February 6, 2022

Lauren Jensen-Deegan

CARROT GINGER

I will call her Alice, because her name
is insolent. I will
take my frustration out on the cutting
board, each layer
of shallot peeled, sliced and separated.
I will call her a pathetic
excuse for a co-worker, because her name
is inconsiderate, in
my husband’s face day after day, mask
below her chin, insisting
she is wearing it while breathing on him
who will breathe I love you
upon our daughter who will then breathe
upon Dylan and Maggie
while learning to swim, each labored
stroke to move forward
or at the very least stay afloat 5 seconds
unassisted. Enough.
I will call her a poor example of a human
being, not because
she declines to be vaccinated, but because
she refuses to consider
why 211 million people in America do.
I will call her nothing,
because her name means nothing and
everything to me, empty
pop cans, pennies, as she holds a magnet
up to my husband’s arm
testing to see if it will stick. It means
too much. Too little.
Too far gone. I will call her our tomorrow
because her four children
call her mom and will grow up being taught
there is only one way
to tie your shoes, never knowing, different
versions, recipes, roads
and this terrifies me. That she takes a family
photo in front of a whale
carcass washed up on the beach. That one
day her only son
will ask Santa for a gun and she will wrap it
for him, bow and all, because
this is her right, as well? I’m so tired, so lost
in our dying seas, a fishing net,
this web, closed doors of communication,
lack of a greater good,
sacrifice, offered hand, why not, humanity, it all—
I will call her Alice,
because her name is AJ, Kevin, Andrea, Dave,
the man not wearing
a mask at North Park Market, the neighbor
yelling behind the fence,
and she will never even read these words,
know they exist,
understand how much she has challenged
our family while she
scrolls Facebook for facts and affirmations.
I will call her the antithesis
to every teaspoon of my existence not for
our conflicting views,
but all the nights I spend awake still trying
to place myself in her
steel toe boots, her church, her apartment,
her cubicle where she coughs
each particle, each tiny breath, willful complaint
against the government,
my husband inhaling it all in, second-hand,
internalizing, bringing it
home, because he has no choice except listen.
As I do. Each night,
one shallot at a time, carrot, celery, ginger root,
apple, baring all the sorrow
turned rage within me, my 5-year-old asking
if she can help stir the soup.

from Poets Respond
February 6, 2022

__________

Lauren Jensen-Deegan: “I thought a new year would be a new year, but it feels so much like just another. Last week the Oregon Health Authority began filing to make mask mandates ‘permanent’ in certain sectors rekindling a fire that continues to burn. I’m tired.”

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December 1, 2021

Joseph Fasano

JOE ARRIDY

1915–1939—“young American man known for having been falsely accused, wrongfully convicted, and wrongfully executed for the 1936 murder of a fifteen-year-old girl in Pueblo, Colorado … Arridy was severely mentally disabled and is believed to have made a false confession. He received a full and unconditional pardon seventy-two years after his death.”

This morning they took my train away.
I hear the birds
singing in the garden.
Why do they always have to sing?

I tell them Joe won’t die.
No one believes me.
They take my train away.
And the stupid birds keep singing.

They sit with me and tell me
to tell my story.
Tell what happened to the girls.
When I forget,

they tell me my story.
It’s like a game and it’s funny.
Like the time daddy
locked me in the garden shed

so he could visit with mom.
Visit means tickle
and it makes a strange sound.
A strange sound makes me alone and that’s bad.

They give me my train back.
The wood is so soft.
I soaked it in the toilet
so I can cut my name in there with my fingernail.

I cut the names of mom and daddy, too.
And Frank, who hurt the girls.
They told me if I tell them
I was Frank when he hurt them

I could see the new kitten.
Now he’s on my train. Now he’s me. 
Now the moon shines on the floor
like the milk I got in trouble for

and that’s bad.
I try to clean it up but it’s not real.
I try to tell them
I’ll clean up what I did but they say it’s real.

The new kitten is nice.
She has a white tail and the warden’s wife
holds her when I stroke her.
She says things to me in kitten

and that’s not bad.
A lot of things are not bad.
Like the sun and the moon.
And the stars. Really the stars.

I saw them once from that great big train
in Wyoming
and that was not bad.
I can still close my eyes and see them sometimes a little bit always.

I remember mom’s pearls
when she tucked me in and I was sick.
I told her they were like the stars.
She said that’s nice Joe be quiet go back to sleep always so I did and I will and I do.

