----------------------------------------------------------------------
the chinese alphabet
i dread the holidays
mostly because i grew
up on dysfunction
normal shit is as foreign
to me as the chinese
alphabet
but i'm old now
crazy left years ago
i seek the quiet
never minded being
alone, just never wanted
to be lonely
the phone won't ring
on christmas
all my former friends
have their families
and the friends they
are using now
i'll turn on some music
something dark and melodic
we never even bother to
put up a tree anymore
somewhere charlie brown
is laughing
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while alone in the shower
she reminds you of
a ghost from your past
listens to mozart
while humming
in spanish
pretends to play
the slide trombone
while alone in the
shower
her kisses taste
like you were
born on the
wrong planet
she once kissed me
on my lips and told
me to close my eyes
i never saw her again
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plastic bombs in the sand
insomnia dances
like a lost lover
strung out on neon
lights and a gentle
line of cocaine
think of all the years
since our lips first met
then ponder how each
of us should already
be dead
rainbows and smiles
plastic bombs in the sand
maybe one day the poor
won't have to fight a rich
man's war
i know
long after most of the planet
ceases to exist
you ever learn to speak
another language
yeah
i can say fuck fluently
in nearly all of them
that's really all you need
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make believe brilliance blah blah blah
long lines
rising prices
i knew there was a reason
i never wanted children
and all the good alcohol
is too expensive
and the shit i can afford
is only meant to harm
the liver faster
i put on some charlie parker
and wonder which will
come first
the first line of a poem
or a fresh vein
don't worry
if i can't afford the alcohol
how the fuck can i afford
the drugs
poem after poem
make believe brilliance
blah blah blah
maybe santa should actually
bring me some scratch offs
that are winners
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way too early in life
the darkest eyes
cover up the most
pain
her smooth skin
tasted like all my
nightmares made
into an off broadway
play
the twinkling lights
are supposed to be
joyful
you've seen too
many movies
about small
towns
backwoods killers
and all the children
that succumb to reality
way too early in life
the holidays are rarely
happy
no snow for christmas
just rain
endless fucking rain
misery fit for everyone
around here
J.J. Campbell (1976 - ?) was raised by wolves yet managed to graduate high school with honors. He's been widely published over the years, most recently at Dumpster Fire Press, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Horror Sleaze Trash, The Asylum Floor and The Beatnik Cowboy. You can find him most days on his mildly entertaining blog, evil delights. (https://evildelights.blogspot.com)
Singular Universe“What you do not have you find everywhere.” — W. S. Merwin
Words harden in recollection.
Pull each one towards you,
cry like they seem evil.
Lay out some traps
for half a dozen—it’s a craft:
fool an infinitive
into holding out for hope.
You don’t need
a permit to live inside your head—
put a foot on the ladder.
Copy out a line:
the sounds of a singular
universe being built.
Call to Action
A great deal of latitude
and an abundance of caution
can be an isolating experience—
what greater enemy does one have
than oneself?
When the ink hits the screen,
it is an indispensable bit
of programming—the totality
of what you did or said
in the aboveground world.
Source: A remix/cut-up composed from select words and phrases found between pages 11 & 60 of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin.The Creative Process
Imagine the scent
of fine paper in summer—
a time when one’s taste exceeds
one’s abilities.
To sense your decay
is not the same as loving it.
A bromide
about the creative process
is that you are often
nostalgic for a candy
you have never even tasted.
Or, to oversimplify,
it is the erasure of mortality
in the sometimes-painful present.
Source: A remix/cut-up composed from select words and phrases found between pages 20 & 86 of Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin.A Rainbow Every Day
for R
Carry off a little darkness
one piece at a time.
I’ve been around for long—
there’s a reason why all sinners are saints.
You’ll know it’s me when I come
through the road to happiness.
Allow me to introduce myself—
a victim of the times,
the gods they made
of you and me.
We didn’t start the fire
and tell the world that everything’s okay.
What else do I have to say?
I can’t take it anymore.
The words inside my head—a blitzkrieg—
but what’s puzzling you?
