"See How We Fell" See how we fell without knowing... Years ago, ago, ago... Blowing air through the barrels of our nostrils, singing songs surrounded by walls of people. Pounding drums and plucking electric guitars, roar of low heavens in our ears... Hollywood movies bulging our eyes full, then drugging them almost shut. Dancing circles of crowds flaunting, nights dark with flashing bed escapades... Too young to know down the hall hospitalizations... Stumping our barefoot dreams and schemes, mind murdering those we seldom thought of... Dead toads on the road smashed and dried behind the high school auditorium. Always wishing for true love and marrying a saint we didn't deserve. Babies crying in the middle of night. Sending them to school in a blink of shock. Working 2 jobs into old age, wishing for a reboot with bags under our eyes. The world becoming chaos in a diaper. The dollar becoming acid in our pockets. The only way out has always been before us. A prayer of grace with unending tears, tears, tears....
Category Archives: CHAOS
Poetry by Yahuza Uzman
When Light Becomes a Slave of Hopelessness
exasperation from a gloomy stream
came and swallowed my little tears
when i was trying to reminisce the memories
of my love buried in a distant land
beneath the house that produces hope.
my love is a very atypical love
treasured in the heart of tears
that lived on the plate of agony.
what would be your light to dream
if the person you agreed to share
your smiles with had built a hatred’s farm?
i was served a food in a burial shroud,
i was given a water to drink inside a casket,
i was asked to eat loneliness for many days
which my neurons would never remember.
so hope has become a distant land
that i can never perfume its nosegay,
& i know, thousands of kilometres are
atween my entire being and hope—
as all i eat is a cooked or boiled hopelessness.
Poetry from Sayani Mukherjee
Celestial
Evening brightness
Slightly dew dropped pearl
My butterfly winged dappled sunlight
Hibiscus rhythms of night vapour
That harbours a mild mellow film
Rainbow trout and opal eyed souls
My bright tea tree holes
Labyrinths of turpentine palaces
Singsong lyrical balance
Yet a bright shimmery dew
Whiter than heavens
Celestial realms
A bright future
Beyond cause and effect
Just celestial.
Poetry from CLS Sandoval
Closed Hearts She said I’m not what they say I am I can’t help but cry Just a little The knot in my throat And weight on my chest Leave it unsaid, he said She never mentioned how his silence hurt her Leave it unsaid, she said He didn’t tell her how many things were seething to come out Death by so many small nicks along the way You never know what goes on behind closed hearts Eating My Shovel Rolling in the cold San Diego waves the up brings life value and the down, maybe not I eat when I’m depressed, when I’m happy, whenever I self-medicate with coffee and food So many people say that life is too short I disagree Life is so, so long My hopes for happily ever after faded to midnight Every choice narrowed the prospects Fewer possibilities now I’ve dug too deep and the only tool I’ve kept is my shovel. My Dead Body At the funeral of my husband’s best friend’s father, for the first time, we broached the topic of what we want to happen to our dead bodies. I have always wanted my body to be useful to others once I have lost any need for it. I told my husband that I want all of my remaining healthy organs donated, and the rest of me donated to science. I would be happy for my body to be a cadaver or thrown out into those body farms in the middle or south United States to help forensic scientists hone their craft. My husband was appalled at this. He could see himself donating organs, but he wanted the rest of him buried, so his family would have a place to visit him. I pointed out how environmentally unsound burial is and what a waste of human tissue, when he could help science, even after death. After a bit of back and forth, we settled on organ donation, then becoming trees to be planted where our loved ones could visit, but we’d be friendly to the earth in death. He wants a headstone I just want to help someone We’ll see who dies first San Diego Beaches Heading north, waves chase my left side As the water pulls back, little puckers appear in the smooth wet sand The sand crabs are reaching toward the sun If I’m lucky, I’ll find a sand dollar Or one of those butterfly shells The former home of a muscle Clam Or oyster Splayed open Revealing its shiny vulnerable inside I remember when La Jolla’s seal beach Was once the children’s cove Instead of the home of so many ocean puppies It was the perfect wading spot for little ones Protected by the sea wall Bordered by tide pools We used to gently press our fingers Into the center of the sea anemone Until they recoiled into themselves Now the seals take up all the space And bark either in delight or warning To all who dare to venture near We Can All be a Stranger She knows exactly how to break my heart My perfect little girl with all those imperfections Her cherubic face makes me want to give her everything She wants and more my obligation as her mother is to not give her everything When she lies She’s a stranger When she’s obstinate She’s a stranger When I raise my voice I’m a stranger When I punish her I’m a stranger I can’t just be her best friend I cant just give her what she wants now I have to help guide her to the best self she can become My little girl is a woman in the making and the making is the hard part
CLS Sandoval, PhD (she/her) is a pushcart nominated writer and communication professor accomplished in film, academia, and creative writing who performs, writes, signs, and rarely relaxes. She’s a flash fiction and poetry editor for Dark Onus Lit. CLS is raising her daughter and dog with her husband in Alhambra, CA.
