Thursday, June 25, 2026

There Once Was a Tree by Nancy Machlis Rechtman

 

Canshotz

There Once Was a Tree

Their story began

Soft and sweet like the velvet blossoms of the cherry tree

That stood in the middle of the park where they met

Kisses as luscious as ruby rivulets 

Were the exotic fruits that consumed them

As gasps of passion

And sighs of contentment

Filled the endless nights

That always promised more.


But soon the sudden chill of autumn

Overtook the air with unexpected force

And the carefree waters where their love had sailed

Uninhibited and free

Soon roiled with ennui

And a new search for the pieces 

Of the puzzle that had been theirs

Tore them apart

As the once-glittering pieces tumbled to the ground

Landing under the now barren branches

Of the tree in the park.

© Nancy Machlis Rechtman


Nancy Machlis Rechtman

Nancy Machlis Rechtman has poetry and stories published in Writing in a Woman’s VoiceminiMAGDiscretionary LoveYoung Ravens, and other publications. Nancy has had poetry, essays, and plays published in various anthologies. She wrote lifestyle stories for a local newspaper and served as the copy editor for another paper.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

What I Kept, An Ode to Empathy by Chris Biscuiti

 

Gabby K - Monstera Production

An Ode to Empathy


I didn’t choose a word

by looking ahead.

I found it

by noticing

what stayed

when everything else

fell away.


It showed up

in hospital lights

and quiet kitchens,

in long afternoons

that asked too much,

in nights where writing

was the only place

my breath could land.


It wasn’t loud.

It didn’t trend.

It didn’t promise growth

or ease.


It asked me

to stay.

To listen

when I wanted answers.

To soften

when the world hardened.

To keep showing up

for a child who taught me

that presence

is its own language.


I wrote through the swings—

the days that lifted,

the days that bent me,

the days that did both

before noon.


I wrote to make room for her—

sweet, earned, earnest, Empathy

for my family,

for myself,

for anyone reading

who needed proof

that care can coexist

with exhaustion,

that love doesn’t disappear

just because it’s heavy.


If there’s anything

worth marking,

it’s this:

I didn’t numb.

I didn’t rush past.

I didn’t turn away.


I stayed curious.

I stayed kind.

I stayed human

on the page.


And her quiet presence—

quixotic as it is—

is what carried me

through the year.


© Chris Biscuiti



Chris Biscuiti

Chris Biscuiti is a poet, caregiver, and Dad to his son Bray Bray. Chris' poem The Believer won the 2025 BREW Poetry Project Community Poem of the Year, and his poem The Hours was published in FLARE Magazine, Issue 4. Connect with Chris on Substack  https://chrisbwrites.substack.com 

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

An Analysis of Peace by Dr. Priyanka Neogi

Alena Orehova

An Analysis of Peace

Your environment is cold.
There is cold in the mind,
As if a sweet breeze is blowing
In the mind.
A tide of happiness in the family,
overflowing happiness,
All-around control and balance.
Little by little,
Still cold.
A society without chaos.
Ease of use.
Unity in the flower of peace.

© Dr. Priyanka Neogi


Dr. Priyanka Neogi

Dr. Priyanka Neogi is from Pundibari, Coochbehar, India. She is an international poet, story writer, editor, motivational speaker, dancer, singer, and artist. She's a member of literacy organizations at the national and international levels. She is also the National Joint Secretary of the Rocket Ball Federation of India; UAP Miss India 2nd Runner-up 2022; Miss Pundibari 2025; Miss West Bengal 2025; a social worker; an International Representative of the Mother Teresa Foundation of India; and the National Director of Miss and Mister Peace India.

Monday, June 22, 2026

Snow Haiku by Joshua St. Claire

ervin.fon Trichev


Snow Haiku

seven crows 

against an altostratus sky 

blue snow 


nightsnow 

I fall 

into deep time 


all morning to travel 

from the stream to the spruce 

snowshimmer


snow arriving at the disappearing mountain 


still 

blue 

the Appalachians in snow 


cyan hills 

the snowwind marks 

our distance  


…a dream of falling snow moon


blank sun 

a black vulture teeters 

over snowworld 


the snowshadow 

of a double-crowned spruce 

limpid sky 


second snow 

three white birds cutting 

across the white pines 


the weight 

of the blue hour’s descent 

snowlight  


© Joshua St. Claire



Joshua St. Claire

Joshua St. Claire is an accountant from a small town in Pennsylvania, working as a financial director for a nonprofit. His haiku and related poetry have been published broadly, including in FrogpondModern HaikuThe Heron’s Nestand Mayfly.


Sunday, June 21, 2026

An Uncertain Season by Mitchel Montagna

Haberdoedas Photography

An Uncertain Season


A storm was pushing from the East.

She tried to soothe my fear.

The normal rap of living ceased.

A thundercloud drew near.


Of all the angels I have known,

she grasped the deepest pain.

Her kindness kissed me to the bone;

her cool eyes kept me sane. 


We crept out in the aftermath.

The sky shone still and blue.

The sunlight cut a golden path;

lush fields were glowing too.


We heard some voices rise and pray,

as we came near a town.

Wind kicked up as we turned their way.

A fog was bearing down. 


Most preachers still call out the blues. 

They know what grief is worth. 

She gave a life I dared not lose

till fury swept the earth.


© Mitchel Montagna


Mitchel Montagne

Mitchel Montagna has worked as a special education teacher, radio journalist, and corporate spokesman. He is married and lives on Florida's West Coast.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Poetry by Jade Kleiner

 

KoolShooters

Waiting at Hyde Park Station


the loud absence of traffic clanking,

the subtle volume of cricket lust,


the train tracks fading into oblivion

and the bugs persisting beneath,


a deplatformed sandwich moldering

with its flock of devout ants,


moths praying to halogen suns

metered all the way down the platform,


and the cold bench merging with my tailbone,

this cardigan vastly insufficient for it all -


my Thunder arrives!


on the other side of the tracks



Unbinding


there was a snap and nothing was true,

the snow became water in snow in water,

I felt the gratitude that kills tomorrow,

the flakes lived forever in that instant.


I no longer needed to trust my eyes,

I was blessed to see.


© Jade Kleiner


Jade Kleiner


Jade Kleiner is a writer from New England. Among other places, her poetry can be found in Trampoline and manywor(I)ds, her haiku in Haikuniverse and Cold Moon Journal, and her fiction in Bright Flash Literary Review. She is transgender and has practiced in the Plum Village tradition since 2020. 


Friday, June 19, 2026

The Last Sentinel by Casey Quinn

 

Chris F

The Last Sentinel

There is one leaf left
on the bare-limbed tree,
coppered, thin,
refusing the fall.

The others let go,
to wind,
to the easy descent.

This one stays
through the empty months,
holding fast
until spring arrives

just to be sure
new life
still knows
the way back.

© Casey Quinn


Casey Quinn is the author of two chapbooks, Snapshots of Life and Prepare to Crash. He writes and publishes work at https://cqwriting.com

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There Once Was a Tree by Nancy Machlis Rechtman

  Canshotz There Once Was a Tree Their story began Soft and sweet like the velvet blossoms of the cherry tree That stood in the middle of t...