VOICEMAIL POEMS

VOICEMAIL POEMS

Poetry via voicemail. Missed calls you need to hear. Open submissions accepted. Guidelines at http://voicemailpoems.org

  1. "Tintinnabulation for the Godless on a Winter's Night" by Shannon Frost Greenstein

    Apr 28

    "Tintinnabulation for the Godless on a Winter's Night" by Shannon Frost Greenstein

    The bells like a leviathan breach the membrane of the liquid dark, tumbling forth like a vanguard incited by adrenaline and the call of drumbeats. The God Paradox States: 1. If God is omnipotent and omnibenevolent, He has the power and also the desire to end evil. Through the open window, the January air bites at the alveoli lodged deep behind my sternum; moonbeams litter the asphalt in geometric shapes refracted by a million prisms all the way down. 2. If God is omniscient and omnipotent, He has the knowledge and also the power to end evil. 3. If God is omniscient and omnibenevolent, He has the knowledge and also the desire to end evil The night is austere, the world holding its collective breath for the dawn of sunrise and the gift of another day; I drive by the specter of the old cemetery, and the bells continue to toll calling the faithful back to God. 4.) Evil exists. 5.) Therefore… My unfinished Ph.D.in Nietzschean philosophy floats into my forebrain like an air bubble. “God is dead,” I tell the bells, recalling my catechisms from a former lifetime with a sardonicism that feels almost like mourning. “This is not for God,” the bells tell me. “This is just for you.” I drive and I listen to the notes dancing through the dark on the way to my ears – the chimes and the melody and the perfect fifths – as the night opens up ahead of me and the rest of my life beckons from right down the road. ————————————– Shannon Frost Greenstein called us from Jenkintown, PA. voicemailpoems.org/submit/ facebook.com/voicemailpoems x.com/voicemailpoems bsky.app/profile/voicemailpoems.bsky.social instagram.com/voicemailpoems

    2 min
  2. "Platform" by Birch Wiley

    Apr 28

    "Platform" by Birch Wiley

    money runs like blood through the big american corpse my big american corpse takes the subway chews the same piece of gum too long like cud like cows we mill in the smoke between tracks eyes wide and sightless our big american mouths follow hunger to hunger won’t see the plainclothes cop until it's too late won’t see him put his hands on a dirty arm won’t remember where that arm goes when it disappears into the non-place of a blue and white van sent to that other island where they take bodies we fear as if a person could vanish in a burst of white light as if a person were a problem we could solve do you believe we are innocent like animals like characters inserted for comic relief do you believe when the last brown face disappears from your block you will finally feel safe do you believe to feel safe is the same as happiness do you believe everything you’re told did you believe you’d lose nothing when you asked the machine to think for you to write your wedding vows and grocery lists to tell you when to smile when to jump how high did you start to believe it could not turn its face back to us that it would not show its teeth to quiet beasts fawning at its feet it’s hard for me to say ‘us’ even when I know it’s the right word even when I know I’m the ghost in the shell we’re the ghosts it’s one shell and just when I believe I can’t stand another moment alive moving like oil like money through this lifeless body my body tries to survive a man clips my shoulder he steadies me a thin hand dusty knuckles he smiles before he turns to face the little black box from his pocket heat of his hand still on my shoulder place our eyes met in the air human easy place where his dark american face meets my pale american face meets wind pouring out hot from the tunnel and the man waits next to me now his beautiful dark cheeks and his beautiful dark eyes move beneath their purple lids and the nod and nod of his head to what I can't hear the two of us wait for the train and the two of us wait like fledglings on a high branch for the moment his face turns back to my face and there is no face left between us ————————————– Birch Wiley called us from Brooklyn, NY. voicemailpoems.org/submit/ facebook.com/voicemailpoems x.com/voicemailpoems bsky.app/profile/voicemailpoems.bsky.social instagram.com/voicemailpoems

    3 min
  3. "Loud Dream" by Uchechukwu Onyedikam

    Apr 28

    "Loud Dream" by Uchechukwu Onyedikam

    Dear moon child of the Universe wake up and lift your golden feet & wave your hand's glory to your placid disposition however humble it may be without surrendering your human dignity For you have the worthy right to be present here void of dark imaginings of who's over your halo & beneath the sole of your feet Dear child see here as loud as the echoes of the walls of your heart not as broken dreams shattered by tricks, lies and politics of many men who are here enabled with authority-power to cancel the dreamers & nightcrawlers As a treader of this path stomping on eggshells moonwalking on the surface of every mountains without whisper or tell... Sing your songs loud to your silence & to the silence around you to halt all silences Even though you encounter defeat & the unfair blows of life knocks you down to earth flat — facedown! Beat your wings & rise from the dusty fall & wear your blackened eye with pride... and stand firmly in the sun with a will tattooed across your chest... fearless, deathless as the kill with shining sword and shield ready to battle... (to bury the dead in you) willing to give life another benefit of doubt For the dream is louder than the noisy confusion of life Blaze it... don't smoke it! ————————————– Uchechukwu Onyedikam called us from Lagos, Nigeria. voicemailpoems.org/submit/ facebook.com/voicemailpoems x.com/voicemailpoems bsky.app/profile/voicemailpoems.bsky.social instagram.com/voicemailpoems

    2 min
  4. "Its 2:24 AM and I Missed Last Call so Just Wanted to Say Hey" by Marissa M. Zhu

    Apr 28

    "Its 2:24 AM and I Missed Last Call so Just Wanted to Say Hey" by Marissa M. Zhu

    Do you remember that summer I spent trying to catch your snort in a jar? That snort you’d bury under a cough every time. A boy breaking through the drywall of a man. I wrote twenty-six poems about you. I gave you a warehouse and turpentine on your cuffs and night air in your gaze. But you wore yellow baseball caps, socks with sandals. Minnesota stamped in cotton, the blockiest state. Remember that time I poured boiling water into your roommate’s soda-lime glass? Not a clean break. A web. Tiny cracks all through the body and it just fell apart in your hands. Anyway, I'm on a podcast now, did you know? They asked me why I built the AI tool. I said I saw a gap I wanted to bridge. Because students weren't watching the lectures. Retention. Engagement. The host asked if the burden of responsibility should fall on individuals and I said no it's structural, and the right model could fix it. And I was so earnest, you would’ve slapped your left knee, cracked that snort open, and called me a sap. When I was beachcombing in Aruba I found a rock shaped like a brain and it reminded me of you. I held it to my ear the way you’d hold a shell, expecting the wild heat of your heartbeat from that morning after. But there was only the aural tragedy of the tide — the same wave, crashing into my ankles, over and over. I could build another reason for you to orbit my desk. I could buy us another summer with the jar open. I’ll bring the rock. Put your ear to the other side. Listen— I learned things in the specific key of your voice and called it professional development. I rearranged an entire curriculum so you could walk past my door on Tuesdays. I was always making something beautiful and useless, always pressing that rock to your side of the wall, wasn’t I? ————————————– Marissa M. Zhu called us from Detroit, MI. voicemailpoems.org/submit/ facebook.com/voicemailpoems x.com/voicemailpoems bsky.app/profile/voicemailpoems.bsky.social instagram.com/voicemailpoems

    3 min

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Poetry via voicemail. Missed calls you need to hear. Open submissions accepted. Guidelines at http://voicemailpoems.org