everything i shouldn’t be
in the early days
of my fourteenth year
it occurred to me
that i had never broken a bone
that i was writing just to fill the page
that i was living just to pass the time
boys were boys
in cotton shorts
and girls were goddesses
i never dared to think about
death was a mile away
even when i played with fire-
sticking my hands in flames just to see
how long i could last
before i burned-
sometimes it disappointed me
but sometimes i was relieved
born and bred
a cradle catholic,
i had always
believed in god-
not enough to want to pray,
but just enough not to
cause a scene
every wednesday
i would go to church
and every wednesday
i would feel nothing at all
as a child
sitting in sunday school,
i learned
it is hard to turn nothing
into something
yet i was told
he built the world
with his own two hands,
crafting the moon and sun
and all the stars
out of his nailbeds
i was told
it took six days
to create the earth,
and the seventh day
was left for us to believe it
but it's hard to believe in god
when you don't even believe in yourself
and it's hard to love a god
that might not love you
for who you are
as i grew
i tried praying
with my clammy hands pressed together
and my sweaty knees on the floor
but i did not get a miracle
nor a saving grace
faith did not clog my pores
my veins did not flood with his mercy
so i assumed
a wreck like me could not be saved
in the early february
of my seventeenth year,
i was patted down
and searched
and stripped of my belongings-
my dignity
my pride
even my goddamn sweatshirt-
as i was entered into the inpatient ward
in the hospital,
the girl hooked on meth and heroin
told me
that life was bullshit-
"there ain't no god,"
she said
through the sores around
her mouth-
i began to believe her
so i stood beside her
and stood for nothing
secretly i spent days concocting "what ifs"
hoping to find the right hypothesis
but i could always disprove them
with this proof-
i had not gotten my miracle-
therefore,
god had not gotten his green card
as spring bloomed into summer
i gave my faith to girls
with red lipstick
and auburn hair
and i experienced heaven
when i kissed them-
it felt so good to sin
and i did not want to be redeemed
it became harder to hide
than be myself
so i crawled out of the rose bushes
and declared my being
while denying god's-
and not a single soul told me to go
in late june
of my seventeenth year,
it occurred to me
that i'd broken my mind
but it was healing
that i was writing
because i was breathing
that i was passing time
because i wanted to
The Prose Anthologies, Volume I: Death
All right, Prosers. Here is the moment for which you’ve all been waiting.
As you know, alongside our Partners, creating challenges is our responsibility. So, to further drive the evolution of Prose, we’ll be launching a new Kindle challenge each month. For May, we challenged the community to write 500 words about death.
Of the 66 submissions only the fiercest, most powerful pieces were chosen. We made selections based on several factors: grammatical soundness, originality, and attention to detail.
In total, there were 40 pieces of poetry and prose that made the cut.
Before we reveal them, we’d like to direct your attention to the newest Kindle challenge: theprose.com/challenge/2317.
For those of you that are not featured in Volume 1, now’s your chance to land a spot in Volume 2. Here are a few suggestions for you, based upon our experience with the first round:
1) Give your piece a title.
2) Double (and triple) check your spelling and grammar before hitting “publish.” This should include the use of appropriate formatting (paragraphs, indentations, quotations, etc.).
3) Avoid extraneous language for purposes of meeting or exceeding the word limit. The piece itself must be a minimum of 500 words. You may choose to provide commentary, such as author’s notes or signatures, but they will not be included in the final publication.
4) Any content that has been previously published outside of Prose, in part or in full, including excerpts, cannot be included in the final publication due to Amazon publishing restrictions.
To read the e-book you must download it from Amazon. You’ll notice that it costs a whopping $0.99.
Our intention was for this publication to be FREE, but Kindle Direct Publishing requires a minimum price. With that in mind, we want to make a fervent promise to the entire community:
All royalties collected will be used to create and publish more books for you, by you.
We would also like to reiterate that, as Prosers, you retain 100% of your original copyright. By agreeing to our Terms of Use (theprose.com/p/legal/terms), you agree to give Prose a permanent and exclusive sub-license to your work, but that’s legalese.
In layman’s terms, we have permission to share your work on our social media and promotional materials.
