thinking it’s safe to breathe again but the sunlight hurts your eyes the surface is frozen god on the lake bottom next to the firstborn child and we are tired of digging fifty years getting nowhere is just one way to describe this irrelevant civil servant’s life too much work trying to think up ay others let the sad little bastard die so we can pick up our shovels again and he is thinking this sounds like a plan he is hoping the poem will grow into a tree but no all it can ever be is the shadow of a tree falling across the windswept snow, and what about all of that wasted time between the hangover and the beginning of the next buzz? what about your father’s reasons for leaving your mother? for driving off the bridge? suspended against the bright blue sky for one small infinite moment then he falls like the weight of god and smashes everything
John Sweet
John Sweet sends greetings from the rural wastelands of upstate NY. He is a firm believer in writing as catharsis, and in the continuous search for an unattainable and constantly evolving absolute truth. His latest poetry collections include "A Flag on Fire is a Sign of Hope" (2019 Scars Publications) and "A Dead Man, Either Way" (2020 Kung Fu Treachery Press).