by Michelle Bitting



It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIMEvery Day's archives!

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We’re all in the same boat ready to float off the edge of the world. —The Band


When I should be asleep
but stay up anyway
step outside to sneak a smoke
behind the recycling bin
froth of soda cans
grass green bottles
spent water from France
a silo of silent witnesses
once effervescent
their colorful labels
torn and scraped now
glass shadows
cast to a rubber raft
under stars
the soft swish
of listing palms
that lean down
but can never reach far enough
lend a hand up
to new dignity.
We are not all in the same boat.
The lucky
find reinvention:
shelf sentinels
curiosities
emerald knickknacks
maybe something more
than holding someone’s luxuries.
Who knows.
Is there a purpose for everything
behind the human grind
beyond the shade
of blameless recycling?
Strangers in a truck
redeeming emptiness
sanctioned on the side
the traffic of coins
sputtered back
at disreputable living
a huddled shimmering
flatbeds
shuttled off in the dark
wet necks
liquid eyes
that glitter the night
shivering as their captors walk
fast from sight
pockets laden with gold
and don’t you just want to
turn them on their heads
shake them hard
til they break
til they shatter
like stars
spilling back
all that stolen brightness?

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Michelle Bitting is the author of six poetry collections, including Nightmares & Miracles (Two Sylvias Press, 2022), winner of the Wilder Prize and named one of Kirkus Reviews 2022 Best of Indie. Her chapbook, Dummy Ventriloquist, was published in 2024 by C & R Press. Recent poetry appears on The Slowdown, Thrush, Cleaver, The Poetry Society of New York’s Milk Press, Heavy Feather Review, National Poetry Review, Catamaran, ONE ART, and is featured as Poem of the Week in The Missouri Review. Bitting is writing a novel that centers around Los Angeles and her great-grandmother, stage and screen actor Beryl Mercer, and is Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing and Literature at Loyola Marymount University.


by Sherry Abaldo



I don’t even know whether to pronounce
myself vase like ace or vahz.
Should have come with care instructions.
So fragile, so much wide-mouthed
yearning to be bud vase, mason jar,
Grecian urn. I am aubergine, brackish,
cobalt. I change with the light. Where
feet should be I have a see-through moon.
Water tickles me no end. I thrill to stem
pokes, stray sepals, fallen petals
bright as stars against my midnight belly.
I was almost a bell. I was almost
made of iron. I was almost useful, but
I had to be so precious. Put away
for decades. Maine shed, LA closet. Now
I’m out and shining. Touch my cool assumed
perfection. Careful. Feed me flowers.

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Sherry Abaldo lives with her husband in Las Vegas, Nevada. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, ONE ART (Top 10 Read July 2024), Rattle, The Eunoia Review, Down East Magazine, and on The History Channel and PBS among other outlets. Her poems are forthcoming in Sequestrum, The Mackinaw, and elsewhere. As a researcher, her latest nonfiction contribution is due from HarperCollins in 2025. More at sherryabaldo.com.

by Sara Rosenberg

What I want is the buttery light of our kitchen
and my mother’s last lemon chicken.

What I want is your memory of snow
falling on larches. I let go the trails

you carved into the woods, each child’s
name knifed in timber. I dodge the lanky spiders,

leave your cicada shells to march along the sill.
Where would I keep it, your collection of rocks

and my mother’s spent tubes of paint?
I say someday I’ll read your margin notes, drink in

the fading ink, but I let slip the loose pages—
paper’s scattered white petals.

To downsize you to a smaller house,
I am culling the seven decades of your life.

I stack the reams of slides and stories you tell–
days camped at timberline in drifts of snow,

the fox that leveled its gaze at you,
alone together in the wild nowhere.

I find the minerals with penciled names,
boots crusted with a mountain’s silt

that carried you to the ponderosas
and the agates you faceted into my rings.

And now, you doze in the living room
in a cone of light.

I want to hold tender every last thing,
but I cannot contain it, not here,

where the blown leaves scatter and vanish.
I drag the trash can to the curb under a sky scarred

with stars, your trees a dull scratching
against the eaves. How I will miss

your house, its shadows blue along the bear grass
and prickly pear patches, its nests of sleeping does.

