SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.
A dog, maybe a coyote, splashes up a shallow, rocky stream. The shame carried deepest in the body is the shame of being fooled.
The dog, maybe a coyote, sheds droplets from its fur. They shine. The shame of being fooled means we can’t trust even ourselves.
Say it: There is a stream. Sunlight. A coyote. Some things have names. The dog, maybe a coyote, raises its muzzle as if smelling, even tasting the breeze.
You could say the same of getting fooled. First, the scent. Then, you taste it. Later, nothing is certain until bitten, until its fur comes away in your teeth.
Michele Sharpe, a poet and essayist, is also a high school dropout, hepatitis C survivor, adoptee, and former trial attorney. Her essays appear in venues including The Rumpus, Guernica, Catapult, and The Sycamore Review. Recent poems can be found in Poet Lore, North American Review, Stirring, and Baltimore Review.