I left heaven because the pillows were filled
with grief and the bedsheets had a threadcount
of longing. None of the angels wanted to talk
about moisturizer, my recipe for vegan pizza,
and every morning, I'd wake up hoping for sin
with my muesli, but instead they offered me
sugar while the living sent prayer requests
to my mailbox. I decided I was wrong
about desire—that earth while messy,
has the best sex and wi-fi. Maybe I was tired
of trying to explain to saints the joys of being
tempted. And how I missed bandaids
and credit cards, apologies and sad songs.
I left heaven with an unmade bed and enough
light to fill a stairway. Maybe in real life
the wound is misrepresented, mismanaged
by its handlers; pain and loss are D-list celebrities
we try to avoid, but between aching,
maybe sacred is tangled bedsheets, maybe
it's the rip in the pillowcase that helps us
recreate the clouds.
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Issue 80
-
Editor's Note
-
POETRY
- Kelli Russell Agodon
- Heather Altfeld
- Derrick Austin
- Sam Barbee
- Michael Carman
- Adam Chiles
- Matthew Carter Gellman
- Stephen Harvey
- Holly Karapetkova
- Stephen Knauth
- Sara London
- Maren O. Mitchell
- Susan Musgrave
- D Nurkse
- Alison Palmer
- Doug Ramspeck
- Mitchell Andrew David Untch
- Joshua Weiner
- Jennifer Wheelock
- Ken White
- Emily Paige Wilson