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      March 12, 2025Yes DayBetsy Mitchell Martinez

      My son asks at breakfast if today can be
      a yes day, grinning up from his bowl of fruit
      because we’re not that kind of family. Even the baby
       
      knows the words to “You Can’t Always Get
      What You Want,” throws back her head
      and crows in a raspy Jagger voice about making do
       
      with what you need. I turn up the volume and call it
      a dance party, arms extended for the reedy
      boys’ choir intro, then the full-body thrash, a line drawing
       
      done with a blindfold, necks slightly off
      our shoulders, wants dispersing in a whip
      of hair, a reverential ahh. Once I skipped
       
      a friend’s graduation party because I couldn’t think
      of anything to say. I drove two hours
      along the river with the windows down, a tangle
       
      of honeysuckle, blank card on the seat
      beside me. Congrats, grad! In the line drawing,
      there are speed marks, spiraling wheels, smudge
       
      of face half a car-length behind, begging for
      a moustache or a blackened tooth, but I don’t have
      the time. I’ve got my hands
       
      on the steering wheel and a cell phone riding
      shotgun, scheduling my merge into the day
      school drop-off lane, my route downtown to the garage
       
      where I’ll slide into a jacket, grab my files,
      ride the elevator up to an office with a paneled door I’ll shut
      before the singer in the belly of this poem
       
      bursts out with his purple velvet pants,
      full mouth, eyes twinkling as if he’s not going to
      unhinge his jaw, kick the microphone stand
       
      from his path, shrug off the tight knit
      of his day and strut into the audience
      to howl an old, electric want.
       

      from #86 – Poetry Prize

      Betsy Mitchell Martinez

      “I recently returned to writing poetry after a 15-year hiatus. Although my longtime job is writing-intensive, it requires an analytical approach to language: everything has to be well organized, well supported, and well controlled. When I started writing poems again—at the end of last year—I rediscovered the joy of language that surprises me and leads me to unexpected places. I still love analytical work, but I find that poetry brings me to a deeper and more nuanced understanding of the world.”