Thursday, February 5, 2026

Jacqueline Valencia : Two poems

 

 

 

Stilts
 

Knees
wish I had them
not a semblance
just aged and used
irresponsibly
no glue to bond
sorry
I walk on impossible stilts/short calves
that might give way
with a pivot or fancy turn
fall
bystanders think I trip when I do
wasn't watching or tipsy
well-meaning
considering history
not
no, bruise
my limbs decided not to work
and akin to grief
I wished
I dared to run after
my purpose
not even my physicians understand
with so much schooling
and opening of bones, blood, and ick
a carnal Pandoric knowledge
individual skeletons are so complex
like flowers
we're Fibonacci knots/not
not at all like a math
detonate
with tangible answers
so the doctor guesses/says, "manage." 

oK dude

painkillers, shots, braced
set adrift
and silent to deal/addict

  

I live, I am a managed purpose
whoever lived for such a thing
but I do because there is nothing else
but a pumpkin
and sweet faces to see 

I am woman
and above my knees,
I love and want FURIOUSLY,
hate and need impeccably...
but not much
for I
float invisible
like the ghost
I am 

Below, I am a functional robot
broken at a certain metre
every step
is a different stanza
my fractured prose rendered due to weather
or a stroke of luck 

chronic pain
you ask me what is my threshold?
on a scale of one to ten
ten childbirth
one, not being?
my gauge and words are too
on the nose
precise
for this Art of words
because I can not scream
and look upon the prize
my newborns' face, fully formed
being(s)
as the result of my efforts
my body: a gloriously gorey
3D printer 

Pain births me instead now

I am literal and still
disturb and render
the tender sensibilities
of the status quo
conceptualism only ever had meaning
with source words identified from
their truth
not from the idea of their meaning 

 

by saying this
I must pause 

 

internal storm in a blurb
I am a danger, caution
I would destroy myself
with medicine
to stay alive and
instead raw dog
a world bigger than I
with no cure or reason 

look upon the prize
I am ticking
my love,
my newborns' face
it's snowing
so bundle up
solo tengo
exploding
I am braced.

 

 

B
 

I'm glad to see you here
because I went to bed angry last night
and I heard the witch
knocking about,
I felt her sad eyes
burning my insides
for fuel,
I tasted her fingertips
as she choked
my dreams
for ink and anything
tanglible enough
to hammer out.
And seeing you here
truth in arcs
of blank on white
I realize
that in my sleep
I let you go
just in time
before I
pulled you across
and pounded you
into these words 

we needed each other
for a moment
and with a pin pulled
together we were a ticking bomb
I was so fucking distracted.

 

 

 

 

Jacqueline Valencia is a Toronto-based writer. She is the author of various essays, short stories, and poetry books, including There Is No Escape Out of Time (Insomniac Press, 2016) and Lilith (Desert Pets Press, 2018). You can find her at jacquelinevalencia.ca.

Process Note #67 : The Invasion of Pantomime by Tim Xonnelly

The 'process note’ pieces were originally solicited by Maw Shein Win as addendum to her teaching particular poems and poetry collections for various workshops and classes. This process note and poems Tim Xonnelly are part of her curriculum for Maker, Mentor, Muse and poetry classes at the University of San Francisco and Saint Mary’s College. Thank you for reading.

 

 

 

I'd taken early retirement and cared for my dad for 13 months in Portland, Oregon, following his below-the-knee amputation and strokes. Now what? In December of 2019 I kept running into Sharon Coleman, who kept encouraging me to take her poetry class at Berkeley City College. It'd been literal decades since I'd taken a poetry class, and the idea appealed to me. This semester's focus would be surrealism. As you may remember, on St. Patrick's Day eve of 2020 came the shelter-in-place order. Surrealism moved into the mainstream. My poetry class moved online.
 

The Pale Blue Luck

 

Of scab romance! Frozen statutes! Human juices!

