back to school
the fight over
corner seats
Adjei Agyei-Baah, Ghana
did I call enough
grandma’s favorite
pashmina wrap
Agnes Eva Savich, USA
coffee rings
on her desk
his promotion
Aidan Castle, USA
grail
the bra
that fits
Alanna C. Burke, USA
writing shasei––
certain I’ve read this one
somewhere before . . .
Alex Fyffe, USA
writer’s block
I ask Alexa
for a prompt
Alex Lubman, USA
10,000 feet
above San Antonio
remembering
how I hate
to fly
Allyson Whipple, USA
samurai film
she won’t let me
buy a sword
Andy Discus, USA
rosary beads : the stains of time
Arvinder Kaur, India
taxi stop
night air rushes to fill
your empty seat
Ash Evan Lippert, USA
last day of isolation
Happy Birthday
through the door
Audrey Quinn, Denmark
scrolling
too fast to pay
attention
B.A. France, USA
ready for takeoff––
the sudden spread
of a mask fight
Barrie Levine, USA
captcha
I am human
right?
Bart Van Goethem, Belgium
doorways
now so narrow
middle age
Bee Jay, Australia
my rainbow
is brighter than yours
suburban sprinklers
Benedict Grant, Canada
just so that
there are no regrets
a shooting star
Bhawana Rathore, India
the years of lying
about her age . . .
mother’s headstone
old widower
the life expectancy
of grief
hall of mirrors
what I think you think
of me
Bill Kenney, USA
heatwave
a white man
loses face
Birk Andersson, Sweden
on the outside
of the picket fence
Black Lives Matter
Brad Bennett, USA
cosmic noise
how much of it
is me
graveside service
an honor guard
takes the hill
menopause
she lets me know
we’re out of eggs
Bryan Rickert, USA
getting myself
in hot water again
shabu shabu
Charles Harmon, USA
genuflection
the weight
of stained glass
Charlotte Hrenchuk, Canada
two pills
shall i go up
or down
Christine Eales, United Kingdom
cold beer . . .
we try to recount
our youth
Christopher Calvin, Indonesia
computer key clicks
beneath my fingers––
his deep sleep
Claire Vogel Camargo, USA
Grandma’s lipstick
shades lighter
than Mom’s
Curt Pawlisch, USA
changing memory lanes the past of least resistance
jewelry box
the ballerina
I never was
Cynthia Anderson, USA
cataracts gone
seeing the world
through sixteen-year-old eyes
i ask the surgeon
what else she could renew
Dave Chandler, USA
altar candles
the secret wishes
of strangers
David Watts, USA
warm oatmeal
she slips a cookie
into his lunch
Deborah P Kolodji, USA
burial
the end
of forgetting
Elaine Costanzo, USA
halving strawberries
Grammy spins the story
of his proposal
Elaine Wilburt, USA
dusk
tipping dinosaurs
off the edge of the sofa
Elancharan Gunasekaran, Singapore
for sale
bozak speakers –– losing dad
all over again
Eric A. Lohman, USA
not asking
about her ‘vacation’
in-patient
Erin Castaldi, USA
the roar of traffic
dying to a murmur
country churchyard
Ernest Wit, Poland
last order
she touches up
her lips
Eva Limbach, Germany
standard deviation––
the measure of your distance
from my mean
Fionnuala Waldron, Ireland
the fly and I
share the same buzz . . .
afternoon bourbon
Gordon Gearhart, USA
yellow streetlight
a pregnant girl, heavy
with almosts
Hege A. Jakobsen Lepri, Norway
retail therapy––
the boyfriend pillow
comes at a price
Hemapriya Chellappan, India
echoing gavel
after the bidding concludes
the bride’s lowest price
underage bride
the handmade rag doll becomes
her chief bridesmaid
Hifsa Ashraf, Pakistan
pitting cherries
she spits out
her diagnosis
embroidery sampler
what each stitch holds
of her
driving with my dad
what used to be here
what used to be there
Jacquie Pearce, Canada
country accent
the roll of hills
a letter away
Joanna Ashwell, United Kingdom
an old stone wall
crumbling into itself
dad’s last words
John Hawkhead, United Kingdom
ouija board
not knowing what questions
to ask
Johnnie Johnson Hafernik, USA
minimum wage
the ramen labels
become a rainbow
Joshua St. Claire, USA
falling cards the house panic built me
Julie Bloss Kelsey, USA
cry for not my usual self help
Julie Schwerin, USA
acclimating
to its only speed
porch swing
June Rose Dowis, USA
baby shower
she remembers me
innocent
Kat Lehmann, USA
death poem––
reconfiguring
the paperclip
Keith Evetts, United Kingdom
guilt
no farther away
than my pillow
Kelly Sargent, USA
jury interview
I try to create
reasonable doubt
Ken Slaughter, USA
attic violin
the person she was before
my first breath
Kevin Valentine, USA
storm damage
not the top-down change
we hoped for
Kristen Lindquist, USA
jazz playing
your whistle far into
the night
empty chair wishing it wasn’t
Lafcadio, USA
our favorite argument
we end it
by not ending it
Laurie D. Morrissey, USA
20th anniversary
her ring finger
in the oximeter
Lew Watts, USA
dry eyes on the sparrow
rock bottom––
it sinks in
that I’m an addict
Lori A Minor, USA
Mom’s silk sheets how things come to be
Lori Becherer, USA
box upon box tissue wrapped childhood
Margaret Walker, USA
heavy scent
of the old dust
colonial house
Marie Derley, Belgium
new year
couch to 5k to couch
resolution
Mariel Herbert, USA
childhood photos––
around our table
the mismatched chairs
Mark Forrester, USA
filling the kitchen
aroma of vanilla
and his fists
Meg Arnot, United Kingdom
breakfast at twilight
trying to remember
your name
Mike Fainzilber, Israel
phone lock . . .
