Author: nicoled

Vanity

by MonaLisa Ortiz-Rosa 

Imposters everywhere. Vanity all vanity, posing as props, as art.
“useless” my father would call me, not
Like my sisters who could clean and mop, or
My brother who could fix a car- even if it was just
A model, a toy -still, all of this contributed somehow to life’s
Invitation to put up your dukes, Engage.
I sat back and read…If I wasn’t reading I was mulling,
In reverie, In the act of noticing
So useless made sense. It was evidence
My father recognized art, not for outcome
But for it’s goodwill, it’s goodness
For the love of the thing -what art aroused
How it compelled virtue and beauty to assert itself
In the midst of struggle and deadlines and poverty
We all mattered, took form, added worth
In our individual ways in a family of imposters and clowns
We all pretended, assumed places in his preposterous mansion
And in mother’s deep depression.

Taking Flight

by Michele Shapiro

After breakfast, I go to the window as I often do. There’s usually one robin or another who builds her nest on the corner of the rooftop just above our apartment. Today, for some reason, the nest is empty. I know it’s silly, but I feel the urge to open up the window, pushing the stubborn frame until my arms tremble under its weight.

Norman is in his study watching television. That’s pretty much where you can find him Monday to Friday from after breakfast until bedtime. Oh, he had big plans for retirement—trips to Italy to sip Limoncello by the Parthenon, walks around the lake, feted by swans, concerts and dances and outdoor picnics in the park. But here we are, he with a pipe perched on his bottom lip—the same that’s already cost us thousands in dental bills—and me with a pair of wings that reach from one side of the bedroom to the other when fully outstretched, a yellow beak, and three crooked talons where my toes were only yesterday. No more pedicures needed, I guess. Norman will like that. He thinks I spend far too much money on frivolous pleasures.

Should I do it? I see the empty nest, made of twigs and branches from the trees in front of our prewar building. I know it’s silly. I know there isn’t room. And while I don’t know what kind of bird I’ll end up when my transformation is complete, I don’t think it’s a robin. Well, here goes. I duck down so as not to bump my head and perch myself on the window ledge. Amazing! I couldn’t even hold the tree pose in my yoga class! If my instructor could only see me now. I spread my wings until I feel the tips press lightly against the window frame and then I count to myself “3-2-1” and, before I know it, I’m on the roof. The nest collapses beneath my weight. “I’ll have to build my own,” I think. “Bigger, stronger, better. Isn’t that the American way?” I laugh silently, thinking of Norman who insists on buying only American-made products. Perhaps if I become an eagle, he’ll respect me more. Wouldn’t that be something?

“Gertie!” I hear Norman calling me from the armchair in his study. I want to respond, but I’m afraid. If she sees me on the roof, he surely won’t understand. But he hasn’t noticed the wings, the beak, or even the talons. So maybe he won’t notice I’m responding from outside the apartment.

“Give me a minute, Norman, I’m busy,” I say.

“Doing what?” he asks, sounding surprised. As if I have nothing to do once I’ve put our breakfast dishes in the washer and swept the crumbs from the table. I have plenty to do, thank you. I have a nest to build! There won’t be any eaglet eggs for me to sit on, I’m afraid. That ship has sailed. But once a mother, always a mother. Or almost a mother. The hole in my stomach widens as I think about the daughter I lost so long ago that I’ve forgotten the year and how she danced for months in my swollen belly. I think she would enjoy me enveloping her with my thick, grey feathers. Maybe I could hold her by the beak and we could fly together—without a passport or a seat that barely reclines because Norman’s too cheap to spring for business class, even on our 40th wedding anniversary trip to Southeast Asia. Twenty-one hours we spent, seated upright, using each other as a pillow. Arriving with inflamed joints and creaky necks. We spent the first two days in a dark hotel room, sleeping away the plans we’d made to explore the golden temples and cherry blossoms.

