Unlikely 2.0


   If you have the capacity to tremble with indignation every time that an injustice is committed in the world, then we are comrades. —Ernesto "Che" Guevara


Recent Articles:

Trust Fund Babies and Phenomena of Interference by Steve Dalachinsky now available!

We Love You — Iran & Israel: a Short Film by Ronny Edry
La beauté est dans la rue: a Short Film by Mayakov+sky and Don Eli
Seven Images by Diana Magallôn
Planetary Climate: Ten Panitings by Leonard Kogan
Four Songs by Gert Fröbe and a review by Margret Crist
Three Poems by Alia Vancrown
Three Visual Poems by Nicholas Komodore
Three Poems by Lawrence Welsh
Three Postcards by Jacob A. Bennett
Three Poems by Wendy Taylor Carlisle
selections from Symphony No.7 (detached resonating hour): Poetry by Ric Carfagna
Three Poems by Lizzy Swane
Whisper, then the illusion lengthens: Poetry by Felino A. Soriano
Three Poems by Marc Thompson
Three Poems by B. Z. Niditch
Civil Servant: Fiction by Tom Bonfiglio
Listen, Arcada: Riffs on Invasions, Violence, Doom, and Other Pathologies: Fiction by George Sparling
Waitstaff: Fiction by Bruce Memblatt
The Spa Owner's Family: A Novella by Dirk van Nouhuys
Phil Rockstroh on police repression, official mendacity and why OWS has already overcome
Jerel C. Wilmore documents the March 3rd protest at Virginia's Capitol Square
Rev. John Helmiere describes being beaten by Oakland cops
At the Crossroads of Climate and Food by Councilman Richard Conlin
Starhawk on green entrepreneurship in impoverished San Francisco


Join our mailing list!


Print this article


Three Poems by Omar Azam

being somebody everybody nowhere at the same time

A manually rupturing addendum
of fruit and caterpillars
in the upwardly mobile sword of reason;

Sword of seasons,
love gently the equivocal being
tying the mind to infinite intellect,

make them the mistake of thinking
gender contains me
the way my sack does my sex,

and mind is completely separate
from body + world

+ free will costs nothing
+ is the dirty little key
that opens every heart +
door in the universe,

which doesn't care
how many souls
live + die
or the number of teardrops
in your + mine stories,

remember we are alone
in a plane of timelessness,
only brothers, twins, two flavors
of the same self, aiming
for that one true beauty
that is a flower, a pair of lips,
a pearl opening + ending of our consciousness.

Happiness
+ meaning
with a capital
period.




artist as family man (daily delusions)

It's a sign of insanity
to scratch nervously on paper,
a public pièce de résistance,
a pen moving to keep pace
with the fire in your lungs,
every corner a corpuscle of biology
in this motley-colored haven of security.

But nothing tastes as sweet
as a foot under the covers
a round set of cheeks and baubles
to keep me constant company,
the timeless conjoin of my daily ritual
an almanac of our hundreds of daily decisions,
joys in the shape of a soap mold or a cupcake,
or maybe an apologetic declaration of détente,

a dirigible hand on the knots of your back,
the first face I see, the last glimpse I get
is your peaceful visage,

and yet the shapes + colors + screams
awaken me at night + pull at my skin,
suffocating me with playful rhetoric,
a sheath of metallic footprints,
misconstrued largesse.




brain in the jar

You can write eight hours a day
and string together a parade
of non-sequiturs.

You can listen to the depths
of a human heart + come up
with seaweed.

You can honor words like crystal,
never daring to dust the menagerie.

You can view a continent
through a black prism
+ call yourself a scientist.

You can act like it's all just a game
+ wake up screaming in terror.

You can yell 'til you're blue in the face
+ find yourself agreeing.

You can fall in love with a brain in the jar
+ discover it's a stuffed pussycat
who gives good email.

You can read a drop of poetry
+ let its bitterness flavor your dreams.

You can get drunk trying to forget yourself
when you meet him.

You can pretend there's no politics
+ bring home burning bacon.

You can disbelieve in music
+ find your heart without rhythm.

You can preach freedom
+ find yourself clinging
to the blanket of your skin
like a coward.


E-mail this article

Omar Azam, of Chicago, is a student and teacher of transpersonal poetry. He practices an improvisational style of poetry and believes that an audience of one, preferably invisible, is quite enough.