Read Poem: Digital Generation Apocalypse by Jane A Tenzin

We live in a digital generation
Social validation on a count of likes and commendation
Swipe left and right till eyes goes dry
Checking every filtered manipulations
Hitting likes without a content
Replacing words with emojis killing literature
Attaching aimless hashtags
Faking and stalking through the unfiltered lens
Flashing gold to stand out from the rest
We live in a Make believe world
Spends time in a internet loop hole
Rarely making a real communication
Distracted from the reality
Exhausted, disillusioned, diluted in a social fascination
Chained in a rhythm of diversion
Constant call for a digital Apocalypse

Read Poem: SCHOOL by Jeremy Azanon

School is a place where we have to pay attention to teachers.
School is where freedom ends.
School is where Ms.Jenny makes us learn non-important stuff.
School is where Math with Mr.John turns into us dying slowly of boredom.
School is where Science with Ms.Olivia explains stuff more than letting us do experiments.
School is where P.E is where Mr.David makes us stand around and wait for 20 minutes.
School is where Social Studies we have silent work time but we are never silent.
School is where our Reading teacher makes us read non-important books.

Read Poem: Under The Shadows by Pradnya

For years I longed,
For a place where I belonged,
Warm and sheltered, comforted and free,
Found it under a great big tree.

After years of shelter the tree gave way,
and its shadow began to slowly fade away.

But before the shadow had completely vanished,
Had to step out without the feeling of being banished.

Burnt by the heat and hit by rain,
Then came the memories flooding, leaving me in pain.
Wanting to runback into the comfort of the shadow,
Unsure of my future, I even seeked tarot.

After some time out in the open,
Slowly started to heal and mend what’s broken.
Heat turned to warmth and rain to showers,
I started to enjoy my new found powers.

There I stood once again reborn,
This was just the beginning of a new day’s dawn,
Looking back at the tree’s shadow, nowhere was it found,
Searched for it high and low and then I turned around,
For there it was once again,
Strong and sturdy as if nothing had changed,
But this time the shadow was not of the tree,
It was my own, the shadow was of me….

Read Poem: Unanswered Call by TAK Erzinger

As a mobile phone begins to vibrate
the fish go about their business in a ghostly dance
unaware of the signals being sent. They are
surrounded by an abyss of hallowed darkness.

They survive in perpetual motion; trills, reverberations,
fluctuations, and wiggling spines maneuvering
through a salty universe of liquid pitch. Among their
presence lies a spy constantly awake.

A hidden eel, with its intricate weaving of wires
and mesh, an intertwined spaghetti of fibre optics,
that delivers the finite elements of human emotions
across the ocean and into opposing worlds.

This back bone of communication carries the continual
whispers and murmurs of desires, images and revelations
at high speed intervals. Its secrets shrouded in
those quiet, icy depths. An apparition is eavesdropping

though, floating in deep indigo and cobalt,
he is illuminated in real-time by tiny
stars of plankton–silver streams of light,
jutting through torn curtains illuminating his show.

This is his portable stage where he sings his songs
to an empty audience day after day.
He steals their secrets to compose his ballads.
The constant chatter and crackle of noise that

travels in that subterranean
network is the source of his inspiration.
His lonely blues at its 52 Hertz, reveal
the ills and wants of the world. He croons away

in hopes that some entity will eventually answer
his call giving his voice a platform before it’s too late.

Instead, there is only silence on the other end of the line.

Inspired by The Washington Post article: The Lonliest Whale in the World This poem is inspired by an article about reports from scientists about a male whale that has been swimming alone around the ocean for years singing at 52 hertz.

Read Poem: Plots and Plans by Ilene Kaminsky

Genre – life

This is a four part poem

I. Born

Raising a child,

Frying eggs in a skillet or

Cutting an onion slice,

Requires little dexterity,

Just a sharp knife handle

and a steady hand.

Flipping over easy

Self centered delicate

Runny bright yolks to

Mop up with toast.

Sweet thick rings from

Bewitching mother of pearl sweet Georgia Vidalias slipping over crazed porcelain

Plates heavy, heavy

With steaks fit for a father- blue centered alone.

But infants insist,

on and on

they really do

Time for feeding, feed her

Maybe dab, a pinky in

Sour mash whiskey no

Not always! But

She’s fidgety and fussy

A finger to the gums

persuading those big eyes

While my own onion slicing tears

(I stop them with my open mouth).

Pin rolling down the dough

I once kicked an old can

Now it’s round and right Perfect for

Biscuits. Those dimpled cheeks, innocently evoked by

Sleeping babies. Innocently, they fuss and dream and smile

Of red striped kittens of

Yellow baby chicks and ducks

White doves and

Chocolate rich brown moody

Pasture cows in

Bluegrass green fields graze on

Dandelion and blowing

Wishes with milkweed.

A flashing picture book

Of outlined farm animals.

Imagine if you can even become innocent now,

just what

A new born dreams

She only knows

What she seen in wordless dreams:

A simple life, a sample, up early, words cruel,

unavailable

Pets without names yet.

But she owns them

Somehow she knows

To say “give me” not

Please.

Guilt visits

Later, in a higher grade, outside

Without the confines

Of a barn door or a kitchen floor.

II. Marriage

Black spot appears

Marring the whites

Of their eyes imagine

Seeing through the eyes of a fly

Telescoping to a single shot.

Remembering someone’s

Boring slides of Niagara Falls and winter.

Swarming in short sharp

Ticks of the tocks

From nowhere in particular

Buzzing over gym socks

Submarines in urban pools.