I take the too-small nest under my wing and carry it to the side of the building and watch as it catapults downward, in gravity’s spell. Perhaps it will land on the head of a small boy who’ll think he’s Davy Crockett. Or maybe it will crown the head of a businessman. And he’s in such a rush, he won’t even notice that the woven twigs are shielding his bald spot. A miracle, a true miracle. Now, I need to start building my nest. And I must get started before lunchtime when Norman will expect his tuna on rye with light Miracle Whip and one slice of tomato.

We’re all such creatures of habit, aren’t we? I was, too, until today. But now I feel lighter, more focused. I have a purpose—to build a home big enough for one, me. Unless I can convince Norman to move up here with me. But I doubt that will ever happen.

My Life in Jeans

by Michele Klausner

In the olden days we called them dungarees. They cost about five bucks and we wouldn’t be caught dead in them. Girls were required to wear skirts all through my school years even up to and including the first orientation week of college way back in 1965. Dungarees were heavy, in those days, and hard, not very comfortable; think Levi Strauss, Lee or Wranglers. But then, right around the same time, dungarees suddenly became “jeans,” and I remember wearing them all the time.

As a bohemian beatnik art major, (and later wanna-be hippie,) throughout my college years and beyond, jeans were my uniform. They had cuffs back in the day or they didn’t, (and now they do again, or they don’t.) We sat on our bunk beds and frayed the bottoms, or we didn’t, and then, as high fashion always has to evolve they became bell bottoms or flares “Bells” we, oh so trendy, fashion-forward (not) kids called them. My,(later to become, father-in-law hated them. I have no idea why; he didn’t care for our music much either, and when they looked worn we got rid of them and bought new ones. By then then they were straight-legged, hip huggers, some even embellished and embroidered. Then along came Calvin Klein, Jordache and Gloria Vanderbilt.

I’ve been wearing jeans ever since. Still love them today, although I’m not sure they are the best fashion find for a 70-something year old grandmother, even one with occasionally blue hair. The cuffs are back. “Boyfriend jeans” they’re now called; hip-huggers or egads, Mom Jeans. Skinny jeans are in, jeggings if you want them even tighter than that. I have them all. And in every shade of denim: acid wash, rinse-wash, mid-wash, light wash, bleached, stone-wash, dark-wash, basic black, summer natural , winter white and ombre. Oh, and regarding the fray, you can buy them pre-frayed, torn, snagged, even already worn at the knee. But today you pay extra for those fashionable defects. A pair of 7 for all Mankind jeans, complete with “distress” will set you back $225. Gucci buckled hi-rise (whatever that means) skinny jeans only $3,200. I don’t own them; I haven’t even seen them. They popped up in a google search. I don’t plan on buying them but hey, two-day delivery and shipping is free. Wait, what’s this? An ad for yoga pants …

Black Oak (& other poems)

by Michele Gilliam

Black oak gathers en masse
Its overcast powerful

I have surrendered to silence
Leaves became moors,
Float like feathers
Until their final demise.

Together we idle
With the surrounding life
And the coarseness of the ground
Prickles. Hints of blood
Secrete my skin

Pain.
I still have life.

 

Exhaust(ed)

breath consumes
then emits
air that tints in its release
the smoke evaporating like
cloud smoke in the air
hollow like the insides of
rusted pipes
I smell the angst of the City
We both exhale.

 

Daddy, Thank You, Always

at first
too fragile
your prayers sustained
my lay still
enveloped in hands
that followed
the tremor
of the tambourines
ringing the glory of
my arrival

then my survival,
now precarious

my heart pierced
pulsating with
too rapid staccato

the miracle now met
with pity
orchestrated by
the wary of chances
and statistics
and spit up
as constant as your worry
unsatiated, I lay

languished
I continued to wilt
you instead confronted
the imminent
exposed promise
eyes illuminated, wandering
as the rest of me idled

your hands now stiffened
too coarse from
tobacco-picking
and men’s work
now prepared to cradle an existence
too delicate
shielding the prognosis
life as a challenge
one that
persists

 

Ordinary Angels (& other poems)

by Michael Cunningham

“Honey, I wet myself.”

