Photo: Tiffany Bessire

Fear of Afterlife

by Coleman Bomar 

Responding to Gregory Maqoma


Responding to Gregory Maqoma

Self-doubt twists my earlobes.
A billboard screams Jesus exists.
I don't believe in apocalyptic retribution.
The blood-red sunrise is shameless.
The graveyard eats our baby shoes.
I hate how life answers questions.
Temptation, in his lingerie, loves me.
The stained glass of skin so brittle.
I need escape from small town eternity.
I recognize hope by its fleetingness.
A mother breastfeeds in the parking lot.
Dogs exist and are usually friendly.
Every day is a flare thrown down a well.
The humans I know are suffering but alive.
When I'm dead, I'll breakdance naked.
I dance on my grave, just breathing.
The twisting stings like Hell. 


About 
Coleman Bomar
Coleman Bomar (he/him) is a 23-year-old writer from Middle Tennessee. He graduated from Maryville College with honors, receiving a degree in Writing Communications. His poems and stories have been featured in many online and print journals and magazines. One of his micro works is archived at Yale's Beinecke Library. He works locally as a journalist and serves as an intern at Forever Literary Magazine.
OZ Arts Nashville presents Art Wire: an ongoing collaboration between OZ Arts and The Porch in which 10 writers attend the OZ Arts performance season and respond to the presentations through original writing that is personal, playful, and deeply engaged. The OZ Arts 2019-2020 season offers each Art Wire Fellow a diverse array of inspiration, including innovative Japanese dance artist Hiroaki Umeda; a genre-bending presentation of Frankenstein by Chicago-based company Manual Cinema; and two emotionally raw works with Nashville's own professional dance company, New Dialect, just to name a few.

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