I think probably
if I think about it
and I do think about it
I’ve been asleep a long time maybe forever a little bit always.

Maybe when the warden touches me
it hurts because it hurts to be asleep.
Maybe everyone else is awake
and that’s bad.

Ice cream in the morning is not bad.
Ice cream in the morning is very good.
I tell them Joe won’t die and
that’s good. They say

that’s good, that’s good,
and they smile so it must be true.
Last night
the warden’s wife let me hold the kitten

on my own.
She cried when I held it so I don’t know why.
Then she said
it will be quick, Joe, you know that, don’t you?

I said oh yes everything is quick.
Your eyes are quick your lips are quick
your lipstick is quick your voice and your heartbeat too.
She smiled and smiled.

But probably she meant the kitten growing up a little.
Things grow up so quick
mom always says and some things
don’t last forever.

Daddy threw her clothes in the yard sometimes a lot
and I had to go get them.
It was like picking up pieces of the moon I don’t know.
But it was like that. It was like that all the time.

Why are you sad Mrs. Warden. 
Why are you sad Ms. Kitten.
Why are you sad Mr. Milk.
Why are you sad Master Moon.

They say my name will last forever
and I say that’s good and they say
no that’s bad. So I don’t know.
Maybe there’s nothing to be sad about maybe sometimes a little bit always.

I have a picture of mom and daddy
that’s made up so no one can take it away.
I keep it in the pocket of my striped shirt over
my heart and that’s good. That’s very good.

They tell me the time is one hour to go.
But to go where 
no one will tell me. 
They take my ice cream away. They take

my train away. They take 
all the names on it away and my picture
in my pocket and also the kitten which is bad.
I think if she could talk 

she would tell me I don’t have to be sorry.
But I am sorry. 
I’m sorry I ever hurt those girls
even if I didn’t hurt them ever

because when you’re sorry then a thing didn’t happen.
I don’t want that thing to happen.
I don’t want any thing to happen.
Can I tell you something else 

if you really want to know
I’m a little bit scared sometimes always
but then the warden comes and holds my hand and that’s good.
I think he’s coming to hold it again now.

I hear the birds singing. I hear
the sun and the moon and my train
falling down the stairs. 
I hear the kitten talking in the dark

and her voice won’t always be like that because
things grow up so quick you hardly know them anymore.
And the birds stop singing.
And the moon stops spilling.

And my name is famous I am 
very famous and the birds sing and the moon spills
and the Man comes with the black mask to talk to me maybe
about the kitten.

It won’t be quick, he says. It won’t be quick.
But I know that. 
I know. 
Why do people tell each other’s stories?

from Rattle #73, Fall 2021

__________

Joseph Fasano: “I rarely remark on one of my own poems, but it occurs to me to say that ‘Joe Arridy’—which at first glance may appear a rather unusual poem, in a rather unusual voice—makes its way toward a question, in its final line, that attempts to recover the humanity in our current cultural conversations about the appropriateness of attempting to inhabit someone else’s voice. It is indeed a nearly impossible act, indeed often a kind of transgression, but it is precisely that crossing over into the lives of others by which we live.” (web)

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October 1, 2021

Emily Portillo

ELEVEN

Today was day eleven and I sketched a garden
in the margin of my notebook. I sat with my laptop
and avoided the screen. Avoided the news.
Avoided the emails and the people waiting
on their side of technology. At this rate,
they’ll be waiting forever. I set my children up
with a science lesson, led myself upstairs,
and masturbated before noon. Twice.
I made lunch, but did not eat it. I walked the dog.
Passed an old man with his face pressed, childlike,
to the fogging glass of his front door.
I waved. He waved. I smiled. He smiled,
and I imagine him now, imagining me,
and feel my face fall in on itself.
I watched my boys bounce their voices
off the wall of the abandoned high school and
didn’t cry at the realization that I cannot catch
or keep them. I tried countless times to pop my ears.
Failed repeatedly. I held my six-year-old on my lap
like an infant. Stroked his head until staccato breath
eased into whole notes. I wrote a poem
with the weight of him against me. I read a poem
in the weight of him against me. I read
an article about a disease, which has become
too much for my jaw to handle. Or, at least,
I tell myself that’s why it aches, but in reality
I may need to see a dentist. I googled “tight jaw”
and cried in the shower. That’s right,
I showered. Even washed my hair.
I ran circles in the basement until my legs became
quick sand, but that was before the shower, which was
before the cradling, but after the echoes.
Everything is a blur. Watercolor dropped in the sea.
How can I be sure it’s day eleven, anyway? I only have
ten fingers.

from Rattle #72, Summer 2021

__________

Emily Portillo: “I wrote this poem huddled beneath a heavy blanket on the kitchen floor. It was a Tuesday night in March, the eleventh day of isolation, and I was officially fraying at the edges. In an attempt to avoid spiraling further into anxiety, I ate an expired can of Del Monte peaches from the cupboard and sat down with my notebook. Only one of those decisions left me feeling any better. And in hindsight, I did need to see a dentist. Wisdom teeth suck.”

