SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.
Scrolling down my iPhone calendar, I stop at 2071. That year, my birthday is on a Sunday. I’ll be 119. If I had to add it all up, I’d say I was way too normal. I can’t believe I spent a minute feeling guilty for having lots of boyfriends in my youth or having sex with two men in one day. It wasn’t easy getting from the east side of town to the west side on my bicycle in time. I should keep the faith. Yesterday, I was in a hot tub with two men. They were discussing earthquake preparedness. One said he had a kit that could filter any kind of water, including sewage. The other said he had a rafter built in his garage to protect his car, and it could support the local high school cheerleading squad doing pull-ups. Or so the builder advertised. I have nothing prepared for an emergency, except a gallon of Tanqueray in the cupboard above the oven because I gave up gin after my second divorce. Maybe this means I have faith in something. At least twice a week I wake up astonished at how living calmly goes on, shoulder to shoulder with unreckonable tragedy. The men paused to take a scrolling glance when I stepped out of the hot tub. Then they went on about where to store the food and the importance of keeping a pair of running shoes under the desk at the office.
Susan Browne is the author of four poetry collections, including Monster Mash (Four Way Books, 2025); Just Living (Catamaran Literary Reader, 2019), winner of the 2019 Catamaran Poetry Prize; and Buddha’s Dogs (Four Way Books, 2002), winner of Four Way Books Intro Prize in Poetry, selected by Edward Hirsch. A recipient of the Fine Arts Work Center Fellowship, Browne lives in Northern California. She was an English Professor for 34 years and currently teaches poetry workshops online. See susanbrownepoems.com.
Scrolling down my iPhone calendar, I stop at 2071. That year, my birthday is on a Sunday. I’ll be 119. If I had to add it all up, I’d say I was way too normal. I can’t believe I spent a minute feeling guilty for having lots of boyfriends in my youth or having sex with two men in one day. It wasn’t easy getting from the east side of town to the west side on my bicycle in time. I should keep the faith. Yesterday, I was in a hot tub with two men. They were discussing earthquake preparedness. One said he had a kit that could filter any kind of water, including sewage. The other said he had a rafter built in his garage to protect his car, and it could support the local high school cheerleading squad doing pull-ups. Or so the builder advertised. I have nothing prepared for an emergency, except a gallon of Tanqueray in the cupboard above the oven because I gave up gin after my second divorce. Maybe this means I have faith in something. At least twice a week I wake up astonished at how living calmly goes on, shoulder to shoulder with unreckonable tragedy. The men paused to take a scrolling glance when I stepped out of the hot tub. Then they went on about where to store the food and the importance of keeping a pair of running shoes under the desk at the office.
Susan Browne’s poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, The Sun, Subtropics, The Southern Review, The American Journal of Poetry, Superstition Review, American Life in Poetry, and 180 More, Extraordinary Poems for Every Day. Her first book, Buddha’s Dogs (Four Way Books), was awarded the Intro Prize. Her second book, Zephyr (Steel Toe Books), won the Editor’s Prize. For more, see www.susanbrownepoems.com.