Spiritual & Mythic Landscapes
Poems exploring the symbolic language of myth, spirit, and prayer through a literary lens. These works draw on ritual, sacred imagery, and inner landscapes—blending mythology, contemplative thought, and the quiet mysteries that shape human experience.
-
Sins of the Fathers – a poem
A haunting winter train ride leaving Kraków becomes a surreal meditation on inheritance, identity, and the strange tenderness of memory—where a grandfather’s stolen silver beard becomes a child made of breath and snow.
-
Adam & Eve: a love story
Before the fall, there was the naming of desire. This poem offers a provocative, intimate look at the moment Adam and Eve discover sexuality, language, and sin in the Garden of Eden.
-
My Grandmother Told Fortunes – a poem
My grandmother told the fortunesof caged birds, plucked yellowor orange feathers, burned themover coals - reads the grey smoke like prayersor tomorrow’s headlines: “A certain bird in a certain city,in a specific house…
-
The Cathedral of the Madeleine – a poem
This poem about doubt and prayer follows a speaker in an empty church, reflecting on a homeless man, a weary Jesus on the crucifix, and the difficult act of praying as an unbeliever.
-
Have You Seen My Story?
A lyric essay about searching for a lost story through surreal visits to a friend, an old lover, and a mother who can no longer answer clearly.