Her son hears the words
and goes to the bedroom.

There are medicine bottles
on brown the night stand.

Red cylinder plastic, some standing
others lying open mouthed.

The smell is what hits him first
a wall of sour stink. But he grabs

his mother’s waist

helps her out of her pants
changes her.

He was her baby, now she is his.

He is no superman. No hero.
Won’t make the evening news.

He is an ordinary angel.

Middle aged, a bad back, bald,
a beer gut, with bills to pay.

He is ordinary. The guy on the subway
you see but never talk to.

He is you and me.

All ordinary angels.

 

Sandra: Jamaica Station

Sandra lay on the subway floor. The needle mark still visible. Her pants slightly down, exposing her panties, which were covered in muck.

She looked at the ceiling. Eyes wide. I wish I knew, she thought.
Sandra gazed down at her arm. Her veins like broken down roads on her brown skin.

“I graduated from Yale.” she said to no one. It came out like a whisper in the empty subway station.

“Please may this be the one.” She said, “Let this be the one that kills me.”

Tears began to stream down her face. Tiny waterfalls over her broken lips.

In the Dark (& other stories)

by Meryl Branch-McTiernan

After therapy, I walk into the bathroom of the Carl Jung Institute. It is completely dark. Darker than death itself, I imagine. Instead of touching the wall and reaching for a light switch, I find my way into a stall and sit on the toilet. Without the distraction of images, I can hear my thoughts more clearly, my thoughts about our session, about how my therapist doesn’t understand me. She is always asking me to tell her what I see. What images come to mind? I tell her I don’t think in images. I think in words. She asks me what I say to myself when I have these feelings. I tell her I don’t talk to myself. Thoughts flow through my mind, like waves crashing against the sand, picking up particles, shells, beach towels, and scraps of bread that the seagulls didn’t get to, and spit them back wetter, in a slightly altered arrangement. Tides go in and out.

I think about telling her I quit. I’m so good at quitting therapy, so much better than I am at getting out of any other unhealthy relationships. I imagine my dream therapist, someone who can help me see clearly the way the characters in Woody Allen movies do—a real analyst, oh how I want to be analyzed. I want someone to take the blinders off, but nobody can.

I am done peeing, and reach for the wall to find the toilet paper, and feel only the peeling paint. What a stupid idea this was, peeing in the dark. I worry that one of the Jungian analysts will walk into the bathroom, and turn on the light, and see that there is a lunatic who has decided to pee in the dark. And she will internally analyze me, but she won’t tell me what she’s come up with, because I’m not hers, her patient, her client, or whatever the proper term is these days. I dream that there is a person who can tell me something new, something I don’t know about myself. Why do I pee in the dark sometimes? What childhood wound am I trying to heal? What archetype am I playing out through this act of choosing to remain in the dark while I pretend to be looking for the light.

I decide to drip dry. Nobody will know. It’s my little secret. I flush the toilet and walk out of the stall. My eyes have begun to adjust. Right next to the door, there is a light switch. I turn it on and watch myself washing my hands, feel the heat of the water, believe in the power of the soap to make me clean. A printed sign next to the light switch instructs me to turn off the light when not in use. I defy the sign’s orders, and leave the light on. Nobody else needs to pee in the dark.

 

And The Other Hand Was…

Alanis Morisette had one hand in her pocket and the other hand was giving a high five. How novel giving high fives will feel. It always seemed like an annoying gesture. Last Spring, I went out to dinner with an old acquaintance from high school. Throughout the entire meal, she reached across the table, over the chips and salsa, and gave me high fives whenever we said something she agreed with. Afterwards, I didn’t know if I could see her again. Too many high fives. But now, I appreciate her gesture. I see her picture on my screens, wearing a mask, and wonder if she misses that physical intimacy, that social converging. Hands touching hands. Touching me. Touching you.

