Find yourself in your view Everyday you will be new Roads become soft and enjoyable Passer by will be available. Tie the time to the top of the finger Nature will be singer Birds will sing the song of heart Flowers will bloom in the desert. Embrace happy memories in solitude Ice of pain will salute your attitude Frustration will never touch future You will be above mental torture. Remove the rivers of sufferings and sorrow The sun will be your tomorrow The dry river will get fountain of the moon God will fulfill your prayer very soon.
Poetry from Sayani Mukherjee
Tattooed By Sayani Mukherjee Uniquely designed for mainstream A six figured tattooed butterfly On my back A pat at my shoulder A beam at my poem Tree house and childplay things My proof of itsy bitsy rock scissors stone A friendship bracelets with red ribbon White washed marooned island Over my chest It stays when I form a circle of mates- Three Pentagons diaphragmatic Radio shows on for Friday nights Modernist nonsense and my Zabberwocky tricks I form my bracelets with my Tattooed fingertips. My jinx my pixie dust my childlike wonder A little sparkle did no wonder Red bracelets white washed marooned island I hum at my lost poem A sudden Omition at the back A little pinch of dusty drives Underneath a new edge control Completing of a poem for the Medal gold I hope my pixie dust will do Good for nothing For this electric haze on my tattooed butterfly soul.
Synchronized Chaos Mid-November 2022: Strength and Vulnerability
Welcome to November’s second issue of Synchronized Chaos Magazine!

First of all, we encourage you to come on out to Metamorphosis, our New Year’s Eve gathering and benefit show for the Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan and Sacramento’s Take Back the Night. This will take place in downtown Davis, CA, at 2pm in the fellowship hall of Davis Lutheran Church (all are welcome, we’re simply using their room as a community space). 4pm Pacific time is midnight Greenwich Mean Time so we can count down to midnight.
The theme “Metamorphosis” refers to having people there from different generations to speak and read and learn from each other, challenging us to honor the wisdom of our parents and ancestors while incorporating the best of the world’s new ideas in a thoughtful “metamorphosis.” We’ve got comedian Nicole Eichenberg, musicians Avery Burke and Joseph Menke, and others on board as well as speakers from different generations.
Second, our friend and collaborator Rui Carvalho has announced our Nature Writing Contest for 2022. This is an invitation to submit poems and short stories related to trees, water, and nature conservation between now and the March 2023 deadline. More information and submission instructions here!
This month, our issue focuses on themes of strength and vulnerability.

Sreya Sarkar’s piece exemplifies this theme, comparing women protesting for change in Iran to the tendrils of a vine. While tendrils may look weak, they can eventually tear apart greater structures and claim a space.
Many other contributors draw upon nature for inspiration.
Channie Greenberg photographs staircases in different locations, many of which are becoming overgrown and reclaimed by plant life. J.D. Nelson creates small poetic snapshots of natural scenes.
John Culp probes the nature of love and intimacy through sharing his feelings about a rose in a vase on his windowsill. Mesfakus Salahin plumbs the depths of human emotion and bodies of water. Debarati Sen poetizes about poetry through floral metaphors while observing the change of seasons into fall.
John Grey writes of love and nature and incorporates modern science and climate change into old style pastoral poetry. Jim Force interposes haiku onto photographs of cracks in the sidewalk, places where the vulnerability of physical materials shows through despite our intent in their construction.
J.D. DeHart writes of nature, virtual reality, and his quest to figure out who he is and how he can most effectively live as a teacher and mentor.
Other pieces are more fanciful, yet still touch on the complexities of our world and our natures.

Bill Tope depicts a wild acid trip in psychedelic detail, yet suggests the dreamer is aware is experience is unreal.
Alan Catlin looks to his mysterious and foreboding dreams for inspiration, recollecting a conversation with a recurrent personage. Fernando Sorrentino depicts a friendship between a researcher and a mythical animal, suggesting coexistence with nature.
Nathan Anderson mixes up characters and text on the screen for artistic effect. Christina Chin and Uchechukwu Onyedikam create a collaborative haiku set, playing off each other to build scenes of nature and human culture.
