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She undressed in the mirror.
Only the reflection watched.
I found her candle,
cold and forgotten.

Her hands moved like smoke
understanding how to be skin again.
Not performance. Not pleasure.
Just unlearning the habit of vanishing.

Her shadow held her shape
longer than I did.
She said: “Stay,
but forget.”

Her child slept, somewhere,
dreaming oceans away.
She etched a name in glass steam,
a word that burned too bright to keep,
then let it melt under hot breath.

There was a song
caught in the ceiling,
something we never played
but always meant to.

I kissed her hair while it was still hair
and not a question
left behind on a pillow.

I opened the door,
it sang some other man’s name.
A line drawn, erased. No message left.
The room forgot its language.
My ghost obeyed
and lifted.
Shivam Sehgal May 20
Time has passed, yet I still feel

those breezes cross my skin-

I pull the blanket close, but no,  

It’s never thick enough.  



Instead, her softness lingers,  

a tide that pulls me under.  

I love this blue, this ache,  

this slow and weightless drowning.  



I want to touch the ocean,  

to weave my hands through waves of hair,  

to hold her like the night holds moonlight—  



but you’re a desert’s mirage,  

a shimmer just beyond my fingers.  



I WISH I COULD CALL YOU  

THE WAY I THOUGHT ABOUT YOU.  

JUST I WISH!
It's all about love...
Jonathan Moya May 18
One Last Ride


The highway hums beneath us,  
a silver ribbon unspooling, stretching time,  
five hours folding into salt and horizon.  

She sits beside me in the old Chrysler—  
the Town & Country, once dignified,  
now a relic of polish fading into nostalgia.  
The wood paneling still whispers of its golden years,  
though the lacquer has surrendered in places,  
dulled like the memory of Miami Dolphins victories,  
of stadium crowds she can no longer stand among.  

She glances at my brother, now wedged in the middle seat,  
his shoulders stiff, hands curled around his diecast Corvette—  
as if the metal chassis might ground him  
while history repeats in voices above his head.  

And then there was us—  
my older brother championing revolution, fire in his voice,  
me standing firm on the slow burn of policy,  
protest versus legislation, force against persuasion.  
He spoke of upheaval, of torches in the streets,  
of movements that scorched their way into history,  
citing rebellions that shattered regimes,  
the necessity of chaos to unmake oppression.  
I countered with the patience of paper,  
the ink of deliberation, the weight of slow reform,  
the belief that change, to last,  
must be built from within, brick by brick,  
not wrested in the fever of a single night.  

My sister, debating feminism with me,  
weaving tales of male privilege into animated kingdoms—  
deconstructing Beauty and the Beast,  
challenging the politics of princesses.  
I fired back with counterpoints  
built on Disney’s quiet revolutions,  
quoting Ariel's defiance, Mulan’s resilience,  
arguing the incremental shift—  
that fairytales were learning,  
however imperfectly, to unmake their past.  
She scoffed, naming the villains still drawn too charming,  
the heroines still shaped too gently.  

And between us, my younger brother sat,  
rolling his toy wheels across his thigh,  
waiting for us to grow bored of history,  
to let silence settle in  
like dust in the seams of a worn-out car.  

My mother sighs, brushing a hand across the dashboard,  
the way she once smoothed the wood veneer  
on our old living room console,  
fingers ghosting over the static  
before the game crackled into motion.  

The 1972 Dolphins—perfect in record,  
immortal in memory.  
She remembers how we all crowded around that screen,  
stepdad balancing a plate of nachos and salsa,  
her own voice sharp with joy  
when Kiick took it in for the score.  

I can almost hear her say it now—  
“They never did it again, but once was enough.”  
And I wonder if she means football,  
or life itself.  

The hotel room exists between versions of itself,  
half-modern, half-forgotten—  
maroon carpet fraying at the corners,  
a sleek lamp that doesn’t match the floral wallpaper,  
a desk too new for its wobbly chair.  
Even the light flickers like it can’t decide  
if it belongs in this decade or the last.  
It is a room in limbo, much like us.  

