I’ve Changed My Mind
Poem: Two Horizontal Lines, by Haley McShane
By Haley McShane
Sparkling makeup and a slim waist
Kisses him at the Mercedes door.
She tries to talk. AHEM!
His wrathful baritone severs her hushed words.
The tender midwife places a cool cloth on her forehead-
As he drinks Jameson at the nearby rundown bar.
Tired like a migrating robin as
It reaches the translucent waters of the South.
The pressure to be perfect
Dissolves the little resolve that remains.
“Every great dream begins with a dreamer.”
Harriet Tubman’s words dwell in her determined heart.
He wakes up to find
A freshly-written note signed
“I’ve changed my mind.”
Haley McShane is a writer living in Massachusetts. She writes poetry, short stories, and freelance articles. Haley writes for Kingston Living magazine, a local periodical about the town of Kingston, MA. She covers local businesses, news, and events in the community. Haley's work has also appeared in The Boston Globe, Best4Bunny magazine, and online publications. Between 2012-2014, she wrote for her college newspaper The Mainsheet at Cape Cod Community College. Haley is a dynamic writer, weaving expository and creative styles in her work.
Two Horizontal Lines
Poem: Two Horizontal Lines, by Haley McShane
By Haley McShane
Two horizontal lines
Numbers on each side.
Woman and man
Of little money
and much-
Equal.
Souls from blistering Georgia heat
Unknown jungles of the Amazon
Lively European metropolis-
Balance.
Unkempt rags lugged through polluted water,
Greedy diamond pendants pepper palaces-
Levelled.
The world will wallow until
the drawbridge lowers at dusk.
Haley McShane is a writer living in Massachusetts. She writes poetry, short stories, and freelance articles. Haley writes for Kingston Living magazine, a local periodical about the town of Kingston, MA. She covers local businesses, news, and events in the community. Haley's work has also appeared in The Boston Globe, Best4Bunny magazine, and online publications. Between 2012-2014, she wrote for her college newspaper The Mainsheet at Cape Cod Community College. Haley is a dynamic writer, weaving expository and creative styles in her work.
I Said
Lena Senuta, poetry
By L.V. Senuta
It is good to be alive they said
But not if there is none to dread
A life worth living is one with flaws
They said it would be more than cause
Don’t be bossy they said to me
Nice girls are those who listen freely
Don’t fight for worthless battles
A small complaint is all that tattles
You have to know what makes you pretty
Or else you’ll finish gray and knitting
Without a husband and a fine son
You’ll die a widow, looked down on and done
How dare you speak up about what you think
Your voice is not at all worth the ink
Listen to the officials first
Then maybe you’ll be excused from your worst
Where is your makeup, you forgot to smile
That tank top is too short, but show what is while
You have good looks so show them off
Why are you difficult, just take it off!
You’re pretty smart for a girl, they say
Even for the monthly you’re acting okay
Am I supposed to be a weak little thing
Born and raised by nature’s own thing?
I am a woman, strong and brave
I have feelings I’m not afraid to save
Yes I’m a woman, with multiple thoughts
I’m not here to waddle with two coffee pots
Since when will they get that I am better
Born and raised on the same earth for one letter
“I” is my way, and I will make change
Some that those who “once said” can’t trade
With three hearts to love I present them all
One to love myself, for I always stand tall
The rest for others and the world I’ve lead
And I am more than a woman, I said
L.V. Senuta has been writing fiction and poetry since the age of twelve. She says “I am constantly working on new projects. I write short stories, long stories, numerous verses strung up into fabulous poetry, and my favorite genres of writing include sci-fi, fantasy, mystery, and realistic fiction. I hope that my creations can be an escape, a sanctuary, and an adventure all through my own words. I’m excited to bring my works into this magazine, and I hope you find it all as mellifluous as I do.”
Self-Portrait of the Poet, Looking at a Photo of Herself
Sara Letourneau, poetry
By Sara Letourneau
Photo taken at Logan Airport in Boston, Massachusetts, September 2021
Look at my eyes
and how they sparkle like tumbled aventurine
behind my glasses. Everyone says my eyes
are the first thing they notice about me.
So did my boyfriend when we finally sat down
to talk about love. He still swears my irises
are the color of polished nickel.
I disagree, but I won’t deny that,
when in just the right light
and at just the right angle, they glow—
soft and steady, like the headlamps
we’ll both wear at the Lava Tunnel cave tour
in a few days. But right here, right now,
I’m at the airport, waiting with him
for our check-in desk to open,
glasses on and sweetly tilted
as I look at his camera,
dark brown hair half-up,
half falling out of the matching elastic;
one hand tugging down my magenta COVID mask
so I can smile for the photo (and for him),
the other curled around the small of my back
to reveal a peek of the opal promise ring
he gave me five months ago.
No pimples or chin hairs are visible,
the freckles on my cheeks too small to see
from this short distance,
but it’s clear from the heart-blush on my cheeks
and the vastness of my grin that I’m thinking
only about the upcoming trip
and not my perceived imperfections.
Behind me, the waiting area at Terminal E
is dim, the announcement screens and white numbers
at each closed desk blurred, almost impossible
to read, as the girl in the mint green shirt—
the girl who is me—
reflects all of the room’s light
like the snow I’ll see atop Snaefellsjökull in one week.
