• Profile picture of Willow

    Willow wrote a new post

    Sucker Punched

    the world has pausedsilence hammers at the sensesheart still beating...barely...does it even matter...it flutters unheard the universe is screamingbanshee howl of despairsucking life from hopea wildly spinning black holedevouring beauty in its path I am collateral damageinsignificant to the true lossa...

    Read More
    27 Comments
    • Poetic oxygen is hanging by a fingernail in our world. But! There is hope. Well done, Willow.

    • Thought on this one Lady, maybe to much. We think it would had hit even harder if posted closer to Halloween

      • To be honest, I hadn’t even thought of Halloween. 😂 Just nursing a bit of pain. I actually didn’t think on it much at all. This was a write and drop piece. I tend to do that when emotion is high. Thank you for your thoughts, ME

    • Extraordinarily compelling ink ma’am .. I was hooked from the off and enjoyed the ride write to the very opposite end and no kidding .. Write on my fine literary friend .. Neville

      • I’m not entirely convinced my muse will give me much time off. If you saw my unposted drafts…egads. Thank you for the support on this one

    • Powerfully penned, Willow. Excellent write my friend with precise imagery and wordplay. Felt this one! Appreciate you.

      Damian

      • I felt it too…like a baseball bat to the crotch. There were layers in this one. World and…life, if you get my drift. Thank you, my friend. Your continued support means a lot

    • The way you combined nature and human in this piece is breathtaking. We should not be used as collateral damage for the error of polluting the air. That is one way I took this piece.
      Then the ones that are cast aside unnoticed.. That is sad, but I believe that there is someone noticing them. They may not know what to do to bring more light in their black hole.
      Just thoughts I got from your piece.

      • You’re not far off the mark on this one. As I said to Damian,👆 there are layers to it. Where it takes the reader is between them and their imagination. Thank you for your thoughts, Fia. Much appreciated

    • the same as for all of us – some care
      thank you Willow

    • Wow. This is a cigarette and a shot write. It is almost bitter, almost defeatist. Yet it also feels like you’re scoffing at the processes too. You need a seashell necklace while writing like this. Reminding you of what’s salty out there.

      • Well, I don’t smoke and I’m a tragic lightweight drinker. Just a full blood hippy who lives by the Moon. Still, I get your drift. I guess when I was writing this, I was reminding myself that my little whimpers are fairly insignificant in the grand scheme of things. Thank you for your thoughts, Styxian

    • Willow…you had me from the first line and held me there until the last.
      Message delivered and your mission accomplished.
      The universe never pauses.Everything rises and ceases,nothing permanent….thank God.Imagine a permanent Trump.

      • A permanent Trump sounds like eternal hell. It’s bad enough dealing with it now. And we still have years ahead. I don’t even like the contemplate what will happen next. It’s like living in a minefield. Thank you for your thoughts, Peter

    • This is dark with a lot of reality in it too. You nailed it with your silent hammers.
      What ever the subject matter your writing is it’s articulate and thought provoking.

      • We can’t always hear the blow coming. We just find ourselves flat on our back in agony. Such is our world at present. Thank you for your thoughts, Adelphina

    • Brilliant use of languge and great imagery.

    • damn…incredible write.

    • The world is all too willing to leave the hurt ones behind. Great ink friend.

      • Truth and facts right there. We gotta pick each other up. Thank you, my friend

    • We see each other. We hear each other. We fall together. We rise together. Thank you for seeing, Volupta

  • Profile picture of S. Libellule

    S. Libellule wrote a new post

    In Jade Relief

    Within verdant stillness, it breathes—exhalation of peace in stone.Silence carves itself into serenity,each line straightens to temporality. Eyes half-closed to all becoming,he sees what cannot be unlearned:the world forever shaping itselfaround folded edges of release. Here, calm is not absence but...

    Read More
    3 Comments
    • The jade Buddha sits in silence. “Silence carves itself into serenity,”
      This is going to be one of my favorites that you have written.

    • Beautifully penned, S. Excellent write my friend. Appreciate you.

      Damian

    • Libellule, only a poet as gifted as you can take a jade carving and make it into a journey into the heart of timelessness itself. There is truth here that lives and breathes in the air of your poet’s soul.

      John

  • Bloody Phones

    I hold the phone look at the screenAnd wonder wheremy mind has been.

    Read More
    4 Comments
  • Profile picture of RomaJ

    RomaJ wrote a new post

    Plexiglass Train

    We travel through the dark--in a train made of glass--a clear shell gliding througha ruined world.Outside, the city sleeps in shadow--sealed off from its own contagion.Now it’s a tourist route--a safe way to witness decay.The ticket promised:You may look,...

