gaia lit
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At Home in the Wild

My best self is parked ​
​
in a lightweight tent

hiking boots waiting
 
for the sign to move
 
The best I can do is approximate
 
            the motion of the stellar jay
 
            skittering from branch to branch
 
            eyeing dog food left out
 
            near a slowly rushing creek
 
The morning is another miracle
 
            sudden eruption of barking
 
            in the campsite’s distance
 
after the god of light has risen
 
            over the low hill--
 
Here, I am a humble visitor
 
            bowing my fleeced neck
 
            to the grumbly fire
 
            as water boils, simple fragment
 
            in a book of symbols--
 
            ruffled lowing, high-perched
 
            twittering, hushed chatter

Everyday Apocalypse

The brown tree ring
inside the coffee mug
will not clean itself.
 
Dish rack, when dirty,
needs the good lick
of a wet sponge.
 
The cat needs to be fed
twice a day and taunted
by a string of feathers.
 
It’s easy to forget
I have a body 
that needs me,
 
a neighborhood 
that needs me
weaving circles through it
 
with my feet. Taking out garbage
is a reverent task. I scrub
the sink, sort the closet,
 
water down the roots of plants
it’d be easier to forget about.
Sometimes, I forget
 
about orangutans swinging
their fists at logging machines.
Coyotes trot the streets.
 
Opossums shine in the night.
Hopelessness is not productive
so I imagine watering holes
 
expanding, return books
to their places, strap on shoes.
There have always been leaves
 
falling, and children running.
The television screen flickers.
I wake to harvest rain.

Nancy Lynée Woo is a poet, community organizer, and 2022 Artists at Work fellow. She has also received fellowships from PEN America, the Arts Council for Long Beach, and Idyllwild Writers Week. Her work has been published in The Shore, Tupelo Quarterly, Stirring, Radar Poetry, and other journals and anthologies. Nancy has an MFA in creative writing, poetry, from Antioch University and a BA in sociology/environmental studies from UC Santa Cruz. Her work is largely inspired by the magic and power of the natural world. Find her cavorting around Long Beach/Tongva, California, and online at nancylyneewoo.com or @fancifulnance on social.
  • Home
  • ISSUES
    • ISSUE ONE
    • ISSUE TWO
    • ISSUE THREE
    • ISSUE FOUR
    • ISSUE FIVE
    • ISSUE SIX
  • CLEAN-UP EVENTS
  • PROJECT GAIA: AN ANTHOLOGY
  • BLOG
  • ABOUT
    • MISSION
    • MASTHEAD
  • SUBMISSIONS