Poetry from Rezauddin Stalin

The Kingdom of Foam Whom I saw old yesterday Is young today Thinking dead who was buried Is walking on the yard The ill-fated man having no legs is running in the field Today the vast sand dune is rambunctious with the sea foam Dead fish are jumping and bathing in the river Arjuna who never lost his aim His arrows are aimless Despite meeting again and again Radha and Krishna were never in affair The blind poet Thamyris is looking toward light Wrinkle skinned Zulekha is Becoming young gradually But Jesus had not yet been taken down from the cross From The Stage of Execution I exactly don’t know why From behind the prison cell I remember my mother Mother used to say you know- writing poem doesn’t bring bread and butter I remained silent in humiliation But today I have time I can ask question like a brave son Mother, who don’t write poems- can they bring bread and butter either My mother is now counting her last days And the predecessors are lying in the graveyard I don’t know if they died of hunger or not And the science of the lords doesn’t blame Hunger as the cause of human death I will be hanged at the third watch of the night To know the final message The concern of rainy winds floats in the eyes of my comrades May be my death has settled the dew of countless pains In the sky of their eyes That will be twinkling like pearls In the sun of love I am indebted and grateful to my fellow comrades The poems written by me Are the essences of their life indeed I’ve just decorated them with immortal ink of the truth I have not forgot their love By the ordinary pain of death The love that no one- can unearth Even throughout his lifetime Standing at the edge of death I feel that today Now I am heeding toward the place of public execution I’ve only one minute left to be hanged Meanwhile what else may I leave for a nation in decline Without the example of igneous death Curiosity I keep a cloud of many words In my chest pocket, I keep the anxieties of unknown In my mind’s locket. Where do the blue stars live Or blue fairy wings, Where does the red lotus White seagull swings. Where does the King Cobra dwell In hidden hilly rest, Where is the cave in the North or In the Southwest. In which sky does the eagle fly Lays eggs in the sea Why is the bird’s heart frozen When cloud sounds bee. To which distance the rainbow Bend its face behind, Why do these questions arise In the corner of mind. As a child looks everything In the blinks of eyes, So have I opened my eyes To listen the cries. Rezauddin Stalin is a very famous Bengali poet, born in 1962 in Nalbhanga village of Greater Jessore district. Many local and foreign awards including Bangla Academy. His poems have been translated into 42 languages of the world. Along with poetry he established himself as a successful media personality. His basic thoughts on various issues of the society give us light. Rezauddin Stalin is now the international voice of Bengali poetry.
Poetry from Kuziyeva Shahrizoda

Ungrateful Girl
– Why are we poor? I don’t dress like other people. All I eat is moshkichiri, complained Odina.
– O ungrateful girl, you have food to eat, clothes to wear, a house to live in, be thankful.
More than that will be conceit, arrogance, lack of visibility.
Sorry
-Dad, forgive me.
– Why, my daughter.
– I hurt your heart a lot.
– No, my daughter. You didn’t hurt me with your words.
– Not with my words, but with my sins…
Solace
– Why are you crying?
– I’m just…
– Has someone moved away from you?
– No, I have come close, he cried after reading the Qur’an verses.
Unfilled wish
Oh, I miss you.
– After all, you are not far away, my daughter.
– I turned 21, now I can’t sleep with you after hearing all this…
– Mother with tears in her eyes, come, daughter, let’s sleep together..
– Hey, let’s go back to my childhood, tell me… he slowly stretched out his hands.
Asr prayer sounded.
Azan was called instead of Allah.
Mother kept saying alla…Allayo alla..alla my child who didn’t sleep with your mother..!
Kuziyeva Shakhrizoda. G’ayrat kizi is a girl of enthusiasm.
She was born on January 1, 2000 in Bogot district of Khorezm region. One of her biggest achievements is being a Navoi scholarship winner.
Her stories are published in Turkey’s “Uzbek voice in the world”, “Talented Voices of Uzbekistan” published by Amazon in the USA, in the anthologies of the Respublic of Uzbekistan “Teacher”, “For Teachers”, “Hilal” collection, “Urganch University”.
“Voice of Youth”, “Ezgu Soz”, “Marifat”, “Virtue” and “Kenya Times”, “Red Times”, “Page 3 news” published in Thailand, USA, India, Canada, Great Britain. It is continuously published in “RKDxTimes” newspapers.
Short story from Ammanda Moore
Cycling for the First Time
When I first cycled due to my bipolar disorder, my brain concocted an elaborate story about what was happening to me. At the time, I was practicing multiple nights a week on a play, Sense and Sensibility by Kate Hamill, a lively interpretation where each character except the two leads played multiple parts.
My brain convinced me that this play was an experiment to get me pregnant. While I worked on something I loved (the play), I would be filling my brain and body with the joy of working in theater, thus reducing my stress levels. I believed that the contract I signed when I accepted my role in the play was actually a contract for this experiment. In my mind, the directors of the play were working with my doctors and workplace so that I could go on leave as soon as I was ready to deliver. So when I was placed on leave from work, I thought that part of the experiment was being fulfilled. I frequently rubbed my belly, imagining new life growing within as I dreamed of twins.
It wasn’t until after I stabilized and saw the incoherent text messages and emails did I understand why I was dismissed from the play and put on leave from work. With my new diagnosis of bipolar, my dreams of a joyful pregnancy were also dashed. I couldn’t imagine living with the disorder and experiencing something as challenging as pregnancy and postpartum.