Synchronized Chaos Mid-December 2024 Issue: A Literary Snow Globe

Evergreen trees within a stylized painting of a snow globe.
Image c/o Circe Denyer

Contributing poet Howard Debs’ work has been included in Chameleon Chimera: An Anthology of Florida Poets, which has just been released by Purple Ink Press, including work by U.S. inaugural poet Richard Blanco and notables such as Geoffrey Philp, Jen Karetnick, David Kirby and many others.

Also, contributor Peter J. Dellolio’s new novel The Confession has just been released from Cyberwit.

The Confession is the first-person account of a serial killer on the evening before his execution.  It is literary fiction, and somewhat similar to Naked Lunch by William Burroughs.  There is suspense in the narrative, as there is some speculation as to whether or not the narrator is really guilty.

Now for this issue: A Literary Snow Globe. As with a real snow globe, we watch delicate bits and pieces of creative thought descend and fall wherever they may on the landscape of our world. Each time we shake the globe and let it settle, each time we read these works, we take away something different and view a unique scene.

Daniel De Culla’s poem glories in the exuberance and diversity of human creative expression.

Salihu Muhammad describes stages in his development as a creative writer.

Ilhomova Mohichehra’s poetry probes the creative potential of liminal dream-states, how emotions and imagination can be strengthened when we approach sleep. Mark Young incorporates color, texture, and text into subconscious, surreal images he calls “geographies.”

Jim Leftwich’s poem incorporates vivid imagery and wordplay, referencing animals, landscapes, and celestial bodies. It also includes philosophical reflections on time, thought, and human experience. Catherine Zickgraf’s work explores time, mercy and judgment, spirituality, and gender. Maja Milojkovic revels in the beauty of the world while acknowledging everything’s impermanence.

Duane Vorhees’ poems explore themes of love, loss, sexual intimacy, nature, and self-discovery. Cheryl Snell’s fictional drabbles look at moments of connection, humor, and tenderness, between humans and each other and other species. Lilian Dipasupil Kunimasa affirms her acceptance of her entire life journey and her acknowledgement of the different parts of her personality and character. Linda Gunther’s short story depicts a woman who finds her identity by finding her calling in life.

Ilhomova Mohichehra ponders the dreary sufferings of life as she stares out at a rainstorm.

Dramatic painting of dark clouds and lightning and black birds over a storm whitecapped sea. A lighthouse on the right beacons with light.
Image c/o George Hodan

Mykyta Ryzhykh’s work offers a glimpse into a complex and troubled inner world through images of childhood, animals, fear, and death. Texas Fontanella’s poem expresses feelings of financial instability, frustration with societal expectations, and a desire for creative and personal freedom. He includes references to pop culture, politics, and literature, often in a fragmented and surreal manner. Mahbub Alam addresses humanity’s potential for great good or great evil and the need to make choices. Sayani Mukherjee speaks to the inner wilds: the vision, beauty, and danger we all carry within us.

Chuck Taylor’s poetry speculates on the nature of chaos, how it does not operate according to a holy book or an algorithm.

Nilufar Anvarova urges everyone to expand their horizons by reading. Kucharova Ugiloy celebrates the power of books and learning to expand one’s worldview.

Numonjonova Shahnozakhon reflects on how wonder and curiosity add color to life. David Sapp approaches outer and inner landscapes as a tourist and explorer, probing an office firing and the idea of his death with the same curiosity as he brings to Rome’s Trevi Fountain. Lawrence Winkler brings a sense of wonder to his trip to the Micronesian island of Pohnpei, exploring the history and culture of the place while witnessing his friends’ mishaps in international business. Santiago Burdon sketches a time and place in his Christmas tale from a rough Italian-American childhood.

Zarshid Qurbonov reads a book out in the grass on a sunny day and reflects on Uzbekistan’s literary heritage.

Farangiz Abduvohidova illuminates the work and life of Uzbek poet and magazine publisher Zulfiyakhanim, highlighting her qualities as a kind human being as well as her writing skill. Murodova Muslima Kadyrovna also honors the legacy of Uzbek woman poet Zulfiyakhanim.

Poster of a Central Asian woman in a colorful blouse with short dark hair. Words underneath her photo in Uzbek discuss her legacy and the years of her life are listed, 1915-1996.
Image c/o Savol Javob

Dilbar Koldoshova Nuraliyevna dreams of becoming a teacher or journalist so as to shape the minds of her fellow Uzbeks towards good. Gulsevar Xojamova highlights the Uzbek Youth Academy’s role in developing the creative potential of many young people.

