snow –
the chirp of a robin
so muffled
Poetry from Patrick Sweeney
come see the skinny-necked sparrow leaving tracks in the snow
Nijinsky brought his own moonlight
and everything else
was papier-mâché
a caterpillar curled up on the grain of firewood
she tested the strength of the bleach on the tip of her tongue
how the picture of his mother became a mirror for fixing her hair
a congested bear on tv hawking honey-flavored cough syrup
taking turns telling me why I need a Titanium phone
there for her first pickled onion
remembering the birthdays of the dead
it was the strawberries in the shortcake he didn’t like
Poetry from Taylor Dibbert
A Long Way Away
He’s at Lost Sock
About to order a quad
And a crogel
And he realizes that
The person in front of him
Is someone that
He used to know
From the Peace Corps
Another volunteer
And no one
Says anything
And he isn’t sure
If she recognizes him
But he thinks
She probably does
And as she
Gets her coffee
And walks out of
The coffee shop
He realizes that
Those Peace Corps days
Feel a long way away.
Taylor Dibbert is a writer, journalist, and poet in Washington, DC. He’s author of, most recently, the poetry collection “Takoma.”
Poetry from Rus Khomutoff
Poetry from Ahmed Miqdad

Gaza and the New Year
The world is preoccupied in
Preparing for the New Year celebrations
The Gazans are engaged in
Looking for crumbles of bread,
a bottle of potable water,
A shelter from coldness,
And tarpaulin to protect from the rain.
The world launches the fireworks
That symbolize the so-called civilization
But the Gazan children are killed with the bombshells
That scatter their soft flesh
And the dogs snatch their bodies.
The world turn on the lights and music
That turn the world into deep darkness
And lead to craziness.
While the Gazans have no light
To see each others in tents
And their music is the sound of drones and jets.
The world shares the beauty of the family
While the Gazans are either homeless or martyrs.
The world feels the warmth of home
But the Gazan children die from the severe coldness.
The world distributes gifts
On children
However the Gazans’ gifts are heavy lethal bombs and rockets.
That dismember their limbs,
Kill their beloved
And demolish their homes.
The world gives children sweets
And the Gazan children receive the white coffins.
The world is celebrating the new beginning of the year
Whilst the Gazans are waiting for the end of their misery.
If you’d like to support poet Ahmed Miqdad and his family at this time, please feel welcome to support and share his GoFundMe here.
Music from Texas Fontanella
Listen to OM & Styx Viscous – We Coffin Up It’s True by STYX VISCOUS on #SoundCloud
Listen to Gold Fears – OmStyx.mp3 by Theodore Aplin on #SoundCloud
Listen to UnentitLed – OmStyx by Theodore Aplin on #SoundCloud
Poetry from Rob Plath
coat of ghosts
i move about
a skeleton
in a coat of ghosts
beneath an old blue place
people stop to say hello
even offer hugs
i smile & sometimes even
a laugh comes out
they don’t know
i’m 3 parts ghost
it’s all a show
b/c everyone who really
made me smile
is gone
they’re ghosts i wear
around me
like a cloak
& when i’m in my room alone
all i do is i cry
listening to songs
that make me remember
all i’ve lost
a skeleton w/ tear ducts
from when i was alive
& today they pass me & smile
they don’t know
my grin is a frown in disguise
even when we shake hands
they don’t notice my grip
is all bone
cuffs of ghosts at my wrists
i’m just a skeleton
in a coat of ghosts
moving about
beneath an old blue place
————————————————
suspended in the night
i woke in the wee
hours of the night
my arm numb
from sleeping on it
& i thought how
we bring things
into existence
w/ our reins of vessels
& circling blood
& slim branches
of nerves, etc…
& while my arm
slowly came
back to life
i lay there in silence
straddling both worlds
the unscrambled one
& one of total nothingness
the latter, of course
my better acquaintance
———————————————-
a visitation
i met my mother the day
after her father suddenly
died in the street
8 years before i was born
she was in the laundrymat
across the street
from our old apartment
in brooklyn
asking herself out loud
how dare the dryers spin?
the machines turn?
don’t they know that
my father’s gone?
& i was there next to her
folding my clothes
on a long white table
twice her age
i gave her my condolences
i told her my mother died
on a sunny day in june
while the baseball game played
loud on the hospital tv
while i was there in the room
& i asked the sun
to stop what it was doing
just for a moment
but it kept on shining
she stared at me as if she
knew something
said she was sorry & thank you
& then looked away
watching the towels lift & drop
in the little round window
& i picked up my basket
& walked out into the blaze
of my dream