pulling the day into a
wrong pattern
Minal Sarosh, India
hopscotch
between adjoining numbers
the boys’ gaze
toy train
choosing from the crowd
the father I’ve never had
Mirela Brăilean, Romania
social media––
a side of you
I never knew
Mona Bedi, India
call from a stranger
his family tree
grows a branch
always happening
somewhere else
until
Nancy Shires, USA
still orbiting
my old bedroom . . .
Jupiter’s moons
Nick Hoffman, Ireland
tv news
a rioter wears
the same mask as me
climate protest
a drum beats
out of time
Nick T, United Kingdom
playing
the wabi-sabi card
chipped china
blue Monday
i wander through
my spam
P. H. Fischer, Canada
mirror, mirror . . .
the topology
of old age
Pat Davis, USA
all-inclusive
the resort’s
armed guards
Peter Newton, USA
the sin in the sinner in me
Pippa Phillips, USA
after
all these winters
the weight of a scar
Ravi Kiran, India
mother’s religion
prayer cards
under her ashtray
Rehn Kovacic, USA
five of midnight
silencing the in-law’s
grandfather clock
Richard L. Matta, USA
synesthesia
developing a taste
for the blue notes
Rick Jackofsky, USA
New Orleans jazz club
dancing with a lady
I already miss
Robert Moyer, USA
barnyard memories
I was once
a spring chicken
Roberta Beach Jacobson, USA
college degree
my application in
at the car wash
Ronald K. Craig, USA
shortest day––
fitting in
a fight
Ruth Holzer, USA
pandemic year
every day I hug
my tree
Ryland Shengzhi Li, USA
last year our cloudy memory of friends
S. Michael Kozubek, USA
black history
twenty-eight
days long
Sarah E. Metzler, USA*
origin story
learning to speak
for myself
Shloka Shankar, India
zazen––
i’ve had my fill
of emptiness
Sondra J. Byrnes, USA
teacher’s birthday . . .
rechecking the grammar
of my wish
work from home
in lieu of 3 a.m. friends
3 a.m. colleagues
Srinivas S, India
hot coffee
the warning
that you’ll burn me
Susan Burch, USA
toy store which teddy to buy dad
colossus
at least I thought
you were
Tim Gardiner, United Kingdom
doodles
on a small cross
early morning prayers
Tim Roberts, New Zealand
campfire
envying my kid’s
imagination
Tomislav Sjekloća, Montenegro
feeling good
about myself
drawstring pants
Tony Williams, United Kingdom
coin flip
am I
two-faced
Valentina Ranaldi-Adams, USA
funeral
all his ex-wives
in the same pew
guests gone
eating the leftovers
cold
Valorie Broadhurst Woerdehoff, USA
library book
did his hands touch
you too
Vandana Parashar, India
twilight
in her curves
the lack of exactness
Vijay Prasad, India
born again
the river baptism
leaves him cold
William Scott Galasso, USA
burnt cookies
my second
Covid Christmas
Yvette Nicole Kolodji, USA
status update
another day
in alternate reality
Zahra Mughis, Pakistan
*“Black History Month is an annual celebration of achievements by African Americans and a time for recognizing their central role in U.S. history. Also known as African American History Month, the event grew out of ‘Negro History Week,’ the brainchild of noted historian Carter G. Woodson and other prominent African Americans. Since 1976, every U.S. president has officially designated the month of February as Black History Month. Other countries around the world, including Canada and the United Kingdom, also devote a month to celebrating Black history.”
History.com Editors. (2022, January 31). Black History Month. HISTORY. https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/black-history-month
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