered as I woke up. Finally, the last word on grief. I even treated it like a last word, putting it at the end of this essay because, at the time, I believed it belonged there.

* * *   

But as it turns out, Jesus didn’t leave an escape route from grief. Quite the opposite: he may have beat death but grief got him square on the jaw. At one point he traveled to the grave of his friend Lazarus to raise him back to life. As soon as he saw the grave and the wailing mourners, he wept.

Jesus wept is the Bible’s shortest verse, too short for my questions. I need to know how he wept, a single tear down the cheek or full-on sobbing and hair tearing and ululation. I need to know how long the grief lasted: whether it magically dissipated once Lazarus was alive again, or whether it lingered because that’s what gloom does. I need to know how to do this, and once again Jesus is silent.

* * *   

Jesus may have been silent but one of his followers wasn’t—an obscure young nun who lay dying of tuberculosis, the disease that thrusts your lungs underwater. For years she’d lived what she called her “little way,” serving Jesus in life’s minutiae. One day someone asked her, “What about your ‘little life’ now?” and she answered, “My ‘little life’ is to suffer; that’s it!”

Some wisdom wants to be learned again and again. I had learned the little way years ago but apparently it wasn’t enough, because I had to learn it with Max too, gray Max, dead Max. Your little life is to grieve; that’s it. No escape given because, apparently, escape isn’t the point.

And if I can’t escape, I may as well look round. Maybe I’ve been seeing gray all wrong. Max was a handsome cat, after all, and maybe he’s shown me that gray isn’t bad, or good either, but simply there, and therefore—when the light catches it just right and you’re paying attention—beautiful.

 

#  #  #

spiritual director, nonbinary person, and quasi-hermit, John Backman writes about ancient spirituality and the unexpected ways it collides with postmodern life. This includes a book (Why Can’t We Talk? Christian Wisdom on Dialogue as a Habit of the Heart) and personal essays in Catapult, Tiferet Journal, Amethyst ReviewEvolve, Sufi Journal, and Belmont Story Reviewamong other places. John was recently named a creative nonfiction finalist in the Wild Atlantic Writing Awards.

Prayer Underneath an Elm Tree in Late Afternoon – a poem by Laura Stringfellow

Prayer Underneath an Elm Tree in Late Afternoon
 
 
At the water's edge, I count 
Cypress knees, their knobby 
arthritic bones jutting from the ground 
like ancient stalactites.
 
Under the wind, the water's surface 
looks scaled, etched, much like 
the medieval scalloped roofs 
of the stave church at Borgund. 
 
I recall last Sunday's Eucharist. On Easter, 
through the sterility of bandwidth, 
I waded through the General Confession,
Prayers of the People, and lamented 
 
an absent sacrament. The night before,
I had politely declined the priest's offer 
to collect the consecrated wafer 
for Sunday's Eucharist, choosing to 
 
keep a safe distance instead. 
Today's prayer is uncommon and wordless 
but no less weighted with meaning. 
The winds heave their intermittent sighs, 
 
and the birds blooming in the trees 
are incessant in their song. 
I slough the burden of the last months
like heavy skin, the scales 
 
collapsing in unison at my feet.
I step out and lean against the fractured elm, 
in the knowledge that the limbs above me
shall share their own unspoken grace.
 

Laura Stringfellow writes both verse and prose poetry, holds an MFA in Creative Writing, Poetry, and hails from the muggy strangelands of the Southern U.S. Her work has appeared in various literary journals and magazines, including Right Hand Pointing, Clementine Unbound, Déraciné, Neologism Poetry Journal, Coffin Bell: a journal of dark literature, Ephemeral Elegies, and The Lake. Read more of her work at laurastringfellow.com.

How to Color a Mandala – a poem by Sara Letourneau

How to Color a Mandala

Whoever said
that coloring is only for children?
When you open the book to the next empty mandala,
you may think that you’re looking at
a ring of exquisite geometry, or that you must
pick precisely the right colored pencil to start with.
If you’re not careful, the beginning
of the process may paralyze you:
thirty-something colors, just as many areas to fill,
the accuracy with which your final product should resemble
a sun, a flower, any round object that is real.
But in this moment, should is better off erased.
So banish your mind from the table
and let that quiet, confident voice speak instead.
Let it tell you the name of the first color,
the second color, and every one thereafter.
Think of this mandala as your version
of clay on a potter’s wheel, something you can mold
with your hands and instincts.
Let the core be silver or chartreuse.
Let the outermost whorls be vermillion flames
streaked with gold, or ocean waves of navy
capped with turquoise.
Create the rules as you create—
or make none at all—and allow yourself
to stray outside the lines now and then.
Breathe as patiently as the way in which
you move each utensil.
Be as lavender, sienna, or ultramarine as you wish.
Inhale the sacred smell of your paints or crayons,
and know you are illustrating the circle of life,
the most ancient circle of all.
When you’re done, tap the shoulder
of your seven-year-old self and show them
your masterpiece, then tell your adult friends
that whoever said that coloring is only for children
should try it for themselves.

.

Sara Letourneau is a poet, freelance book editor, and writing coach. Her poems are forthcoming in or have appeared in Constellations, Mass Poetry’s Poem of the Moment, Boston Small Press and Poetry Scene, The Aurorean, and Soul-Lit, among others. You can learn more about working with Sara at https://heartofthestoryeditorial.com/ and read more of her poetry at https://saraletourneauwriter.com.

Blessing – a poem by John Muro

 
Blessing
 
 
Gold-staggering flesh exposed
Beneath the tattered bark
Of a misshapen birch;
Little else the woodland offers;
Snow and shadow closing-
In amid the bleeding dark,
And this cold, futile search
For greener things falters
And prospects become less sure. 
 
Good to feel the explosions,
Though, of soft-knuckled flakes,
Of wind lifting in search
Of thick-needled conifers –
Setting in circular motion
Feathered branches caked
With ice; then, the crashing
Torrent, a prayer answered
Incense of resin rising from altar.
 
 
 

A life-long resident of Connecticut, John Muro is a graduate of Trinity College. He has also earned advanced degrees from Wesleyan University and the University of Connecticut. His professional career has been dedicated to environmental stewardship and conservation, and he has held several executive and volunteer positions in those fields. Over the past year, John has had the good fortune to dedicate more time to his life-long passion for poetry. His first volume of poems, In the Lilac Hour, was published by Antrim House in October of 2020 and is available on Amazon. His work has also recently appeared or will soon appear in Amethyst ReviewFirst Literary Review-East, Plum Tree Tavern, Freshwater and elsewhere.