poetry on mamazine:

I can't wish them dead
by DeAnna Jones

Funny Face
by Cristina Trapani-Scott

Recipe
by Kristin Berger

She Wants to Taste Everything
by Kristin Berger

Limbs Cast in Gold
by Cristina Trapani-Scott

Birth
by K. Danielle Edwards

Remembering
by Nagueyalti Warren

One Week After Miscarriage
by Anne Spollen

Sunday Mornings
by Michelle Johnson

Tub Dreams (this is how easy it is to get lost)
by Nikol Hasler


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POETRY

Sick Day
by Emily Scudder

I have bags under my eyes.
I have bags under the bags
under my eyes. What's worse?
My co-worker told me so.
At home my kids won't let me
sleep. I'm sick! Sick! Doesn't that
mean anything to you? I don't want
an answer. I just want sleep.
Now they want to apologize.
Now they want a hug.
Now they are on top of me
wanting me to apologize.
Because I yelled at them.
Because I hurt their feelings.
A nap. That's all I ask. Is that
really so hard? I play my part
as if on a stage in a performance
of a woman's life like mine.
As if the dramatic delivery
of a script might make a difference.
He nods, my son, the older one.
He yanks his sister to the door.
I told her to be quiet, Mom.
It was her idea to come in!

Emily Scudder lives in Cambridge, MA, with her husband and two children. She works as a library assistant, labor activist, and workplace mediator. Her poems have appeared in Agni Online, Swivel: The Nexus of Women and Wit, Xavier Review, Soundings East, Epicenter, and Tiger's Eye. You can read more poetry by Emily here and here.