Poetry, Ezra Gatlin
rose-colored glasses
sometimes, i think about dying
in a place where my sins backlight my regrets
i am the poltergeist
seamripping crushed velvet in my sleep
i am the dancing santa
on the dashboards of a suicide heist
drunk off cherry wine and cyanide rum
for a few short weeks in april,
cherry blossoms fall like rain
homesick kanzan kiss the foreheads
of unsuspecting travellers,
begging the wind to take them home
stupid sakura petals don’t know,
they’ll die dusting rooftops
i want to be good
where soul meets body
i want to be beautiful
when pain flays passion
i want to drive past my guilt
while death becomes her
washing expensive stationery in watermelon juice
pressed magnolias and dessicated pulp
crumble beneath my fingers
i found god in a whore house
and on barren beach
just before the tsunami of
japanese cherry blossom
dances with the birds
Ezra Gatlin (they/any) is a black, transmasculine poet from Aurora, Colorado. They have new or forthcoming publications in Bluebird’s Scribe Review, Arcana Poetry Press, Page Gallery Journal, and more. They are a 2025 Poet–in–Residence with Bitter Melon Review, and are seeking publication for their first manuscript, “I think there’s something wrong with me.” They can be found at @bloodbornepoetry on Instagram.