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September 25, 2021

Maria Gil Harris (age 13)

LIKE MAGIC

The sand aflame,
I walked towards the sleeping ocean.

I held my breath, despite the snorkel resting on my dried lips,
As I swam to the endless horizon.

Thousands of fish scurrying away from me,
My heavy strokes shattering the surface of the water.

At last, I lay still,
In hopes of catching a glimpse of their sky blue scales.

Just as fast as they had swum away, they returned,
Bubbles rising from their fins, rushing to pop at the surface.

They began sifting through my fingers,
Disappearing at every curve.

Like ballerinas in blue,
They danced around, leaving a trail of light behind them.

Many times I have tried to recreate that moment,
But I have discovered that magic does not repeat itself.

from 2021 Rattle Young Poets Anthology

__________

Why do you like to write poetry?

Maria Gil Harris: “I write poetry to gain a deeper understanding of myself and the thought that comes with it. Through poetry I can explore the many thoughts and ideas like I never could before. Over the past year I have discovered how poetry can be a wonderful outlet to put my thoughts out onto paper. Everything about a poem is carefully thought-out to bring an idea, a story, or a character to life. The literal and metaphorical meanings, the shape of the words in your mouth, the rhythm, even the build of the poem itself. I practice many forms of art, that being music, painting, writing, etc., yet I have never found a better form of expression than poetry.”

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September 12, 2021

Amit Majmudar

RECURRING NIGHTMARES OF RETURNING SOLDIERS

from the archives of the Lewis Stokes V.A. Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio

RODRIGUEZ

He’s upside down and turning clockwise
the same slow way Torres did
when he found him hanging in the garage.
A steel cable connects a house-arrest ankle bracelet
to a puppeteer beyond the clouds.
His head is three feet above the Swat Valley.
He knows there’s a helicopter up there somewhere
dangling him like a cherry
over the mouth of hell.
He’s naked, but he’s got his M27.
The valley crackles awake on all sides.
The dirt pops like a pond tossing
raindrops back at heaven.
He’s a bait goat.
“I can’t decide where to fire my weapon, Doc.
At the guys firing at me from the mountains,
or the chopper I know is up there somewhere.
So I curl myself up—
Torres used to work his abs that way,
knees hooked on the pull-up bar—
beast.
I curl myself up and start chewing through the cable.
Like a rat. Front teeth, like a rat.
I feel it fraying.
These little metal threads tickle my beard.
They’re shooting wild, but they’re getting tighter.
Think of dragonflies crisscrossing
less than a foot from your ears.
I think I bit my tongue last Tuesday,
though I still don’t know
where. I should feel it, right, Doc?
In the morning? If I bit
my tongue in my sleep? All I know is
I spat out a mouthful of blood on the sheets,
and I’ve got this chipped tooth right here
and no money for the dentist.
Got an edge like a skinning knife.
I’d slit my finger open if I stroked it.
Clean across.”

 

CHIRO

He’s the one who discovered Torres—
the three were housemates,
three jarheads
dropped from a height, trying
to seal each other’s cracked skulls with gold.
So when he falls asleep
he goes from room to room
discovering his whole platoon.
Trumbull in the kitchen
with a mouthful of blackberry jam.
Behind him, on the wall, a Rorschach blot
in the shape of kissing sharks.
Wyatt in the bathtub
he’s filled up by himself.
Look right: ants bristle a toothbrush. Look
left: black mold spatters the shower curtain,
Braille orders that he cannot read.
Jenks on the couch, his hand on his own head
asleep like a cat in his lap.
Diaz in the bedroom
with a giant stinkhorn rising
from his navel, death mask locked in awe
of what is growing out of him.
Every room is someone else
until he opens a door
and it’s his old room at his mom’s house.
No one in the closet, no one on the bed.
So he kneels and checks beneath the bed.
He says his own name, coos it, sings it
as he thumbs the safety,
Nicky, Nicky, where you at …

