Sunday, 3 May 2026

Five Poems by Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal




 




Withour a Name



I try so hard 
to not exist
without a name
to call my love.
Dispossessed, blood
cools in my veins.
My open heart
is here for now.
I have no code.
Come through the door.
Find me inside,
sheltered in place.
Without love, please
show me the way.




Time is a Statue


Time is a statue 
of men and women
who made alliances 
to garner praise
and accolades, some
well-deserved, I guess

Some statues are
riddled with pigeon
droppings and graffiti.
Some honored were
the most despicable 
humans that ever lived

Murderers, tyrants,
killers of entire races,
genocidal madmen,
criminals with crimes.
I am on the side of the
pigeons doing God’s work.



As You No Longer Dream


There are no limits.

You will learn later 
as you no longer
dream. You settle 
for the birds that

spread your sacred 
words. Your mortal
heart and soul will
leave the physical 

world. A dying rose
still red wilts in
the garden. Cold

sheets drape over
your body. Out comes
your last sorrow.
No more sleepless
days. The end is near.
No more weeping days.

You hear the birds
outside. This is the
last shadow. You can
see it fading all
around you as
you no longer dream.




The Air


I hear the air screaming through the vents.
The air fills my bedroom with coldness.
My face feels like a frozen round stone.

I do not mind the air when I feel hot.
I do mind it when it freezes my bones.
I don’t like the bill for the luxury of cold air.

I hear the air is the reason I feel sick.
I’m reading an article about it right now.
The air is the reason I am frozen stiff.

This poet feels like another ice cube
in the freezer. His verse is as cold as
falling snow. I could be an avalanche.

Alas, I am only human. I feel the air
tickling on my ears. They feel so cold.
I am scared they might fall off.

It is getting too cold in my bedroom.
There is too much melodrama here.
I think it is time to put on a coat.
 



Birds Flying


There were birds flying 
out of a mural
as twilight was dying not
long after banking hours.

They flew into darkness 
with frayed black wings 
like the birds of the
apocalypse in unison.
In the absence of light

their ashes fell on
the grass near the gates
of heaven. I sensed
fear in their song.








Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal - Born in Mexico, Luis lives in California and works in the mental health field in Los Angeles. His poems have appeared in Blue Collar Review, Chiron Review, Kendra Steiner Editions, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Mad Swirl, and Unlikely Stories. He is the author of Raw Materials (Pygmy Forest Press), Peering Into the Sun (Poet's Democracy), and Make the Water Laugh (Rogue Wolf Press).



Three Poems by Sam Calhoun

 






Blood Moon

By the time it arrives
we know what it’s been through,
it kept the shedding in the dark
so we could be cocooned in light,
heads raised high with dead corn,
wishing the stars were rain.



Semaphore

All evening I watched
the birds teasing
the wrapping
on new feeders, empty,
waiting for rail hooks
any day now,

and the lone bee
searches for
the old mat
it suckled for water,
draped across a chair,
waiting for the sun
any day now,

as I work to forget
the way every shadow
writes your name
in dark places,
hope a broken fortune
cookie, empty,
like our home,
every day now.



The News

What can be said
of this record
breaking cold,
this out of season
experience, this
word-less loss

we have brought
the pumpkins indoors,
double checked
faucet covers,
tucked curtains
tight so even
the sun cannot
see the heart
leaf philodendron
as it begins to fade.

we know any water
will freeze, we know
your grave slumps
west, we will fill it,
sure as the sun,
sure as the night.






Sam Calhoun is the author of six chapbooks, the most recent First Things (Eulogy Press) and co-author of a collaborative collection, The Hemlock Poems (Present Tense Media). His work can be found in numerous journals and anthologies, including Cosmic Daffodils, Eratos, Westward Quarterly, Boats Against the Current, and Cold Moon Journal. His work has been displayed as broadsides in museums and art galleries as part of Wild Alabama's “Conversation Through Art” project, and featured on WLRH's radio broadcast 'The Sundial Writer’s Corner'. He lives with his wife in Elkmont, AL. Follow him on Instagram or X @weatherman_sam, 

Bluesky @weathermansam, or his website, 

https://pol01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?


Five Poems by Luis Cuauhtemoc Berriozabal

  Withour a Name I try so hard  to not exist without a name to call my love. Dispossessed, blood cools in my veins. My open heart is here fo...