Thick With Conviction - A Poetry Journal
thick with conviction a poetry journal

Paul Hostovsky

Credo

I will give you your belief if you will
give me my doubt. I will own there's a god if you will own
all the huddled humanity holding
itself up with no help from you or your
god is wholly heartbreaking. I'm willing to
pray if holy shit is a good prayer,
if jesus christ is a good prayer,
if oh yeah oh yeah oh yeah is
downright devotional. Dance with me
for the chance. For the chance is in time
with the world. And we are in the world
and of it. Of course we are of it, what
else should we be of? Praise dog!
Praise the little dog sniffing Earth's
big crotch. For she is of the world and knows it.
For she would eat the world if she could fit it
in her teeth. And you would love the world if you could fit it
in your head. A little irreverence
goes a long way. A little
dog goes a long way with its tongue hanging out
and its tail pointing up, and its nose
rooting around in Earth's lap
for the essential
life.



To A Motion Activated Paper Towel Dispenser

* Best of the Issue - April 2008 winner! *


Once upon a time we touched things.
We touched each other, we touched
ourselves. The world had
doorknobs. You could grab a hold of the world
and walk right through it. There were
handles, beautiful handles, and we
couldn't stop pulling them.
Hand washing hadn't caught on yet
so people caught colds from each other and worse,
much worse. Most people couldn't
even spell prophylaxis, much less
practice it. But there was such a thing as
olfactory intelligence. People loved smells
more than books. An armpit
was a library or a temple. You could
worship and study there. And you could
sniff your own fingers to get
word from your lover
more eloquent than a hundred love letters.
But today it's no longer possible
to just open a window and make love to the world.
Today you can' t even
touch yourself and feel good about it anymore.
And the children's drawings
are full of emaciated stick figures
with lumpy limp smiles
and stumpy arms whose hands can't reach
below the equator.


Paul Hostovsky's poems appear widely online and in print. He has been featured on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and The Writer's Almanac. He works in Boston as a sign language interpreter. To read more of his poems, visit his website: www.paulhostovsky.com

 Current Issue:
April 2008

 

Chris Crittenden
James H. Duncan
Taylor Graham
James Hannon
Paul Hostovsky
Candice Nguyen
Lori Romero
Cole Subik
Kelsey Upward
J. Michael Wahlgren
Leland Zhi

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