pounding heart; tunnel vision; racing thoughts; black outs;
blood pouring from ears</p>
</div>
<divclass="col-md-8 verse">
Geas
Wing
Dark
Horizon
</div>
</div>
<divclass="row">
<divclass="col-md-4 text-right">
<h3>VI</h3>
<p><em>Geese Level:</em><br/>
Terrifying</p>
<p><em>Expect:</em><br/>
tinnitus; piloerection; shortness of breath; uneven gait</p>
</div>
<divclass="col-md-8 verse">
I’d rather owls.
Owls, as though geese were turned inside out,
made less evil.
Still portentous,
Still momentous,
Just less terrifying.
Owls are okay.
I can think about owls.
</div>
</div>
<divclass="row">
<divclass="col-md-4 text-right">
<h3>VII</h3>
<p><em>Geese Level:</em><br/>
Uncomfortable</p>
<p><em>Expect:</em><br/>
subdermal itching; formication</p>
</div>
<divclass="col-md-8 verse">
Life within a comfortable grid.
Parallel lines
Interrupting narrowing circles
Of birds in flight.
Travel in straight lines.
Turn at right angles.
Trace the roof of your mouth
With wet tongue.
I’m not afraid of geese anymore
Because I can step on them now.
I’m big enough.
</div>
</div>
<divclass="row">
<divclass="col-md-4 text-right">
<h3>VIII</h3>
<p><em>Geese Level:</em><br/>
Birds</p>
<p><em>Expect:</em><br/>
birds</p>
</div>
<divclass="col-md-8 verse">
Ritual thinking
Driven by geese —
By lines, by grids, by food —
By numbers and neat delineation.
And I’m left with questions:
Why the portents?
Why the anxiety?
Or maybe:
Did I take my meds this morning?
Failing that,
Can I just have the comfort of prayer
Or the ecstasy of signs
Without bleak paranoia
Over circling birds?
</div>
</div>
*Thanks to C.M.*
-----
!{First-place winner of the [Typewriter Emergencies Poetry Contest](https://www.typewriteremergencies.com/single-post/2018/02/13/Beneath-her-coat-was-a-whole-identity---1st-Place-Winner).}!{In *Eigengrau*}
'''
Beneath her coat was a whole identity:
A subtle form of ideas under soft fur,
A constantly shifting mass of meaning...
And somehow, she pulled it off.
She would go for days without shedding a thing,
And then, as if a bottle rolling off a counter,
She would shatter, sending shards of self flying,
And then we'd all see.
Then we'd all see the terror, the joy,
Then we'd all see the grief at nothing,
Then we'd all hear her say,
"I'm not built for a life with death in it."
And slowly, she'd pick herself back up
And find a brand new way to piece herself together