Once More

Griffin Smith

You’re a perfect sight

and on sleepless nights,

I climb to new heights

to hear your voice.  

The flame can alter,

but never die or falter.

You’re a glass of clean water

in a desert of past regrets.  

Celestial stars,

returning scars,

and flashing cars.

Hold my hand once more.  

I’ll be in your ear when the sun rises.

I’ll be there when the sun sets.

I’ll be willing to make compromises

as long as you’ll say yes.  

The truth is better than all my dreams.

Unprecedented joy and endless smiles.

I’d be willing to drive thousands of miles

just to feel your touch.  

Wondrous eyes,

pupils enlarging

with a slight glimmer.

Let me see them again.  

Tell me about your day

as I hold your hands again

and gaze into the eyes of perfection

once more.  

Somehow, some way…

I’ll marry you some day.

Run your fingers through my hair.

It’s far too much to bear.  

That first grasp.

A touch of freedom.

Stand Up Taller

Teagan Daniels

I would have given anything to trade places with her. To take her pain away. I would have sold my soul to the devil twice and ran through fire to have her safe and sound. But there was nothing I could do. Absolutely nothing. I had to be content to sit by and watch as her bones turned to dust from the poison drip in her arm.

She told me over the phone. We never called each other. Face time, maybe, but call? Out of the question. Something was wrong. Given that I was grounded from my phone, I hid in the downstairs bathroom, as far away from my mother as I could get and swiped to answer.

“Hey, Lil. Are you okay?” I asked in a low whisper over the TV roaring upstairs, “What’s going on?”

“Yeah, uh, I’m okay, I guess.” Lil mumbled, “Remember when I said I had something to tell you at practice?” We were currently in a production of Sally Cotter at a local theatre. I hated every moment of it, but Lil, with her abounding charm and featured role coveted the nightly rehearsals. She floated between groups of friends and my sulking self with ease and organized theatre fundraisers I refused to set foot near.

         “Oh, so you’re finally gonna tell me?” My tone was sarcastic and dry.

There was a long pause as she searched for the right words. “Look, Teagan, I have cancer.”

My mouth went dry. My knees buckled beneath me. The bathroom tiles were cold on my face as I lay, curled into a ball, holding the phone away from my face so she wouldn’t hear me crying.

I was ultimately forgiven for using my phone when grounded, considering the news I delivered to my mother that night. I begged her for a ride to the hospital despite the late hour. The drive there was quiet, the only sound was the whispering of the tires over the freeway, soft and feather light. Bright stars danced above, and when the moon glared against my tear stained hands, I swear it shone so bright it burned holes into my retinas.

All the people I loved most in the world were already there, gathered around her bed. Lil was our glue, the socialite butterfly of our massive prepubescent army. She sat there, garbed in hospital gowns that couldn’t have suited her less and laughed as my friends cracked dirty jokes. Such a late night hang out with the whole gang would have been amazing under any other circumstances, but small details reminded us of why we were here. Abby sat sobbing in a corner, unable hold her emotions in. A constant beeping came from the pole Lil dragged behind her. The whole room smelled off, like cleaning products gone bad. It was a fantasy encased in a nightmare.

Mostly life was fine. The couches in the hospital were comfortable, especially considering how much time I spent sprawled out them, legs and arms tangled with various other preteens. I rode the bus to the hospital almost every day when the clock finally had enough decency to end the torture known as summer school. It was a one exchange bus ride, meaning I switched buses once at the downtown plaza. The bus I switched to, Bus #2, was the designated hospital route bus, and I was always the youngest person aboard. Old women in wheelchairs gave me sidelong looks either pitying me or judging my short shorts, I never knew which.

I tried to help fill Lil’s role in the theatre, facetiming her at performances and trying to have a better attitude. Still, I celebrated when the last show had come and gone. I was a free man! At least until school started.

Freshman year was the worst of my entire life. I went from a tiny magnet middle school to a tiny magnet high school, so you would think the transition would be easy. I was supposed to start high school with my three best friends, Cash, Abby and of course, Lil. We had all pushed each other to apply, helped to edit our application essays; we even went over Cash’s head and texted his mom in the hopes we could all start together in the fall. Cancer tore that plan to shreds. We wouldn’t be joining at the same time like we always planned. All our handwork was for nothing. To make matters worse for me, classes were sorted by math level, meaning I had no classes with Abby or Cash. I was completely alone in this new environment, like a baby left to drown in a roaring ocean, circled by hungry sharks on all sides.

