Saturday, December 20, 2025

Loss at Fourteen by Sterling Warner

Image / Antoni Shkraba Studio

Loss at Fourteen

I’d 

fall like 

clockwork 

twenty-four/seven 

yet one slip 

would change

me

My sense of smell diminished then

disappeared after

a compound

fractured

skull

A

foxy

nurse begat

unexplored passion

emptying

my bed

pans

Through

sight, sound,

taste, touch, I

absorbed the essence

of her female pheromones

Fed

pipe dreams,

my fledgling

flirting inspired 

no response 

beyond

grins

© Sterling Warner

Sterling Warner

Washington-based author, poet, and educator, Sterling Warner’s works have appeared in such magazines, journals, and anthologies as Verse-Virtual, Ekphrastic Review. Warner’s poetry/fiction includes Rags and Feathers, Without Wheels, ShadowCat, EdgesMemento Mori, Serpent’s Tooth, Flytraps: Poems, Cracks of Light: Pandemic Poetry & FictionHalcyon Days: Collected Fibonacci, Abraxas: Poems, Gunilla’s Garden: Poems (2025)and Masques: Flash Fiction & Short Stories.  He currently writes, hosts “virtual” poetry/fiction readings, and enjoys fishing along the Hood Canal.



Friday, December 19, 2025

Poems about the Body and Soul by Mike Turner

 

Merlin Lightpainting

Poems about the Body
and Soul


Storm and Calm


We hold the storm

Lungs containing the wind

Voice, thunder 

Eyes cry the tears of rain

Pummeling our spirit with the fury of the tempest


We hold too the calm

Heartbeat slowing to the Earth’s rhythm

Breath as cool zephyrs

Whispered flutters of gossamer butterfly wings

Settling to the stillness of the night


Yin, yang

Dawn, sunset

Spring, summer

Autumn, winter

The mystery and magic of infinite eternity


All held in the oneness of our souls



Body and Light


Our bodies

Are but lanterns

‘Tis our spirits

Are the light



Lattice


We are all part

Of an interconnected web

Intersecting the physical and spiritual planes

‘Tis not a net ensnaring us

But rather a lattice, a framework, sustaining us

As we strive to understand

Ourselves, our fellows

The world, and the cosmos

Which, together

We each and all comprise

And, they, us


© Mike Turner


Mike Turner

Mike Turner was named 2025 Poet of the Year by the Alabama State Poetry Society. He has more than 475 poems published in over 100 curated journals and anthologies. Mike’s poetry collection, Visions and Memories, is available on Amazon.



Thursday, December 18, 2025

SAVOURING NIRVANA by Devayani Anvekar

Image / Kavinda Bandara

SAVOURING NIRVANA

Down where a broad main road cuts past a slender byroad of a semi-urban town, where people, like the rest on Earth, strive to feel happiness. Know love. Experience satisfaction. On all weekdays, except Tuesday, you will see her there. 
As industrious as any lean bee, you will see filling its beehive. Two or three times a day, she scoops out colourless water with her right hand from a discoloured purple plastic container held in her other hand, and sprinkles glistening drops of clear water onto her bundles of dill, spinach, reddish, fenugreek leaves, and other vegetables that tend to droop and look pale. As the sun turns bright lemon yellow and moves higher, higher, to linger an hour or two over sweat-spilling heads. 
She has all her vegetables enlivened, looking green and fresh, piled on her four-wheel vegetable cart. Parked beside a laterite-stone compound wall of an old house with a red-tiled rooftop gone blackish, and its view is half obscured by mango, jackfruit, and jambul trees with hefty arms spread above it and over its front garden, where orange, red, and yellow marigolds and white, pink, maroon dahlias bloom. Koel’s shrill calls are heard, and grey squirrels like sprites are seen running about. Where black crows caw and nest, green parrots like ripening mangoes rest, perched on the trees' high branches.
You realize.
You need glistening drops of humility sprinkled on you to enliven you. See you care and look around. Smile. Especially to those who threw away and lost theirs. Hold no resentment. Feel sorry for those who refuse to smile back. For they have dropped their smiles and dropped their joy. 
The satisfaction. Hope. That rises in you, to see the world freed of poverty. Misery. Ugliness. On seeing smooth, broad, safe, clean roads and footpaths leading to aesthetically built and well-maintained houses, buildings, gardens, and parks. Huge trees cover and shelter large swathes of open land, hills, and valleys. Found in little things as well: life's ecstasy in small things, its handsomeness in tiny details, that highlight its greater grandeur. 
As in.
Aesthetically outlined, as with an artist’s black ink and round brush, saffron monarch butterflies. Bees with black and yellow bands. Hovering over sunken sprigs laden with stout bundles of white mogras, tempt you to softly clasp them and raise them close to your nostrils and inhale slowly. 
The sight of orange-yellow sun rays gleaming through droplets shines like lit lamps on red hibiscus petals, green grass leaves, and just-washed windowpanes. The little laughs, small smiles. On seeing blue water ripple and glister across a still lake or a water bowl holding it, securing it.
The sight of people gathered around chaat carts parked beside busy roads and street corners, shaded by large peepal, banyan, and dainty gulmohar trees that people cared to keep and see grow unrestrained. Dropping pani-puri, bhel puri, aloo tikki, and other spicy chaats handed out to them, onto their salivating tongue, and chat. Their eyes turned moist, gleaming, as if they were savouring nirvana.

© Devayani Anvekar

Devayani Anvekar

Devayani Anvekar is an illustrator and caricaturist of social and domestic issues. She lives in Goa, India. She writes poetry, fiction, and non-fiction prose when drawing fails to convey human struggle. Her written work has appeared in 50-Word Stories, The Metaworker, and is forthcoming in The Genre Society and Witcraft. 




