Friday, May 29, 2026

The elm tree by John Doriot

Ran Hua


The elm tree

The elm tree’s limbs droop 

in curved and uneven clumps. 

I see the tree and the branches

from my bay window. 

The tree is healthy, grass green 

leaves hanging from strong tan 

and chocolate brown limbs 

with peeling gray rectangles

of bark, reflecting life 

and death simultaneously. 

The limbs appear burdened. 

Heat has been excessive, but

several days of rain have brought 

relief. I think the burden I 

perceive resides within me. 

Nature, in the form of this 

elm tree is there to remind 

me of the presence of God. 

As is the unwavering desire of my

dog to be with me at all times, 

especially when I am sad, leaving me

if I swear at the world, only to 

check back on me minutes later

to make sure I am okay. 

I struggle with sad days when

dreams are a struggle or 

health prevents me from 

finding some semblance of 

normal. Anger consumes 

me before the rational mind 

tells me to stop, to open my eyes. 

Plans not seen do not mean plans not made.

Yet, there are days, I wonder if I am 

strong enough to endure the journey.

And then my dog comes to me, wags her tail,

letting me know she is there. Will always

be there. Others say the same thing in silence

or with acts of kindness.

This time, the pendulous nature of a healthy elm tree

prompted me to open my eyes. I believe nature 

whispers to God daily, and together they plan simple

exhibits of life, reminding those with a desire to sleep,  to awaken.  © John Doriot



John Doriot 

John Doriot is an award-winning author and poet. He has written 17 books and received 7 Georgia Independent Author of the Year Awards from 2022 to 2025. Three of those awards were for collections of poetry. 

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Thursday, May 28, 2026

The Lagoon by Penny Nolte

 

ElĂ­as Manuel

The Lagoon

My first memory of the place is being taught to swim. Puddling around with my little brothers, close to shore, wearing life jackets while dragging ourselves along. Finding handholds in the rocky bottom. 

The swimming lesson involved my life jacket being removed and then my being set down a little further out in the water. I sank like a stone. Firm hands reached in and pulled me up. “Paddle,” suggested Dad, “Doggie paddle,” and he demonstrated. Still sputtering from the dunking, I tried and sank again. “Faster!” Dad said, making a big show of whirring his cupped hands through the water. It looked silly, but it worked. Soon, I was paddling circles around my brothers, still bottom crawlers in life jackets.

Because two docks protected the lagoon, the water between them froze smooth in winter. We would all troop down single file through the snow, carrying a shovel for Dad, who would use it to clear off the lake. Then we’d strap two-bladed skates on over too-big winter boots and wobble around. 

Our parents had real ice skates that laced up past their ankles, and Dad skated beautifully, swinging his arms from side to side. Sometimes humming a tune. Often, we’d “dance” with him by standing on his skates to get spun around in circles until we were too dizzy to stand. Other times, we rode on his back. I don’t remember skating with Mom, although she could because there are pictures. 

Afterwards, we all drank from a shared thermos. And hot cocoa never tasted so good.


First publication credit: Soul Poetry, Prose and Arts Magazine


©Penny Nolte



Penny Nolte

Penny Nolte creates gentle narratives of family and place. After a long pause from storytelling, her newest work is found in The Avalon Literary ReviewThe Writer's JournalThe Macrame Literary Journaland Dorothy Parker’s Ashes, among others. Originally from upstate New York, with a fortifying decade in Colorado, Penny now calls the Green Mountains of Vermont home.





Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Through the Rearview Mirror by Nancy Machlis Rechtman

 

Jonathan Borba


Through the Rearview Mirror

My childhood home

Appeared in the rearview mirror

As I watched the movers start to pull away

With the last remnants of my parents

And my childhood

And I, along with the house, was empty.


I had gone down to the basement one last time

And reluctantly said my goodbyes to 

my books and record albums,

And my dolls and my toys that I had planned to give to my children

Until the day I realized that no children that would be coming.


My wedding dress had been stuffed into a box

In the far corner where the washer used to be

My dress hadn’t exactly been cherished after the divorce

But yet it, too, had remained,

A sad reminder that hope can fade without a whole lot of fanfare,

As easily as a once-beautiful silk dress.


I had discovered my compass on a shelf from my 4-H days

And I wondered why it hadn’t guided me away

From all the wrong choices I had made.


