Approaching My Own Version of Adulthood

These oppressively hot, humid nights,

alone

with my thoughts and the heat in this premature summer.

Thinking how friends continue to scatter,

progress, bloom

into adults.

And I’ve somehow failed to climb out

of the liminal tweens lifestyle,

eight years in the same city, vaguely grounded

yet stultified, underpaid, underwhelmed.

Balancing part-time work, half-heartedly

pursuing dreams, boyfriends,

life. Desperate for change

yet afraid to be hopeful. Treading water,

staying afloat but receding,

relinquishing days to inertia.

Wondering if I’m a traitor

to my sign. A Capricorn

is apparently industrious, ambitious, driven.

Yet we also do things on our own time.

Ah. I must be a late-bloomer, I am one of those

fragile, erratic breeds, prone to sickliness,

then unsuspecting growth spurts.

I’m subtly subverting tradition, waiting

to eclipse the heat, approach my own version of adulthood.

Rachel Carbonell

 

Rachel Carbonell is a writer, artist and teacher living in Brooklyn, New York. She maintains a blog, and has been published in The Vagrant Literary Quarterly and accepted for publication to the shady side review and cliterature. When she is not writing or teaching, Rachel enjoys exploring NYC, biking, seeing live music and spending time with her friends and kitties.

Rina Caparras

Falling

falling

from a

height

is a kind of

f

light

where

your

desti

nation

is

your

self.

 

In The Spaces

(Why)

You can only speak your words (to me)

only in the spaces between

your utterances,

and (Why)

I can only write my words (to you)

only in the spaces between

my texts:

 

Do you know that I measure time

not by minutes, not by hours,

not by days or nights, but by the

 

duration of your glance?

And yet here we are, feeling intimacy

only in the way our backs touch,

our faces turning strange

not knowing whether to age or to

remain the same,

for our faces have not faced

since (when?).

 

If I dared to call out your name,

will you turn to me? Will you let me

be again? Or will you not hear me

because you perceive speech

not by words, not by phrases

not by sound, but by the

movement of my lips?

And you cannot see them,

because we love the way our backs touch.

It ends for us

not knowing whether to turn or

to remain this way,

for our faces have not faced

since (too long ago).

 

The Youth

And it bothers us how

those heroes, whose names

we couldn’t care less about

died for their mother

land

as if she ever did them any good.

 

Yes, we are children

with no navels, no mothers

who graced us with her milk

because she was too dry;

too incapable of nurturing.

 

In ancient Sparta, they

used to send weak offspring

to meet the elements.

These days we do that to our mother.

 

Gentle Things

I used to keep roses in my garden.

They were most wonderful:

luscious red petals

silky smooth against my fingers…

 

I also used to keep rabbits.

They were most gentle:

immaculate white creatures,

hopping about the yard;

free to taste the grass,

to smell the leaves…

but they only had eyes

for roses.

 

Surprisingly, they didn’t mind the thorns,

the risk of getting pierced was worth taking

for a taste of the nectar dripping

from red veins.

 

Obviously, I tried to stop them:

I carried the rabbits by their

hungry bellies,

and lifted them

to someplace else,

but they always returned

to where they’ve been,

gnawing and eating,

 

until what remained were

scraps of what was once

the crowning glory

of my garden.

 

My roses, killed by mere

gentle things…

 

Bonsai

Sturdy branches, destined

to grow tall, to bear fruit, to live life.

But the hand that feeds it takes from it

its destiny.

 

Oh, impaired child, what will she say

When your mother finds you,

Tiny and battered?

Oh, impaired child, what will you tell her

When she weeps for the death that you live?

Will you smile? Will you say you’re fine?

It’s a shame, but I think you will,

After all, you take pride in your

Bro

ken

limbs,

the ones disciplined

yet broken.

 

Rina Caparras

 

Rina Caparras writes fiction, nonfiction and poetry. She is a senior student at the Ateneo de Manila University taking up Creative Writing. She also writes reviews for a local magazine.

Keeper and Hawk

Outside, herself again, effects of kill

and cure alleviated by the news,

she’s dancing early morning Braille grace notes

along the woodland ride. She pauses, high

on her consultant’s view, “Not visible,”

charmed by a ring-of-feathers fairy sign

against the broken stile. “Yon sparrow hawk,”

he answers to the question on her mind

as yet unasked; “her feeding post.” She knows

him from the local, captain’s chair, beer mug

above the bar; old gamekeeper, skin like

gnarled bark, wax jacket, corduroy, retired.