Ibragimova Rushana outlines various techniques for teaching languages. Aziza Umurzoqova highlights the role of student-directed technology for language learning. Jonpolat Turgunov elucidates the history and value of the Ibrat Farzandlari Project, an online resource for learning foreign languages. Durdona Ibrahimova suggests possible innovative roles for technology and online apps and games in language instruction.

Abdumalikova Mushtariybegim celebrates the Internet but encourages balanced and moderate use of technology.

Fayzullayeva Gulasal outlines technical and financial problems within Uzbekistan’s industrial chemical industry.

Sarvinoz Quramboyeva conveys the daily determination of the Uzbek people to move their society forward. Shodiyeva Mexribon celebrates the hard work, hospitality, and honor of the Uzbek people. Ilhomova Mohichehra praises the kind and hardworking villagers of Uzbekistan. Sitora Otajonova honors the rule of law and social progress and community spirit of her native Uzbekistan. Mahzuna Habibova speaks to her native Uzbekistan as a friend, urging the land to hold onto its freedom and glory.

Farangiz Abduvohidova elucidates the history and culture of Uzbekistan’s Azim Bukhara region as Tuliyeva Sarvinoz describes the Uzbek historical castle monument of Tuproqkala. Ismailov Sanjar describes in detail the shrine of Sa’d Ibn Abu Waqqas in Uzbekistan. Through his photographs of an Afro-Caribbean festival in Boston, Jacques Fleury celebrates the region’s vibrant cultural diaspora while outlining the historical and psychological significance of the Caribbean rara celebrations.

Young Black woman in a sequined costume with a yellow mask and headdress dances in a city street.
Photo c/o Jacques Fleury

Sarvinoz Tuliyeva recollects her Uzbek childhood: fragrant trees on her street, parents baking bread in the oven, her father crying as she grows up too fast.

Alimbayeva Diana reflects on the constant care and provision of her father for her whole family. Zabuna Abduhakim writes a succinct verse of gratitude for her caring parents. Makhmasalayeva Parizoda Makhmashukurovna praises her father’s selfless love and sacrifice. Sobirjonova Rayhona honors her kind-hearted sister. Diyorbek Maxmudov praises her father’s tender love. Azimjon Toshpulatov’s verse honors the warmth and love of her mother. Ilhomova Mohichehra reflects on how blessed and lucky she is to have loyal and caring family members. Akmalova Zilolakhan Akobirkhan speaks to the consistent love and practical care most people receive from their parents. Faleeha Hassan speaks of children in the winter, nourished and warmed by caring parents. Muhammed Sinan offers up a tribute to the love, dedication, and integrity of his father.

Audrija Paul’s poetry reflects the determined patience of a lover as Jonborieva Muxlisa Rahmon reflects on the value of friendship and what you gain by being a good friend. Norova Zulfizar reflects on a love so joyful and nurturing it reminds her of spring’s flowering and her parents’ care. Mesfakus Salahin employs a variety of poetic images to convey a gentle and kind romance. Sobirjonova Rayhona urges her fellow young people to live happy lives and treat their parents with gratitude and respect.

Uzbek historical monument of Bukhara. Stone city plaza with doorways and stairs and a skyline.

Nurullayeva Mushtariy illustrates the heartache that comes when the younger generation does not have compassion for their parents. Shahnoza Ochildiyeva remembers how she began to empathize with and befriended some children who were originally annoying bullies, because she realized they lacked the care of loving parents.

J.J. Campbell reflects on having survived decades of broken dreams, troubled relationships, and abandonment. Yet, as he acknowledges, he has survived. Abigail George reflects on love, loss, mental health, family relationships, spirituality, and her artistic dreams in a prose poem formulated as a letter to her niece. Graciela Noemi Villaverde grieves the death of a husband with whom she shared a tender love.

Z.I. Mahmud explores masculinity and romance in D.H. Lawrence’s Sons and Lovers and how various social and psychological pressures drive the protagonist away from his fiancees. Eva Lianou Petropolou’s poem, reviewed by Williamsji Maveli, explains how both psychological issues and societal problems such as discrimination and violence against women can interfere with loving relationships.

Somber closeup photo of a man in the shadows resting his head on his hand. He's of indeterminate race, we see him from the side.
Image c/o George Hodan

Kass’ piece explores themes of heartbreak, regret, and the lasting impact of a past relationship. Grant Guy’s poetry reflects on daily routine, loneliness, the lack of intimacy, and loss of identity within some relationships.

Chimezie Ihekuna elucidates the struggles of men in his native Nigeria and elsewhere in the world: being disrespected and viewed only as a source of money in an economy where decent jobs are hard to come by. Maftuna Rustamova also reflects on materialism and the tragedy of reducing human value to money. Don Bormon laments the suffering of the poor out in the cold during winter, while acknowledging the beauty and the harshness of nature during winter months.