Daniel De Culla’s earthy, risque piece entertains with bawdy humor.
Some pieces address personal and historical grief, loss, and remembrance.

Andrew Cyril MacDonald evokes scenes of mausoleums in his work, structures fading into memory along with their occupants. Naziru Sulaiman mourns his recent ancestors lost to a war of aggression, bringing them back the only way he can, in poetry.
Santiago Burdon presents a brave child who uses logic to confront his parents’ prejudice against Jews. Bill Tope presents a scene of raw suffering in a Nazi concentration camp. Cora Tate relates a tragic tale of a community leader who sought peace only to die from law enforcement brutality.
J.J. Campbell’s poems portray stagnation and the long shadows of trauma. Santiago Burdon shows a drug abuser turning to substances to distract himself from the desolation caused by his addiction.
Chris Butler’s short story highlights the trauma of sexual violence. This act strikes hard enough at the personhood of both victim and perpetrator that it colors their views of everything in the world surrounding them.
Other writers look at the social, emotional and psychological ways we can struggle or find our power.

In another piece, Sayani Mukerjee explores the cultural mythos of women as simultaneously beautiful and dangerous in a modern way, using metaphors from human society along with the natural references.
Jaylan Salah critiques our harsh criticism and disgust for women in film or popular culture who have “issues” or public meltdowns. She suggests that feminism has tried so hard to make women appear confident and competent that it has become difficult for women to acknowledge the human weaknesses that make us all real people.
Oona Haskovec wrestles with the human tension between loving our bodies and wanting them to change. Lorelyn Arevalo’s sensual poems convey the physicality of emotion, whether love or self-hatred. Amirah Abdulrahman mourns the limits of poetry to express feelings and change reality.

Vyarka Kozareva illuminates the drama hidden within ordinary life: clothing, birthday parties, holiday decorations. Chimezie Ihekuna continues with his semimonthly Christmas countdown.
Chris Daly’s readable, humorous poems about workaday life, taxi driving, and pigeons in San Francisco also capture the everyday, this time as something to enjoy.
We hope this issue will be a source of reflection, growth, and pleasure now and in the weeks to come.
Poetry from J.D. DeHart
We Rushed
to the sound of broken
water and crashing streams.
A thundering knock
at the door, early morning. These
are the pools we stepped in.
For too long I’ve spent too much
time puttering on things that just don’t
matter, trying to peddle my goods.
Time to stop applying a metric
to my faith – good, better, best –
Just be.
It’s enough.
Really.
Gaming the System
Forget the trees
Outside my door a moment.
I was seeing the bright colors
Of future worlds by the time
I was ten. In the films I watched, I met
Cities and skyscrapers.
Batman saved my reading life.
In the video games I played, I found
The ability to hop into new worlds, and leap
Over unfamiliar obstacles.
In those days, we had to level up,
You started back at the home screen if you
Stopped the game. No re-spawning.
So, my days were spent trying to beat
A boss – then starting back at square one,
Over and over.
How many days, wrapped in blizzards,
Did I spend navigating a digital character
Through a video snow.
There is Space
where space should be.
This poem is not about
rockets, I assure you.
There is a wondering
absence where there really
is not absence. Am I
an arm, a mind, an interconnected set
of thoughts and instruments
moving ensemble
what is my motion
my e motion
what is my work
life, work life
the continuation, the
meaning.
I Have Tried
too long to brace verdant reality,
bunching up worries into an
easy-to-follow guide,
warnings whispered on websites,
and more time, time
to linger longer in the quiet,
stillness of the waters that pass,
decorated with litter.
Now, I linger again in the
stillness of this time, unsure
of where the world goes from
here. Hopeful. Realistic.
Almost a year ago, I lay
on my back as I do today,
different purposes, new reasons,
lack of reason.
I thought of what would
be ahead, framing moments
of trust
in unseen figures. A constant
hope.
Weeks earlier, I accepted
a new path that would
come to reality.
