Read Poem: Gyroidal Women, by Aurora Eden

It comes as no surprise that we turn away from this whirl
How we burn and turn through the Kali Yuga,
Spinning as women do

As the time comes to observe what we’re making
With our hands and breath—
Past enemy lines.

And we contemplate how to strengthen the torus field—
How to turn inward and see
With the heart.

It is the Gyroidal Women, they are crowning the men
Who have risen and dared to serve and protect
The holy of holies, the golden spiral of women.

As it comes as fire and ice, on the days of trial and tribulation
Yet, embedded in the feminine will, is the courage to preserve
The web of life, on earth as in heaven.

Planets rotate from inner space; they sing above the ashes
Miles of walking and talking at the cost of our lives
To hear the quiet humming of the mother’s wrath.

Read Poem: HE LOOKS HUMAN TO ME, by Elly Paul A. Tomas

the news megaphones he is sporting a new look
i wanted to react like WTF, is that even news?

he is buying wet market carcasses in candid photos

gamely

like it was not expected for him to do so
like he is not eating
like he lives on astronaut’s food pills

but Pablo Neruda would probably say
“at least, it’s no longer a difficult time for him”

and sure enough, i would agree

i would agree.

Read Poem: OUR LEGACY?, by Andrew Smith

I think about the future,
I think about the past,
I think about the little ones,
That seem to grow up fast,
I think about their years to come,
And the world in which they’ll live,
And I think about the legacy,
Our generation hopes to give.

But what will be that legacy,
That gift we’ll leave behind,
These things we deem important,
For the furtherance of mankind,
As we rush headlong in denial,
See things through blinkered eyes,
And in our wake we’ll leave dead seas,
And toxic polluted skies.

We’ll kill off the pollinators,
Raise the forests to the ground,
We’ll build our concrete jungles,
And say that they’re New Towns,
An opportunity for all to live,
How can we be so blind,
To destroy the things that we all need,
For the future of mankind.

So I think about the future,
And I think about the past,
I think of all the little ones,
That may not grow so fast,
For their future is looking bleaker,
Unless we open our eyes to see,
That a sad and dying planet,

Will be the legacy that we’ll leave

Read Poem: NinE, by Aaron Lee Graves

I just received some new batteries to kick-start my heart, I’m not writing for flatteries because it’s actually a tragedy—that I’ve been living like I’m dead.

I’ve been given a sedative but it’s time for me to let live; let it ride; before I die:

Proceed with caution, because what I’ve got inside is a terrifyingly beautiful ride.
It’s a little unusual, a spiritual tide, a rituals original,
and now the only that’s pitiful is when I sleep at night,
leaving a table full of things I coulda done,
things I shoulda said, love I could’ve expressed,
but that was then, this is now.
I’m not dead, I’M NOT DEAD.

I’m done not speaking my mind, I’m done being left behind, instead of looking for time to unwind, I’ve got to be kind and rewind my life like a video; tape:

off the crime scene;
Uh-Oh, my anger revealed itself,
and all of its wealth that’s been pent up like a dragon hoarding it’s treasure. It’s but a horrific murder of the man I hate myself to be,
docile and apathetic,
a heretic spewing my own rhetoric when questioned about why I avoid the conflict of being;
anything but comfortable, always safe, never outspoken, always misunderstood.
Blood all around the pain is excruciating, separating a part that’s been bonded since I can remember;
all the trauma and anger that scared me as a child,
insinuating that peace is always just out of reach, and that fear is something to submit to.

But it’s fear that taught me to not rock the boat of which I’ve locked my soul below deck,
smothering it’s feelings and suffocating my urge to implode upon myself, or explode on those who love me.
You see the anger within these hands, it’s not hate, but the rage that’s necessary to kill the stubbornness inside myself that desires comfort instead of a destiny of giving love without fear.

It’s a painful process, but I’m making progress, in becoming who I’m born to be.