Sandro Piedrahita’s short story dramatizes another tragedy, the Pinochet regime’s murder of singer and guitarist Victor Jara. Odera Chidume highlights the effects of war in Nigeria on everyday people through his story of remarkably resilient teenagers.

Vernon Frazer’s poems explore themes of wealth disparity, societal decay, and existentialism, often using vivid imagery and unconventional language. Howard Debs reflects on the human and ecological losses of 2024 and the changes many societies are experiencing.

Before we can fully take stock of 2024, though, there are the December holidays.

Pink, blue, yellow and green outlines of stars on a black background.
Image c/o Andrea Stockel

Taylor Dibbert recollects an awkward encounter with a stranger as Doug Hawley’s memorable anecdote recounts a Christmas filled with physical and relational peril.

Brian Barbeito’s poem illuminates the beauty of our world and highlights the importance of appreciating nature and loved ones, at the holidays and any time.

Bill Tope’s short story explores human compassion, connection, and perception. Another of his pieces depicts a kindly Jewish shopkeeper whose gift makes some young girls’ Hanukkah very special.

We hope that this issue will be a gift to you, and that as you read, the particles of snow in our literary globe will land in interesting ways that resonate with you.

Poetry from Sayani Mukherjee

Confetti

My Confetti of small baked dreams
My own peripheral vision
Eating me alive
Too fast it spreads
Individual is in decay 
The lovely bridal vision
Wear your best sunglasses
Into the open wild 
The nemesis is my own.
Reflection of my own 
Designs and marmalade sky
Please keep your safety pin 
Understatement and autocracy
The beautiful Sofia 
Maiden high my own daisy dreams
Smallstars and paint me blue 
Let's dive Into the autumn wild
Before you lie to yourself
Learn to tie your shoes
My mother's own place
The all knowing eye 
Blinded by sea green gold 
Old spice here your own voice
My better known white

Essay from Sarvinoz Quramboyeva

Ordinary people

Life don’t show yourself to us,

Life don’t tell me what to do,

This is how you life today, tell you,

Equal the straw, ordinary people.

Life is passing, morning are breakfast,

Bongs are played from the depths of the heights,

Tunes are a sign of the future,

Equal to the straw, ordinary people.

This world is cruel, it’s hard to live,

This is life! You say, but your breath is exhausted,

Uzbek people are like that, they are restless.

(Uzbek teen girl with long straight dark hair, a black and white striped coat, and a black top)

Poetry from Jonborieva Muxlisa Rahmon

Teen Uzbek girl with a headdress, brown eyes, and white collared shirt standing outside in a lawn.

Friends

My day doesn’t go by without you.

There is no circle without us.

You are dear to me,

Dear friends.

                  An opportunity

Someone’s dream is a dream for someone,

It is a medicine that heals the heart of those who suffer.

We remember the one we love every moment,

Disloyal people forget this moment.

Jonborieva Mukhlisa Rakhmon’s daughter is a 10th grade student of school 16, Muzrabot district, Surkhandarya region. She was born on September 6, 2007 in Muzrabot district, Surkhandarya region. Her nationality is Uzbek.

Currently, she is a 10th-grade student of the 16th general school of Muzrabot district. She is the winner of the 3rd place in the Muzrabot district district stage of the 2023 “Surkhan youth” science Olympiad for the regional governor’s prize. She is the holder of a certificate for her active participation in the festival held in cooperation with Uzbekistan’s government under the project “One country, one language” where her poem also earned a place.

Essay from Akmalova Zilolakhan Akobirkhan

Central Asian teen girl with a light tan headscarf standing in front of a red curtain on stage holding a bouquet of roses and tulips.

A Father and Mother are the kindest in this world. You can find many friends, but you cannot find another father and mother. Father and mother are the only ones. If we get sick, they come out at night to see us. They don’t wear fancy clothes but spend their resources on us and even provide the water we drink. There is no such thing as enough love for a mother and father. No matter how much I do to honor my parents, it is not enough. They wash us clean and comb us as children.

God willing, father. I will send your mother on Hajj and Umrah trips, and you too, if you take your parents on Umrah trips, your parents will enter heaven inshaallah. And if he recites the Qur’an, Allah will go to the Angels on the Day of Resurrections, and if Allah does not want, the parents of those who read the Qur’an will come on foot, and he will enter Paradise with his parents.

Akmalova Zilolakhan Akobirkhan is a student at 17-Idum specialized state general education school 5.

Poetry from Numonjonova Shahnozakhon

Uzbek schoolgirl stands in front of a large white building in a headdress and long black braids and a blue coat over a white collared shirt and tie and black skirt. She's holding up photos of astronauts and spacecraft.
Colorless world

Who were we in a black and white world,
He saw black and white with his colored eyes.
We said that this whole being is unchanging,
Accustomed to the view stored in his mind.