I try to know myself,
thinking, reading, believing
in bright promises ahead.
I sought connecting
as I wait for warmer
weather.
Others See Me As
warrior
mentor
soul friend
collaborative writer
Appalachian scholar
supportive
attentive leader
one with kind eyes
dependable
covenant partner
educator
sincere
one who invited
healing.
I am only one person
making a way
in the world,
mindful of footprints,
seeking
true words and actions.
New Pathway
beginning of a forest,
dogs trotting ahead in the path,
fresh air adjusting leaves
like ornaments around me,
warmth of summer
years ago, remembered again
point of a branch, and I know
I’ll return here soon
again and again, and never leave
as I once did.
Preserving the silent world.
There is
a space where
space should be,
there is a wondering
absence where they really
is no absence. A hollow
that is filled but still echoes.
Am I an arm,
a mind, an interconnected set
of thoughts and instruments
for making syllables and other
sounds.
What is my motion
my emotion
what is my work
life, work-life,
where are those boundaries
now?
the continuation, the meaning,
as days stack up.
I want to be a better
teacher, a voice that’s honest
a clear teacher of teachers.
Poetry from Vyarka Kozareva
INTERPRETATION Of course, We all could condone any vitriol Spilt on the rifts of the long hibernation. The flesh seems fresh than conjoined For those who want to believe it. You see it banal from the space Between your index and thumb. The night is blank sentence, Projected perfectly onto the medulla oblongata Where The vector of light pokes the horizon To trace the core of the cross. HAPPY BIRTHDAY The top layer swanks creamy Decorated with an arty-farty cut lemon body Ornated and candied, More aesthetic than functional. Nobody knows and wouldn’t ask If some hours ago The acid juice splashed its hangman’s pink skin, Innocent, Seeking dormant wounds To nip. ADVENT I try to imagine my curbed ego, The marking commas, the restrictive brackets. I knew the coin’s been already thrown For a voice which grammar has many cogent rules. The new beginning would be inky, Far from all those pastel-painted frames With empty rooms fostering pastorali In stuffed poultry hearts. The real blood never puts artless colors on its pride. From the chandelier fell too much of words Keeping silence about the profit of being mortal. I tried to discern the salt in the wound, bugs on the face Worn promises, Holly knowledge. I regret losing my taboos in remission of sins But the new me still has time to slip into my old Long haired coat Because the snappish winter is coming close. REVIVAL Morning is tiptoeing over to the window Like a cat Descending the tree of wishes Head first To see all ghosts off Too modest in their self-knitted hats And backs heavy with the weight of the tenderness. Interjections wait woven into the soggy day. Lungs implore more oxygen. Movements set a Morse code rhythm Flirt with coffee steam Dance under the wind’s baton On the garnished with fine mica flakes pavement. From the crowd’s sleepy orbits Protrude huge, perplexed, yesterday‘s question- marks. CORROSION IS IN FASHION We are charming in ochre, scarf-styled, Radiating that exceptional dress sense While fall is parading its paradigms. The warmth of gold is already proven Out of time arguments When the taste for art mimics the lack of logic In the global language. Sometimes we wonder If the closed societies undergo attitudinal changes. In fact, silk on wool presents fond delusion in rainy days. That world’s hurly-burly, A storage of nonsense we use to feed scraggy wars Pretending that they’re somewhere far In order to satiate our nonchalance And quell any inner disturbances. Happy hypocrites we are If believe in the grace of the swan neck Garlanded with luxurious plumage. Beneath the camouflage— the wormy throat.