I get a unicorn out of a zebra,
the truth from a thousand lies.
I erase myself, clean this slate
with the hands of a believer.
I can’t be what I’m not.
There’s a game called circle—
as heads is tails.
I’d love to wear a rainbow every day.
Source: A remix/cut-up composed from lines and phrases from the following songs: “Sympathy for the Devil” by Rolling Stones, “Man in Black” by Johnny Cash, “One Piece at a Time” by Johnny Cash, “We Didn’t Start the Fire” by Billy Joel, “Believer” by Imagine Dragons, “What I’ve Done” by Linkin Park, “No Matter What” by Boyzone, and “I’m Not Afraid” by Eminem.Shloka Shankar is a poet, editor, and self-taught visual artist from Bangalore, India. A Best of the Net nominee and award-winning haiku poet, Shloka is the Founding Editor of Sonic Boom and its imprint Yavanika Press. Her debut full-length haiku collection, The Field of Why (Yavanika Press, India), was shortlisted for the Touchstone Distinguished Book Awards 2022. Website: www.shlokashankar.com | Instagram: @shloks23
The Nose
My nose has started to lean to the left.
It happens when you get old.
You’d like to stay on the straight old road
But you get old and lean to the left.
The path you’re on, it starts out straight.
To love, to truth, to fame.
Then the nose goes off on its own, on its own
And you circle back round to the grave.
Moon Song
Necklace
I pinched metal between my thumb and forefinger,
and yanked
until my spine
s
l
o
p
e
d
and my forehead pressed against the carpet and
ached
with the
a
r
c
h
of my vertebrae.
I hung
myself
and hung the necklace
from myself. Leaving me
dangling,
until the etched metal etched
a strict tan line
into my collarbone.
And protected what's left of me
from the sun. The son
that I heard
had to be buried.
I hung
from her lips
“like the
Gardens of Babylon”
Giving and
taking
The Moon.
I tried to comfort me
with the
weight
of a 13 and a skinned hand and some
mountain
range.
on the chain
whose clasp
inches towards my heart
slower
and is turned
Away.
I pressed a song
into my forehead, forefinger, and necklace. A song
quieter now
a song
for
The Moon.
And then from the garden, into the kitchen
The heavy, pleasant weight of guava-scented flowers in your belly,
Tomato guts on shoe soles,
The way dirt dries in the creases at the bottom of your sneakers.
Try and remember the click of the screen door as you open it,
The screech it emits,
Shrill, noisy, and exhausted.
Remember the way the yard looked as you left it,
The bright greens of the leaves, trees, bushes.
The sharp contrast of the bulbous yellow lemons, bright juicy cherry tomatoes,
Pink zinnias and delicate purple flowers that
You can’t help but look out on as you close the door behind you.
As you climb the stairs, each step unbending,
hard and sudden on the arches of your feet,
Remember the slide of your steps against the painted white wood,
And the way you scraped the soft of your fingertip over the dark polished banister,
Seeking a splinter that wouldn’t pierce,
A piece you could hold in your hand.
Remember the woman in the kitchen,
Dark brown hair, debatably hazel eyes, swirls of blue on her oversized shirt.
Wrinkles marking the edges of a mouth that mirrored your own so remarkably,
Recall the face of the woman who stands in the kitchen,
A number of feet from your own sweaty toes.
Remember the way you forgot to slip your shoes off,
And remember the way you only remembered this courtesy as you neared the top step.
The way you dashed back down, overwhelmed just as you were seconds ago, by
the scent of the garden wafting through the screen door.
You slip off your shoes,
And whip around quick as you can, white spots blurring your vision.
As you climb the stairs by two, skipping the step a dead bee has fallen on,
The kitchen grows nearer and nearer.
The room is monochrome, all the shades of the clouds
making up the cupboards, sink, and cat bowls on the floor.
Finally, with your socked feet on the tiled kitchen floor, your auntie’s bedroom to your back,
Breath in her kitchen’s stale air, so different from the outside.
And accept the clutched handful of chocolate cherries she gifts you.