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  • Sincerely, the younger, old me

    How can an old me exist in the past?
    Or does this prompt require me to fast
    Forward
    A message in a bottle from my sequel
    Versions of “I” and “me” deemed unequal
    Jagged glass, tossed about the sea, deemed polished
    An unavoidable trajectory praised or admonished
    Am I ever new, if perpetually used?
    If the old us is younger, are we not confused?
    Bemused
    The past and future writing in the present tense.
    Therefore I choose, to write from the end. Stanzas stacked, likely not to comprehend
    (Lest you choose to read from the end to here. Or both, for you have free will, my dear)

    Your dear friend
    The older, new me, most sincere
    I’m typing it early, for this hemisphere
    I hope this doesn’t reach you too late
    The last we spoke, “is not” wasn’t “ain’t”
    Do you still like to paint?
    An emotional state of inclusivity
    Your interpersonal, personality
    An ephemeral state of relativity
    Will be
    The small that you were, and you are, and
    Or plummeting down hill
    From slowly ascending
    Glad to see you still find a thrill
    Lie
    Yet the imagery of a heart, is a symmetrical
    The muscular breakdown of a thigh
    Similarly, the tension of a bicep
    Our chest
    Inside
    How strange to know what a heart looks like
    Stare
    You’ve observed, despite being told not to tear
    You’ve stretched knowing that you could
    Omnipotence
    Accepting a life in pursuit of infinite
    Ignorance
    My how you’ve found bliss, devoid of
    Good evening, self

    Stella Armani

    Voting starts July 2, 2025 12:00am

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    • Stella, what a beautiful piece. I really enjoyed your reminders that your identity doesn’t always remain the same. You are forever changing, and that’s okay! Each new experience is going to teach us a lesson that hopefully shapes us into better people. Thanks for inspiring me!

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  • The incubator

    You’d watched her do it for years with envy. Turned on the switch that illuminated a dozen eggs scattered about a styrofoam oven. Instead of two neat rows of 70 calories, these misshapen, feather laden, orphans lay dormant in my mother’s 1st grade classroom until they pecked their way through birth only to be “set free” and dead before their 6 year old foster parents started the next school year.
    So when I, crossing the farm across the street, stumbled upon a nest without a mother, took it upon my 12 year old self to clutch the only child from its cold next and cradle it within my hoody as I entered my first month of motherhood. I found the incubator, covered in the amniotic fluid of this past year’s open-house-show-stopper, and quietly brought it upstairs to my closet. I plugged it in and placed my single egg within its synthetic worming haunches. A few weeks later, my pubescent closet was filled not only with American Eagle sale items but the warmth of newly hatched killdeer. It was an endangered species. I fed it worms and it died. I felt proud. But now, filled with regret.

    Prose from a Novice

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    • Aww, Stella. I am so happy that you experienced this. Even though the loss must have been hard on you, this only made you a stronger person. Way to go for persevering through the loss and becoming a better version of yourself because of it. You should still be proud of yourself! This was a lot to take on for a kid and you did it the best that you…read more

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  • Piece of Mine

    To be a piece
    To be at peace
    Don’t call me on my homophone
    It’s likely that I am alone
    But is alone, a singular state? Alone because you are unknown? A loan because you want a home?
    Peace is often associated with solidarity; something for which we’ve waited
    A state sedated, perhaps over rated
    Peace for me is found in a crowd
    Strangers to surround, ears are filled with the din of a city’s sound
    Camouflaged by the anonymity of vicinity to those with whom we share our city
    What is my piece?
    Where am I at peace? Do we ever really know until we’re deceased?

    Stella Armani

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    • I loved this, it reminded me of beatnik poetry slams in smoky cafés. Clever use of homophones within your piece. I love your writing style and I hope to see more from you in the future!

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