Havilah Barnett


The Dead are Rising

 
 

After the Uniform

I no longer cry 
for the neighbor’s dog,
tree-tied, gasping.

For winter’s steel 
pulsing hot against 
the old woman’s throat.     

Instead
            I swarm

medicine cabinets. Gulp
the human with zoloft. 

Not a brain
unrolled,
am the zombie

the pit, the twelve
-foot hunger. 

To begin again,
please. Face-blur 
pink with sky.


“I wrote ‘The Dead are Rising’ while grappling with a lot of anxiety/depression around unnecessary suffering from ongoing wars—thinking specifically about children and societal expectations for women to give birth. ‘After the Uniform’ (originally titled ‘Zoloft’) speaks to my experience of starting medication after coming home from a deployment, namely the frustrations of feeling everything versus being numb.” —Havilah Barnett

Havilah Barnett is a poet and MFA candidate in Creative Writing at the University of Colorado Boulder. Her poetry explores trauma, mental illness, and the effects of mutism in a deafening world. She’s currently an Editor for TIMBER Journal and was previously an emergency medical technician for both the Army and a civilian ambulance service. Havilah loves sharing space with animals and experiencing life as a highly sensitive empath.

Previous
Previous

Yasmeen Amro

Next
Next

Norla Chee