by Declan Quinn
I walk along this winding road
Wind and snow tickle my face
This bleak white stretches for miles
Thoughts of discouragement slow my pace
by Declan Quinn
I walk along this winding road
Wind and snow tickle my face
This bleak white stretches for miles
Thoughts of discouragement slow my pace
by Joaquin Munoz
To say I’m going through a tough time is an understatement
To say that I’m also having the time of my life makes it a contradiction
But lately I’ve found that life is anything but a one way street or confined to black or white
I finally admit to it being a gray area, a sort of blurred line.
What problems am I going through, you might ask? Continue reading
by Christian Theodossy
Tomorrow, tomorrow.
Why always tomorrow?
Why do I leave affairs until the razor’s edge?
Instead of being the razor and cutting through my work?
Why do I procrastinate so?
Why can’t I just get it all done?
I ask as I write a poem when I should be doing homework.
by Maya Asregadoo
Last in the forest
Beautiful in its death colors
The sunset-colored leaf
Clings to its branch
by Christian Theodossy
The men had been fighting for years, eons. No one, not a soul, not even the old generals commanding young soldiers to their deaths could remember why it had started. But still they fought. They fought day and night, not even stopping to remove the bodies of nameless men. It was no “civilized” war like people fought in old times. There were no ranks of soldiers lined up to open fire and mow down the opposing lines, but instead a confused, angry, terrified mass of human beings fighting, tearing each other apart, gouging and ripping and biting and cutting. And the demon of war stood above on a hill, looking down on the great war he had begun.
“This is good,” he said.
“The men fight. They suffer. They die. And for no other reason than because they do.”
The fighting went on for centuries, children being trained to fight at an early age and sent off to battle when they were ready. The sides were evenly matched, no side ever gaining ground on the other. They simply fought on a scorched field covered in packed dirt and blood from hundreds of thousands of restless feet pounding the ground. The people were beyond hope that the war would ever end, so it became their way of life. Continue reading




By Jack Joseph
I needed to get this out of my head and onto the page, so that I would be free of the weighty burdens of work and pleasure.
__________
This is not for a prompt. This is not for any external reason. I am writing this for a selfish purpose. I am writing this for me.
I have come to the conclusion that one of the most insidious inventions of mankind is the calendar. Yes, it allows for long-term planning. Yes, it provides a definitive schedule so that we may structure our lives and partition out our time. Each and every one of us has been able to make long-term plans because of calendars. However, it puts a person into entirely the wrong mindset. Continue reading