poetry on mamazine:

What She Finds
by Cati Porter

Mother May I
by Cati Porter

Seven Floors Up to the Kitchen of the Soul
by Cati Porter

Sick Day
by Emily Scudder

The Newborn Explains Three Days of Prodromal Labor; The Newborn Explains His Unhelpful Sleep Patterns; The Infant Explains His Continuing Sleep Problems
by David Harris Ebenbach

Gravity
by C. Delia Scarpitti

Language
by Kristen Berger

Every Angel
by Jackie Regales

The Early Morning
by Margaret Elysia Garcia

Thunder
by Angela Papalas


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POETRY

at 30 weeks
by MaryAnn McKibben Dana

it's happened before, but sooner this time.
i'm twangy as a country song,
a loose woman, swaggering through honky-tonk joints:

the bottom stair feels rickety in my stupor;
the phone falls, hits my shoe,
and two-steps across the wood floor;
a plate drops from my hand,
its contents sprawl drunkenly in my lap.

everything slips away now, except the one
thing, deep in my soul, that remains closed up,
locked away in a purse of thick leather.
i'm getting ready to let it go too, when the time comes;
perhaps with all this practice it will be easy.

MaryAnn McKibben Dana lives in northern Virginia with her husband, Robert, and two daughters, Caroline and Margaret. A writer and minister, her work has appeared in Literary Mama, numerous print journals, and the book My Red Couch: And Other Stories on Seeking a Feminist Faith. You may read another of her poems here.