Still, I thought to myself, she can join us midyear. My hopes of Lil joining us midyear quickly turned to hopes she would join at the start of sophomore year as it became abundantly clear that she would be devastatingly behind in class. Smart as she was, nobody could jump into the middle of AP engineering or biomed, and not be completely lost. Heck, I was lost, and I had been in the class all year long! She would join us next year. I could hold out for her. I had to. That singular thought was my overarching thread of hope. It was fine nobody in my class liked me, because Lil would be there soon. It was fine I had panic attacks over tests, something I had never experienced before, because Lil would be there soon. It was fine I tortured the Spanish teacher, because Lil would be there soon and who better was there smooth over my blatant disrespect?

This time, she told me over text. DM, to be more accurate.

“You’ll love it here,” I typed, “It’s just like middle school but a little bit harder.” This was an outright lie, and we both knew it. High school was nothing like our grade-free, test-free middle school, and Lil had heard enough of my late-night rants to know that.

She took forever to respond. “I’m not going to SVT. I just can’t. I’m not smart enough. I’ll probably just go to CV or something.”

Once again, I found myself on the ground, sobbing silently. I threw my phone against the wall with all the force I could muster. It didn’t even have the courtesy to break, and it bounced harmlessly onto the carpeted floor. How could she do this? Didn’t she care? Didn’t she know I was only holding out for her? My whole body shook with tremors like an earthquake had been started inside of my stomach. I gasped for air. And at that moment I gave up. I gave up on our friendship. She obviously didn’t care about me as much as I cared about her. I gave up on making new friends. I gave up on my schoolwork. I gave up on hope.

We didn’t speak again for two years. The habits I had fallen into from lack of hope were self-destructive. In short, I had turned myself into a complete and utter brat. People avoided me, and whispered behind my back, I ate alone in the crowded cafeteria and never participated in class. Every comment that escaped my lips was foreign and cruel. I was an empty brained zombie, a shell of my former self. Alive, but not quite there.

Something had to change; I forced myself to be better, to try again. Each and every day I worked to be a good person again. In those long two years, I completely rebuilt myself as a person. I switched schools, there was no reason to stay in that pit of misery anymore. I finally made friends. I found a whole new side of myself, a personality combining who I wanted to be and the zombie I was, that I would never have found if I hadn’t been to rock bottom. I found myself. It took two years for me to reach out again, which I did in a hyperactive, late night, caffeine addled delirium. We instantly reconnected. She had none of the hard feelings I imagined she would for my abandonment in the hardest period of her life, and she wasn’t even aware of how much she had hurt me. We bonded over our past and nostalgia, once again becoming friends who text on an almost daily basis. Sometimes, you have to fall down and wallow in the mud to stand up taller than ever before.

Like the Stars

Emalyn Sharp

I want to go out like the stars do

Each and every night

For though not always visible

One is conscious of their light  

I want to go out like the stars do

Lovely and beyond reach

While glamorous from a distance

You would burn if the distance you could breach

I want to go out like the stars do

Sparkling more than most could conceive

For though to many I am visible

So few yet believe  

I want to go out like the stars do

Glittering in mystery

Whether a shooting star or airplane

The answer is left in history  

I want to go out like the stars do

With wisdom beyond their years

As they watch the world with heavy eyes

Dripping out their tears  

I want to go out like the stars do

A map to light the way

To point the direction onward

When with words there is nothing to say  

I want to go out like the stars do

Shining bright for all to see

For while I may be beautiful

It is but Christ who lives in me    

I want to go out like the stars do

For even when my life is quelled

My radiant beams that pierce the night

Will still be long beheld  

I want to go out like the stars do

With a dramatic flare

For even when my light is gone

My debris will still be there  

For Somebody that I Used to Know

Avery Heck

The moment I entered the room the first time we met, I felt like you were the person I was always supposed to be around. With your unnaturally long dark hair and your caramel-colored skin, you were beautiful and enticing and oddly shy, now that I reflect on it. Your tattooed father loomed over your shoulder, acting as if you trusted him (you didn’t) and your mother had her arms crossed, wishing she were anywhere but here. And your sister. Your sister’s gaze was locked on the wall, as if she was floating somewhere else. I was painfully unaware of what was going on. But who could blame me?

