Pelvic Physical Therapy

every week at the doctorโ€™s office, I fold
my boxers inside my pants, and pull

the scratchy sheet up to my hips.
I didnโ€™t know I could get used to this.

the moon hides once each month, just like me.
we are brothers, and I am the jealous one.

tell me if it hurts, she says.
it hurts, I say.

but itโ€™s okay.
thatโ€™s how I know

itโ€™s working.



____

Kaleigh Oโ€™Keefe is a gender outlaw and proud union member living in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Their poetry has appeared in Breaking the Chains: a Socialist Perspective on Womenโ€™s Liberation, Slamfind, won the PRIDE Poetry Prize in Passengers Journal, and is featured on indie music legend Ceschiโ€™s album Sans Soleil. Kaleigh is a contributor and editor for Liberation News, is a co-founder of Game Over Books, and hosts the First Fridays Youth Open Mic in Jamaica Plain. Find Kaleigh online atย www.kaleighokeefe.com, on Twitter and Instagram at @KaleighOKeefeOK.

I had another dream where the roof caved in.ย 

the plaster bulged 
like a huge 
pregnant belly, or 

a cyst. cracked 
like a dry 
knuckle. I reached 

out my hands 
like I could 
catch whatever fell 

from it. shouted 
like it could 
listen. the water 

poured like an 
omen. I woke 
cloaked in sweat, 

one hand on 
my plaster womb, 

one hand on 
my pouring chest



____

Kaleigh Oโ€™Keefe is a gender outlaw and proud union member living in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Their poetry has appeared in Breaking the Chains: a Socialist Perspective on Womenโ€™s Liberation, Slamfind, won the PRIDE Poetry Prize in Passengers Journal, and is featured on indie music legend Ceschiโ€™s album Sans Soleil. Kaleigh is a contributor and editor for Liberation News, is a co-founder of Game Over Books, and hosts the First Fridays Youth Open Mic in Jamaica Plain. Find Kaleigh on the web atย www.kaleighokeefe.com and on instagram at @kaleigh.okeefe.poetry @FirstFridaysJP @GameOverBooks

Cracked Wall

by Hulian Zhang

Little flowers and leaves on the wall
If you could tell me 
How you sprout grow blossom 
I will know how you cracked the wall
I will know how our softness could be better placed 
In this similarly solid rocky world



____

Hulian Zhangย (she/her) is currently a PhD candidate in Medical Ethics and Law at Newcastle Law School, Newcastle University (UK).

Promise of Fortune

Ginger K. Hintz

we both wanted more 
so we took it

                                                                                            hands act like scarves 
                                                                                           wrapped around necks 
                                                                                                             turned over 
                                                                                                                     for you 
                                                                                                                face down 
                                                                                             filled with your effort


like dusty mandarins
marked with strangerโ€™s fingerprints 
how do you carry your violence?



____

Ginger K. Hintz, originally from South Dakota, eventually found her way to Oakland, CA. She is a self-taught poet and independent scholar with a dayย job. She has an MA in American Cultural Studies. Find Ginger atย cacheculture.com. Publications include Friends of William Stafford Journal, Bluestockings Magazine, Q/A Poetry. She was a finalist for the 2021 Stephen A DiBiase Poetry Prize and semifinalist for the 2021 Crab Creek Review Poetry Prize.ย 

Line of Sight

by Ginger K. Hintz

Will the past be unobstructed
when the observed become intervisible narrators?

Culture is cancelled. Culture has been cancelled.
Only blue this morning.

The catโ€™s fur fades in the summer light.
Time [redacted].

We remain virtual until we go outside.
Hashtag: nature, grass, sky



____
Ginger K. Hintz, originally from South Dakota, eventually found her way to Oakland, CA. She is a self-taught poet and independent scholar with a day job. She has an MA in American Cultural Studies. Find Ginger at cacheculture.com 

Publications include Friends of William Stafford Journal, Bluestockings Magazine, Q/A Poetry. She was a finalist for the 2021 Stephen A DiBiase Poetry Prize and semifinalist for the 2021 Crab Creek Review Poetry Prize. 

๏ฟผi choose to be a riptide

by Regina Jade

I am told 
That because I am a woman
It is my job to yield.
I am to be smiling and cheerful,
I am to be soft and gentle.
I should be like water in the ocean:
Adaptable and constant,
Welcoming to all who wish to relax
And forget their troubles
After a long dayโ€™s hard work.

Never mind that the ocean is angry
When it roars during storms.
Never mind that the ocean is unmerciful 
When it swallows houses and beaches whole.
Never mind that the ocean is deceptive
When it lures the unsuspecting into dangerous riptides.

If I am to be the ocean, truly,
Then I choose to be a riptide.
Calm and smooth on the surface
And an inexorable force below
To drag down all who expect me to yield. 



____

Regina Jade is an Asian American writer and poet. She loves chocolate, custard tarts, and cats.ย In her spare time, she can be found trawling the depths of libraries for new books to add to the to-be-read pile, which never seems to get any smallerย Her recent work appears inย Eucalyptus & Rose Literary Magazineย andย A Coup of Owls, and is also featured in an anthology titled โ€œImaginary Creaturesโ€ fromย Carnation Books. She tweets from @thereginajade.