Alanis Morisette had one hand in her pocket and the other hand was flicking a cigarette. I’ve never had a cigarette. Not even once. I am orally fixated and knew I would instantly become an addict if I tried one. Every man I’ve ever loved was a smoker. In those last days in mid-March, when the city was still alive, however low its heart rate, I saw more people smoking than I’d see in years and I absolutely loved it. I walked around Chinatown and saw half the population wearing masks and the other half smoking. Yesterday, I passed a man walking down Great Neck Road with a cigarette in his mouth instead of a mask and I wanted to kiss him.

Alanis Morisette had one hand in her pocket and the other hand was giving a peace sign. We are at war, they say. Does that make Trump a wartime president? We are fighting a microbe, an enemy so much smaller than a pencil dot. We can’t see the enemy, but we can see each other. I have never felt such sorrow as when people jump off the sidewalk to avoid me as I approach. They are just following orders. Six feet of social distancing. Six feet that remind me that I am completely alone in this war. I have no team. No army. I am just an enemy walking amongst my neighbors, who are all enemies of each other. And I’m not even supposed to be walking.

Alanis Morisette had one hand in her pocket and the other hand was playing a piano. I used to play the piano, from second through fifth grade. I never took it seriously. It was something my mother wanted me to do because my grandfather was a musician. I took lessons, but didn’t want to practice. Instead, I pretended I was making up songs. Banging on the keyboard until my parents left the room. Eventually, my teacher, the serious Romanian pianist, with an ego even bigger than her teased hair, told my parents she didn’t want to work with me anymore. I never touched a piano again. Maybe when I get out I will.

Alanis Morisette had one hand in her pocket and the other hand was hailing a taxi cab. My last cab ride was on Friday the thirteenth. It wasn’t really a cab, it was a Lyft Line. It pulled up in front of my building on Canal Street. I saw that the backseat was already full. I would have to sit up front with the driver. As soon as I sat down, I started coughing. I thought about getting out. But I was already late to meet my date, a smoker, who I’d met in New Jersey the week before. We had a couple drinks at Fraunces Tavern, the oldest bar in New York City. We hugged goodbye, because we still could. And I decided to walk home.

Breath

by M. Kaizu

M. Kaizu

Dreams must be alive
Like a caress
Force is being
Being is force
Truth is what I dream of
Embodying
If I just let myself be
Caress is the breath, the wind,
Petals in the sky
Scattered on the ground
The storm, elements, stars
Is truth the seeing of things?
In the kitchen I long for your food
The flavor of cumin
The aroma of jasmine, the yellow of turmeric
In the kitchen was magic
Flavorful, vibrant spices in the window
In the absence of a caress
Numerous lost potencies,
Nurturing, loving kindness
Everyday
I want to be grateful
Life’s fullness,
Heartiness, abundance
Duality of things
Interacting, dynamic, zoetic
Reality like this dish
Cumin tastes like shiso
Aromatic green and herbs
What wakes me
On a day like today
What does absence mean?
Is it lack of nourishment?
Caring concern?
The act of finding them?
What are good works?
Good fruits?
Can I grow and expand?

The Red Muse (& other poems)

by Mary Arda

Images flow
from memory
to fingertip
Enveloped in song
they become
a narrative

I am transported
Carried away
by you
to the stories
of your past
My present

Red lipstick
Crimson half moon nails
Ebony hair shines with the moon
Almond eyes
deep and transparent
My illusion

At 9 o’clock
cannon shots
fill the bay and
conceal the
cries of death
in the night

Royal Palm trees
with their lullaby
gift you
with dreams
Images
of a future
that lives in the past

The drums beat
for me to dance
The waves crash to wash me clean
The muse’s voice
calls me home

 

