Monday, March 31, 2025

Drifting Away by Terry Allen

Image | Adria Masi

Drifting Away

they stand at the top of the hill

in each other’s arms

 

under the quarter moon

dimmed by falling snow

 

silhouetted by one

haloed streetlamp

 

winter has been busy

the street is banked and white

 

a gust of wind picks up

and fresh flakes swirl about them

 

years pass

the couple marries

 

memories fade
he visits her now

 

in a home that’s not theirs

where her mind sometimes drifts

 

to a winter night 

when the Lady of Time

 

brought the purest

white flying carpet 

 

that took them for a ride

into their prosaic lives

© Terry Allen

Terry Allen

Terry Allen is an Emeritus Professor of Theatre Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, where he taught acting, directing and playwriting. He is the author of five poetry collections: Monsters in the Rain, Art Work, Waiting on the Last Train, Rubber Time, and Preserving the Past for the Present.

Friday, March 28, 2025

You Know, You Should Keep This Untitled by Kushal Poddar

 

Image | Alan Cabello

You Know, You Should Keep This Untitled 

The fallen leaves draw a conclusion 
I hesitate to reach. A growing sapling amidst 
the bricks does.
Some conclusions I cannot reach 
are in the whistling of the crazy nomad 
who has coiled his addicted sleep 
on the concrete below our building. 
Sometimes I comprehend, see the clouds 
in the mirror and the shine in my eyes once they rain.

© Kushal Poddar



Kushal Poddar 

Kushal Poddar has authored ten books, the latest being A White Can For The Blind Lane, and his works have been translated into twelve languages. He is a co-editor for Outlook Magazine and the editor of Words Surfacing. He does illustrations and sketches for various magazines.




Thursday, March 27, 2025

Snowflake in a Blizzard by Todd Matson


Image | Cottonbro Studios


Snowflake in a Blizzard


You feel like

nothing more than

snowflake in a blizzard?

When strangers like snowflakes

accumulate, lose their individuality in icy

wintry crowds, shopping sprees become blizzards

of greed, faceless consumers flurry into swirling mobs to form

inhumane snowdrifts blocking the flow of foot traffic

and you have been left to face hypothermia

all alone as if stranded on a glacier

in a frigid arctic wasteland;

when tiny ice cycles hang

from your eyelashes, tears freeze

on your face like miniature waterfalls and

your breath crystalizes and vanishes as if it never

was, and your skin flirts with frostbite as pain signals spin

their wheels on ice and nerves become numb and

you long to feel anything, even pain, to

remind you that you are still alive;

remember to look within

where your heart still beats and

your blood still flows at 37 degrees Celsius

through every organ system of your body, where your

brain still crackles at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit with the chemical

and electrical ingredients of life, where every cell of your body makes you

as unique as a snowflake and yet infinitely more valuable, and

where your entire inner being testifies that you were born

of fire from an exploding star that melted everything

in its path to reach this place where once

upon a time, you were born the child

of a star, and beyond happily

ever after, you will ever

be seen, known,

and loved.

 

© Todd Matson



Todd Matson

Todd Matson is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist in North Carolina, United States.  His poetry has been published in Salvation South, Agape Review, San Antonio Review, The Brussels Review, and featured in Poetry for Mental Health.  He has also written lyrics for songs recorded by several contemporary Christian music artists.



Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Letter to autumn by Mykyta Ryzhykh

 

Image | Ylanite Koppens

Letter to autumn

You wrote me a letter from the past,
As if from a distant land.
Each word a fragment of time,
Each paragraph a bridge to the unknown.

I read your lines,
And each word sounds familiar.
As if you were sitting beside me,
Not in a far-off world I do not know.