 


Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Between the Cracks by Karen A. VandenBos


luizclas
Between the Cracks

It was on that devilishly hot day

when the sun was an orb of fire

in the sky that you watched her

break apart the dirt and plant

seeds of kindness and all you

wanted to do was to patch the

cracks so the light could not

shine through.

I asked you why you would

want to shroud everything in

darkness and keep out all the

light but you had no answer.

Perhaps you did not know

that between the cracks is where

the laughter of the Goddess

resides and prisms of rainbows

spread their wings. © Karen A. VandenBos

Karen A.VandenBos

Karen A. VandenBos was born on a warm July morning in Kalamazoo, MI. A PhD course in shamanism taught her to travel between two worlds. A Best of the Net nominee, her writing has been published in Lothlorien Poetry JournalBlue Heron Review, Moss Pigletand others. 




Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Children by Peter Mladinic

 

Michael Morse

Children                                                                                                                   
I’m out of touch with children,
but I was a child.
Everything the child sees is big.
To the child, people are big, big as trees.
The field is vast, the river wide and deep,
wider, deeper for the child.
You too were once a child, a son.
Why you took your own life is a mystery.
In college you played baseball,
second base, as I see you on the diamond.
When we met, you said “recovering.”
I didn’t see you fall off the wagon.
Five o’clock shadow,
rumpled chinos, blond hair thinning,
The Paradise Lounge, your abyss.  
I call from my side of the river,
as if you could hear.
For the child, all is magnified: a twig
on the ground in the woods,
damp earth, mint freshness of leaves,
crisp winter leaves under his or her feet.
In the woods of childhood, joy warbles.
The child hears, keener than I.
One morning in a restaurant,
you harangued the server about no milk
for your coffee.
I live with trees and rain.

Originally published in Bluepepper, a defunct Australian journal. 



Peter Mladinic

Peter Mladinic's most recent book of poems, Maiden Rock, is available from Uncollected Press. An animal rights advocate, he lives in Hobbs, New Mexico, United States.



Monday, December 15, 2025

FEED THE HOLY: In the TOP 10 for Great Editors on Chill Subs!

 

Image Created on Canva

Great news! FEED THE HOLY made an impression on Chill Subs, which recently ran a contest for the Best Lit Magazine. Click on the links below to see the results. 

Owing to the votes of the contributors to FEED THE HOLY, I earned recognition as one of the top 10 most outstanding editors of all the lit magazines on Chill Subs. Thank you so much!


Great Editor(s) - Best Lit Mags of 2025


In the category "Great Editors," FEED THE HOLY is in 7th place! 

https://www.chillsubs.com/lists/great-editors-2025


Editor, Barbara Leonhard

I'm grateful for the vote of confidence and vow to do even better for the contributors.

~~~~~

Check out the voting statistics across categories. It's fascinating.

The 2025 Best Lit Mag Awards: By the Numbers

https://www.chillsubs.com/blog/best-lit-mag-awards-2025-by-the-numbers


Consider joining Chill Subs to find lit magazines and track your submissions.

~~~~

Follow Feed the Holy


Gardening in Community by Kristi Jones

 

RDNE Stock project

Gardening in Community

A patchwork of garden plots, divided by chicken wire fences

Tomato cages and bean trellises sprout up from the soil

In spring, the gardens boast neat rows of pale green lettuce

In summer huge, prolific zucchini plants abound

In fall, unruly squash vines take over garden plots

Every gardener plants uniquely different crops

Some people grow Big Boy tomatoes and bush beans

Others nurture long Asian squash from their homeland

Microbes flourish in a communal compost pile nearby

Happy pollinators buzz and flit everywhere

Community gardens make space for those without yard space

Sunny, chemical-free space for growing food and flowers

Sacred, holy, joyful space 

Space that welcomes novice gardeners and skilled green thumbs alike Space filled with hope for thriving plants and abundant harvest 


© Kristi Jones


Kristi Jones

Kristi Jones is an emerging poet who lives, works, plays, and writes in Madison, WI. Her poems have been published in KFF Health News.  She loves spending time in her community garden plot, even when it involves non-stop weeding.  She holds a BA from St Olaf College. 




Sunday, December 14, 2025

Thoughts on Hearing My Mom Coughing by Jason Ray Carney

 

Image / Gustavo Fring

Thoughts on Hearing My Mom Coughing

I hate to hear my mother cough

while sleeping in my childhood room at 41.

It reminds me of great-grandma Mary,

who introduced me to Nintendo

and slowly wasted away from lung cancer.

My mother does not smoke,

but her persistent cough still frightens me.

It’s the sound of sickness returning,

of youth spent,

the disintegration that unweaves us.

My mother was beautiful at great-grandma’s funeral,

where she cried and threw herself on the casket,

the first time I saw her cry.

Later, Grandma Simmons took me aside

to the back room of the church.

She made me a coffee,

a 9-year-old with a cup of coffee.

I drank it and said it was gross.

She told me my tastes would change,

that I’d be a grown man drinking coffee every day.

I didn’t believe her.

I couldn’t imagine a gray-haired man,

tired at 9:00 PM,

lying on his childhood bed in Ohio,

listening to his mom’s cough,

echoing great-grandma’s,

at whose funeral I learned I would grow old.


© Jason Ray Carney


Jason Ray Carney


Jason Ray Carney is a Senior Lecturer in Literature at Christopher Newport University. He is the author of Weird Tales of Modernity (McFarland, 2019) and a contributor to the Los Angeles Review of Books.




Featured Post

Loss at Fourteen by Sterling Warner

Image /  Antoni Shkraba Studio Loss at Fourteen I’d  fall like  clockwork  twenty-four/seven  yet one slip  would change me My sense of sme...