 

BRUENIG

He’d always wanted a husky, growing up.
Now he had one—on a leash
crusted with bits of glass
like the rock salt rimming a margarita.
He kept switching hands.
He was in fatigues; the street was scared of him.
And no wonder—the husky kept growing.
“Or maybe I was shrinking?
I thought I saw a sniper on the terrace.
Turned out to be a crow, but that was worse—
the husky took off after it. I lost my footing
and after getting scraped along the road
a while, I just let go—
I had to let go, sir. My palms were mush,
fatigues all torn up, pebbles
bedded in my raw thigh.
Whole town is screaming. It’s not Kabul;
smaller, residential. I go looking for him—
God knows what all he’s doing—
and I see bodies in the street.
And then I see a woman, an American.
She’s taking pictures. I’m like,
‘Don’t—this isn’t real, I can explain,
this isn’t what really happened.’
And she’s like, ‘Stop me.’
I say, ‘Don’t make me whistle.’
And she says, ‘Thought you said it’s not
your dog.’ So then I whistle. And he comes.”
At this point in the telling, he breaks
eye contact. “When he’s done with her,
he licks my hands. I let him lick my hands.
And when he’s done with them,
I turn them to my face like Muslims do at prayer,
and Doc, my hands are healed.”

 

OCAMPO

is trapped on a hospital boat in hostile waters.
He wants to wash up
but they say the scab is a blanket the blood weaves.
“Thing is, it’s not my blood. I’m fine.
It’s all somebody else’s blood on me—
someone I shot—it’s like acid on my skin.
Though how the blood got on me—
I’m a sniper. There’s no way. The guys I killed—
I was a quarter mile away sometimes.
I kept clean. That’s the one good thing about it.
You keep clean.” The only way
to wash it off is jump.
He splashes down in solid jellyfish,
the water mucusy with them, its surface
tension just enough to drop and drown him.
He’s screaming with the pain now—hydrochloric
blood and jellyfish tentacles
wrapping down his legs. (In waking
hours, this is his sciatica.)
A doctor flings something on the water
and gestures at him like she’s putting on
a crown. He swims to it.
It’s not a ring buoy, much less a crown.
It’s a loop of rope
he must thread with his neck
to survive to die.

 

LIU

He’s waiting on the steps of a jail
in handcuffs. Women
billow in black from top to toe.
The street is full of them. Each one peeks out
through her mourning,
through an eye-slit in her portable cell door.
They’re screaming, pointing, weeping at him.
“I’m like, ‘Hustle me out through the back!
Get me in a jeep!’ The Afghan cops are making
phone calls, trying not to look at me.
‘You can keep me in cuffs if you want,’ I say,
‘but you’ve got to protect me. Guys, I trained you.’
I did, in Kabul, in ’07. Teenage kids
in khaki costumes. Three weeks just to teach them
how to clean and reassemble a handgun—
warrior race my ass.
They should’ve been in art school, med school,
something. Those days? Either
go grow opium in the valley,
or sign on with the Americans. They didn’t
hate us, or at least I didn’t think they did.
These women at the jail, though—
in the dream, I mean—they surge to the foot of the steps.
I feel them tugging my fatigues.
So I’m all, ‘Why’ve you got me on display?
Take me inside, for fuck’s sake.’ Sorry, Doc.
God’s sake, I should’ve said. I should’ve said
I’ve got a lot of blood on me. It’s even crusted up
my hair. A kid who’s maybe sixteen
wearing the Sharpie badge I made him
raises a handgun to my temple.
The mob gets even louder. He lowers the gun
and shoves me from behind.
I’m on their hands now, crowdsurfing at a concert,
weightless …” He shakes his head. “I’m waiting
for all these women to drop me to the pavement,
stomp me, stab me, run off with my dog tags.
But I don’t wake up with a gasp just then,
they set me down. Safe. On the other side.”
I ask, “The other side of what, Tim?”
He shakes his head. “Of everything.”
“So they were demonstrating for you?”
The sobs break through. “They were there to break me
out.”