But the letter you sent,
Like a stone dropped in a quiet river,
Sends ripples through my memories,
And I find you where you were not.

first publication in The Wise Owl

© Mykyta Ryzhykh


Mykyta Ryzhykh

Mykyta Ryzhykh, an author from Ukraine, now lives in Tromsø, Norway. He was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2023 and 2024. He’s published in many literary magazines Ñ–n Ukrainian and English: Tipton Poetry Journal, Stone Poetry Journal, Neologism Poetry Journal, Shot Glass Journal, QLRS, The Crank, Chronogram, The Antonym, Monterey Poetry Review, Five Fleas Itchy Poetry and many others.

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

It Doesn’t Matter by William Cass

 

Image | Ricardo Varela

It Doesn’t Matter


It was just after 2am when Jan, the ICU charge nurse, called Carl.  The phone rang twice before it was answered by a sleepy voice.

“Sorry to wake you at this crazy hour,” Jan said, “but we have another one for you, if you’re up to it.”

Carl rose in bed and said, “Of course.”

“An elderly man just off a vent.  Don’t think he’ll last until morning.”

“I’ll be right there.”

They hung up.  Rosa, a young nurse charting at the next computer, had only been on the unit for a week.  She’d watched the exchange and asked, “What’s that all about?”

Jan paused a moment before she said, “Carl Gilbert.  Retired as an elementary school teacher a couple years ago.  Started volunteering here at the hospital afterwards and asked to sit with patients who were nearing death and had no one with them.  Or had next of kin we were unsuccessful reaching or who they’d been estranged from.  So that the patient wouldn’t be alone at the end.”

Rosa frowned.  “What’s he do with them?”

Jan gave a small shrug.  “Talks to them.  Holds their hands.”

“Prays?”

“No, nothing religious.”

Rosa shook her head and said, “Wow.”

“Yeah.”

Rosa gestured with her chin across the counter from their work station.  “Peter?  The old guy in 2C?”

Jan nodded.  Theirs was a small regional hospital with only twelve rooms on the unit.  The respiratory therapist had just left Room 2C where they could both see a large man in his eighties lying propped up in bed on his back.  His eyes were closed, the rise and fall of his chest just visible.

        When Carl had kissed his wife’s forehead and said goodbye, she’d only mumbled something unintelligible before falling asleep again.  It took him less than ten minutes to reach the hospital.  He entered through the emergency room, showed his volunteer badge to the receptionist, and was buzzed in.  He passed the ER bays, pushed through the double doors at the far end, and turned left down the short hallway into the cramped ICU.

Jan and Rosa looked up as he came beside their counter.  He and Jan exchanged sad smiles.  Rosa regarded him silently.  He was tall and slender with short, salt-and-pepper hair and was dressed in corduroy trousers with a cardigan sweater over a plaid shirt.  His rimless glasses covered eyes that were gentle and kind.

Jan pointed to the dying man’s room and said, “His name is Peter.  Pneumonia, plus heart and renal failure.”

Carl looked from the room back to Jan.  “Nobody at all has been with him?”

Jan shook her head.  “There’s a son across the state we’ve tried calling several times a day, but have only been able to leave messages.  None have been returned.”

“Has he been conscious?”

“Not since yesterday.”

“All right,” Carl pursed his lips and nodded.  “Thanks.”

He went into the tiny room and pulled a plastic chair to the bedside.  He studied the numbers on the sat monitor hooked to Peter’s probes, the drip from the morphine bag, then the old man’s wide face.  He hoped to see something like peace there – sometimes he did – but Peter’s held a sort of scowl.

Carl sat down and took his hand.  He said, “Peter, I’m Carl.  I’m just here to be with you.”  He gave the hand a slight squeeze.  “If you can hear me, Peter, squeeze back.”

There was no response.

“Okay, Peter.  We’ll just be together here, then.  Just two old guys being together.  Two old guys who’ve lived good, full lives.  Two old guys with lots to be thankful for.”

At the nurses’ station, Rosa watched and asked, “So he comes anytime day or night?”

“Just about,” Jan said.

Rosa shook her head again, then went off to check on one of her patients.  

