
Hurricane Season
By Craig Kirchner
I wrote about it, we argued, not nasty,
but disagreed about whether to leave.
We stayed, I made risotto. We planned
to sleep in the master bedroom closet,
Swedish death cleaned, stocked with
bottled water, a small mattress.
Its closest to the middle of the building,
furthest from the windows, very stable,
if this condo complex blows away or ends up
under water, so will the rest of Florida.

Routine
By Craig Kirchner
There is a routine, it starts with getting out of bed
and squirting the sleep from my eyes with Refresh.
I won’t bore you with the bore of the rest,
you have your own to remember.
There have been interruptions to it over the years
that usually involve an infirmity or natural disaster.
I used to play golf twice a month, practice during the week,
now arthritis in my knees makes it too hard to turn.
We had the strongest storm to ever form in the Gulf
relocate sleeping to the closet, away from the windows.
But never in 75 years has the government altered my life,
it always held up its part of the bargain. I paid taxes
and voted. It kept the roads open and the food safe,
never interfered with my daily regimen.


Report from 2025
By Miriam Bassuk
No way to encapsulate this period.
No rhyme or reason can iron out
our daily terror squashed deep
in the gutter of our bellies. What
makes it hard, there are no safe-
guards against a regime that lays
waste to all we hold dear, a regime

The Power of Play
By Peter Asco
Burdens will be cut down to size
Workload will become much lighter
Regrets will make you laugh
Impossibilities will look within reach

CESSION
By Robert Kokan
Beneath the tower of the fourteenth street bridge
it's dark and it's the last tired night.
All men now with sorrow filled eyes
and sad contentments of heart
have given over to the dreams of new birth
(when your time comes, it comes
there is nothing a hand or a blood-borne
can do to prevent it).

Are We Prepared?
By Millie Renfrow
Fellow Citizens of the United States of America,
we meet at the axis of a revolution –
both political and social –
sweeping through our national life
such as we have never experienced
in most of our lives to date.
We enter a new war.
What poem will emerge
to fill this void?
There’s the key…
to alter the relationships
between this poet and others…

Grass and Stars
By Margaret Roncone
We listen to the voice
that says 'grass and stars'
the voice that knows perfectly how to describe
luminescence.
we wait patiently on
the foothold
of March to see early daffodils
and crocus pushing through earth’s cold skin.

A Long Time of Nothing
By Mary Ellen Talley
(a found collaborative poem created from snippets of a phone chat with houseboundMillie Renfrow, age 84, on 11-16-2020)
Somebody sent me a sketch book
They started some doodles
I kept scribbling
It’s all black ink.
You can go from very light
to very very dark.

Betting on America
By Craig Kirchner
I wanted to leave, you said no.
I wanted you to come with me.
Malta became a reference point,
a not so funny inside joke.
I was no longer betting on America,
a personality disorder was President.
He appointed a sexual assaulter
to be his Secretary of Defense.

ICE has been given a quota.
By Leszek Chudzinski
“Then they came for the immigrants, and I did not speak out—because I was not an immigrant.”
***
ICE has been given a quota
to catch each day and deport
1,200 to 1,500 illegales
schools
churches
hospitals
houses
raided
people rounded up
in the streets
at work
at home


No Need
By Craig R. Kirchner
I’m told constantly not to talk about it.
Half your friends and family will be offended.
You don’t want to express your disgust,
and you can’t quote their guy.
Quoting his remarks is damning,
there’s always a disconnect.
If you take one of his threats,
or rants on his hatred out of context,
you’re accused of misrepresentation.
If you put them back into their context
they become worse, unhinged, long winded.
I don’t want to talk about it, it makes me ill.

Present Day Shinobi
By Carsten Cheung
You’d think it’d be
super cool,
but actually
there are many downsides
to being a modern day ninja.
First of all,
it’s not even by choice.
Like ancient Asian prophecy
foretold by American
fortune cookie,
your destiny is decided
at birth.
Black hair?
Dark almond-slanted
shaped eyes?
Male? (especially eldest child)
You are Ninja.
(Exotic-Lotus Ninja if born female).

Women and Men
By Martha Ellen
Oma
She had found a bit of woven, checkered cloth and fashioned it into a diaper for her newborn son. She scrounged some lengths of cloth and thread from wherever she could and embroidered a cap for him. She stitched a cotton gown with flowers. With tenderness she dressed him before she swaddled him in a worn woolen blanket to keep away the chill of the cool morning air. She held him close, kissed his cheek one last time and carefully laid him down on Brabant Street, in Ghent, in the early morning of May 26, 1815.
Cecile and Rosalie were returning to the common house near the port after a long night’s work, as they did every morning, holding hands as European women do when they are friends and as kindred spirits do when seeking the comfort of others who often endured a night of brutality some men were inclined to heap upon those they thought unworthy of any tenderness or care, only to be used and discarded. Cecile lifted the swaddled baby from the street and held him close, her maternal feelings intact, inaccessible to any cruelty that visited her in her harsh life.
They all knew this scene. It was not new. Each knew the role they were compelled to perform in a world that did not value the likes of them as though they were incapable of giving love and unworthy of receiving it.
They took the baby to the police station. He was reared by other loving women in the convent orphanage.
I call her Oma.

The Daily Political Moment
By William Doreski
Scolding the world in public
eases the dark congealing
in your shapely, old-fashioned skull.
The coffee shop hums. Urns deplete
as snow whirls in the doorway.
Baked goods hunker on display.

Letter to Amanda Gorman
By Craig R. Kirchner
We are being told daily of our incredible freedom
here in the Sunshine state,
where the sun is experiencing the freedom to be hotter
than it has ever been in recorded times.
We are free, as James Madison obviously envisioned,
to openly carry our beloved firearms,
in case we experience a need to defend ourselves during a road rage,
or in case our children are being groomed by lesser than ourselves.
We can carry our assault rifles in the trunk,
in case a particularly bad case of frustration crawls upon us
and we are near the elementary school that scorned us,
as the second amendment suggests.

Aftermath
By Cheryl Caesar
(This poem was originally published in Across the Margin)
On the first day our Facebook pages went black.
We drove to work through a film of tears
and hugged each other in the hallways, unashamed,
and in the women’s room. We talked about renewing passports,
and families in Canada. We avoided referring
to the beginning of The Handmaid’s Tale. We went
on to meet our classes, or conference with students
who complained, “I didn’t know
this assignment would be so evidence-based.”
We kept our blurry eyes front, and flowed
through the day on a current of work and love.

“How Blessed To Burn Alive”
By Bud Sturguess
This morning, I woke to find my manor was burning.
I’d heard rumors about the neighbors being on fire,
or some such story,
but I’d long ago painted my windows black.
When I was stirred awake by
a constant crinkling and popping,
when I saw my Beatlemania collection melting
in psychedelic apocalyptic colors,
I decided it was finally true.

In the Garden of Time
By Neil Vincent Scott - November 10, 2024
turn the news off
turn the music up
let us once again
tend to the garden of goodness and light
rejecting
rebuilding
renewing
as darkness descends
on the trampled flowers of promise