Neon's second wind! The he she they we of it! Neon crawling to

the finish line! How blue the blue, how pale-

Noise of nothing, barely the hum of sidewalk breathing.

Languages not English, cyclone fence placid with ads. Another 

brilliant cafe gone to premium student 

housing. A somber yellow stretch in glass bashful bane yes 

further pale the blue. Of steam and breath oh paper cup. Oh

crane construct blot the sky, dot the eye, blue the blue for 

all despair to come. The cold 

hard work of folding silences, fed shirts, powder boots.

Wet air. Barnabus bus with nobody in it.

This is a looser poem than I might ever publish, but it's true to my 2020 experience: commas and exclamation marks, the day chugging to a start with both dawn's hopeful light and those lights that brought us through the night ("neon's second wind"). I am not the only person in this poem, but the others are moving almost silently, kicking the city to life. A month later, I was copying figures into my notebook of the ill and the dead; by city, county, state, nation, world. Many of them these essential workers.

Here's another poem quite unlike my usual voice, influenced by Breton's "Free Union" and by a randy young man, a graphic artist. Allen Ginsberg finds Breton "a bit wooden" but praises "Free Union" for its freeing influence. This Dude woody indeed but hardly wooden!

Could I sing his praises in the cubist/uglyish manner of Breton? Let's see.

 

Dot One

 

Dude goes that ring new can I see it I just love yr cute chub

sausage fingers

Dude crack me up check out every old fat guy pass by

Dude slip into gizmo chipmunk puppet voice

Dude texts his finders fly

Dude we fit like Legos don't let go

Dude hammers like a barn raising

Dude sweeter than the one I stole from a witch

Dude flower and beeeeeeee

Dude hammers like a barn raising

Dude palm tree hair

Dude fireworks paint the sky

Dude goes I want to know you spreading three fingers in

front of my nose he's enlarging my font

Dude. That.

I want that as well

These poems made a pastiche before-and-after document that I fussed with long after they should have flown the nest. Five years later, I expanded the original chapbook Dremes of 2020 with a part two, Out Like a Lion. Dremes of 2020 remains mostly poems written or published in that year. Out Like a Lion is a return to my more typical style, with the tools and memories of that surrealism class and the dreams of 2020.

Like this one:

 

Glitterpen Apocalypse

Because people
subconsciously unconsciously consciously
& in isolated cases determinedly
will try to prevent you from writing
because writers tell secrets because
as you know a good secret is a good story
because as you know
when the words you write feel so dangerous you
stop & look around then you know it's
getting good
because some of the secrets poets tell
are secrets everybody knows
and they lived happy ever after
then a dragon came and ate them all

This is quite recognizable to someone who knows my work: bombastic/oxymoronic title, 14 quick lines, no punctuation but one apostrophe and two ampersands, confiding tone, punch line. In readings, I often close with this one; poets laugh and cheer. It's a poem as influenced by George Carlin as Frank O'Hara. 

I've collected my dreams in the morning, free as rainwater, since before I wrote poetry. It's a way to build a bank of personal symbols. Some of my poems are one dream narrative (“Fishing with a Construction Crane,” “A Marriage of Cats”); some are explorations of a single dream image (“Stapled Amaryllis”); some are pileups of dream symbols (“Dumb Socks,” “Dreams of February”).

 

I build from these dreams.

I stand behind my experiments.

I thought I knew what my poetry's like.

My poetry continues to school me.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tim Xonnelly

Special Education Paraprofessional and Union Negotiator, Berkeley Unified School District; retired.

Chapbooks: Velcro Heart (1989), A Season In Bed (1998), I Skip the Long Ones Too, (2004).

Anthologies: Cross Strokes: Poetry Between Los Angeles and San Francisco (Otis Books 2015), 1001 Nights (Redondo Poets, 2018).