She settles into the bed,  
the pillows stacked carefully beneath her spine,  
the weight of the drive melting into crisp sheets.  
On the TV, The Best Years of Our Lives flickers—  
Frederic March raising his glass,  
Harold Russell tracing the contours of a future  
without the hands he once knew.  

She sighs when Homer tries to hold Wilma,  
the way his body betrays him,  
the way she stays, unflinching.  
The scene quiets something deep in her—  
the knowing that loss cannot be outrun,  
only softened by those who refuse to look away.  

My sister calls from Alaska,  
says the northern lights flared last night,  
green ribbons curling like seaweed in sky.  
She asks if I can send pictures of anything  
her daughter might sketch—  
a streetlamp bending against the wind,  
the way light fractures through a rain-streaked window.  
Then, her voice shifts, careful now, measured—  
she speaks of the future, of what is fair,  
what is owed, what might be promised  
when the weight of care no longer rests  
in my mother’s hands.  
What will be reimbursable,  
what should belong to whom,  
what it means to inherit responsibility  
instead of just the things left behind.  
And always, beneath the calculations,  
my brother—  
who will watch over him,  
who will decide the shape of his world  
when the one who knows him best  
is gone.  

My brother in Oregon speaks of rivers,  
his voice full of exact false cheer,  
the kind meant to mask a quiet weariness.  
He talks about cold hands gripping a fishing rod,  
of waiting for something unseen  
to take the bait,  
of how trout move like ghosts beneath the surface.  
And beneath his words, another thought lingers—  
his wife, frail as she is,  
how she will need tending,  
how responsibility never truly passes,  
only shifts shape,  
only finds new hands to hold it.  

And then there is the shape of what’s to come—  
the joy and the breaking of it, the laughter and its echo.  
A wedding, the shimmer of promise,  
then papers signed in quiet rooms,  
the weight of goodbye settling into drawers.  

A body betraying itself, the stark syllables of diagnosis,  
the fight, the frailty, the waiting, the return—  
cancer like a storm that bruises the bones,  
then fades into remission,  
leaving only the knowledge  
that not all things come back untouched.  

The love of my brother, steady as the road beneath us,  
the joy of tending, the ache of duty,  
the fear of expectations unfolding  
in silent negotiations I do not yet understand.  

And then maybe a tornado,  
ripping through the known world,  
splitting the timbers of a home  
that once stood unwavering.  

But a new house will rise,  
new walls will carry voices,  
new foundations will hold weight—  
my brother, my wife, my dog,  
a life remade in the wind’s aftermath,  
a future stitched from everything that came before.  

And my mother—  
she watches my younger brother  
the way a lighthouse watches the dark,  
aware of the storms ahead,  
of the care I must carry  
when she no longer can.  

She hums the Dolphins’ fight song softly before bed,  
a hymn to all that lingers, to all that fades.  
Then, almost without thinking,  
her voice shifts, slipping into Belafonte,  
A Hole in the Bucket, the rhythm of trying, of mending,  
of things that will never quite be whole.  
Then Day-O, a call to the dawn,  
a melody of labor and waiting,  
the night giving way to the light  
that does not always come.  

She came from thirteen—  
six brothers, seven sisters,  
her name the last written on the family roll call,  
though not the last to leave.  
She will be the middle one to go,  
just after the final brother,  
after the first three sisters,  
her place in the lineage somewhere between memory  
and the spaces left behind.  