That allows us to show the world just how talented you are, which is why we’re here.
To download the e-book, visit:
(For Prosers in the US)
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00YNDY75O?*Version*=1&*entries*=0
(For Prosers in Canada)
http://www.amazon.ca/dp/B00YNDY75O/ref=cm_sw_r_tw_ask_vP5QJ.1VCDA9W
(For Prosers in the UK)
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00YNDY75O?*Version*=1&*entries*=0
(For Prosers in Australia)
http://www.amazon.com.au/gp/product/B00YNDY75O?*Version*=1&*entries*=0
You’re also encouraged to read all of the entries by visiting www.theprose.com/2230.
We would like to thank everyone that participated for their hard work. The Prose Anthologies are dedicated to this community, which includes each and every one of you.
rationales & fire in my stomach
you think this is poetry?
you're delusional.
this isn't even a sentence
i'm not good at turning
bruises into beauty.
i'm not good at
anything at all.
i can't write a coherent
motherfucking stanza
and i sure as hell can't finish one.
i'm not even good at
spilling my guts.
you could ask me to
puke on the page
and i would choke on
my own spit.
i'm illiterate.
as of right now,
my last words would be
a long-winded string of "fuck-you"s,
the kind you hear in the alley
as a theme song
to the street fight between
dumbass #1 and
drunk bastard #2-
nothing special,
but really something.
maybe it's like that,
maybe i'm best
when i'm raw.
hell, maybe i sound
best with your hands
wrapped around my throat.
is it better to lose your voice from screaming
or would you prefer to never speak at all?
Another, bitte.
I think my favorite words are, "another cup of coffee." In the morning, golden and new, sharpened by a dark roast. Noon, afternoon, evening. Even a night where you are dedicated enough to make more coffee. It is a sleepless night, but one with that récompense, that iohnend that you know it will be a good night, not matter how bad it is.
this is not a poem about her
she told me
to stop writing about her,
so this is not a poem
about a girl
who has a freckle
on the tip of her nose
and eyes that shine
brighter than stars.
this is not about
how i fell asleep on her
at two p.m.
that sunday afternoon-
nor is it about
how peaceful i felt
resting my head on her chest.
and this is definitely not a poem about how holding her hand
made me feel like atlas-
i was intertwining my fingers
with galaxies
and tracing universes
with my thumb.
no,
this is not a poem about any of that.
but if this was
a poem about her,
i would write about how
she closed her eyes
and looked towards the sky
whenever i kissed her neck.
i would mention how gorgeous
she looked from upside-down
when i was resting
my head on her thighs.
god,
if this was a poem about her,
i would carry on for hours
until my veins ran out of ink
or my hands cramped from
writing far too long.
but she told me to stop writing about her,
so i guess she'll be thankful
this isn't a poem about her.
Good Poetry
When writing good poetry, please, consider the following:
•Never let poetry scare you because it is all about rhymes.
—This is not true poetry uses free verse as well; let your poetry be as free as your ideas and pen.
•Try to avoid cliches. Cliches such as roses are red and violets are blue are so overused.
— They are unhealthy to any poet just as sugar in our diets; let your poetry be about subjects no one has ever talked about or describe something as people have not seen it yet.
•Let your poetry have a heart.
—Good poetry always, ALWAYS, has to have heart and passion. Let your heart be the guide and your brain the writer.
•Make your poetry be long and fruitful.
—Always try to set a goal to yourself about how far you are going to write. Make this a habit, and you'll find yourself writing essays about love and the human condition. If your poems are meant to be short please re-read the previous suggestion.
•Don't know what to write?
—Write about any moment, any feeling, rain, clouds, the girl or boy sitting next to you, their actions, your crush, the beauty of someone, beauty itself, the universe, your vision of the world. Poetry is about anything not just lovers and love.
•Listen to music when planning to write.
—When writing something new, listen to soothing music. I listen to Bear's Den, Deep Forest, Classical music, etc.
•When writing good poetry it doesn't have to be in a poem's format; it can be a paragraph or just as this format, a poem about how to write good poetry.
•Be yourself, get inspired by others.
DA 2015