I.) there are dates in the year when the nights are so bright even owls become larks
II.) remember the kindness of sleep is winged but claw-footed: sleep looks like an eagle-sized nightjar, poised to swoop down where it spots you
III.) in a nest, on a tree branch, a rooftop, a trunk hole, mid-river, or down in the earth: choose wisely
IV.) dream of the sky, dream of yourself as one stitch in a murmuration
V.) close your grip, let the tendons in your talons tighten as you perch, and you won’t worry about falling
VI.) watch out for the moths, they steal tears while you sleep, don’t let them drink from your eyes
VII.) if you ask the swifts you should sleep on the wing, once you are high enough to glide
Laura Theis writes poetry, songs, and fiction in her second language. She received a Distinction from Oxford University’s MSt in Creative Writing. Her work appears in journals such as Poetry, Oxford Poetry, Mslexia, Magma, Rattle, and Strange Horizons, and has been widely anthologized by Candlestick Press, Broken Sleep Books, Pan Macmillan, and Aesthetica, amongst many others. Her Elgin-Award-nominated debut how to extricate yourself, an Oxford Poetry Library Book-of-the-Month, won the Brian Dempsey Memorial Prize. Her collection A Spotter’s Guide To Invisible Things won the Live Canon Collection Prize and received the Arthur Welton Award from the Society of Authors.
JJ Rowan is a queer nonbinary poet and dancer whose writing and movement practices have developed largely out of collaborative approaches and the pursuit of deep connection. They are looking for the places where the written line and the lines of the moving body intersect, where genre blurs and remixes and reboots, and where style and role reach maximum fluidity and deeper capacity. Their chapbook, a simple verb, is available from Bloof Books. You can follow their handwriting and movement projects on Instagram.