Once again, I ask you to bear with me- as I learn to bear my soul.
I must understand that my opinion matters, and with it, I can shape the life of great man. No longer a boy who’s afraid to be, afraid to speak up in fear stirring the waters. Afraid of causing a wave capable of capsizing the ship I’ve built which is ironically named “Relations”; as they are what I fear sinking the most.

I will learn to speak out, and for once maybe I’ll boast, for I know my heart and it’s intentions, and that is something worth a mention.

I need your help to remind me who I am, a living opportunity to express love, not just a hollow porcelain shell of a man living behind these hands.

Read Poem: About Her, by Lawrence Mathebula

Days in my thinking place, thee I saw
only
Faces of her;she stays than I do in me.
How long’s the day? The hours, slowly
seep!
How long the night? I struggle, to fall
asleep!
It’s more yourself, it occurs,
Thy countenance here recurs;
Thy spell prolongs, while beauty’s own
bold
Hands are a charm, as thee attracting,
holds
Thy fruit fertile and witchery full in her
Blood running warm today, the single
heir.
Thy parents life is seen;here thee are,
Full another one has yet, to pop a
flower.
Thy flowers to come, days in their
thinking place,
Those men shall too, dream of them in
their, days!

Read Poem: Solitude in the City Woods, by Peeush Trikha

Solitude in the City Woods

The Mid July heat,
the heat on the concrete pavements,
Of ACs drawing out heat from all corners of houses,
The CO2 s and NOs of the automobiles making life hellish,
makes one feel thirsty, hot and tired.
Yet tasks are to be done.
Targets to me met.
Disputes to be settled.
While walking in this heat,
comes a lonely and deserted passage of grass and trees,
with some cows resting and crows roaming.
And the blessed shadow of the trees
fill one with a much needed relief
and joy.

Who doesn’t wants such a solitude in the city woods,
which fills our mind and soul with a resolve,
to protect our nature and trees.
For what are we without them,
without them…….

Theme: Philosophical

Read Poem: Avoiding the Clutches of Tony Glut, by Matt Snyder ©2019

The road to 165

is a slow and arduous task

for every small 20 foot hill conquered

I still stumble down large mountains

often with my feet stuck in thick mud

but thankfully avoiding any quick sand

I’ve managed to evade Tony Glut on Easter Day

because I don’t want to pay the price for what he’s constantly offering me

I shall persevere, I will reach my destination and Tony won’t be there to taunt me.

Read Poem: AI! AI! AI! (A Tartarus for Youth), by David Estringel

I.
AI! AI! AI!
Sated with stolen life,
emerged from mother’s Night,
there is longing to be free
from the warmth of darkened humours–
to be crowned by The Light of Artificial Gods.
Our worlds quake and rip,
tossing us upon gory shores
beyond fertile crests,
illuminated by a cold Sun.
Messengers sweep down in clouds of winged oblivion
to wet lips with Lethe’s waters
upon cruel fingertips.
“Shhhh.”

II.
AI! AI! AI!
Blinded,
light brings pain
in rushes of movement and sound
that sting the flesh.
Icy
with invasions
of steel and sterile prodding,
souls rouse to profess philosophies
in cries and screams
that crack the air,
unheard
like the falling of leaves upon the ground
from distant trees

III.
AI! AI! AI!
Swaddled bodies,
searched in vain for the safety of familiarity,
tell much, tell little
like symbols in scrying mirrors.
Their fictions, written with sweat and tears,
anointing
foreheads, eyes, and lips
with benedictions of shameful regret.
As if it were better to have the heads of babes
dashed and bloodied
upon the Rock,
than to suffer Spartan destinies, impaired.
Left only to linger—a world apart—
in bloodless mediocrity.

IV.
AI! AI! AI!
What are these ragged paths
to be stumbled upon
under tender foot,
with stones that cut
and scratching thorns from the briar
that temper flesh,
supple and pink,
making hard what was once soft to the touch.
Fed by an earth
that feasts on cuts,
bodies devolve to walk upright—and alone
upon roads, paved with the hands and backs
of brethren.
Knuckles crunching beneath soles like so much gravel.