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maw Shein Win's latest full-length poetry collection is Percussing the Thinking Jar (Omnidawn, 2024). Her previous full-length collection Storage Unit for the Spirit House (Omnidawn, 2020) was nominated for the Northern California Book Award in Poetry and shortlisted for the Golden Poppy Award for Poetry. Her work has recently been published in The American Poetry Review, The Margins, The Bangalore Review, and other literary journals. She is the inaugural poet laureate of El Cerrito, CA, and the 2025 Berkeley Poetry Festival Lifetime Achievement Awardee. Win's previous collections include Invisible Gifts and two chapbooks, Ruins of a glittering palace and Score and Bone. She teaches poetry in the MFA Program at the University of San Francisco and in the Low Residency MFA Program at Dominican University. Along with Dawn Angelicca Barcelona and Mary Volmer, she is a co-founder of Maker, Mentor, Muse, a literary community. mawsheinwin.com

Lydia Unsworth : 1B

 

 

 

 

I’ve been feeling a little untethered

I bought a new pan
so I can touch it
the non-stick
so slippery
the way nothing sticks to me
either
the way life is just a series of events 

I came to my computer
went back to the kitchen
I’ve burnt my new pan
the old one                      I knew
its proportions
the handle that wobbled
where to place it on the hob 

the man in seat C
also here for the first time
in the front row
was finding it as funny as I was
all those people filing past
through snow
I mean everyone 

he asked me for the meaning of life
what was my happiness moment
he said it was when my first baby was born
I said I wasn’t going to say it
it can’t be
that simple
because it was also awful
and is relief the same as happiness
and is happiness only an absence
like a kind of uncrushing
a here we go again 

like how my little boy says he wasn’t anywhere
till he was three
said then he started 

I said there isn’t a time
until you’ve lived more times after it
for comparison
through consequence
and that isn’t the moment 

I said what was his happiest moment
        I didn’t
I should have asked him
I said maybe it was now
my happiness
which surprised me
wondering if that meant I was alright
or if everything before had been somehow worse 

         or worse

wondering if I just meant this

this sitting next to him
this talking to someone
this being attended
scooped
into the possibilities of motion 

because really
anything
anywhere
sometimes 

then I’m in the house
I buy two pans
what else can I change here
I throw away the plastic toys my children keep shedding
back to the sea with them
        expanding
their rippling muscles 

on row 1 we sat facing the people who worked there
for takeoff
I said this is awkward
them looking so nonchalant
and me so afraid of everything
I said they don’t exist
                                                    one smiled at me
I said I won’t look at a pilot 

I didn’t have a back rest to grab
so the boy said he’d talk to me
wouldn’t stop talking to me
all the way home
I look like my father
in this seat
in this coat
in this face
in this hair 

he asked me if a man could ever be friends with a woman
told me he’d discovered he had a half sister
twelve minutes before embarking 

I said I’ve only ever wanted to talk to people
dead or alive
be allowed to reply
and what is travelling if not collision 

he said I was a pigeon
always a pigeon
wherever I would go
he said most communities are closed
what landscapes do I remember
I said the Gobi Desert
the Westfjords of Iceland
tethered and untethered
alone but not
because you can tell can’t you
who’s open to the world
who’s trying to unlock its marginal kindnesses
who’s still curious 

I said you’ve got public transport
and you’ve got the supermarkets
that’s where we find each other
that’s what we’ve got 

I said some people answer questions so easily
a baby
a marriage
I’m not sure they’re always thinking about it 

I bought some make-up remover pads
some menthol shampoo
some floss

 

 

 

 

Lydia Unsworth is a poet from Manchester, UK. Her work has appeared in many journals and anthologies including Dreaming Awake: New Contemporary Prose Poetry from the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom. She is a PhD candidate at the Centre for Place Writing in Manchester, looking at kinship with disappearing post-industrial architecture. She has 6 poetry collections and 4 above / ground chapbooks, and has two new poetry collections coming out in 2026, Stay Awhile (April, Knives Forks and Spoons Press) and This Now Extends to My Daughter (May, Blue Diode Press).

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