“Identity” Featured Artist Varsha Saraiya-Shah
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back Houstonian poet Varsha Saraiya-Shah with “Number Three, A Mystery,” exploring her identity as the third a girl child rather than the hoped for boy …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back Houstonian poet Varsha Saraiya-Shah with “Number Three, A Mystery,” exploring her identity as the third a girl child rather than the hoped for boy …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back writer and poet Pan Piper from Scotland with two poems about the struggle for personal autonomy and self-acceptance. “beginning to belong” celebrates the sense …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome poet Allan Lake, based in Melbourne, with his memoir poem “My Hippie Life.” Remembering hitchhiking across Canada as a teenager newly graduated from high school, …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome Berlin-based writer Nancy Chapple with her essay “Inculcation,” which explores how some male partners gaslight women, indoctrinating them with the belief that their personal growth …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to announce the winner of our “Identity” poetry contest, Akua Lezli Hope’s “Black Orpheus V.” We had wonderful poetry submitted for this theme and there were eight …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome Australian poet and writer Doug Jacquier. “Reflections” was one of the finalists for our “Belonging” poetry contest and shows how those who have an urge …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome Iowan poet Martha Sherick Shen with “Hollywood Juniper,” the winner of our “Vulnerable” poetry contest. We chose “Hollywood Juniper” because it functioned on so many …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome back writer and poet Kathy Labrum McVittie from the UK with two pearls of poetry that deal with types of detachment. The first, “spontaneously, a …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome poet Sarah Dickenson Snyder from Massachusetts with “From Eve to Me.” Looking back to the life of the biblical Eve, “all the long years she …
I understand now that no one else in the world knows what I should do. The experts don’t know, the ministers, the therapists, the magazines, the authors, my parents, my …