Venus of Willendorf

by Colleen Abel

Venus of Willendorf

That which is most is most
unbearable     a body
should be a length of string
a spine a taut yard of twine
the shadow a pillar
of dark marble





Why must you speak
like that:
every dark thing
accessed, every excess


Unseemly the handfuls
of flesh

I think what you really mean
	




But the body
is a planet you tilt
on its axis     spinning
zero miles per hour
at the poles
a thousand 
at the sweated equatorial


Fecund as a flooded valley 
I plunder you
gasp-wracked

Ungirdle     unstone

is I am ochre-soaked

cornucopiate

Colleen Abel is a disabled writer living in the Midwest. Her work has appeared in venues such asย Lit Hub, Cincinnati Review, The Southern Review, Colorado Review, Pleiades,ย Poetry Northwest,ย and elsewhere. Her first poetry collection, REMAKE, won the 2015 Editors Prize from Unicorn Press. She has two chapbooks, HOUSEWIFERYย (dancing girl press) andย DEVIANTS, a hybrid work about stigmatized bodies that won Sundress Publications’ 2016 Chapbook Prize. She has been awarded fellowships from UW-Madisonโ€™s Institute for Creative Writing and the Tulsa Artist Fellowship. She is the Poetry Editor of Bluestem magazine and Assistant Professor of English at Eastern Illinois University.

Note: “Venus of Willendorf” is reprinted with the author’s permission from the chapbook DEVIANTS (Sundress Press, 2016).

Heretic in the Catacombs

by Colleen Abel

When I got out from under
the damp tongue of the priestโ€™s 

sermon, there was something I was
finally ready to declare

something grave:     God
as the great

naught     God
as unโ€”     not urโ€”

All I held:     fictionalia

& then I went to the castle
of bones     the bunk-

beds of martyrs     with God
yawning from the clammy tufo

requiring nothing

Heresy is easy scoffs the marble 
saint     the axe marks 

in her neck say try believing   

& there was something I wasโ€”

finally ready to




____

Colleen Abel is a disabled writer living in the Midwest. Her work has appeared in venues such asย Lit Hub, Cincinnati Review, The Southern Review, Colorado Review, Pleiades,ย Poetry Northwest,ย and elsewhere. Her first poetry collection, REMAKE, won the 2015 Editors Prize from Unicorn Press. She has two chapbooks, HOUSEWIFERYย (dancing girl press) andย DEVIANTS, a hybrid work about stigmatized bodies that won Sundress Publications’ 2016 Chapbook Prize. She has been awarded fellowships from UW-Madisonโ€™s Institute for Creative Writing and the Tulsa Artist Fellowship. She is the Poetry Editor of Bluestem magazine and Assistant Professor of English at Eastern Illinois University.

Note from the River

by Twila Newey

Fall had just turned cold 
the year I hung over youโ€”speechless and intentโ€”
death making an end of all 
my exquisite preparationsโ€”words 
stolen from my mouth. 
Here, when I speak, only fireflies fly out. 
Sultry and opaque I slipped 
through the haze between worlds 
that postcard you kept writing me 
Joy was to be endured as well as sorrow 
like a fountain vanishing the body flows 
for a little while. A risk 
to return as mist rising
in another century, another shoreline, 
I trusted your impulsive hospitality
What else could I do but try 
to speak again of lightโ€”
of desireโ€”maybe 
shake us both free 
of fatherโ€™s tongue. Iโ€™m telling you 
it was a mistake to weigh my pockets 
down with stones and wander into water.



____

Note: Italicized lines are from Virginia Woolf’s “Moments of Being.”

Twila Newey lives and writes at the confluence of poetry, local ecology, motherhood, and the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers in Northern California. You can find recent work at Green Mountains Review, About Place Journal, and Radar Poetry.

Possession, the act of

by Corinna Schulenburg

Then, this: that a woman made of water
or not even water, but the reflection that light 
knits on top of it, that this woman might,
as any clever ghost should, lure a set of lungs
to where she could, flavored as a vape,
slip sweetly down the pipes and seize the wheel,
and what do you call an exorcism outside in,
and what do call this place, this stab of dock
where fog makes amphibians of us all,
and gives us breasts on chests that once
were smooth as cutting boards, and ferries
pronounce the birth with horns that sound
like whales in slow motion as the woman
sheathes    my self    in skin and shakes down
my hair, which curls around the air like vines, 
and hey there, can you show me the way to town?




____

Corinna Schulenburg (she/her) is a queer trans artist/activist committed to ensemble practice and social justice. Sheโ€™s a mother, a playwright, a poet, and a Creative Partner of Flux Theatre Ensemble. Poems in: Arachne Press, Beaver Magazine, Capsule Stories, Eclectica Magazine, Lost Pilots, Long Con, LUPERCALIA Press, miniskirt magazine, Moist, Moonflake Press, Moss Puppy, Oroboro, Pastel Pastoral, Poet Lore, SHIFT, The Shore, The Westchester Review, and more:ย https://corinnaschulenburg.com/writer/poet/ย ย