Whenever I spend the day crying,
my friends tell me I look high. Good grief,
they finally understand me.
Even when the arena is empty, I thank god
for the shots I miss. If you ever catch me
only thanking god for the shots I make,
remind me I’m not thanking god. Remind me
all my prayers were answered
the moment I started praying
for what I already have.
Jenny says when people ask if she’s out of the woods,
she tells them she’ll never be out of the woods,
says there is something lovely about the woods.
I know how to build a survival shelter
from fallen tree branches, packed mud,
and pulled moss. I could survive forever
on death alone. Wasn’t it death that taught me
to stop measuring my lifespan by length,
but by width? Do you know how many beautiful things
can be seen in a single second? How you can blow up
a second like a balloon and fit infinity inside of it?
I’m infinite, I know, but I still have a measly wrinkle
collection compared to my end goal. I would love
to be a before picture, I think, as I look in the mirror
and mistake my head for the moon. My dark
thoughts are almost always 238,856 miles away
from me believing them. I love this life,
I whisper into my doctor’s stethoscope
so she can hear my heart. My heart, an heirloom
I didn’t inherit until I thought I could die.
Why did I go so long believing I owed the world
my disappointment? Why did I want to take
the world by storm when I could have taken it
by sunshine, by rosewater, by the cactus flowers
on the side of the road where I broke down?
I’m not about to waste more time
spinning stories about how much time
I’m owed, but there is a man
who is usually here, who isn’t today.
I don’t know if he’s still alive. I just know
his wife was made of so much hope
she looked like a firework above his chair.
Will the afterlife be harder if I remember
the people I love, or forget them?
Either way, please let me remember.
Copyright © 2023 by Andrea Gibson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on May 30, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.
try calling it hibernation.
Imagine the darkness is a cave
in which you will be nurtured
by doing absolutely nothing.
Hibernating animals don’t even dream.
It’s okay if you can’t imagine
Spring. Sleep through the alarm
of the world. Name your hopelessness
a quiet hollow, a place you go
to heal, a den you dug,
Sweetheart, instead
of a grave.
From You Better Be Lightning (Button Poetry, 2021) by Andrea Gibson. Copyright © 2021 Andrea Gibson. Reprinted by permission of the author.
Today my mum said she doesn’t remember
arriving at my house with a dishcloth,
doesn’t remember me telling her
my kitten stayed overnight at the vet,
that I’d be coming over to help with bills.
What she remembers is now.
She knows her memory is a ship
leaving port without permission,
her memory is a cloud she can’t hold.
When she asks, Why is everything so hard?
I say, I don’t think you’re the only one
asking that. When I say, I have trouble
with loss, she says, We are all leaving.
She adds: I know I won’t be around
much longer. So I ask her
what she’ll come back as? A pig, she says,
then laughs. I tell her I can’t imagine
seeing a pig and having to say,
Oh, there’s my mom! She smiles
and says, Then maybe I’ll return
as a hummingbird. Another conversation
in the present. Another conversation
I will remember alone.
Copyright © 2025 by Kelli Russell Agodon. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 7, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.
You held the fire in your hands.
You watched the embers burn, held the memories in your hands, held the silences, their emptiness.
You were braiding the sky with flame. You were listening for the cry.
Time was a hunger swallowing despair, desperation, and always the strange colonies of cloud overhead, time speaking in tongues.
You were driving right into the storm.
You were asleep at the wheel, or aiming your father’s gun, halting thought with your own blood.
You were childless, you were yourself a child
waiting for the muzzle’s flash and still, for the eternity of light, star in the eyes, for the simple, impossible brilliance and afterimage billowing out
as you were thrust into that secret dark where no one escapes, no one remembers,
where you’ll remain, in the end, frightened and alone,
holding the fire in your hands.
Copyright © 2025 by Rob Arnold. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on November 11, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.
If I die, I want a loud death. I don’t want to be just
breaking news, or a number in a group, I want a death
that the world will hear, an impact that will remain
through time, and a timeless image that cannot be
buried by time or place.
—Fatima Hassouna, Gaza photo journalist,
on April 15, before her death on April 16, 2025
Like the sound waves in space that tear
the remnants of supernovas, and twist the paths
of light
so maybe this is why some spiral galaxies
like Messier 77 resemble ears.
But also when
sunset splinters its light over the ridgeline and
the fireflies in this ravine cry desperately to save it,
or when the embers from last night’s crackling
campfire tremble,
or when our dog begins to fear
the sounds we do not hear,
then we know those waves
have touched us too.
For it is the silence after
the plane’s screech or the missile’s strike,
a kind of voiceless scream
that her photos captured
even as she stood among the rubble looking up
as if those waves could also signal a moment’s
desperate hope.
There is so much we do not hear—
the rumble of shifting sand dunes, the purr and drum
of the wolf spider, the echoes of bats, the explosions
on the sun, the warning cry of the treehopper, but
it’s the cry of those buried alive we so often refuse
to hear as too distant or beyond our reach to help,
yet even an elephant’s infrasound, which can be
detected by herd members as far as 115 miles
brings them to safety,
which tells us, well,
tells us what?
It was Jesus (Luke 19:40)
who said if these keep silent, then the very stones
will cry out.
Here, the news moves on to the next
loudest story,
or some chat on the phone blares
the latest scandal, score or personal interest.
In Gaza,
one journalist warned, a press vest makes you a target.
In one photo a hand reaches through the rubble is if
it were reaching to speak, 16 April 2025, from Al-Touffah.
In the end, it was the sound of her home collapsing.
In the end, we are all targets in our silences.
In the end, we know her absence the way each syllable
shouts its lament, pleading from inside each of these words.
Copyright © 2025 by Richard Jackson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on December 5, 2025, by the Academy of American Poets.