American Volta

By Yash Seyedbagheri

 

they once said every poem needed a volta

a shift

a transition

a turn

but what about this poem

replete with shattered glass, shrieks, screams of 

socialism, books spirited away

distortions, banned abortions

tears mocked on TikTok

taking things from others for mythical greatness

Anglo-Saxon nomenclature above all else

another round fired while authorities slink away

 

Where is the volta?

 

another news story

another dissection 

another thought

another prayer

but no turn 

a man throws his meal against a wall

and tries to strangle truth

because he can

and his followers proclaim it all fake

lock dissent up

but you can’t lock dissent up

 

Let me tell you, I dream of Nazis every night

tossing and turning on sweat-stained sheets

and my name feels like a swarthy scarlet letter

a name mispronounced

a name which draws attention

and no comedy laugh track can drown it out 

night after night

 

I imagine words spat at me

cracking like bullets

terrorist, towelhead, camelfucker

and I see a fist flying into my face

while being chased by a sputtering truck

in the name of so-called justice

the exhaust consuming

I see it beneath the moon’s once luminous smile

behind a Ponderosa

I see it around each turn of a bend

 

I want a volta

a real volta

a fairy godmother to turn a page

and say it was all a dream

but I wake up

and all I see 

is someone’s intelligence

purged and bleeding in a trash can

another conspiracy

about something never stolen

all I want is a fucking, real volta

 

America

do you know where your voltas are?

Yash Seyedbagheri is a graduate of Colorado State University's MFA fiction program. His stories, "Soon,'' ''How To Be A Good Episcopalian,'' "Tales From A Communion Line," and "Community Time," have been nominated for Pushcarts. Yash’s work has been published in SmokeLong Quarterly, The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts, Write City Magazine, and Ariel Chart, among others. He lives in Garden Valley, Idaho.

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