Or perhaps I’m not reflecting light
but emitting my own,
a beacon of my world and his,
using lenses made of intuition that flash a message—
Look at me, I am beautiful—
that I’m only now beginning to believe.
In the Bath
Here,
in the hotel bathtub,
I am resting
in water scented with
coconut shampoo
and arctic thyme bath salts,
rinsing myself
in solitude,
a river of reveling.
My boyfriend has already
washed my hair
and my body,
but that is not
why I feel
cleaner
and newborn.
Here,
in this bathtub,
I marvel at myself
for the first time as an adult.
Smooth, uncalloused feet
with toenails painted
the purple of orchids.
The thighs I’ve called
thick and flabby,
now weightless.
My stomach,
softly sloping,
a meadow of skin
inclining toward
the hills of my breasts.
Slender arms,
with hands that hold love
and fingers that give back.
Now they wave
from side to side
so that gentle tides
are slapping against porcelain,
splashing my face,
rippling, whispering.
Here,
in the bathtub,
I let my body rise
to the surface,
let my old fetal self
unfurl my limbs and neck
so my new eyes
and freshened mind
can see me as I glisten,
as I glow.
Here,
a dam I never knew
I had built
bursts inside,
and thoughts of
blemishes,
scars,
spidering veins
are swept out to sea
as I caress
this precious vessel
that carries me.
Sara Letourneau is a poet, freelance book editor, writing coach, and writing workshop instructor who lives in suburban Massachusetts. Her poetry has received first place in the Blue Institute’s 2020 Words on Water Contest and appeared in Mass Poetry’s Poem of the Moment and The Hard Work of Hope, Constellations, Soul-Lit, Amethyst Review, The Avocet, The Aurorean, Golden Walkman Magazine, Aromatica Poetica, and Muddy River Poetry Review, among others. When she’s not working or writing, she enjoys drinking tea, doing yoga, reading, cooking and baking, and going on adventures (including traveling) with her boyfriend. Her manuscript for her first full-length collection of poems is currently on submission. You can learn more about Sara at https://heartofthestoryeditorial.com/.
Sunday
Karian Markos, poetry
By Karian Markos
as a kid I wished for conformity
my name sounds like another word—
what vultures call their breakfast
like Marion with a K
blaming my parents for their ignorance of English homophones is unfair
their thoughtful creativity conceived of this mishmash
for fear a Spanish rooster would awkwardly crow my real name
on the first day of kindergarten—
kikiriki and Kyriaki sound awfully similar
and so abrasive to small, third-generation German Irish ears
and quite the tongue twister for a teacher
the solution—
Karian kicks six kittens quick
Karian kicks six kittens quick
Karian kicks six kittens quick
rolls off the tongue
my Greek name means Sunday so I could have been a Sunny—
Sunny sells seashells by the seashore
Sunny sells seashells by the seashore
Sunny sells seashells by the seashore
just as easy and no animals were harmed
as a kid I wished for conformity
for sleepovers and dances with boys
for ham and cheese instead of taramosalata
for time outs instead of flying shoes
for the freedom my ancestors coveted
the weight of my family tree was placed square on my shoulders
its reputation was secured in a vault between my legs
pride bedded shame and my tangle of dual loyalties was born
two flags two homes two names
Karian Markos is a Greek American poet, fiction writer and nonprofit attorney living with her husband and three children in the western suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. Much of her poetry and short fiction explores issues relating to identity and mental health. She is currently working on her first novel, a dark fantasy fiction inspired by medieval Greece. She donates much of her professional time to charitable organizations that work with children. Her work has been published in Beyond Words Literary Magazine and Bombfire.
Mea Conley
Mea Conley- When I was a Bullfighter
From the Column
Just a Moment
Poetry
When I was a Bullfighter
When I was a bullfighter I
Waved my red cape
Back and forth like a
Rippling sun.
You were kicking up dust and
Hollering like mad.
I couldn’t stop you.
Dust coated your bones and
Etched out maps of sinew and
Left you afraid of -
What, exactly?
Ivory silence against egg shell white
Backdrops finds us
Neutral ground where we can
Finally talk,
Matador to
Craven beast.
But I sit across from an empty chair,
In a crowded restaurant.
Cigarette smoke hangs like dread,
And I realize maybe
I was never a bullfighter
After all.
Alissa Aronson
Alissa Aronson, poetry
Just Her
Beautiful was her calling
Or so the whispers said
No one would ever compare to
All the voices that lay in her head
Her ups became her downs
Racing and ranting so
Problems turned into promises
Her thoughts stuck in a deep limbo
Pointed fingers often lingered
And her mind was slowly awoken
She played victim to the masses
Still brittle and slightly broken
Her mind was not her own
Damaged in so many ways
Her moon was filled with lasting nightmares Her happiness slowly drifting away
Excuses became a blame game
Painting her fears with Bipolar
Still she’d rise each dawn
Like a lonely little love song
Smiling all the while
Knowing this was simply just her
My name is Alissa Aronson and I am the youngest of two. I grew up in the city of Framingham Massachusetts, instilled with a love of the arts at an early age by my father, an artist. I vividly recall penning numerous short stories in elementary school, where my love of poetry began to take shape. I worked briefly as a freelance journalist and have continued writing short stories. Over the last few years, I dove head first into poetry and have never looked back. I am so happy to share my words with others.