Learning to Unfurl

Gillian Wallace

Every time she breathes
the muscle hisses, a sharpness
of tissue refusing its shape. No
position is comfortable, all
hold the weight pressing
her shoulder onto
the bed. Still
she lies there, counting
on her breath to draw her
into the present, fluttering up
to the ceiling then down
as thoughts float past
unattached. Or so
the theory goes. But she
likes theory, can carry
it with her on the bus, use it
to close her mind’s anxious eye
against the crowd and feel her toes.

Gillian Wallace earned her PhD writing her thesis on original sin and is a graduate of the Humber School for Writers. She’s had poems published in The Antigonish Review, ottawater, the Ottawa Arts Review, and forthcoming in Arc Magazine. In 2009, she won the Diana Brebner Prize for Poetry from Arc Magazine.

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“Maple keys are built by nature like helicopter blades, which allows them to propel as far as possible from the mother maple… In these pages, we see the brave, touching, true ways we, too, must embrace the fear and the excitement that comes with leaving where we are rooted.”

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