I was hardly fourteen and my mind was filled with books and what I was having for dinner that night. My focus wasn’t on the purple bruise just peeking out from your dark shirt, a stark contrast from the warmth of your skin.

Your shy behavior didn’t leave me for hours that day and I hoped that we could be friends. I just wanted a friend. That’s all I ever wanted. I wish I hadn’t wanted it that hard.

Months later, when I saw you again, I practically fell to my knees and said, “I’m so glad you got in!” Only to be met with, “Who are you?”

I was dumbfounded. How could she not remember me when I had made it a point to memorize so much about her?

My cheeks ran red and I tucked my head low, one of many mannerisms I gained from being in your world and said, “Oh, we met at the audition.”

We would become best friends, attached at the hip, and I would tell you everything. Anything and everything. When I was with you, there was no filter. You were my world, my reason for getting up in the morning, my best friend and my sole confidant.

I would tell you everything, but you would never.

The things you would say were base level, nothing that proved that you trusted me with precious information. You were so closed off and it used to annoy me, but now it doesn’t. The things you would tell me, I wish you never had. Before you, I lived in a world of naivety that I would never get back.

I had considered her my best friend before the truth in our relationship began. I think I was desperate to dub someone that title because, like her, I was so suffocatingly lonely. And just as much as I needed her, I think she needed me. Neither of us had truly known what the words meant – or, I guess, we had different definitions of it. Best friend. Above all others. The bestest of the best. The one who triumphs all the others. She was my best. And I thought I was hers. Maybe, for a time, I was, but then I lost her to other things.

It took a whole year of friendship before she finally opened up to me and poured out her entire soul.

We went to see one of those, now cringey, young adult films at the old Regal theater in our small town. She lived in the apartments right next to it. I lived about ten miles away in a gated community with a four number code that she knew well. It was ten o’clock at night and the film had just ended. My father sat at the entrance in our second car while her mother was nowhere in sight. She murmured, “Go home, I’ll be okay waiting alone.” My father refused and said, “No, we can wait until your mom gets here.” I think she was used to being left and gaped slightly at my dad’s words.

He sat in the car and we waited at the entrance. She turned to me and whispered things that I don’t think I was ready to hear. But she felt in her heart that I was ready to hear it.

Her dad had just been arrested in Miami for robbing a bank and her mom was about to get fired because of an “indiscretion” at work. (Months later she would reveal that her mom was addicted to cocaine and had kicked her and her sister out, leaving them practically homeless.) She revealed the abuse and the toxicity and all of it while my dad sat, with the windows rolled up, in our little car.

I didn’t know what to say. When the words finally came, her mom pulled up and she reluctantly got in the car. I watched carefully as they pulled out of the theater parking lot. Two days later in school, she pretended like she hadn’t said it.

From then on, I reminded myself how lucky I was. I was damn lucky. I had a mother and father who loved me and a brother and sister who I protected. I extended a hand out to her and basically told her she could be my family too.

We let her stay the night – many nights. We took her on family vacations. She was in every family picture and every family moment for nearly three years. It wasn’t charity, it wasn’t because we felt bad, it was because we loved her like an extension of ourselves.

The shame didn’t come until junior year.

I would eat a sandwich and she would side eye me, making a comment about how bad it was. I would look in a mirror and say, “I look chubby” and she would say, “It’s okay, I do too.” She would make comments about how fat she was – she wasn’t – and then obsess over my weight. It felt like a game and I fed into it. I stopped eating. She stopped eating. We fed into each other’s worst qualities and exploited them.

She would fall back on her work, I’d let her copy every assignment.

I’d ask for one bit of help and she would silence me for a week.

I would cry in the corner of a room, she would laugh with the girl who would end up replacing.

Maybe it was petty of me, but I fell from her good graces. Every single thing I did for her fell away and I became the shell of a person that I once was. I wanted to help her, do her right by the world because no one else had put her first. I celebrated her successes; she didn’t celebrate mine. And maybe that’s because she didn’t know how to do that or what it would mean to do that.