When you do not come to the door, I step into the mouth
of your foyer, where your breath floats in off the mildew

and roses, your skin the paper before it molders,
your lungs the books heaving with our dust.

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Sara Rosenberg’s poems have appeared in Pine Row Journal, Passengers Journal, and the Ocotillo Review. She lives in Austin, Texas.

by Mary Ann Honaker



It's winter. On foot, we are going some-
where. I wear fishnet, a miniskirt of
leather. We wear all black, all of us.

Laughing, up the icy road we claw
in our tall boots, in our long coats, in our
prime. My boots don't have enough tread. Our way

is steep. A biker-jacketed boy lifts me to
his back. He is bearded, jangles with each step, the
chains dangling off him everywhere. Bottom

is a pleasant place to be, we transcend
our world's comparisons, dart downward.
My fishnet are ripped, it's okay, we're there

in coats with shredded lining, at
a place where we are all fabulous. The
boys wear eyeliner, here at the hub

of my youth. I feel strangely tucked in, of
them, comfortable. The memory, the
moment, framed by snowfall, will never drain

from me. It's in a snowglobe. We are we,
and it's easy for once. Step back; flakes swirl.



This is a golden shovel using lines from Diane Seuss' “I Went Downtown and Went Down,” from Four-Legged Girl.

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Mary Ann Honaker is the author of Becoming Persephone (Third Lung Press, 2019), and Whichever Way the Moon (Main Street Rag, 2023). Her poems have appeared in Bear Review, JMWW, Juked, Little Patuxent Review, Rattle.com, Solstice, Sweet Tree Review, and elsewhere. She currently lives in Beckley, West Virginia.

by Wendy Mannis Scher



“all night it is the one breast/comforting the other” –Lucille Clifton,
"lumpectomy eve”


What you forget is how to disappear—how to unzip, step away from mammograms, ultrasounds, biopsies, diagnoses, MRIs, blood draws, bi-lateral mastectomies. What you don’t remember is the night before, curled up, facing the wall in daughter’s queen-sized bed, husband asleep on the pull-out couch, your breasts’ last hours attached to their chest. You don’t remember tears, a headache, anger at breasts angry at you, frustration with positive family-telling. What you forget is sleep, light tracings on walls/ceiling, full moon in between slats of Venetian blinds, daughter’s steady breath/snort as she shimmers deep in her own somewhere, what else? Two breasts

toss/turn their weights onto a mattress. You don’t remember mourning, cataloguing each milestone of their making, pre-pubescent fruits, painful duct swell, tickled tongue thrill, latched baby-tug, more, more. . . maybe heft and service was too much, hidden shadow flesh turning at last on itself, suicide. What do you forget dreaming of?

You forget breasts, sliced, studied, incinerated ash, smoke, cloud dust floating up there, rain. Rain cleaves to you, to earth, a foreshadowing of sorts, this becoming.

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Wendy Mannis Scher is a graduate of Smith College, the University of Colorado’s School of Pharmacy, and the University of Alaska’s MFA Creative Writing program. Her poems most recently have been published in Thin Places & Sacred Spaces (Amethyst Press), Panorama Journal, Harpy Hybrid Review, Warm Milk Publishing, and the chapbook, Fault (Finishing Line Press). Currently, Wendy lives with her family in the Colorado foothills.


by Sarah Sarai

It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIMEvery Day's archives!

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Arms, and the man…
Virgil


Christ almighty was that a year.
The damn war FINALLY over
though one many-faced hero heroed-on
ten more to slay a weaver’s suitors lined-up
and slicked-back on Ithaca Ave.

THAT year, warriors de-warriorized, or tried to.
Mothers had died fathers had died wives
husbands aunts uncles sisters brothers had died.

But not one golden-guy,
with eyes a glinty glint
and sweaty sweat on biceps bulging.

Sailing sea-y seas Aeneas ashored on land
of a lady founder
who took one gandy gander and
plunged into bicepboy’s eyes—not deep pools—

and after the jumping-off-joy—
no small joy we agree—was deady dead,
having lit sticks and self and such when
loverboy sailed again. Soon,
the city-on-a-boot he birthed,

Rome, all Latinated and lawyered up,
warriorized and empired, though,
we admit, the engineering was good.

