Tag Archives: Leavings Literary Magazine

AARON BANKS.April 2026


AARON BANKS

Photo by Jeff Sirkin


 

A DWELLING

A sense of self is made

from imagined fragments.

The only way the selves

communicate is with post-

its, strings, & some kind of

bird. None of us completed

the trainings, so silence

between me’s. What ifs,

like that, they pile into

stackables, & each a puzzle

of a thousand pieces.

To finish them all is not

realistic, so I only find

the shapes I like & keep it

moving. Sometimes,

it’s about color, and others

are dependent on how I woke,

how I feel my body move

through spacetime that day.

My life revolves around

collecting these pieces,

& yes, I’ve completed a

number of these puzzles.

Enough to say I shouldn’t

say I know I’ve wasted

away, off up in the corner

of the little room in my face.

In there hangs a picture of

no one you should know

in particular. A picture &

a mirror & nothing other

than a bed & a spot to piss

& dump & wash my face

feet buns & yes the rest

but please stop. Done. I’ve

said more than what’s fair

about my assortments, &

please don’t forget to forget

where you stumbled.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

REMOTE

Sometimes, I look at what surrounds my body

for an opening line. I’ll hold my head in my hand

and face it at an angle toward a window. Now, one

car sits parked and beaded with wet and sun. How

to decide if the clouds are advancing or retreating

depends on where you’ll be in an hour or two. So,

I waited about 5 minutes, waited and cleaned the

earbuds from their ring of grime, and by then, they

were all out of frame. An hour later, when I changed

locations, I saw the fleet, only blocked by surrounding

land. With this view, set now eye to eye with the

tallest buildings, from a distance, to take it all in, I see

that we’ve been invaded by dark whites that look

to have a flat base, while the tops, classic cotton balls.

Hi. Do you know where I am? I’ll give you a hint:

At the top of an actual hill. A top with a small lake

of water at its center. Now, a lady with two small dogs

off-leash. She allows them to roam the tree line.

She whistles, and they regroup without noticing.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

VISITORS

It’s never really us locals;

you won’t hear us––never

speaking of it too often.

A few more weeks until

it’s mostly gray all over.

I think it’s due to reaching

exchanges, fumbling, and

landing on weather chats

and exotic hand gestures.

Hear them discussing moods

and colors. Elbows point

wide, taking room. Check-in

with us mainly by eye

contact to make sure. Locals

seem at peace when days

turn toward shade. Soon,

browns and muted greens

lost in snow. I want to be

clear: The others are more

than welcome, even though

there are few dialogues

with us while buying up all

the pastries and mugs in all

the cafés. They seem to think

highly of wearing cloth gloves

and scarves. You hear them,

how their joints scream

as they shuffle from cars.

They mean well, stay long,

leave unannounced and

crumbs from their cakes

and jam bars. Their fingers

cram in their mouths: Taste

this brambleberry filling.

They offer their hand, and

it seems rude not to kiss

their purple palms.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

MEANWHILE

I’ve been practicing extended eye contact

with my wife. It’s been helping with our

nonverbals. We’ve always had the practice

of exchanging platonic hugs in the kitchen

to remind one another of our friendship.

She has been saying to use nicer words.

I tell her the chemtrails are vibrating

guitar strings. She likes thinking of when

we were dating and how I still don’t have

much to say. I ask if that’s a problem, how

I have less to say. I think the problem is

with biting my tongue and cheeks at night.

5 minutes of not breaking eye contact seems

like the night before a field trip. In gaze,

the shades of her face unwind into a May

in second grade, a trip to the Rose Garden

when Mom chaperoned. We had to cross

some roads, she made our group hold hands,

and before she looked my way, I thought

I wouldn’t even reach out.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

BLUE LIGHT

The blue crack glows out

the laundry room. If there’s

light there’s air I heard once

from This Old House. Cool

air seeps out the laundry room.

The basement is different

after daylight savings. Seems

finished with sandpaper, the

smudge glow in old films when

a lady’s on screen. So, the

basement seems like a lady

is standing slightly off-

frame. Like lightning, blue

crack has me on my knees,

turns my hands royal purple.

I call it blue light sickness.

I bathe in blue light sunsets.

I wonder if it’s early enough

to dance before the dinner.