Over the next hour, Carl alternated between sitting silently with Peter, softly stroking the old man’s thumb with his own, and talking quietly to him.  He told him that everything was all right, just as it should be.  He told him a little about his own life and a couple of his fondest memories, chuckling when he did. He asked Peter about his own favorite memories and suggested he think about those.  During that time, Peter’s nurse came in twice to check his vital signs, and the respiratory therapist came once to suction his mouth.  Peter’s breathing grew gradually slower and shallowerand the beeps from the sat monitor grew further apart.

A little before 4 am, a heavyset man perhaps a decade younger than Carl came into the ICU and made his way tentatively up to Jan.

My father is Peter Navarro,” he told her.  “I got your phone messages.”

Jan felt her eyes widen.  She pointed.  “He’s in there with one of our volunteers.  I’m afraid it won’t be long.”

A confused pain filled his face.  

When he made his hesitant entrance into the room, Carlimmediately saw the resemblance.  He said, “You’re Peter’s son.”

“Yes, I’m John.” 

His eyes went to his father, and Carl saw his jaw set.  Carlstood, gestured to the chair, and said, “Please, sit.  I’ll get out of your way.”

“No,” John blurted.  “Stay.”  He shook his head.  “I don’t know how to do this.  We haven’t been close.  In fact, I haven’t seen him in over thirty years.  We have a…troubled past.”

        Carl nodded several times, then said, “Doesn’t matter.  You’re here now.”  He turned the chair towards John. “Go ahead.  Sit.”

Carl stepped away, and John lowered his girth onto the chair.  He looked from his father to Carl and said, “What now?”

“Take his hand.”

Slowly, John wrapped his father’s hand in both of his own.  His lips began trembling.

Carl said, “Talk to him.”

“Can he hear me?”

“Maybe.”

The big man blew out a breath.  “Dad,” he whispered.  “Papa…”

It was warm in the room, close.  The gaps between beeps on the sat monitor lengthened further still.  Thewere barely audible.

© William Cass


William Cass

William Cass has had over 350 short stories appear in literary magazines and anthologies.  A nominee for Best Small Fictions and Best of the Net, he’s also had six Pushcart nominations.  He’s published two short story collections with Wising Up Press and has another scheduled for release early next year.



Monday, March 24, 2025

If I Knew Grief by Sylvia Clare

 

Harvest Moon | Micky Findlay

Grief



If I knew grief
how would I encounter
the stoic inside me? 
Could she still be 
strong, resilient, 
maintain equanimity?


If grief came to me
and begged to be 
allowed into my life
would I melt or crumble
under the weight
of so much?


If grief came after me
chasing me into death,
I might walk unwillingly
or else run ahead, eager 
to see what it might be like.
What can I look forward to?


If I found grief hiding
under a stone, or behind
a tree, I would laugh, hold out 
my hand and say come dance
with me here and now. 
It is only a moment of change.


If I saw grief sitting in church
mourning a loss, I would stay,
share the moment, reflect on
so many losses in my own life. 
‘Find me a peppercorn from a house 
where no one has died’, asked the Buddha.


Grief flowed through me, when you died,
sharp as knives honed in fire. The moment
passed. Like falling autumn leaves, 
we all lose. The space left allows 
something new. If we can let go
and just look up, the sky is still there.


The extract comes from my memoir No Visible Injuries.


© Sylvia Clare


Sylvia Clare

Sylvia Clare came into writing later in life as result of her journey to find out who she was, having struggles with mental health herself for most of her life, and wanting to help others too. She mainly writes memoir and poetry, or essays about mindfulness, mental health and living well. She cares passionately about kindness in the world, developing compassion and caring for the environment. She is a deeply spiritual free thinker and does not adhere to any single religion, but believes everyone should seek to explore their own deeper spiritual natures and find their own truths. She lives with her soulmate and spends much of her time gardening organically, growing her own food and writing. MY books can be found on Amazon here: Amazon.com: Sylvia Clare: books, biography, latest update



 

 

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