And I wonder—  
when the tide turns,  
when the wind shifts,  
who will sing it for her?
ProfMoonCake May 18
I have forgotten what my mind was like
before I met you.
You are the first thought—
and the last.
Who was I before?
Did I write?
Did I laugh?
Maybe.
Maybe my life was simpler—
a quiet loop,
a routine with a predictable rhythm.
Maybe I woke up sad.
I can’t remember anymore.
I looked for her—
the girl I was—
in the books I swore I loved more than you.
In the moon,
but it never looks the same now.
Not since you.
Your words haunt me.
They live in the corners of things.
They ruin songs.
They ruin sleep.
But it’s okay.
I let them.
I look for you in other bodies.
I tell the same jokes.
Nobody laughs the way you did.
I get new answers I didn’t ask for.
It’s silly.
Stupid.
Obsessive, even.
I spent more time missing you
than holding you.
The sticking points losing their touch
We used to dive into drops of rain
Fahad shah May 16
Last night I dreamt of my grandfather
Who died six months ago.
Passed away, people speak in my ear.
Yes, passed away. He passed away.
He passed away on one fine Saturday.

Two days ago, I wrote a poem.
A friend said, “Write one for him too.”
A eulogy?
My grandfather died six months ago.

He left a cane behind,
a torch
And diaries scrawled with debts:
Jamaal, 300.
Kamaal, 500.
Even our milkman who helped dig a grave.

Abu ji, dear Abu ji—We called.
Abu Ji died six months ago.
Passed away, they say. He passed away.
His friends say he passed away.
His sons say he passed away.
His wife—she says it too.
He passed away, they all say.

Last year, he gave me a shirt to wear
and a belt of fine yellow leather.
“This, I bought in the 60’s when I was young.
This, I bought when I was married.”
He talked of two dozen friends often,
a menudo, mi abuelo, Sus amigos.
I learned in Spanish.
A menudo: often,
Mi abuelo: My grandfather.
Sus amigos: His friends.
He spoke of his friends,
“My friends.”
Men, tall men in long boots and khaki uniforms,
who called him “Inspector,”, “Our dear inspector”
mis amigos y sus zapatos, I learned again.

Before he died, he asked
In a voice, strong, shrewd, and tired,
“Who won the election?”
“No one, for now.
Here, Congress had a rally today.
Yes, he… came to speak too.”
“A brave man,” he said.
“Yet…”

My grandfather died six months ago,
Suddenly. Of a heart attack.
I suppose.
I calmed his face by rubbing his chin,
He stared at me in a silent disbelief.
I took him to a hospital, my brother too,
“Check his pulse.”
“Is he breathing?”
“let’s turn back. There is no point.”

In the hospital, I was the brave one.
Even so, braver was my brother,
Quieter, shaken–he didn’t cry.
Nor did he in the ambulance,
Or at home.

Wrapped in a red blanket,
“Wait, did you tie his mouth?”
“Here. Take this bandage,
Tuck it beneath his chin.
What a fine beard.
What a fine man.
Are you the adult here?
Call your father”

“Father, come home. Abu Ji died.”
“Passed away,”. “He passed away.”
“Yes. He passed away.”
Brother, however younger, pats my shoulder,
“Do not cry. What shall we say?
What shall we ever say?”
“To whom?
“to mummy?”
We call our grandmother mummy.
“Yes, what shall we tell mummy?”
Abu Ji died. he died six months ago.
Passed away, she’d say. Passed away.

He died at noon. While eating.
He had only started.
A morsel of rice, dry in his white palm,
Mother screamed in disbelief,
I ran down, so did my brother
who had just come home.

“Why didn’t you come yesterday?
When I asked you to come yesterday,”
Abu Ji had said.
Then gave him all his keys
in an untimely hour.
“Quite lucky,” they said. “He gave you his keys before he died.”
Passed away, he says. He passed away.

Mother said, “Abu Ji called your name before he died.”
Passed away, she says. He passed away.
“He called your name before he passed away.”
I am shy about writing my name,
Too reserved to write my name.
If my name was Kamal, Abu Ji said,
“Kamal, come to me, I will die.”
If I was named Jamal, Abu Ji said,
“Jamal, come to me, I will die.”
Mother swears she heard it.
While Grandma was lost somewhere else.
“I heard him, he called your name.”
I do not believe it,
Not even six months later.