Those aqueducts and bridges, those walls.
They were something else.

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Sarah Sarai is a birthright New Yorker and skintight Californian. Her most recent collection, Bright-Eyed (Poets Wear Prada), is a sort-of account of her family’s westward motion.

by Jami Macarty



Planted at her birth for maple shade and sway

Big leaf light gathering yellow, a green reach, and sky

Held so in place by its underground life

Limbs so surely rooted and reaching symmetrical flight

Leaves green green filtering a highlighted yellow

Unyielding as the life she already knows she wishes to lead

And so, the tree’s not-yet-lightning-struck boughs

Call the teenager out of the house

Summer’s swung open swoon

A vertigo of the future arriving

Climbing barefoot through the sun

Pollen of her own blooming

The hornet hummed under her blowsy pink nightgown

Stung the flower of her knee

The violence of life sometimes, Nature said, out of her hands

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Jami Macarty teaches creative writing at Simon Fraser University and writes essays, reviews, and poetry. Jami’s books: The Long Now Conditions Permit (forthcoming University of Nevada Press, 2025), 2023 Test Site Poetry Series Prize winner; The Minuses (Center for Literary Publishing, 2020), 2020 New Mexico/Arizona Book Award winner; The Whole Catastrophe (2024) and Mind of Spring (2017) from Vallum Chapbook Series, among others. Read Jami’s poetry and reviews, offered in service of poetry’s underrepresented voices, at jamimacarty.com.


by Laura Ann Reed


—after Tomas Tranströmer


Winter’s iron bell

mutes the white tulip and the peony.

The arguments among the jays

no longer scrape the air.

In the glacial nights my regrets

pace the corridors.

And what I’m trying to say

hangs out of reach

like the fruit of a different season.

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Laura Ann Reed is a Contributing Editor with The Montréal Review. Her poems have appeared in seven anthologies, including Poetry of Presence II, as well as in numerous journals. Her most recent work is forthcoming in Illuminations. Her forthcoming chapbook, Homage to Kafka, will be published in July, 2025. See lauraannreed.net.

by KT Herr



It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIMEvery Day's archives!

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I thought I had exhausted all my metaphors: various prey; coins
inserted slant, jamming vending machines; cartoon hand over cartoon
mouth. I studied grim histories of hysterical patients, listened
to accounts of fish who change their sex to breed. I thought I knew all
there is to know about glass: a viscous liquid forced to acquiesce
to rigidity. If I could learn the posture well enough I’d know
how to unlearn it. I practiced exhaustively. I’m practicing now,
today, as I sit smoking. Next door, workmen are lowering a warped
slab of half-inch plywood from the building’s distant roof. Above, one rotates
a winch while below another gathers slack, taming the spent plywood’s
wild twists. A third man stands, watches the rough plank pirouette past several
windows, bracing to receive the spinning scrap. You think I’m telling you
the story of the plank; how it feels to be trussed, grappled over. But I
am the third man: waiting for some purpose to come into my hands.

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KT Herr (they/she) is a queer writer, stepparent, and curious person with recent work appearing in Foglifter, The Massachusetts Review, Black Warrior Review, and as winner of the 2023 American Literary Review Award in Poetry, among others. KT is a Four Way Books board member, a poetry editor at Gulf Coast, and an Inprint C. Glenn Cambor Fellow in critical poetics at the University of Houston.


by Meg Freer


Late at night we threw ice off the roof of Spokane’s historic Ridpath Hotel
where Elvis had once booked three floors for his drunken entourage
ordered windows painted black, loaded a room with his bodyguards’ guns
sent for lobster tails after midnight, sent back eggs to be cooked hard as rocks

where we rode the high-speed elevator, raced to ice machines on each floor—
giddy on adrenaline from several days of music festival performances
and evenings of practice on the white baby grand at the piano store—
where we pressed the Penthouse button for the intriguing, unlucky 13th level.

When the door slid open, we spied on the high rollers dancing in the club
found our way in the dark to the open-air roof, leaned over the railing
whooped and hollered when our ice missiles hit a car or bus
hoped people down below would wonder why there was hail in May

while our mothers in the hotel bar with drinks on the rocks
tried for an hour to forget they were responsible for us.

