GRIEF Poem: To W., by Gabriella Garofalo

No more indigo nights, she wonders
Why things went so wrong, galaxies all snafu-
But don’t worry, just grab fast grooves,
As nothing can limbs or words do
Against old rumbling dogs, hair to go through,
Ice-cold stares-
Sure, she’s not a woman, she’s not a birth,
Your hope that writhes if blind to breath, to light
Demise shuns green questions,
Her die-hard habits, I know, and all that jazz,
Just ask yourself what’s left if they call it quits,
Thank God only time begets blue shadows,
But fire wipes them out-
C’mon, it’s same old here with your blue nature,
The reckless dance when you let in
Sparks, blackouts, maybe rejections,
Bit rich, yes, if winter days throw you
A light where you dream of nice creatures,
Your dream of frayed lights, they’re coming,
Yet don’t see them, you scatterbrain-
So don’t you say words matter
To shining breaks, or shelters of silence
When God keeps throwing silence
To fields in her soul, and they shun
A sky already prey to hands.

*******

GRIEF Poem: Eternal Rest, by Christine Leoni

It is coming…
Tendrils of mist swirl in front of my mother’s grey eyes distorting the here and now.

It is coming…
She painstakingly lays down nostalgic objects as her mind travels into forgotten narratives.

It is coming…
Folds mark her beauty with years on end, as gravity pulls her body down.

It is coming…
She moves tentatively across the room with irregular gaits, stooped on a stick for symmetry.

It is coming…
The final stages that steal time make her daily efforts become unattainable.

The time has come…
She lays in dreamless sleep, her perfection preserved in time. Only in the end, is the certain
realization that she loved me most.

GRIEF Poem: INTERVENTION, by Yatharth Rajput

Today morning, my neighbors painted their house pink. “Sticks and stones break into homes. Everyone knows that.” the contractor joked. Since it’s spring, I fell off my bike & did not mind. On the road, a snail slugged forward. Just behind it, one was slashed, like a misplaced fault line. Turns out, loss is a second skeleton. I followed him and he led me to the fallow again. & you were there. The weeds grew like prayer in our hands, and we lived w/o thinking about it. My head on your shoulder, I asked you, “Boys, like snails, have a shell tied on the back and a tail they leave behind.” We planned a walk to the temple because my grandmother died this day 5 years back. Because she disappeared, we found ourselves even better. Our shoes are torn. I tell you how much I still talk to her, and we enter the gate like time enters grief/grave.

GRIEF Poem: Incomplete Without You, by Binh Herdrick

In a crowded room, I stand alone,
Without your voice, without your own.
Surrounded by faces, yet none can replace,
The warmth of your touch, the love in your gaze.

A void that lingers, deep and wide,
No solace found, nowhere to hide.
Your absence echoes, a silent song,
A constant reminder of all that’s gone.

Your sudden departure, swift and cruel,
Left me breathless, shattered by the harsh truth.

Baby— when I look at the trees in our garden,
The water fountain, the home we once shared,
Each sight is a memory, vivid and clear,
Of times we laughed, when you were near.

Your voice, once soothing, now just a dream,
A distant echo, a silent scream.
Your touch, my anchor, now lost at sea,
Leaves me adrift, searching for thee.

In every corner, shadows fall,
Without your presence, I feel so small.
Even in a crowd, I’m incomplete,
Your love, Larry, made life so sweet.

Your cremation is at 10 today,
I’m overwhelmed with sadness, lost in dismay.
I hope to bring you home, to be close again,
To feel your presence, to ease my pain.

You reside in my heart and soul forever,
Our love eternal, a bond that will never sever.
Though you’re gone, you’re always near,
In my heart, forever my dear.

GRIEF Poem: The Grief the Dead Cannot Give Away, by James Maxwell

I knew a woman once who
Believed herself a fish
Always arching herself across the bed
As if any second going by
A gigantic fin might erupt from her back
And send us flopping over one another, awash
In saline fluids

Every now and again she’s call me over to the mirror
Bare-breasted and the color of tea in low light
She’d raise one elbow above her head
And draw fingers of the opposite hand
Across her ribs as if bow to violin and say
“See how my gills suffer in open air,
All this oxygen and death with hook and reel?”

She’d lie in the tub for hours examining herself
So that when she emerged slick and dripping
Even her cunt, the dark unshaven prune pit
Where I was made to dive for pearls on my own
And sink my fascination in unspoken depths
Hungry bellies, the bends, everything sinister and alive
We waded into a further obscurity

Then came a day when I returned home, a
Dozen scallops wrapped in newspaper and
Tucked under my arm
I placed them on the counter and thought I heard
A soft sound rolling from behind the closed bedroom door
Like clouds rolling up the Carolinas’ coastline in
Tempestuous little fists, brawling freely
Above the broad throat of the sea
And when I opened the door, I found her
Straddling the windowsill with one leg already
Well on its way into open waters, something unknown
A whole city perhaps holding its breath below
But really still honking for the hell of it
Not a single eye raised past 5th Avenue
One dream held quaveringly hostage inside another

“I yearn for my brothers and sisters,” she said
And without warning, withdrew all of herself
Back inside
That prospect of death tricking us into either
Boldness or cowardice
There is no in-between, nothing so very
Extra-curricular about it