We came back in an ambulance
Received by 300 strange men
With 300 different hats
Men I only nodded to.
Men, who would visit my grandfather often.
“Pity, he was great.”
“Indeed. He was.”
“Oh, how every soul shall taste death”

Grandmother cried in disbelief,
“He did not die. Nor pass away.”
“Yes, you are right.”
“Yes, you are right.”

My grandfather died.
Six months ago.
I no longer cried; only felt sad.
Talk to people, I hear them say.
My great, great aunt and her great, great uncle
To their dismay
I thought of an old friend
who never calls.

My grandfather died,
Two months later, I met a friend
Where were you all this time?
She says, “I am sorry. Was he sick?”
I say, “It is all right. He was just old”
It is not all right.
“Do you miss him?” she asked again.
“I do not want to talk about it,” in disdain.
Not with her. Ever again.


My grandfather died,
Some say he called my name,
While others say he was a great man.
He left me an old ashtray,
his two diaries and a cane.
I do not want a key.
Or a shirt.
Or a belt from a forgotten age.

Last week, an old politician breathed his last,
This week, a city fell to a wildfire’s wrath.
Who is left to talk to anymore?
Last night I dreamt of him, saying that
wise old man is gone!
“Abu Ji, that city itself is ash and smoke too.”
What a pity.
My grandfather died.
Passed away; I remind myself.
Six months ago, he passed away.
Abu Ji, Dear Abu Ji.
To all grandfathers who make your lives better.
To all the best friends who always make you laugh.
Psylocke May 16
You left a photograph with red light leaks
You had a waxen skin and a Cheshire smile
You wore a dark blue stripped sweater
Had on faded blue jeans
You were wearing your favorite necklace,
The one shaped like an icosahedron
It was quite haunting, this photograph of you
I don’t remember taking it
Wasn’t even quite sure it was you
Kalliope May 15
My feet move forward but my mind stays stuck,
I walked this road alone before, I tried to stop picturing you with me, no luck.
Though I know you're long gone, I still see you peripherally,
A shadow seeped into the corner of every memory.

Everyone I've ever loved has a home in me,
I let go in body, but in spirit you're weaved.
A tasty snack, an even better smell,
You're in my air, in this breeze, embodying a perfect  nostalgic hell.

I have new goals, new friends, new skills
From time to time I still think of our thrills,
Sometimes it's quiet reflection, sometimes its tearful and loud,
It's wild how I can still find you in once familiar sounds.

I can't bring you back but how I wish I could, if I could do it all differently believe that I would,
If I found you now would the spark remain the same?
Souls are so fragile, and who knows what time has changed.
I watched an anime recently Frieren: Beyond Jounery's End,
And it just really struck a cord with my soul
Leave when the sky is loud but the sidewalk is quiet.
When the door clicks shut like it’s keeping a secret,
don’t flinch.
Let your hands hang heavy,
the silence has its own grip.

Take only what fits in your chest,
you’ll be shocked what doesn’t.
Use only what won’t puncture your lungs.
(Even breath can betray you.)

Don’t check the mirror.
It lies loudest when you’re quiet.

If you must cry, do it in motion.
Stillness makes grief cocky,
then it hands you a mirror labeled “proof”
and waits.

Let the memory bruise.
Don’t label it.
Names are spells.

Closure’s a mirage
that waves from the distance
and never once turns around.

When the day feels unbearable,
bear it.
Not because you’re strong—
because you’re stubborn
and still here.

By month three,
his name will taste like static.
By month six,
you’ll forget the exact color of his laugh.
And by month twelve—
you’ll mistake the whole thing for a metaphor.

You’ll almost be right.
But even metaphors
break skin.
Memory crusts,
but it never closes.
for when you finally go and don't look back
Cadmus May 15
For a moment,
I was everything.

As we danced,
He spoke in sonnets,
promised castles and constellations.
I believed.

But when the music died,
so did he.
The stars blinked out,
the castle never was.

And I returned
to my table,
to my silence,
to a world that never danced.

With nothing in my hands
but the weight
of hollow words
spoken in fluent dreams.
Some men don’t love you. They just know how to speak fluently in dreams.
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