drank everything away,
no reason to call the doctor,
took care of all my problems
when i handed the devil
the gun in my dreams.
love ain’t what it seems,
when you’re
changing the litterbox
of your own mind,
blindly calling the cat a deity,
better to write bad poetry
than to delude oneself
with the notion
that there is
any hope for escape
and let the skull of every
recurring nightmare
bleed toxic.
Eliana Vanessa is originally from Argentina and moved to New Orleans, Louisiana at a young age. She recently participated 100,000 Poets for Change (2018) and served as part of a panel of poets in The Jane Austen Festival (2017, 2018, 2019). You can find her work online at The Horror Zine, The Rye Whiskey Review, and The Sirens Call Ezine, The Ramingo’s Porch, Ariel Chart, Beneath the Rainbow, and Fearless. Her poetry appears in two recent anthologies: Masks Still Aren’t Enough (2019) and Americans and Others (2019). She is Eliana Vanessa on Facebook at the following link: https://www.facebook.com/eliana.vanessa.7758.
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