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Meg Freer lives in Ontario, where she is a writer, editor, and piano teacher. Her work has appeared in many journals, and she has published three poetry chapbooks. She is co-poetry editor for The Sunlight Press and holds two music degrees and a Graduate Certificate in Creative Writing. Find her published work on her Facebook page, or her Substack blog at megfreer.substack.com.



by Sanjana Nair


In the praying mantis hidden under the pansy-faced blooms of the autumn
sage, a part of me. On the black stone of the kitchen counter, remnants of my
DNA. In the masala chicken for dinner, the oil of my skin, the oil of the onion,
the sweat of the mustard seeds. In the sky, the mimicking of birds in flight, we
trail fumes from planes in which I dreamed. In the ocean, eel remnants of
what was not consumed, waiting for the floating omnivores of the world.
In my head, a lightning flash brighting my childhood bedroom the day we
burned my mother. Of the head: small star, the light of memories burning
dendrite and neuron to keep alive what has already gone, all the dead.

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A tenured professor at the City University of New York’s John Jay College of Criminal Justice, Sanjana Nair’s poetry has appeared in various journals ranging from Spoon River Poetry Review to Fence Magazine. Deeply invested in collaboration, her work has been performed at Tribeca’s Flea Theater and featured on National Public Radio’s Soundcheck. She has performed at Barnes & Noble in NYC’s Union Square to the Rubin Museum. She resides in Virginia with her family.


by Tara Labovich



i am looking for answers. i think this is what i have always been looking for.
a little story, or punctuation, to end the impossible sentence.

it was near a year ago now, i sat with my dearest friend in mismatched chairs.
in the nook of those wide mountains, i said, this is the best carrot i have ever eaten.

it was winter, and they had dressed the little stalks like royalty. oil. salt. a little honey for glaze.
that morning, a stranger had held my hand as we walked the steep incline.

she did not let go. even when sweat beaded between us.
it was the first time i had been touched like that in two months.

it is so simple what reminds us of loving again.
no—what wakes the love in us again. like love is a thing that can sleep.

like love can be stirred. with oil. salt. a little honey for glaze.
i told my friend of the carrots, and the long walk through high snow, and the stranger.

they told me, carrots taste the best after a hard frost.
it’s the cold that shocks starch into sugar. it’s a jolt that turns the everyday into dessert.


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Tara Labovich (they/them) is a lecturer of English and Creative Writing at Iowa State University. Their multi-genre creative work explores questions of queerness, survivorship, and multicultural upbringing. Their writing is nominated for Best of the Net, and can be found in journals such as Salt Hill and the Citron Review.


by Deborah Hauser



It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIMEvery Day's archives!

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Dear Sir/Dear Parental Unit/No/Dear Sperm Donor/No/Dear
Male Relative/Stop/Dear old Dad/how many Our Fathers must
I say to make you appear/like Beetlejuice/why summon evil
spirits/how to apportion blame/to an empty
chair/MIA/absentee parent/you were tricked/ trapped/
torn/she turned you/in/to the Draft Board/she was daft/
I became deft/at avoiding her blows/I never learned/how/
to apply a tourniquet properly/the Girl Scouts don’t award
patches/for the survival skills I needed/she needled/ me/
endlessly/I wrote postcards in my head/having a splendid
time
/not/wish you were here/to stop the beatings/brace
yourself
/for stormy weather/there’s a cold front moving in/
to the guest room/you were my imaginary friend/perhaps
you wrote me too/invisible ink letters/never delivered/coded
messages/intercepted/by enemy hands/Hansel & Gretel/
my grim role models/my plastic red raincoat/she sent me
out/for milk and bread/I took the long way/home/longed
to be/lost/if I came back too late she locked me out/
always on the lookout/for something/to cling/to/a sharp-
toothed wolf/clever enough/to swallow me/whole.