Poetry from Chris Daly
The Comeback The big trucks roll in and out all day and the gulls on the dump don’t know them any more from St. Francis. There are hundreds of them fluttery and imperturbable orgying on the donations of 400,000 citizens. Ugly on the ground they look like overfed pigeons with skinnier legs if that’ possible & with heads like Edward Everett Norton but when they spread those long wings there is a grace the eye does not resist. There are so many that it’s scary at first but they don’t give a shit (hopefully) about visitors, another truck comes in they swirl about in their somewhat flipped out fashion this set up being too easy and maybe you start feeling a little flippy too. The garbage men get two holidays a year which they make up the following saturdays. The birds have been there for years. Archimedes at the Wedge two sumo size guys sitting with the great stillness of the huge another somewhat noisy somewhat sizable guy with ugly hair & no definition big lower lip many years at the beach one other large mostly muscled guy with the best hung-over drawl about the tangle of the last few days’ parties and these gentlemen misshapen to various degrees are deferred to by the trim and the less seriously physical. off at a distance families demolish boxes of donuts. a dreamy woman almost gets sucked to her death, a guy with stitches shows up. one of the sumos has disappeared but one shoots across a short high left face half his body out of the water holding up the world. Terminal Island (a fond look back) The sailors come from off the sea The porno movies for to see I take them there for a small fee Because I am a cabbie, a cabbie. They also go dive-hopping And on suitcase-buying sprees. $4.10 into town, or if you have 5 horny greeks, $4.50, or 3 insane Bostonians, their wives with season tickets to arthur fiedler (whose dead, I think), $4.30. But I like it out there. The driving is fast and reckless, The air feels good. The ships are platonic, The ship’s whores doubly so. The company supplies the tires, The sea provides rumor And inference. Nude beach When you come over the bluff And look down into the cove It looks like sand When you get there It turns out to be millions Of small rocks Which leave red marks on your ass Which look like sunburn From a distance Loudmouths and quiet lookers With salty dried-out hair Girls with stones for eyes & tits that are pointy guys dive off rocks and try to keep from being sucked by the current into the cave flesh everywhere but not a stiff prick in sight people stand on the side and shout to the divers “stay on the surface” beach at trouville 1873 the sand is behaving itself the smoke is beautiful in the clear air dress is formal, boater for the men buss & parasol for the ladies no one is lonely or trying to get picked up marriages have reached the here-we-are stage, the hair is dark, not grey the beach socially is just being discovered and the feeling is somewhat like a movie set la mer is vaguely paid attention to less than say boats on it we are all fairly fucking cool thank you later our teeth will be pulled and freudian psychology revealed with a national twist and a slight yawn but now it’s the morning of light the sand is being so good the heels are clicked together hard to tell shape of ass under those large skirts but the waist is a general guide the weather is perfect and it’s the most perfect day of a fairly perfect year tahiti in tails a cole porter level of charm there is no food and the wine is not in sight the wind is excellent there are no numbers or letters visible (being in the picture they cannot see the artist’s signature but if they could they wouldn’t change a thing) of course everywhere is a seminal dream as we existing prove we’ve only lost the charm the style the clothes the light and control of the sand
Poetry from Andrew Cyril Macdonald
Insides of mausoleums
i
Shapes shifted
blue (turquoise endeavored)
to the favorite bar
our constant devotion what
stumbles across them the
distant voices once heard if
hereafter recollected,
existents of a higher plane
every body talks of—
this no man’s land
a graveyard
sought for if retrogressive.
ii
Type doors
to faded sepulchers
spectraled silhouettes align with,
bundle what light makes
(ancestral, important)
in tombs
windows encase them,
cutting the distance to climb of
their paradise eternal
a squared room
contorts it.
iii
Sky’s throw
the distance that covers
closed sets of harvest
(once and for all)
if consequents of choices
stand tall to accuse of
some Other’s vision
this room stocks it while
perennial graces
alabaster
herein triumphs.
Andrew Cyril Macdonald considers the role of inter-subjectivity in poetic encounter. He celebrates the confrontations between self and Other and the challenges that occur in moments of injustice. He is founding editor of Version (9) Magazine, a poetry journal that implicates all things theoretic. You can find his words in such places as A Long Story Short, Blaze VOX, Cavity Magazine, Don’t Submit, Experiential-Experimental Literature, Fevers of the Mind, Green Ink Poetry, Lothlorien, Nauseated Drive, Otoliths, Synchronized Chaos, Unlikely Stories and more. When not writing he is busy caring for seven rescued cats and teaching a next generation of poets.