V.
AI! AI! AI!
O, the passion of attainment,
upon which the masses engorge,
aimless in its metal
and promises
of faceless adulations
and the settling of laurelled wreathes
upon heads of cartilage!
How empty, these violent strikes against the Self,
incessant and passionless,
carving out pounds of flesh,
victory for victory,
‘til nothing remains–
all for narratives
that are not their own.

VI.
AI! AI! AI!
How thirsty are these–
the razor-tongued buds of spring.
Driven
to the drinking of others’ tears
for satisfaction of sanguine thirsts.
To revel
in the tearing
of white petals
from tender stems
with poisoned fingertips,
delighting in themselves,
as if masters of ceremonies
at blood-lettings
and vivisections.

VII.
AI! AI! AI!
The sooth of touch’s fidelity
has melted away–
soured–
like cream in the sun.
Replaced,
the quality of distance
makes, explicit, one’s worth,
across arid plains
of air and silence.
Fallen away, the allures and charms
of communion,
only to make room
for the play of shadows
on Plato’s walls.

VIII.
AI! AI! AI!
There is a science,
oppressive
and cold,
behind the collisions of heavenly bodies of light (in love)—
clashing
explosions of atoms
over chasms—
the spaces in between—
that define and separate.
Souls, burning brightly,
cannot coexist
in their starry majesties
without a surrendering of fire.
My Ares takes your Aphrodite.

IX,
AI! AI! AI!
Upon paths paved with gold,
under the azure
of a fanning sky,
herds
are driven in blithe procession
to the precipice.
Cast into the maw
of their society.
Without the iron shielding of wings,
they perish,
masticated,
like everyman’s meat,
leaving them shades
that stain the wintry air.

X.
I, I, I,
will crawl to the grave,
worn
and weary,
upon the Earth I have salted
with tears,
violent and hot–
but harmonious–
in Time’s own poetry,
where I will find
the Peace and Solace of Rest,
drinking from a forgetful cup,
enshrouded
by the arms of my brother—
The Undergloom.

Read Poem: A Beautiful Death, by Kristen Corbisiero

This love was never meant to make history,

Darling, we were never meant to move the stars and caress fate.

This mere distraction turned into a spell-bounding affair

Of two hearts stuck on each other.
With the red string closing in at their throats,

We are simply two souls, trapped in a fragile state of caring too deeply, too much.

Our story begins as a boy and a girl, meeting a stranger’s eye and returning a smile,

It goes on for days, months and years before our love solidifies,

A power of simple affection drawn deep from the infatuation made from strangers.

A burden I can no longer carry on my own.

But our tale holds as much joy as it does sorrow,

For a star that burns so bright can only been seen as it implodes on itself.

And our stars colliding was the best thing that could happen to my universe,

For any cosmos we make will harbor passion, greed and lust born from such lovers.

In the deep skies we find ourselves at our best and worst.

You have become neither scorn nor lover,

In the body of angel, and the mind of the devils son, you worship me.

And we fall into the blacken sky, holding onto a breath that has escaped us.

My heart falls deep and fast for a being such as you,

And you take me for everything I am, the good the bad and the worst.

For you, I give my all and get so much of you in return,

But our love is tragic and laced with caution,

(The stars beauty is only found in the light years it takes away,)

My heart is too melded in yours to be broken; rather, it simply shatters,

Taking pieces of you and me, scattering them across the universe of time.

Oh, darling, you’ll be the death of me,

So consider yourself lucky on how beautiful it will be.

Read Poem: Black Person, Should I Be More Like You?, by Sway Writes

Cookie cutter black person
What does it mean to be like you?
What do I need to do?
How do I say what I need to say to sound more like you?
“Be more black, act your race” is what they all say
What does that even mean?!
I refuse to be a cookie cutter example of you
Why can’t I be me and do what I do
So what I like to listen to rock and pop and maybe a little alternative too
Is that deemed white music by you?
I like to listen to rap as well
Am I finally acceptable to you?
I love my black people and I love my brown skin
But I refuse to be put in a box
Because you’re satisfied enough to live in it.