THOUGHTS


poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

New Math

The confusing, devastating reality of the “new math” that has been introduced into my life in the last few years. For me, it’s a zero-sum game.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Next Door

When I worked in Virginia, my cubicle had a window which looked out to a small house with a front porch, where I witnessed the real-life drama of a family contending with the slow and ravaging effects of cancer.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Dead End

Making one of those life-altering decisions that involves paving a completely new path can lead to a kind of paralysis.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Connor Haiku

I wrote a series of haiku during the first year of my son’s life. As you’ll see, humor and poetry are great coping mechanisms during the stressful, sleepless days (and nights) of taking care of a baby.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

The Stage

The need to connect with other souls can often supersede the strongest feelings of stage fright.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Autumn

Many years ago, a friend asked me to write a poem about autumn. This concept came quickly.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Home

Misunderstood lyrics from Peter Gabriel’s “Mercy Street” (“words that haunt like home” instead of the actual “words support like bone”) became the inspiration for a poem describing the feeling of not having a place in this world.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Christa

Written for a dear friend who flourished, despite a complicated and disadvantaged upbringing.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Familiarity

Exploring a relationship that seems to embody the adage, “familiarity breeds contempt,” but has an unexpected moment of tenderness. Love is complicated.

Read More
nonfiction Heather Harwood nonfiction Heather Harwood

Scraps

Two days before my father's funeral, I stepped through the door of 951 A, a modest apartment; Dad's for the past 35+ years. There was a lot to take in, viscerally and emotionally.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Real

There is a lot of imagery and emotion here that was present during my college years. And, there is that sense of longing and loneliness that has been shadowing me my whole life.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

The Ride Home

I wrote this after driving home with my son, asleep in his car seat. I guess I was overwhelmed by love and the gravity of what being a parent means.

Read More
poetry Heather Harwood poetry Heather Harwood

Moving Without Footprints

After having moved seven times in 20+ years (a total of five different states), I wrote this poem about the difficulty of putting down roots and feeling like you’ve made an impact, however small.

Read More
fiction Heather Harwood fiction Heather Harwood

Still Time

He caught a glimpse of his face reflected in the bottle. God, he looked pale; partly because of the residue of the makeup, partly because he was old. At 50, he should be considered “middle-aged,” but after 35 years working in the circus full-time, he considered himself old.

Read More
fiction Heather Harwood fiction Heather Harwood

Sight

I heard distant, cheerful chirping: so sweet and reminding me of the summers of my childhood, where my bedroom window was just steps from the woods and I would hear a chorus of songbirds seemingly trying to wake me every morning from my deep, dreamless sleep. As I listened more intently, I noticed the chirping was closer, and from one bird. Chirp, pause, chirp, pause. It was almost rhythmic and…digital.

Read More