Back in the kitchen, she eyes the sagging bundle
Of newspaper, and with pause, demanded to know
It’s all there, I admitted. Every bit of it
Not one organ, but its entire self among other
Equally succulent replicates of itself
She slipped a nail beneath the single strip of waxen masking tape
Separating a photograph, a blistering of helmets taken from
Sunday’s winning Giant’s game from a
Codex of stocks, percentages and figures
Far too dull for anyone but the rich to consider
Untucking triangular folds, neat as razors
She gently unfurled the parcel like
Disassembling a perfectly engineered swaddle
Some mysterious cocoon governing
Cycles of sleeping and soothing

First expecting her to cry out
To batter the little butter dollops into paste
With her fists, I
Stood idly by just over her shoulder, waiting
A glisten within the bramble of damp wisps
At the nape of her neck, revealing
Just where doubt or maybe fear first set in
Like an episode of delirium or the onset of a cold
The initial sniffle that gives you away
A dog’s tail wagging at the prospect
Of a bone, suffering
Entire lifetimes of this

But instead, selecting a scallop
Placing it in the palm of her hand as one
Might scoop jelly upon a slice of toast
She brought it close to her lips and bestowed
Upon it a single kiss as if
Releasing it from its debt, relinquishing
Back among the rest of them, clumsily
Dumping glob upon glob, the
Glittering little marshmallows from which
All good things come
And then disappeared from where she stood
Pulled gravitationally back into the
Bathroom as though summoned to serve

A campaign of silence
The belch of the lock that signaled
Intrusion upon the evening, taking
The form of absence, the
Unruliest of guests that we
Will allow

Soon I heard the water squeal to life
Bathtub filling by the bucketful
Perfumed pockets, rollicking
Beards of foam
The window of opportunity thrown
Suddenly open
Scallops in the cast iron, olive oil
And chive
Air alive with smells of dead flesh
An ear out for swirling, draining
Any reduction in flow
Consuming as though intending to
Scrape years off my life

And when I finished not a scrap remained
But here I noticed a bruise had
Pooled just outside the bathroom door
The carpet now matted and wet
Spreading, darkening outwardly
Like a puzzle piece forgotten in a puddle
Slowly losing its shape

As I sat imagining all the ways I could
Write it off as insanity
The door to the hallway
Erupted to life, fists
Battering, voices hollering hoarse to
Shut off the goddamned water before the
Entire city drowned

GRIEF Poem: NICOTINE, by Calypso Morgan

Yellow walls,
nicotine’s dust
glued to everything.
The smell of cigarettes
sticking to the books
and clothes.
Rubbish and papers
mixing together
in drawers and boxes.
You are gone,
but you leave
so much behind you.
I’m exorcising
evils and demons
from their nest,
throwing out every piece
of you
to finally erase
your presence.

Finally,
I’m leaving
these yellow walls,
and the memories of you
fade,
same as the smell.
I can say goodbye
and good riddance.

GRIEF Poem: Swan Song, by Sarah Samarbaf

A somber silence enveloped the world’s face
Earth becoming once more a colder place.

A love is lost, a color fades
Lonely guitar weeps in shades.

But his smile spreads beyond time
We will not be there, in his storyline.

Perhaps universe with all its daze
Is the creation of his unique gaze.

The raindrops are his precious tears
The sunlight: ray of his joyful cheers.

The rivers overflow whenever a legend dies
Sky opens its arms and his soul flies.

In his tragic passing, any people would grieve
But through his art, he’ll never leave.

GRIEF Poem: The Beach, by Courtney Hatcher

Paradise Pointe
calls for me
every June,
Teal tower,
Apartment 6B,
Three rooms
to suit twelve,
A close fit
but it didn’t matter,
We’re right in front
of the beach.

Sunday,
Perfect blue,
Splashing around
before noon,
I’ll be
a sinister pirate
and you’ll be
my mermaid,
Greatest play
this crowd
will ever see.

My youth,
Make-believe,
Transforming into
the books I
pack with me,
Don’t touch
the tanning lotion
rubbed all over me,
Snow-White skin,
I’m so sick of
looking like this.

Adult years,
Self-loathing is
my daily routine,
But when I step
into this condo
I love again,
Serotonin shaped
in low tides
and Oreo sundaes,
How could I
hate myself here?

February,
Long-distance
but not for
a long time,
Until suddenly
we’re through,
Grandpa announces
on a random afternoon,
This can’t be true,
Didn’t he love it
as much as me?

And I cry
as if I died,
Cause that’s better
than driving by,
New bodies,
Standing on
my balcony,
Will it still be
a crime
if I push them
out of grief?

All-consuming,
It blinds how
we’re all hurting,
He didn’t want
to sell it,
But the doctor’s
getting worried
about his wife,
Prescribed those
weekend getaways
to get away.

It was done
for the best,
And it’s not like
I’ll never see
the sea again,
Different stay,
Adjusting body,
I’m sure I’ll cry
over this too,
But at least
I’m at the beach.

Paradise Pointe
calls for me
every June,
My mind is
a scrapbook of
family breakfasts
and sappily laughs,
I’ll gift them
as an heirloom
when you’re older,
My sweet Summer

GRIEF Poem: YOUR MOVE, by Michael Potter

I am caught between two extremes.
I want you to stay so life can go on.
I want you to leave so life is more bearable.
To watch you stay is to see you suffer.
Struggling to maintain normalcy with support and aid.
To have you leave is to have a void no one can fill
and we all make adjustments to move on.
The person who is here, I don’t recognize.
Body’s weak, as is one’s mind.
I find it hard to communicate with you at times.
You come, you go, and sometimes, you try to stay.
For you to leave means only the memories survive,
Which is good, for I rather remember you as you were
and not as you are
So what extreme do I choose?
I leave that choice to you.