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Deborah Hauser is the Poet Laureate of Suffolk County (2023-2025) and author of Ennui: From the Diagnostic and Statistical Field Guide of Feminine Disorders (Finishing Line Press). Her poems and book reviews have been published in Ms. Magazine, Women’s Review of Books, Kenyon Review, Prairie Schooner, Bellevue Literary Review, and Calyx. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee. Her work explores the intersection of poetry and activism. She has taught literature and writing at Stony Brook University and Suffolk County Community College. She leads a double life on Long Island where she works in the insurance industry.

by Donna Vorreyer



Of course, someone has named it “apron” belly.
You know. The kind that women of a certain
age begin to show, a pouch of weight below
the navel that resists attempts at flattening.

Apron. As in part of the road where the slow
or damaged pull aside. As in dinner on the table
when the man gets home
. As in domestic, tamed.
As in expected to toil and remain unstained.

As in tradition. As in remember your place. It could
be called prosperous. Could be shield. Could be
creator, battlefield, but it needs no label.
A body is a body. A woman already has a name.

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Donna Vorreyer is the author of Unrivered (forthcoming, 2025), To Everything There Is (2020), Every Love Story is an Apocalypse Story (2016) and A House of Many Windows (2013), all from Sundress Publications. Her poetry, fiction, and essay work have appeared in Ploughshares, Cherry Tree, Poet Lore, Salamander, Harpur Palate, Booth, and elsewhere. She lives and creates in the Chicago area and hosts the monthly online reading series A Hundred Pitchers of Honey.


by Mercedes Rodriguez



1.

The apartment is dangerously cold at night.
The hearth is a perimeter too far from my body.
I’ve taken to freezing a glass of milk before bed
And using it as a doorstopper.


2.

Some days, the heat tickles my toes. Others,
I’m peering through a crack, half-expecting
The neighbor’s nativity scene to come alive—
How long is too long when conspiring?


3.

After saying yes to a sleepover, I wake to a lover
Carelessly making his way to the bathroom.
He reassures me he’s not an angry drunk.
I never told him to pack a pair of slippers.

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Mercedes Rodriguez is a poet from Los Angeles, CA. They are an MFA poetry candidate at North Carolina State University.

by Lindsay Rockwell



the rooks and hives have gone quiet
what appears to be the ear of God

is a small boy's palm
catching the rain

a woman begs
to be felled by this rain

the sound it makes
silence gone drumming

a cello lifts from a high up window
there's a pool before the temple

and she before the pool
weeps in her scarf and shoes

I lost my mother to a surgeon's slip
hers to the sea

smoke purls from a chimney
winter's coming—the wait for sorrow

she lost her mother to the sea
mine to a surgeon's slip

before the pool I weep
in my scarf and shoes

from the temple's high up window
a cello lifts

the sound it makes—gone silence
I beg to be felled

by this rain that soothes the boy
his small palm

mistaken for the ear of God
the rooks and hives are quiet

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Lindsay Rockwell is poet-in-residence for the Hartford Connecticut’s Episcopal Cathedral Church. She has recently published or forthcoming work in Poetry Northwest, Poet Lore, Tupelo Quarterly, Radar, SWWIM Every Day, among others. Her collection, Ghost Fires, was published by Main Street Rag, April 2023. She is the recipient of the Andrew Glaser Poetry Prize, fellowships from Vermont Studio Center, and Edith Wharton/The Mount residency.

by Jennifer Markell



It's #tbt! Enjoy this great one from SWWIMEvery Day's archives!

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It isn’t green at all, this suit
you call Dress Greens,
not the color of living things
but what remains when a river
of ice is drained. You align
your shirt buttons with the front
fly seam, straight gig line
with the belt buckle’s edge.
Pin a grenade to your lapel,
sallow eagle, frozen in flight.
Turning to face the mirror,
you catch your reflection taking aim.

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Jennifer Markell’s first poetry collection, Samsara (Turning Point, 2014) was named a "Must Read Book" by the Massachusetts Book Awards. Her second collection, Singing at High Altitude, was published in 2022 by The Main Street Rag. She has received awards from the Chester H. Jones Foundation, The Comstock Review, The New England Poetry Club, and the Rita Dove Prize in Poetry (Finalist, International Literary Awards.) Her poems have been included in numerous publications, including The Bitter Oleander, Consequence, Diode, RHINO, Storm Cellar, and The Women's Review of Books.