A place for stories about chronic illness, disability, mental health, and neurodivergence.
For people like Caitlin Thomson and her family, a societal lack of COVID precautions is even more isolating than the early stages of the pandemic.
In his prose poem, survivor Phil Scearce writes about what it’s like to live after recovering from cancer.
“Her dying happened in slow motion, like in a/dream you know is a dream but you/can’t wake up from.”
Alan Abrams writes about grief, love, and baseball in his latest poem for Knee Brace Press.
“It’s my first time. I sink into cushy recliner. A monitor tracks blood pressure. The therapist adheres a finger sensor, a final electrode as I shut my eyes.”
In his latest poem, Andrew Hall writes about disability in the context of a relationship.
In this poem about grief and death, poet Alan Abrams tells us what it’s like to watch a friend fade away, knowing you could be next.
“I’ll spend my whole life/Disentangling from you/That’s all fine/I can handle it.”
Eli Underwood is a writer, organizer, and archivist living with CPTSD, ME/CFS, fibromyalgia, and Long Covid. Read their poem, Invalid Invalid.
For our one hundredth post at Knee Brace Press, poet Casey Sharp writes about her experience with ADHD.