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Arianne True

Seattle Sonata (legato, every note legato)

I – razbliuto

It’s hard to be in love with
someone who can change so much.

My city left me behind chasing
a seat at the table when
our table was already set,
overflowing with possibility
and art and people who can’t afford
to live here anymore. I live an hour
away now and don’t know how to feel when
I see her. Something like longing. Something
like disappointment. Something I worry is
like a word I learned once at her side,
the Russian word that names the feeling
you have for someone you once loved
but no longer do. I worry that’s true.

II – in Russian

There’s no such word in Russian. You can say,
“I once loved you but no longer,” but there’s
no shorthand for it. No sum up. Despite being
in the books of so many experts, so many linguists —
no such feeling in its source language. Best guess:
a typo in a 60s tv show. Replicated somehow to now.
A not-Russian word that only exists in English.

III – object permanence

I feel home, though, in some of the same places.
Pioneer Square and the Seattle Center, bookends
of a past continually overwritten and a future imagined once,
two half-truths preserved in architecture.  These buildings at least
feel real to me, like they’ll still be there when I turn around.
It’s hard to feel steady when you’re surrounded by disappearances,
a constantly changing view. How much was ever really there?
I trust the old bricks and concrete most in this city.
[Still not more than the trees that grow up the ravines.]

IV – no what

it’s hard to tell        someone you left
everything they would’ve needed to change
for you to keep wanting them.
you shouldn’t try. living things change,
it is just hard to love living things
(harder not to) the city is a living thing,
you know. like I am a living thing to
the microscopic creatures that populate
my body who make it somewhere
I can live too. no me without them.
no city without who? hard to say
for a city bleeding out. what are you losing?
when will you notice? and what
will you do then?

V – somehow it’s not happening here but

Sometimes I have to speak so plainly that my voice gets lost in the words.
It’s to be understood when you’re swimming against misconceptions.
It still only works when someone will listen. Is willing to hear.

VI – why here

My writing exists because this is home. Me born to another city
is another artist, who knows her medium? Something about this
place keeps breathing me words. Maybe it’s the dense undergrowth,
so many places for a whisper to catch and hide, to wait for you.
So easy to move slow here, easy to spend an hour on the bus
or twenty minutes walking. Cars dull my senses, speed me up
to where I can’t catch the details anymore. I write more when
I am slow in the world, and this home made that so easy
for so long. It’s harder to get here now, but when I can
the whispers are still waiting, falling with the pine needles
or pushing up with irises, caught in the air of a bumblebee’s
fuzz as they sleep in a rosebud. Other places have flowers,
but these ones know my name.

VII – whole-body ear

I wear thinner shoes now
and can feel the streetcar
fifty feet away, every move
and stop spreads sensation
across the soles of my feet.
This place always teaching
me new ways to listen.

VIII – what about the other colors

Thick pigeons flock and split
like a grey kaleidoscope no one is turning
in the one hour we have of snow.
So many land together three stories up,
a whole crenellation of plump birds.
The rest must’ve gone west somewhere,
maybe past the clock tower,
I can’t see them now.

IX – cadence

I think what I want is for hometown to mean something.
Something tangible, more than longing or nostalgia,
to mean something with a body. Some kind of right
to live in your home. Some new knowing (not new
to me) that these streets were parents for some of us.
Some of us were raised by buildings and bus routes
and empty auditorium stages, by old old trees,
by blackberries and sticky rhododendron blooms and
the salmon that come home every year to become
the stream again. Some of us were raised by
pavement and school fields and drainage ditches.
By strangers and being a stranger show after show.
By the water that runs over all of them. (us.) None
of these are just images. This is not a poem, it’s
a map. This is not a poem, it’s a lineage. I am
telling you my family. I am telling you my home.
I am telling you one of the saddest things I know,
that none of that is allowed to matter more than
money in the city that’s been built here. Maybe
what I miss is like parents before you find out they
are only human too. I am not surprised by the
changes here anymore. But I am surprised
by the things no one notices. I live in shock that
we have no right to our home.

See About the Poet Laureate here.

Lana Valdez

Neighborhood Strays

the more i learn of god, the more i liken him to my neighbor, jude coltran. his dark
hair shadows the rest of his face, and he spends his days talking to the floor. jude
is like us, but his eyes can only tilt up a certain way, until they tire and retreat back
into his brain. i’ve heard stories, ones that could make me tear out fistfuls of my
hair in fear, but i still let jude take me out dancing to a club he goes to. i dance until
spots appear in front of my eyes, whirling disco balls and little red chandeliers that
line the ceiling. in the night, jude wakes me up to tell me about his god. we don’t
have to sell our souls or clothes, he whispers, he is already in us.

Lana Valdez is a twenty one year old writer, poet, and filmmaker living in Southern
California, most known for her poetry and short films. Her poetry collection. THE RED DOLL,
is available via Bottlecap Press, and her short films are on her YouTube channel, Lana Valdez.

