Today’s choice
Previous poems
Sreeja Naskar
everything i love is out to sea
glass-tooth morning.
salt mouth.
i left the stove on just to feel wanted.
the sea wrote back once—
in lowercase.
smudged.
untranslated.
i drank it anyway.
//
the sun fell behind me like
a dog you didn’t name.
didn’t stay.
i speak in splinters now.
no full words.
just
kitchen tile
cracks in the paint
the hum of things unplugged.
the mug is chipped.
the coffee’s been cold since ’06.
conversations curdle at the rim.
nobody drinks.
everybody talks.
//
i laughed at the funeral /
no one was there /
not even me
what i mean is—
i’ve been alive too long
in the wrong tense
& no one noticed
when i folded
my joy
like laundry
& forgot it
in someone else’s drawer.
//
i saw her—
knees to her chest,
eating a poem
like stale bread
with no butter.
still said thank you.
they call it healing
when you leave the wound open
& just name it sky.
//
everything i love is out to sea.
no letters.
no flares.
just
float.
drift.
unclench.
(i keep setting the table anyway.)
Sreeja Naskar is a poet from West Bengal, India. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Poems India, Modern Literature, Gone Lawn, Eunoia Review, ONE ART, among other literary journals. She believes in the quiet power of language to unearth what lingers beneath silence.
Mofiyinfoluwa O.
when you
know that your time with someone has almost run out, that is what you do. you look for
tiny things buried in the sand so that you do not have to look at the huge broken thing
standing between you both.
Chris Emery
and if we walk to the same sea later
we’ll see something heaving up beside us:
caskets of grey, white-capped, barren and loose,
the way memories are.
T. N. Kennedy
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life at its most intense and solitary
turning them on when you most need to feel
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Jennie E. Owen
and in that last moment
the dead shrug, shake
off their boots, shuffle off
jackets and shirts,
Martin Figura for Mental Health Awareness Week
Children in care do not have much of a voice, they often accept whatever is given and do not dare to speak up.
Julie Stevens for Mental Health Awareness Week
Are these the words you want me to say
about how my day became a raging river
crashing through my bones?