Whole different world,” to poison, trap or shoot

all compromises to his grand design:

I’d bide nest-side for hours, stock still. One day

she lighted on my gun, dark mantle, wing,

locked feet, mere inches from my gaze.” He peers

behind her fear-crazed eye and reads her pain,

admires her pulsing breast, life force within.

I let her be that spring. Next year? Lord knows!”

 
Peter Branson

Peter Branson has been published or accepted for publication by journals in Britain, USA, Canada, EIRE, Australia and New Zealand, including Acumen, Ambit, Envoi, Magma, The London Magazine, Iota, Frogmore Papers, The Interpreter’s House, Poetry Nottingham, Pulsar, Red Ink, The Recusant, South, The New Writer, Crannog, Raintown Review, The Huston Poetry Review, Barnwood, The Able Muse and Other Poetry.

Christina Borgoyn

human sky

tendrils of flaxen wind dance

unbeknownst,

 

billows & curls into incandescent

orbs, blinded-

blinks, and heaves open

 

the mouth and its million raindrops,

faint caress of song lingers, a heavy fog;

and shoulder blades beg to beat

faster

to the tune of flight, arms flail solo-

a slow push and legs swim

amid stratus

 

as naked moons peek toward a sunrise,

hail intensifying the mien.

 

holiness hurts

night and her mortifying

caress,

 

beautiful lightening-

I am lonely child

deserted and small,

 

insignificant to your power,

crouched without morning’s touch.

 

Christina Borgoyn

The Hours Between Our Feet

When you breathe,

I see the map materializing

like it’s a cold day in winter.

I pluck it from the air,

and I am finally able to hold distance in my hand.

It’s a delicate, beautiful flower,

though poisonous to ingest.

 

But when I set the flower on the road,

it blossoms into mileage⎯

millions of feet of choking vines

sprout between our feet.

And it occurs to me that you’re breathing

an hour into the future,

five away from me.

And I want nothing more

than to lie tangled naked in the vines

and swallow the distance

until it kills me

 

Sirenna Blas

 

Sirenna Blas’ short story “Maps & Men” was published in the 2011 winter edition of the Rose & Thorn Journal. Her poem “Paradelle for the Poet” won first place in humorous and satirical poetry in Purdue University Calumet’s Stark-Tinkham writing contest, and “The Sky Swallows Us All” won second place in their short story category. She is a freelance nonfiction writer, as well as a peer tutor at Purdue Calumet’s Writing Center.

Nina Bennett

Dispersing Luck

April wind whips tumbleweeds

across the plains of Santa Fe.

Some wedge in barbed wire fences,

others bounce along I-25

like children playing hopscotch.

Maybe that is what happens

to the souls of the dead. They travel

unfettered, gather the detritus of life

as they journey from ocean

to mountain to desert.

 

What we call luck

might be what a soul grabs

from one person as it passes,

delivers to another on its way out of town,

the way tumbleweed disperses seeds

as it spins across the plains.

 

 

Since You Asked

You want to know why I don’t

watch the news. The anchor

lays out local stories the way

a casino dealer reveals

the house hand. Puppy attacked

by machete-wielding neighbor,

three children dead in house fire,

college lacrosse player murdered.

 

You want to know why I don’t

read the newspaper. Train derails

in India, more than 70 killed.

U.S. military dead in Afghanistan

hits 1,000. Robbers distract

victims at cash machines,

squirt them with feces

before stealing their money.

 

You want to know how I spend

my time. I listen to Simon and

Garfunkel in the car, read poetry

out loud in the evening,

line breaks punctuated

by the call and response

of songbirds in my back yard.

 

Nina Bennett

 

Nina Bennett  is the author of Forgotten Tears A Grandmother’s Journey Through Grief. In 2006 she was selected to participate in a master writer’s retreat with the poet laureate of Delaware, sponsored by the Delaware Division of the Arts. Nina’s poetry has appeared in publications including Drash:Northwest Mosaic, Pulse, Alehouse, Panache, Yale Journal for Humanities in Medicine, The Smoking Poet, Oranges & Sardines, Philadelphia Stories, Pirene’s Fountain, The Broadkill Review, and the anthologies Mourning Sickness and Spaces Between Us: Poetry, Prose and Art on HIV/AIDS.