Back Page with Sam Siegel

Mount Robson–36″ x 36″ oil on canvas

Artist Statement: As a Canadian artist based in Vancouver BC, I am constantly inspired by the breathtaking landscapes of the Pacific Northwest. From the misty forests to the rugged coastlines, this region is a never-ending source of inspiration for my art. In my work, I use a variety of brushes and oil paints to create these landscapes by hand. Whether I am painting the intimidating snow-capped peaks of the mountains or the tranquil waters of a quiet lake, I am always filled with a sense of wonder and awe at the natural environment all around us. I hope that my artwork takes you on a journey to a nostalgic, whimsical world of the imagination, and serves as a reminder of the enduring beauty of our landscape. 

Bio: At an early age, Sam Siegel discovered and was supported in his artisitc expression by teachers and family as an antidote to his ADHD. He stuck with it. An injury and consequent addiction to oxycodone and then fentynol sent him through rounds of rehab which eventually took hold. When he came out the other side, his father and uncle joined together with Sam to create his business, Sam’s Original Art, with a gallery in Vancouver, BC, and a well-established website (samsoriginalart.com).

For more information about the artist, you may go to these links:

Chipmunk Peak Summit, Pemberton

30 under 30
CTV NEWS
Boston Voyager Magazine
Sam’s Original Art at Facebook.com

Willawaw Journal Spring Issue 16

Rachel Coyne’s “Silver Stars”–8 x 10 acrylic on paper

 

Notes from the Editor

Dear Readers,

This issue includes multiple themes: poverty, unemployment, lost, trauma, drought—but also play, humor, and maybe our one hope for survival: recognizing the value of all living beings. So you will find a poem about raccoons (Babcock), a hummingbird (Moffet), crows (Stone and Harris) , a bear (Stearns), ospreys (Rabuzzi), and some chickens (Petska). Petska says it well when he imagines the “surveilling eyes” of his chickens, assessing him from the other side, and wondering if he was worth their investment.

Two poems honor insects not usually considered honorable in Trail’s “To the Hornet” and Sullivan’s “Against Glass.”

Anis Mojgani’s prompt, “Shake the Dust”, inspires some listing, ranting, rambling, and celebrating in the works of Champlin, Dorroh, Hammial, and Hoggard—pushing boundaries, sometimes making sense into nonsense, following the stream that is consciousness, playing with words. (After reading Hoggard, see if the word “country” ever feels the same!)

Three poets address memories, how they can haunt (Fick), how the less desirable memories can open the poet to the joyful ones (Finley), how remembering is like time travel to places you did not know you cherished until they were gone (Popperl).

And of course several poets did time travel—to the first romance of a schoolboy (Stoddart), to sorting mixed raisin boxes by grower on a cement slab in the heat of Fresno (Barile), or to culling through Puerto Rican cultural experiences her children will never know (Ettinger).

This issue is full of surprises, including the artwork of Rachel Coyne which I found unsettling at first glance but then could not look away. Her images are like poems in that something is left out. These narrative pieces are deliberately enigmatic. See her BACK PAGE for a bit of insight.

I hope you are as tickled and touched as I am in reading this issue. It seems to offer a map for healing. Spring is coming. Mojgani concludes, “when the world knocks at your door . . .run into its big, big hands with open arms.”

Yours in poetry,

Rachel Barton

Frank Babcock

The Racoon Tree

Our good friends, Duane and Heather,
have lived in their house forty years,
stewards of a large cherry tree.
They look forward with anticipation
to the black cherries each June,
though they never get to taste any.
It is known as the Raccoon Tree.
After blossoms drop in spring
a raccoon sleeps in the tree every day,
keeping an eye on future cherries.
Imagine the local ringtail clan
drawing straws each morning before bed,
the loser spending the day in the tree.
When the cherries show the slightest blush
all raccoons spend the evenings there,
stuffing their bandit faces full of red cherries,
dropping the telltale signs under the tree,
cherry seed scat. Picture them
dark nights roosting, bellies full, playing cards
with their little hands, snickering and chattering
like they’re wont to do, telling human jokes.
Not a single Bing ripens enough
for Duane and Heather to savor a taste.
They satisfy themselves at the window each night
by watching the glowing eyes in the tree,
and rogue cherries tumbling down.

Blackberry Vines

Blackberry vines arch in temptation,
making wildlife tunnels,
sustaining all manner of small beings:
birds, mice, insects even rabbits.
These vines are known for a trinity:
berries, barbs and prolific growth.
Often the sticky canes billow out
toward the meadows.
When the brush catches your clothing,
best just to plow through.
Any attempt to use finesse
just creates more tangle, like a spider web.
When grabbed by the skin, though,
don’t yank away. Just relax, back up,
let the bush let go a little at a time.
Don’t lay down and close your eyes
in the proximity of these briar patches
like Rip van Winkle did in the Catskills
when he met a band of mysterious Dutchmen.
You might wake up twenty years later
with a long white beard, sticks and thorns
holding you fast to the earth,
needing to be fed with a spoon
for the rest of your days.

Frank Babcock lives in Corvallis, Oregon and is a retired Albany middle school teacher and owner of a bamboo nursery. He writes poetry to share the strange thoughts that rattle around in his head and to get them off his mind. He started with an interest in the beatnik poets, Ferlinghetti and Ginsberg. He has a long way to go and much to write before he sleeps. Poems published in the local Advocate, Willawaw Journal, and Panoplyzine.

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