poetry on mamazine:

To Alecia at Four Weeks
by Joan A. Monheit

For Sasha on Her Fifteenth Birthday
by Joan A. Monheit

Dark Side
by DeAnna Jones

The shadow
by DeAnna Jones

Toughen Up
by Robin Mullery

track two (night dream)
by Judy Halebsky

On the Coast
by Judy Halebsky

Home Schooling
by Elsie Whitlow Feliz

Dream World
by Madeline Sharples

Black Bomber
by Madeline Sharples


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POETRY

Running, Thinking
by Elizabeth Sullivan

Running up a staircase after thinking:
the child is taking my life, taking and giving my life
ordinary thought among the shifting molecules of stair, air.

From the street I see him in the window
his fleshy body, fat of delight,
and inside I hear his star-lung and reed-throat, sounding freely.

He can mimic the ocean-sounds tape.
The instructive nonsense of singing to a baby,
Oh, I made a little person—someday he'll be a man.

Taking the bridge, the ladder of heaven, to get away—
the pattern in the carpet like many half-closed umbrellas.
Growing sounded like going; almost: almond.

A sieve, a sandal—a teacup without handles,
a flowering tree of petals, breastmilk heavy metals,
our old house as it settles.

Once there were cairns to signal the turns.
Atlas of the new city: blue lines for rivers
and streams and black for roads,
the brook we can see through the skin on the bridge of his nose.

Elizabeth Sullivan is a mama, poet, and environmental and bike activist. Founder of City CarShare and a new venture, Streetline, Elizabeth lives and works in the Mission District of San Francisco with her partner, Gabriel and her son, Jonah.