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Showing posts with label Roe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roe. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2022

VILLANELLE FOR A POST ROE WORLD

 by Mary K O’Melveny


Cyndi Lauper and Laura Dern

Women have no rights required to be respected

say five jurists whose words hurl us back to ancient time.

What actions are required to see this travesty corrected?

 

This outcome—undesired by most—was not unexpected.

Women have been told for centuries that men’s role is prime,

that women have no rights required to be respected.

 

Some say our decisions must be made by men, elected

but clueless, whose laws transform our choices into crime.

What actions shall we take to see such travesty corrected?  

 

Once a woman’s bodily autonomy has been rejected

by folks who’ve no idea the mountains we must climb,

how can we ensure that anyone’s liberty will be respected?

 

Diminishments of human rights are always quite connected.

Misogyny, like slavery, depends on whose lives we define

as worth the actions needed to see such travesties corrected. 

 

Look in the mirror—do you see the person you expected?

No matter age or circumstance, the time has come for rage sublime.

If women have no rights required to be respected,

revolution is what we need to see this travesty corrected.



Mary K O'Melveny is a recently retired labor rights attorney who lives in Washington DC and Woodstock NY.  Her work has appeared in various print and on-line journals. Her most recent poetry collection is Dispatches From the Memory Care Museum, just out from Kelsay Books. Her first poetry chapbook A Woman of a Certain Age is available from Finishing Line Press. Mary’s poetry collection Merging Star Hypotheses was published by Finishing Line Press in January, 2020.

Monday, May 09, 2022

THE ART OF THE HANGER

by Anita Pulier


Abortion rights supporters protest outside the Supreme Court on Tuesday. Credit: Valerie Plesch for NBC News.


Momma taught us to hang up our coats
tidy our rooms
and so we became familiar with them

Now that gang of robed men
and one godsmocked woman
remind us of the skills

we honed in the 60s then
abandoned when Roe freed us
to seek health care

in hospitals or clinics
where decisions
about our bodies

our lives
our futures
were ours

and we could safely
refuse to carry a doomed fetus
refuse to sink into poverty
refuse to empower rape and incest

now

untwist the sturdy wire
from its frame
squat, push it in

deep
scrape around
bleed

remember even 
their God still loves you
but they
don't give a damn


Anita S. Pulier’s chapbooks Perfect Diet, The Lovely Mundane, and Sounds of Morning and her books The Butcher's Diamond and Toast were published by Finishing Line Press. Anita’s poems have appeared in many journals and her work is included in nine print anthologies. Anita has been a featured poet on The Writer's Almanac.

HANGERS

by Mark Danowsky



“Let’s be clear about this: Roe wasn’t the beginning of women getting abortions. It was the end of women dying from unsafe abortions.” —No Dem Left Behind PAC


Blood in the streets

Blood on our hands

No Plan C

No icy nurse

No forced videos 

No waiting room

No chosen futures

Blood spilled by the broken 

Blood of a thousand splintered lives 


Mark Danowsky is Editor-in-Chief of ONE ART: a journal of poetry. He is the author of As Falls Trees (NightBallet Press) and JAWN (Moonstone Press). In 2022, his poems have appeared in Kestrel, The Broadkill Review, tiny wren lit, Anti-Heroin Chic, Otoliths, Harpy Hybrid Review, The New Verse News

Thursday, May 05, 2022

HOW TO HANDLE A LEAK

by Ann E. Wallace




My daughters and I live in a leaky 
old house. The three of us have 
learned how to handle a plumbing 
emergency, to spring into action, 
sop up the mess, cut the water lines,
track the source, mend the seams.
 
This is what women do.
We live in bodies that bleed,
are vulnerable, that give life 
but also betray, and we have 
passed down the fortitude 
to handle leaks and other messes. 
There is wisdom in our living, 
and we know how to act 
when a leak is sprung, exposing 
the ill intentions of those 
who do not live in our bodies, 
those who spout 
outrage at the egregious 
betrayal—as if they know 
what betrayal is—of being 
caught with the pipe cutters 
in their bloody hands.
 
As they sputter and point fingers, 
we—the women—are gathering 
our tools, our rage, and our ballots, 
like we have so many times before, 
ready to fight for our freedom.


Ann E. Wallace is a poet and essayist from Jersey City, New Jersey. Follow her on Twitter @annwlace409 or on Instagram @annwallacephd.com.

Wednesday, May 04, 2022

IN STATES OF SUSPENSION (& HOPE) :: OF LEAKS, TWEAKS, & BREACH

by Jen Schneider



amidst stunned
states & stunning
breaches
 
alongside
whispers 
turned quakes
 
& leaks 
turned looks
 
that suggest pens
both feared 
and feathered
 
have chosen a line
on which to claim 
their fight
 
            stains 
                        stomps           
squashes 
states 
   rights
 
one can pray (in spaces
of religious neutrality)
 
that the ink 
blot will be contained
           
stains 
                        stomps 
squashes 
            states 
   rights


& that the breaking
news is merely 
a sign of the times
 
turbulence
amidst days 
heavy of bait
 
            stains 
                        stomps 
squashes 
            states 
   rights
 
rather than
an alert  

of the (dark) ages
& finalized pages
 
            so that fifty years
 
of reproductive rights
remains on & of books 
produced
with no breaks
 
stitched tight
not of patchwork
but of federal right
 
& of plights
with no turns
 
& of nights
with no detours
 
& ideologies
remain unstamped
 
in sacred (politically
neutral) spaces
of individual (personally
critical) places
 
            of individual
rights
 
before
the ink dries
 
hope resists
            & remains      
resolute
 
that quakes  
settle 
& reproductive 
freedom
 
persists


Jen Schneider is an educator who lives, writes, and works in small spaces throughout Pennsylvania. Recent works include A Collection of RecollectionsInvisible InkOn Habits & Habitats, and Blindfolds, Bruises, and Breakups.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

HAIKU IN THE MODERN ERA

by Sandra Eisdorfer

(Photo: NASA Goddard)


    initiatives:
    immigration  gun control
    onto mindfulness

    choice: Roe at 40
    diplomacy  not bullets
    meditation soon

    Arab spring winters
    climate  changes coastlines now
    await inner peace


Sandra Eisdorfer was a university press editor (Duke, University of North Carolina Press, Oxford), now teaches writing classes at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at Duke University.