 

PORTER

Night in Chicago. All the streetlights shattered.
He takes a premature right to avoid an invasion
of ambulances. He can’t quite tell
if that’s a dog or a child weaving
in front of his car. His headlights go out.
Whatever it is, he’s hit it. He kills
the engine. All the houses have metal fences,
choke-chains that have lost their Dobermans.
He tries to find the body.
There’s a crowd marching up the street.
Even if he hasn’t killed
someone’s dog or someone’s son here,
he’s got an ARMY STRONG sticker
on his rear windshield that’s going to be
the death of him. He’s on it,
scraping frantically. His nails break off
and bleed. The mob is getting
closer. Someone rushes
out of hiding. “This’ll get the stain out.”
It’s a hammer. As the people stream past,
he’s on the hood of his own car
smashing his own windshield.
Sobbing as they cheer him on.

from Poets Respond
September 12, 2021

__________

Amit Majmudar: “This poem is about the veterans who have returned and will be returning from our foreign wars. I remember working with many during my training, since we rotated through the Cleveland V.A. hospital. Killing kills something in the killer.” (web)

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September 11, 2021

Kevin Gu (age 15)

THE YANGTZE

i.
The first time I dipped my toes in the Yangtze my mother
told me the story of Qu Yuan, a great poet
who drowned himself
along the branching twines of the river.
I laughed at her, split-grinned,
and submerged my legs anyway.
Later that night, I dreamt
of jasmine rice and zongzi.

ii.
Indigo means immensity. Mother cooked 麻婆豆腐 (Mapo Tofu) for me
when the winters were still long—the middle
stages of twilight at 5 PM. The rusty heater pumped
rivulets of smoky air,
scent lingering in my lungs like yinghua syrup.
Her calloused fingertips kneaded
my fleshy face while the rest of the world was quiet,
only us alone in the house.

iii.
Mouth gaping under the light-year skies. Taste
the moon’s perspiration, it tells me. It grips me.
They all want something,
the Yangtze said to me that day.
Mother stroked my burnt hair,
blackened soot on the thin skin of my undereyes.
Find yourself in the infinite
or it will drive you under
the currents.

iv.
The silky black felt frozen between my toes,
Chang Jiang was its other name. Mother told me
it meant long river. Long falling, long gone.
Fish nipped on peach-frosted skin as inward legs
held the weight of the horizon. The listless sky spun around
two axes, one centered above me another piercing
my side, asymmetric, indigo split like gears
grinding flaked sugar stars. My chest trembled,
eyes closed at the sight of the undertow.

Why did Qu Yuan drown himself?

The Yangtze answered, over
and over and over:

He yearned for the sky
and found the next closest thing.

from 2021 Rattle Young Poets Anthology

__________

Why do you like to write poetry?

Kevin Gu: “I write because the emotions that bottle up within me are too intricate to describe in a linear way. Poetry, specifically, helps me express my stories like the rolling of waves and the uncontrolled flow of water—infinite. Sometimes my writing is purely based on one experience and one emotion, and other times it’s an outlet for me to spread important messages that I believe in.”

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August 4, 2021

Kari Gunter-Seymour

THE WHOLE SHEBANG UP FOR DEBATE

Today I gave a guy a ride, 
caught in a cloudburst 
jogging down East Mill Street.  
Skinny, backpacked, newspaper 
a makeshift shield, unsafe 
under any circumstances.
I don’t know what possessed me.

I make bad decisions, am forgetful, 
cling to structure and routine
like static electricity to polyester,                 
a predicament of living under 
the facade I always add to myself.

Said he needed to catch a GoBus,
shaking off droplets before climbing in. 
He gabbed about Thanksgiving plans,
his mom’s cider-basted turkey, 
grandma’s pecan-crusted pumpkin pie.

It was a quick, masked ride.
Bless you, he said, unfolding himself
from the car. No awkward goodbyes, 
no what do I owe you? Just Bless you
and a backward wave. 

At the stop sign, my fingers stroked 
the dampness where he sat minutes before. 
Sometimes life embraces you 
so unconditionally, it shifts 
your body from shadow 
into a full-flung lotus of light.

from Rattle #72, Summer 2021
Tribute to Appalachian Poets

__________

Kari Gunter-Seymour (from the conversation): “I come from a long line of self-sufficient, resourceful, hardworking people. As far as poetry is concerned, my work is Appalachian through and through. Growing up near my grandparents’ farm in the very small village of Amesville, Ohio, I was sheltered. We all had a bit of twang in our voice; we were all kinds of colors and shapes; and we didn’t care because we all grew up together. A lot of people don’t even know that about a quarter of Ohio is in Appalachia proper, and that there are pockets of Appalachians throughout Ohio, those who out-migrated north to find work just before, during, and after World War II.” (web)

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