I wrote “Ask This Old House

inquiring more about the

blue light and the moon

and if either has to do with

my dancing in the dark.

They never aired a reply,

and besides, I don’t care

for their expertise. I speak

from jealous daydreams

of my wanting to cut tile

into elaborate shapes.

Watch a decent tile cutter,

how they never measure.

I desire that faith but rooted

in self-defense, leaning

toward knife skills–

between West Side Story

and The Iron Chef. Like

opening a man’s gut just

for Maria. Oh, Maria.

Who would throw a life

away to kiss you twice?

The pool hall scene is filled

with fleeting innocence,

but I don’t recall it correctly

because I once dated Maria

in middle school, and perhaps

only because of her name.

She almost had me wanting

to cut a man. Something

about that name. Maria

brings me right to blue and

finished ladies in sandpaper

light. I hold my breath in the

presence of the blue, and

I pray to the giant ball of lint

and repent to my God in an

exhale. How should I know

when I went too far? Perhaps

I should admit I‘ve been

skipping church to do more

laundry, to have a bit more

time in blue, and been buying

up more socks to feed the dryer.

A barrel of footies for the glow,

for more blue, bluer royals

and purples, which means more

violet until the beast rings.

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

COCO

Something about what I’m not.

Now, about the season the trees

are in. My body is in a space

at all times, so here are some details

about my whereabouts. From here,

assume my dress. Assume I’m not

new. I ignore the presence of

mind, & first, steady my body,

my hands. No cant’s & not’s here,

but time to be & time to leave.

Hmmm mhmmm hmm. It’s okay

to be singing to yourself. At night,

the last memory I have is rocking

my body; don’t know where that

habit begun. I’m worried when

I’m not surprised at waking.

To the public, it’s called feeling

low. A doctor calls it you should,

you need, you know. What I know

is the sound of these birds, but

their names, I do not. It seems

knowing that is doing too much.

There are few things important to

my breathing. Too much in the news

overnight. What it was was just

another tight revision, new casting,

& episodes that go & go. Someone

& their dog have come & gone.

What I heard is the name Coco.

When they were, they went over

to that tree, growing fireball fruits

that cover the earth. Arm reached

& selected one, & said, Coco,

did you know I can eat this fruit?

 

 

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*** ** ***

 

A THEORY WITH MANY NAMES

With everything happening at once,

it’s raining somewhere, which means

someone is left standing getting wet.

Now, we have two types of people:

Those who choose and those without

a choice to remain. Now pick one.

From here, we now have information

that can serve as a component in a

formula that’s loosely tied to a theory

that I already know you. With a few

interchanging variables, this works

out the same with different types of

pastas, and when and how long it takes

when one chooses to cook one. Between

rain and who’s a certain kind of pasta

eater, that’s pretty much all America.

A few weeks ago, I took a linguistics

questionnaire, and it told me exactly

where I am. This was enough reason,

and I figured I should begin to cook

up a theory to prove why I don’t see

the point in traveling. Did you know

if it’s spring, and it’s raining, the higher

likelihood there will be a pasta dinner?

Of course, this is all theoretical, so,

I feel my job’s nearly done, but it’s clear

where this research is headed if it gets

into the wrong hands. It’s a theory of

freethinking. Well, more like a theory

of wet windows. Seeing, but a bit more

distorted, though one should have some

idea of what’s on the other side. Between

the rain and the pasta, please take into

account sleep. You should be able to

guess that in the formula, the symbol

for sleep are Z’s, not to be confused

with dreams, which account for most

of what we don’t consider when we’re

going through daily motions. A theory

of seasons in a place that experiences

all four in their purest form. A theory

of Rochester, New York, where day

can slip into abstraction, like any place.

 

 

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AARON BANKS


Aaron Banks
is a poet who lives in Rochester, NY, where he was born and raised. He received an MFA from Warren Wilson in 2022. He works at the URochester in their McNair Scholars Program (TRIO), and teaches poetry workshops at the Rochester Institute of Technology. He has attended the Bread Loaf Writers Conference since 2024, returning as part of the administrative staff in 2025, and will again in 2026. He is seeking publication of his first poetry collection, Cottonwood Man. Poems from the collection have been published in Leavings Literary Magazine, Zócalo Public Square, The Swannanoa Review, and in Obsidian (forthcoming).

 

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April 2026.AARON BANKS