I would’ve supported her in every decision.

I was falling apart, only living for her approval and the idea that she would be okay.

I wanted to die. I was falling apart. I was stuffing my face with diet pills and eating nearly nothing.

I was falling apart because I wanted to look like my replacement. I wanted to be in my best friend’s world. I was a puppy dog. I lived only to lift her up and not for myself. If there was something we both wanted, I would throw myself to the wayside so she could have that special moment.

We wanted to go to college together. I wanted it so badly and when I was unable to live out that dream, she shamed me for it, saying, “How could you abandon me? Why would you do that to us? I hate you.”

When I reflect on high school, I can see so perfectly why I was miserable the whole time. I only lived for her.

When it all came to fruition and I gave up on her, she had blocked me from her life.

Leaving her was the most cathartic experience.

I was so afraid of leaving her because she made it seem like she would have nothing, only she didn’t. She got into our dream school, found an old woman to pay for it, and now she is living out her best life while I lay in my dorm room unable to move most days.

There were days when I felt like I carried both of our worlds. I so desperately wanted to give her everything but I fell short.

I am still healing.

She reaches out sometimes.

I respond.

It doesn’t go further than that.

From that experience, I learned the most valuable gift.

You must be gracious in this world. Help those who need it but don’t lose yourself in the process. A savior complex is the worst kind of burden to have. It’s unfair to yourself and your potential. That was my most valuable spiritual journey.

Reverse Poem

Tayla Vannelli

Hope > Fear  

Fear

the power of

the devil. He has not

been defeated. He is only

growing stronger. Satan’s kingdom has

come down to earth. The church is

at his mercy. Heaven has

been eradicated. We marvel

that the devil’s power has

been chosen by God. Now,

how can this be? The suffering ones have

been ignored.

God’s love has

found a way to deceive us.

Clearly, evil

is victorious over all.

God,

Understand who He is:

He wants us to

choose fear.

There is no reason to

Hope.  

(read bottom to top)

My Whole World

Destiny Killian

Earthen eyes of hazel

ground me

after our world has turned

topsy turvy

Six feet or six lightyears

the distant is irrelevant

I could travel the globe

yet fail to find your equal

Kyoto’s famed flowers

would turn green with envy

their pink petals shriveling

upon seeing the blush

that blossoms on your face

at my every compliment

The city of love could never compare

to jazz music lilting

through the living room all around

avoiding our klutzy attempts to keep rhythm

Hopefully we’ll be better at this

during our first dance, mon amour

Not even your Bel Paese

from which your family hails

has enough beauty to match

your melodious tone

We hum and sing and saute mushrooms

in your stepmother’s kitchen

imaging the day when we have a home of our own

Despite this dire past year

our love leads me

to places new yet so familiar

The circumference

of your arms,

a planet previously undiscovered,

now my whole world

Walls of Jericho

Jesse Lee

“When the trumpets sounded, the army shouted, and at the sound of the trumpet, when the men gave a loud shout, the wall collapsed; so everyone charged straight in, and they took the city”

– Joshua 6:20

1st Trumpet

I have always told people that if they see me cry something is terribly wrong. Sad movies, happy endings, beautiful strains of a violin, all the things meant to touch a soft soul ricochet off my Kryptonian heart. I was a warrior, a she-wolf, a lioness in high heels. I would survive this harsh world with steel in my soul and a broken glass smile. Ice queens in armor of rock music and leather jackets do not cry.  

2nd Trumpet

It became a joke as the mission team boarded a plane bound for New York City. My best friend, who had never seen a single tear in my eyes, made a bet that something would get to me. Some emotional arrow would find a chink in my armor. I laughed and sipped my Americano. By the time we were ordering much needed coffee in Budapest, the whole team was in on the wager. “The mission field changes everyone, all you have to do is lower your walls”, the team leader told me. I gave a groggy half-nod and crawled into the van for the three-hour drive across the Romanian border.  

3rd Trumpet

A night in a Romanian hotel and another day spent driving through the Carpathian mountains allowed us to get to know the couple who owned the mission house. We were told at the end of the week we’d be asked to share something we took away from this trip. My friend nudged me in the ribs and I smirked. Learn something? Sure. Get emotional? Never.