Home

Fly across the ocean
Where the deep blue sea
meets transparent aqua-colored waters
When you see it glimmer
Like a million diamonds in the sun
You’ve almost arrived

When you land
you will be greeted by a family of Royal Palm trees
You’ll hear them before you see them
Their fronds will play for you
swaying to the beat of Caribbean breezes
They will line paths
to offer you direction

You’ll come across a long road
lined by a sea wall
Stop and visit
many times
along the way
The peanut vendor will sing for you
The sound of the bata and the conga
will bekcon you to move

Stop and say hello
To the me that’s present
in the children that dive off the wall with expertise
The lovers that embrace
intoxicated by the scent of the ocean
The dancers that take you back to Africa

Follow the sun as it sets
Let it take you down cobblestone streets
To the cool darkness of the forts
The foot of the castle
Cross its moat
Meet Spain

Traverse the streets that carry the
scars of the trolly from yesteryear
Stop and cool off under the shelter
of expansive porches that sit
behind arches of buildings
They wait
for the sound of your footsteps
your voice
your laughter

The barber will point you in my direction
Walk towards the park
You’ll see it
The red Flamboyants and purple Jacarandas
in bloom
let you know you are near

See the wrought iron fence
The terracotta tiles
Smell the cafecito
Hear the laughter
Don’t knock
come in
We’ve been waiting for you

 

The Children

They didn’t tell the children
The pain was too deep
The loss was too great
The circumstances too harsh for developing minds

They didn’t tell the children
For them, they swallowed the torment
Each of them taking in huge gulps of tragedy
Consuming dread like morsels of lead fishing weights
Sinking to the bottom of their souls

They didn’t have to tell the children
They heard it
in hidden whispers and silent sobs
that came in waves that emanated from broken hearts
They felt it in the absence and not the lies

They didn’t need to tell the children
The children communed with it at night when their souls wandered
They saw the shadows and heard the voices
They bonded with it at night when no one was around
When they told each other they knew

They didn’t save the children
The children saved them

Visions

by Mark-Anthony Hudson

As I lay down in my bed
The confusion in my heart and pain in my head
begin to mix and spread
hope I’m strong enough to overcome
Being human doesn’t feel that fun
when it seems like I’m the only one
that’s tired of pretending
like I know the meaning and ending

of the lines in life’s movie

Quarantine (& other poems)

by Marina Bonanno

Quarantine. Quarrel. Quarter.
Dividing my time,
Sifting through sentiments,
Peering into prisms that obfuscate and confuse.

If we were together now, of what might we quarrel?
Would I love you unselfishly?
Praise your predilections?
Nourish every need?
Minimize mine?

Or would I quarrel with you mercilessly,
Meting out misery,
A spiteful shrew needling,
Internal rage reduced to rancor.
Nursing a salty loneliness of bitter, brittle brine.

I realize time with you was always quarantined.
Quartered into portions of too few rations to sustain me.
Quarrels that were avoided until we disappeared.

 

I Come To You As Moonlight

I seek you through space over enigmatic night.
I touch your cocoa skin, imprinting my longing for you, lest you forget me.
I shall not slumber to gaze upon you for eternity.

Your eyelids taste of almonds, your lashes, satin caresses.
Permit me to devour, cover you in chocolate kisses, paint you with my tongue.
You are my oxygen. Our breath, hotter than sun, commingling as one.

Your furrowed brow, a map of creases that hail from parts unknown.
I wish to explore these crevasses, learn their secrets from when you were young.
Follow their trail of gumdrops from childhood. Assuage your fears before they’ve begun.

I come to you as moonlight, covered in cloaks of gossamer.
Without illusions nor pretensions.
Transparent as truth, beautiful as night.

I will love you ad infinitum. Across galaxies, throughout millennia, in every lifetime.
Transport and transcend us beyond mortality. Bathe you in soft illumination.
Hold you in sanctuary, whilst we come undone.