I continued to watch the truck through the mirror

Appearing to be shrinking as it bumped its way down the road

 and then disappeared through the underpass

To destinations unknown

Carrying my memories and the fragments of my life.


I turned on the engine

And headed away from the truck

Away from the underpass

Away from all that had once been my life.

© 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.

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

A Thousand Versions by Chris Biscuiti

 

NISHIT DEY


A Thousand Versions


Being a caregiver

has carved a thousand versions of me—

the steady one, the tired one,

and 998 more

sculpted by my calloused hands.


Writing is the place

I gather them all,

stacking their shadows and bruises

until I recognize the outline

of who I am beneath their weight.


When I put a day, a week, a year into words,

I see strength I didn’t know I spent,

I feel muscles I didn’t know I strained,

a resilience built quietly in the background 

of every waking moment.


I see the softness, too—

the part of me that refuses to die out,

the flicker that outlives the exhaustion.


His persistent smile keeps me anchored

when the current tests my footing.


I sail toward the sound of his belly laugh,

and even the waves surrender

to his unseen power,

washing me ashore.


A thousand versions of me carved,

bound by one common thread—

he was born to be my miracle,

the singular piece

they all can’t live without.

© 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 

Monday, May 25, 2026

Driving by LeeAnn Pickrell

Alexander Mass


Driving

Acacia frames both sides 

of the road into Santa Cruz

Head back, I let myself drift

a leaf to the ground

in this sacrament of the 

present moment his hand

finds mine


© LeeAnn Pickrell



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LeeAnn Pickrell

LeeAnn Pickrell’s debut collection is Gathering the Pieces of Days from Unsolicited Press. Her chapbook Punctuated was published in 2024 by Bottlecap Press, and her book Tsunami is forthcoming in 2026, also from Unsolicited Press. She lives in Richmond, California. See more at www.leeannpickrell.com.


Sunday, May 24, 2026

the words are hidden by Melissa Lemay

 

Mirac Sendil


the words are hidden


in the remnants of grease on

the frying pan hands toil to scrub

clean ; through the sunless day


those masterpieces: clouds

cognizant of their thick splotches

of paste , or it cognizant of them


beseeched by the pouring out

of a heart run through with the

bone brittleness of black love


sung onto concrete dried after

it is drenched with rain that has

become soundless in its own


sanctuary


© Melissa Lemay



Melissa Lemay


Melissa Lemay lives in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, with her children, cats, and dog. She writes about God, addiction, trauma, healing, motherhood, and many other things. She enjoys spending time with family, drinking good coffee, and being outdoors. She loves animals. Her poem, “Ephemeral”, was chosen as Poetic Publication of the Year for 2023 at Spillwords Press; she was Author of the Month for July 2024 and Author of the Year for 2024. Find her at melissalemay.wordpress, collaborature.blogspot, and at dVerse Poets Pub




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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Fears and Feelings by Edilson A. Ferreira

Matthias Zomer


Fears and Feelings

There are certain weekends and holidays 

when I feel somewhat insecure. 

I worry if walking ghosts have occupied  

the void of empty streets and closed doors,   

looking at me as an intruder or suspicious 

on their walks. 

I miss hearing the sound of hammers and

hoes, the strident come and go of saw blades,  

the brushing of pens on paper or keyboards  

being typed throwing feelings to the world.   

I love the imprecations of painters and artists

when they can’t find the pure art they look for. 

I love children screaming through the sidewalk,

running endless races only they are capable of. 

I love the noise of people in the streets and alleys,

corners and places, 

as they move to destinies only they are aware of, 

struggling hard to make their lives a story. 

I love hearing someone making something, 

even if it is the buzzing of bees.

First published in the March/April 2018 issue of Indiana Voice Journal. 

© Edilson A. Ferreira


Edilson A. Ferreira

Edilson A. Ferreira, 81, is a Brazilian poet who writes in English rather than Portuguese. He has launched two poetry books, Lonely Sailor and Joie de Vivre, and has published 300 works in various international literary journals. Has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He began writing at the age of 67 after retiring from a bank.


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The elm tree by John Doriot

Ran Hua The elm tree The elm tree’s limbs droop  in curved and uneven clumps.  I see the tree and the branches from my bay window.  The tre...