MuddyEstuary.com: Women’s Forum Topic: Normal Relationships
J.R. Ramakrishnan
Kidd_O posted at 19-11-2008 01:16 I am a pengkid. My age is 21 now but I have been this way since I was 12. At first, I was just a tomboy but since I started working three years ago, I met Juli (not her real name, of course), my sweet, beautiful girl.
Sucking Famous Dick on the Rooftop of the Omni Hotel in Downtown Austin During SXSW 2011
Tommy "Teebs" Pico
[wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Pico.mp3″ text=”listen to this story” dl=”0″] I really want some smoked brisket on the stroll. Some soul watering pulled pork tacos, BBQ beef sandwich, a Frito pie from Stubb’s, meat sticks on the street corners, deep fried skins with melted cheese and chili, grilled stuff from the food trucks.
SH+JW 1881-1914
Julia K. Patt
And what are the Adventures the Cases the Studies if not love letters if not odes to his remarkable friend his extraordinary friend his wise friend Holmes and what is Dr. John H.
Five Poems
Daniela Olszewska
items will have shifted my eardrums pop whilst my solar plexus aches w/emergency situations. i am chewing tobacco + finding all these dead pigeons in yr travel- sized dead pigeon carrying case. the flight attendant squiggles at us- but you are too busy trying to make me feel boring.
Dionysus
Megan Milks
Age matters little for immortals. When I met Dionysus, I was twenty-four. She was old. We met at an after-hours club. She caught my eye or I caught hers. Her eyes were glittery and wise. She came over and laughed. I felt good.
Stitching
Joshua R. Helms
[wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Helms.mp3″ text=”listen to this story” dl=”0″] John’s body splits open when I squeeze him too hard. I stitch ceremoniously and he watches me work. He asks if I remember how we used to live in our house and sleep in our bed and never worry all the time about his body splitting open.
Five Poems
j/j hastain
Dear secondary umbilical, A slowly opening camber for the zygote that is also the antiquity.
Mother Friends
Casey Hannan
I tell my grandmother I’m gay, and she tells me I’ll live a lonely life if I don’t get out of town.
Mirrorball
R.W. Gray
Ben used to call me only late at night, blurry drunk, too drunk to go home but not so drunk that he couldn’t operate a phone if he had one eye closed and said the number over and over. I don’t know how he managed to always remember my number.
From Odes of Opposition
Nancy Flynn and Lisa McCool-Grime
Gertrude Stein’s Objects Nancy Opposes Gertrude EVERYTHING ORDINARY. A fact a single fact was certain. Then the said did fall and where was a fence inside it, then outside was sent out and here people stayed when doubtfully nothing was lowdown. It was frivolous. A SAID SUN.
Five Poems
Ezra Dan Feldman
THE ARROGANT MAN (MY MAN) [wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Feldman1.mp3″ text=”listen to this poem” dl=”0″] In which it was half habit then half necessity to crowd the middle: the tent walls brayed in the wind. In which I believed we’d staked everything down or if not locked half in the trunk. In which we collided in half sleep.
Poem and Short Fiction
Emma Crandall
Poem for the Apocalypse [wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Crandall.
Tonight, Tonight
Chris Emslie
[wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Emslie.mp3″ text=”listen to this poem” dl=”0″] I still hate the song. He fucked me on the comedown from his Boston ‘e’ party, quick and neat as a well-done execution. His young stubble grazed my shoulder, he feigned sleep when someone knuckled his door.
Six poems
Gillian Cummings
Amie [wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Amie.mp3″ text=”listen to this poem” dl=”0″] Clotilde found me in the hayloft, sticking straws under my nails. She saw where I’d scratched a broken cross on my wrist where veins sketch a blue delta. And she shrieked, the cuts smeared with blood.
Femme Body Bop (Become)
Tamiko Beyer
1. Into and entered I bend, just-discernible shape. Features something to comment on: eyes small, small nose, the mole on the left breast. Was a body. 2. Streetlights trembled as we marched back the night trembled! we were so fucking fierce. But couldn’t shake my traitorous yearning for pink eyelet smock.
Out Cleaning Up The Scene
AJ Atwater
[wpaudio url=”/audio/6_13/Atwater.mp3″ text=”listen to this story” dl=”0″] We settle at the bar, our eyes hooded, hard-ons rising behind suit coats. A shot a Johnnie, we say to the barkeep. We’re sweating. We’d stopped to admire half-slips made of lace on plastic male torsos at Slipwreak.