Even if it is a thousand stars, this is a mortal world,
A brave man comes out to the big square.
As if trying to make a difference,
But the people have no business, they can't obey the decree.

He tried to be like them,
The opportunity he found paid off.
There was astonishment among the people,
Very nice, chosen side.

A thought suddenly came to his little mind,
"This world must remain like this."
In the eyes of the black and white world,
He returned to himself, day by day.

The world is filled with color and paint,
Everything changed immediately.
Every bit seems more beautiful to him,
There is nothing left in the black and white world.

Numonjonova Shahnozakhon. She was born on June 7, 2009 in Fergana region. Currently, she is studying at the creative school named after Erkin Vahidov organized by PIIMA. Her creative works have been published in several international magazines and has various international certificates. The creator's future goal is to become an international ambassador and receive a state award named after Zulfiya.

Essay from Fayzullayeva Gulasal

Central Asian woman with a beaded headdress, pink scarf, and ruffled gray and white blouse.
Problems and reforms in the chemical industry 
                          Faizullayeva Gulasal
                            School 32, 8th grade
                           Student

  Abstract: This article provides detailed information about the chemical industry and its development problems and shortcomings, as well as reforms aimed at eliminating them. 


 Annotation: V dannoy state predstavlena podrobnaya information about chemical industry, problems and shortcomings in development, as well as reform, improvement and elimination.
  Keywords: chemical industry, planned projects and modern reforms, chemical research

     If we talk about the reforms of the chemical industry in our country;  On September 21, President Shavkat Mirziyoyev got acquainted with the presentation of the main indicators achieved in the chemical industry and the planned projects and made the necessary proposals.

    As a result of the reforms, the type of products in the chemical industry increased and profitability increased. More than 1 million tons of mineral fertilizers were produced in 8 months of this year. Exports increased almost twice and reached 330 million dollars. 

Speaking of the chemical industry, the chemical industry is one of the heavy industries, which produces a variety of chemical products.  types of mining and chemical raw materials, basic chemical products (NH 3 -ammonia, inorganic acids, alkalis, mineral fertilizers, simple chlorine and chlorine products, liquefied gases, etc.), plastic and synthetic resins, including caprolactam, cellulose acetates, chemical fibers and threads.  It produces plastic and glass-plastic materials and products, lacquer materials, synthetic paints, chemical reagents, photochemical products, household chemical goods, etc. 

The transformation of the chemical industry into an independent industrial network is connected with the industrial revolution.  Samarkand superphosphate factories were launched in 1963 and these factories served to meet the needs of the republic's agriculture for phosphorus fertilizers. With the launch of the gas field in the Bukhara region, the Fergana Nitrogen Fertilizer Plant was founded in 1963, and the Navoi chemical plant in 1964 started to work. 

Problems: the costs related to mineral fertilizers used in agriculture are not covered.  is going  Therefore, starting from 2018, the supply of mineral fertilizers to consumers is planned to be carried out through stock exchanges through the mediation of "YAGONA AGENT" organized under "ÕZKIMYO" JSC. These and many similar problems are causing great damage. These damages are being considered by our president.  and managed to find a solution. 

What measures have been taken or are being taken in this situation?  The ability of enterprises to form small working capital is completely limited, and they are solving the problem by attracting loans at 16-18%. Another problem that should be paid attention to is the obsolescence of the main technological equipment.  the equipment is not undergoing current and capital repairs. 

The head of state is also finding a solution for this and he emphasized the need to develop a network plan for the implementation of current and capital repair works, and this is very true.  we say thank you and we cannot help but recognize the high knowledge and potential of that person. Let's conclude by saying that each of us should contribute to our country, let's be thankful that we live in a bright country, in a beautiful life.
 
 References: 
 1 President's reforms
 2 Planned projects 
 3 Google sites 
 4. Decision of the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan on measures to further reform the chemical industry and increase its investment attractiveness

Fayzullayeva Gulasal was born in 2009 28th of January in Bukhara region Gijduvan district in ordinary family. Now, she is 9th class and she has succeeded lots of achievements. She is author of "Dadajonim orzusi" -" Dad's wish"and "Onajonim jannatim" My mother is my paradise". Additionally she has achieved many prizes in biology and chemistry subjects. English, mother tongue and literature are her favourite subjects too. Gulasal has attended in "Kitobxonlar festivali " - Literati festival " and won three day tour to Tashkent.
Three are 6 people in her family. Her father has passed away. She is very talented , intellectual and sussed girl. She has lots of plans and dreams in future so now Gulasal is trying to do her best for achieving them by learning biology and chemistry subjects. Her big dream is to study in abroad.