    Read More
    14 Comments
    • This is like a dystopian future. Great ending. 🙂

      • Thank you! I’m glad the ending stood out. It’s dystopian, yes. but really about how the privileged can buy a ticket to witness poverty from behind glass, without ever having to touch it.

    • Hoi hoi
      What a write!
      And the longer I read, the thinner the glass will become.
      Can you see who is giving the thumb up?
      I’ve tried, but I can’t give you more than one!

      unsure which side of the glass
      I belong to
      The cherry on the cake!
      Keep them coming please.

      Kind regards, Gus

      • Thank you so much! I love how you caught that image of the glass thinning. The barrier was never meant to hold for long. And your line about the thumbs up made me smile! I really appreciate your kind words and encouragement.

    • We humans are complex and complicated at the same time. Is there glass or any kind of barrier that separates our complexity?? I’m not sure there is. I think the complication comes in when we do not understand these complexities, understand that we are capable of anything and everything. That we humans, because we learn and are conscious, can change the world and ourselves, become neither beauty nor monster, just human(e). These are the thoughts I had as I read your poem RomaJ. I liked how the glass disappears and leave you wondering, “who am I” and perhaps also “who do I want to be”.

      Amazing writing RomaJ.
      -Curt

      • Thank you so much, Curt. I really appreciate the depth of your reflection. You’re absolutely right. Our complexities can both connect and divide us, and maybe the glass isn’t a barrier at all but a mirror of our own awareness.

        I love how you phrased that. Becoming neither beauty nor monster, just human(e). That’s exactly the kind of questioning I hoped the poem would evoke.

    • Powerfully penned, Roma. Excellent wordplay and the imagery made me feel like a passenger. Outstanding work. Appreciate you.

      Damian

      • Thank you so much, Damian. I’m really glad the imagery pulled you in and made you feel like a passenger. I appreciate your kind words.

    • What a great idea to write about. Some writers “see”. You do. The way you led the reader along the corridor of scrutiny(?)
      and put them almost as a prisoner forced to watch it play out. Transfixed.
      Great write and thoroughly thought provoking.

      • Thank you so much, Styxian. I’m really glad the poem resonated with you, and I appreciate your generous words about the writing. I love that you described feeling “transfixed” –that sense of uneasy observation was exactly what I hoped to evoke.

        The idea for Plexiglass Train came from thinking about the screens and devices we all look through every day– we’re all passengers in our own glass compartments, watching the world and each other through layers of reflection.

        And sometimes, as we gaze through our own glass screens, we almost catch a glimpse of our own reflection.

    • There is something of magic realism inherent in your verses. A dripping ambiguity & multi-layered which leaves the reader curious. Glass is such a useful metaphor and you give full justice to the word.

      • Thank you so much, Ghosteen. I really appreciate your thoughtful reading. I’m glad the layers and ambiguity came through–glass felt like the perfect metaphor for that fragile line between what we see and what we sense beneath it.

    • This in a way reminds me of a traveling circus. How we go see the bearded woman or the unusually tall man.
      Different walks of life being set out to the public to entertain each night. They’re not monsters but maybe spectacles – and still we the public go seek them out because we are drawn to the unusual. Then we go home and they leave to a different town.

      Maybe a few stay tired of the circus life and maybe a few decide to join the circus looking for something unusual.
      How we are all interchangeable depending on the view.

      Sorry if I’m rambling!
      I loved the write:)

    • The imagery and story telling here are done to perfection. The passengers view the abject poverty outside from their comfortable train. Perhaps to them it just looks like more tv. Like seeing the hungry people of the world on their tv without ever having to interact or see them in person. But maybe the glass grows thinner when the reality brings stronger emotions even empathy. Truly a great poem you have penned here. You have mastered your craft. And I read in awe of your gift. I too had such an experience on a train long ago. I was on the Crescent City train headed from New Orleans to Boston. As we passed through the shacks in the slums of Birmingham, Alabama I heard a two man talking and one said, “You know America really is a dilapidated country” or something like that. It was an eye opener for me.

      John

  • Profile picture of Tim

    Tim wrote a new post

    Darkness

    For the longest timei saw stars in the skybleeding bright lights, wounded by isolation,stolen by space, and foolishly thoughtit was only metrapped in darkness.

    Read More
    8 Comments
  • Load More Posts

My Friends

Profile Photo
Curly Grace
@curlygrace
Profile Photo
M.E
@mustapha
Profile Photo
Brandon Houser
@llama40204
Profile Photo
Rosie C
@rosie415
Profile Photo
AnnaM44
@annamarie44

Groups

Group logo of Music is Art
Music is Art
Public Group
Group logo of News and Suggestions
News and Suggestions
Public Group

My Recent Posts

Braided

Orion Skies

Location

Florida, USA

New Report

Close