- 42 minutes ago
By Isabel Hoin

I had a vision of Jesus once— yes, a vision of Jesus and my deceased grandfather and also my deceased twin who I never met but somehow he was my age in this particular vision and in that moment I assumed I had the vision like all the priests and nuns and even the popes and possibly the saints have felt before and then I felt special, somehow, but that was when I was in catholic school for that one year before I left and opened my mind to the many texts it stored and still stores and now I want to tell my past self this: read and
breathe
in as much information you can possibly hold;
the cracking of book spines only brings growth while
simultaneously crumbling indoctrination you were never aware
of— and then it hits you
like the breeze of an opened window, in fall,
and in this deep, submersive breath of amazement I close my eyes, again, and rethink this once-in-a-lifetime occurrence over and over Sunday after Sunday while seated in the very last pew at 8am and remember to genuflect, and then kneel, and then stand, and then kneel, Sunday after Sunday
and then today.
Isabel Hoin is a Perry Morgan Fellow (Poetry) in Old Dominion University's MFA program, and her work is already in or is forthcoming in Vagabond City, Door=Jar Magazine, Blue Press Magazine, Wild Roof Journal, Voices/1922 Review, La Picciolėtta Barca Review, and Pensive: A Global Journal of Spirituality & the Arts at Northeastern University, among others.
"Nube Nera" art by Federico Federici.

