Holes
Shana Ross
For we so loved holes we let them
move into this world. A screened porch the wind
passes through without howling. Let grief
soak in the concrete driveway,
let it freeze & thaw & erode & pit
the surface until there is nothing to do but watch
things crumble. Who am I missing, as weeks
collapse like dunes walking themselves
through a desert, the dead keep
scooping themselves from my heart
with a melon baller. I grow gristle
on the ragged edges. I edit
the Christmas card list, three rows each
this year and last. I rust from my own
tears like tin, stuck standing in this clearing, ax raised.
Shana Ross is a recent transplant to Edmonton, Alberta and Treaty Six Territory. Qui transtulit sustinet. Her work has recently appeared in Cutbank Literary Journal, Laurel Review, Gigantic Sequins, Meetinghouse Magazine and more. She is the winner of the 2022 Anne C. Barnhill prize and the 2021 Bacopa Literary Review Poetry competition, as well as a 2019 Parent-Writer Fellowship to Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing. She serves as an editor for Luna Station Quarterly and a critic for Pencilhouse.