Soft velvet bodies lie in dust

Crisp crepe carcasses woven

into cheap throw carpets.

Small specks in a salesman’s sample

of linoleum tiles manufactured

Reimagined to look like real wood.

Indications that a family once

Sat at the minty bright green

Plasticine kitchenette set,

Who all sat straight in the

patent leather star shiny chairs

Who dug roads in the seats with

The bones of their rears

Who ate silently slicing through toast

With the sharps of their teeth.

Who showed sun honied skin

Beneath short pants and mini skirts.

County club wine tastings

Sipping reds poured

Flowing from boxes and bags

Drunk with bloody noses punched

Over, and over again.

Everyones incinerated thoughts flush away

Alongside shit and Charmin

Q-tips and zip locks and

Blood wiped onto old rag.

III. Old

Humbling, a jumble,

Of disconnected thinking thoughts

And it damn near hits her

Out the curtained kitchen

window like a brick red pick up truck

She left the house unlocked

with the icebox door wide open.

Who still uses that anyway?

Icebox, she’s thinking

Just as he asks her to

open and say ah,

Thinking in her head

Spit in the clear eddy

Down the shined shell porcelain

Now she remembers

why the flies died.

IV. Eulogy

What a character

Forgotten.

The eye color gone

Within a month

Faces go

Details first and go quickly.

The memory makes an excellent prodigy

For the medical examiner to go searching

At past midnight haunts

Out to steal fresh looks

Just before the hearse arrives

Horse drawn and piano black.

Ilene Kaminsky
Yeux Deux Vintage
Etsy shop: YeuxDeux
Blog: http://www.cancerbus.com

Poetry by Fatima Ahmed

I am a Muslim. I am British.
I am British. I am a Muslim.
I am a British Muslim.
Do the order of words REALLY matter?
Muslim British, British Muslim.
A cup of tea is what I crave,
Digestives and Custard Creams are my fave.
At the same time, the headscarf I wear,
And YouTube I scour to fashion it with care.
Awkward weather conversations and polite queuing,
HP sauce, marmite and cows mooing.
At the same time, I rush out to perform my prayer,
Because for me, this makes my daily endeavours clear.
You tell me I must choose,
But neither I am willing to lose.
For both are a part of me,
So please, allow me to be.
I am a Muslim. I am British.
I am British. I am a Muslim.
I am a British Muslim.
Do the order of words REALLY matter?
Muslim British, British Muslim.
Mus-tish?

Written by Fatima Ahmed, Teacher at Islamiyah School, (Masjid Sajedeen Open Day 2018).

Read Poem: THE AUTUMN WALK by Sam McNally-Cross

The front door closes,
the lock twists shut with
a certain sense of finality,
as the journey begins.
Stepping out into Autumn.
Feet falling on rain-spotted flagstone
as though in mourning
the sky has shed a tear, or three.
There is a bite in the air
A chill,
that creeps into even the thickest coat,
a piercing reminder the sun is setting…
Browned leaves crack
under shoe leather.
Those jettisoned early, falling soundlessly
to earth,
whilst others, yellowing, curling, cling
desperately to brach, to life.
Then, without word, the light is gone.
Winter comes. All is still.
Only the cross, atop the church spire,
dares to puncture ever greying sky,
to proclaim in sacred dignity
‘It shall soon be Spring’

Read Poem: DEAR SOCIETY by Bhumika Sharma

Dear Society,
Thank You for teaching me how losing anything could be so beautiful….

1. Thank You for telling me how I could be more beautiful by LOSING WEIGHT
Because Barbies and Princess don’t come in XL size

2. Thank You for telling me how easily I could please everyone and be their favourite by LOSING MY STANDS AND OPINION
Because a woman with opinion (commonly known as “Bitches”) are nasty and contaminate the society

3. Thank You for telling me how beautiful my skin was but LOSING MY COLOUR or changing it could make people love me more
Because nobody would choose Jasmine over Snow White

4.Thank You for telling me how important it is for me to always be poise and polite because only after LOSING HOW I TRULY FEEL I could be everyone’s favorite
Because Blossom and Bubbles were everyone’s favourite not Buttercup

5. Thank You for telling me that even when the questions change, the answer has to be “YES” as LOSING YOUR RIGHT TO CHOOSE is a step of being “a woman”
Because Medusa was punished for skipping this step
.
.
.
.
99999… Thank You for telling me how LOSING MYSELF was a part of change which was constant in nature.

From,
You

Genre: Angry, Poetry, Inspirational, Social Norms, Grief, Hope, Self Love

Poetry Movie: CHILD BRAIN SURGEON by Tracy Déchaux

 

Poetry by Tracy Déchaux

Produced by Matthew Toffolo

Editor & Visual Design by Kimberly Villaruel

Read Poem:

It’s a daily occurrence
Attach the electrodes for torment
When really everything will be just fine
I’m just playing around with your mind

You lie there so trusting
When its me that has you cussing
If you wake up with a headache
Don’t worry, it’s just your sanity that I take

When I ask you to relax as I linger
And put on my surgical gloves with floppy fingers
Don’t be nervous and hyper ventilate
I’ll be checking your eyes if they dilate

After the surgery get plenty of rest
It’s true but its for the best
My home is hell in a dim lit room
It could be worse, you could be stuck in a tomb

Don’t forget, you will want to see me first
As I am so careful with my thirst
But as time moves on that knowledge is forgotten
I am Hell’s Child Brain Surgeon

https://www.iheart.com/artist/-32140995/albums/hells-child-brain-surgeon-56637790/