Jennifer Shikes Haines
Jennifer Shikes Haines (she/her) is a disabled poet and retired educator based in Southeast Michigan. She enjoys exploring questions of what does, and doesn’t, connect our world. She is a member of the Brooklyn Poets Mentorship Program cohort for 2025. She has poems published or forthcoming in The Patterson Literary Review, coalitionworks, Tension Literary, JAKE and HNDL Mag: Highlighted Neurodivergent & Disabled Life, among others. She can be found on IG @jenshaines77.
Easy read of the poems in the images above:
Letter from my small intestine to my brain
You did it again, friend. Your wires so
crossed, the joints said “enough” and
blast of mega steroids bloomed
a sunflower of Heliobactor Pylori
clinging to my walls, infecting me
with fury.
Chill for once, you sodden piece
of meat. I dream of green forest
where my genius of peristalsis can
truly rest. I want to be an emerald
green snake of brilliance, while you just
drag us in the mud and muck things up
again. No antibiotic will cure this. But
you’re a stubborn bitch, so I’m showered with
laxatives, invasive tests, an endoscopy.
Life with you— unpossible collaboration.
What I Can Do on a Good Day
Wash that large griddle
read the Nap Ministry
take a nap myself
eat a pazcki
eat a power bowl of microgreens
run up Mount Mansfield with my dog
her little legs pumping
my little legs pumping
swim the Channel and end
with a polar bear plunge
ride the Chunnel on my bike
hell, just ride my bike
lift every Ypsilanti organizer
on my shoulders and give them
the stash from all the bad banks
and the good ones
bow to Bernardine Evaristo
high-five Pauli Murray
lift weights with RBG
bring them snacks, tea, kombucha,
wine, the finest whiskey, water
from the Appenines
build the world’s biggest home
with enough rooms
to grow a garden of teens
nourish them with
veggie omelets and fruitcrisp
grow multiple ears
and listen, listen,
my many ears sponges
from the Great Barrier Reef.