4th Trumpet

Pictures, stories, eyewitness accounts were all woefully inadequate for what awaited us at the river village. Children barely dressed, shelters built from trash, a room the size of a closet housing a family of eight. We brought a hot meal and supplies. We ate, prayed, built, smiled. We left exhausted but proud. We promised to return later in the week.  

5th Trumpet

We worked in the garden of the mission sponsored children’s home. We laughed and played games with the Romani Gypsy children fortunate enough to escape the villages and live there. A little girl sat in my lap for hours, snuggled against me as we watched cartoons. Another thing that made my friend smile. I had always claimed to dislike children. But this little girl climbed into my lap, all dark eyes and gap toothed smile, skinny arms wrapped around me until the day we left. I never stood a chance.  

6th Trumpet

They were considered the lucky ones, a large family living in two rooms made out of a modified shipping container. Lucky because they were out of the villages. Lucky to raise their children in a tiny box. Children that ran to greet us, knowing that the mission house van meant food and care for a few hours. We stepped inside when the mother told us there was a baby. A baby lying on a bed in the blazing heat, tiny hands twitching at the flies that crawled over it. The softest heart in our group scooped him up to hold and I stepped outside.  

7th Trumpet

The older girls were getting their hair braided. The team didn’t have another hair tie. I pulled mine from my own braid and took it to the woman braiding hair. The little girl said something in Romani, grinning up at me. I smiled back and waited for a translation. “She said you have pretty green eyes.” I gave a cracked thank you to this beautiful smiling girl and retreated. I was silent the entire ride back to the mission house, busy attempting repairs on the cracks in my citadel’s walls.   Shout The day we left, I dropped my bag by the door. I knelt down and hugged the girl who had been my shadow all week. She smiled and squeezed me tight. I’m not sure if she thought this was a goodbye or a I’ll see you later tonight. My knuckles were white on the straps of my bag as I loaded it into the van. I sat silently in the back as we left the town of Viile Tecii in the rearview mirror. Halfway to Oradea we were asked to share what we were taking away from this trip. I thought about dark eyes staring into green. Gap toothed smiles. Tiny hands and flies. I thought of disciples, of Christ, of “suffer little children.” And the walls came crashing down.

be still

Anna Lundy

and know that

i am with you.   

be still and know

that i am here.   

even in your

solitude.   

even in your

fear.   

even in your 

loneliness.   

even in your

grief.   

be still and know

that i am here. 

Seasons and Security

Emily Boban

You feel the icy chill, you feel hot breeze  

Inhaling pollen that makes you sneeze

You’ve been hungry, you’ve been tired

You’ve been joyful, you’ve been inspired

You’ve been late, you’ve been early

You’ve felt weak and you’ve felt sturdy

You are no stranger to failure nor to winning

You’ve wanted consistency and a new beginning

You’ve been empty, you’ve been stressed

Each and every day you still get dressed

You may earn or you may lose

You may look ahead or at your shoes

You’ve been wrong and you’ve been right

Yet you’re always precious in His sight

Yellow

Destiny Killian

I used to hate the color yellow

Resented the fact that only one crayon

was meant to draw a smiling sun

Regarded sunflowers as

too similar to the plastic fakes

sold in stores

And thought lemons were

far too sour for

my tastes

I looked down on this

singular shade as being too bright, too loud,

too much  

Until I met you

and rose colored glasses

enhanced my sight, turning

once offensive hues

into pastel happiness

Like an epiphany, love

had reformed my

kaleidoscope vision

Bringing you into

crystal clear

focus  

You send me

pixelated hearts with

every good morning message

Primarily yellow ones

alongside romantic red

like a palette

of flames meant to be tamed

but instead burn

us both

prismatic

I love the contrast, you say

You, who are also

bright and loud and

accused of being too much,

couldn’t be more

radiant to my eyes  

Your warmth surrounds me,

bathing my skin

in a summer glow,

comforting me during

my dullest of days

Your mere presence

parts every gray cloud,

the lambent light of

our love shining through

I could live in the color yellow

so long as

I’m living with you