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No One Counts the Bodies Jesus Walked Past

Kensington spreads its legs—
lets the city crawl in,
dripping Xylazine / fentanyl / tranq,
open sore veins
moaning dirty dirges.

False prophets—
all piss and panic—
bark half-lies
through decaying molars,
fingering apathy
for spare change.

You smell it
five blocks before you enter.
The stench tests your soul
before it reaches your throat.
Narcan.
burnt spoons.
street toilet.
Dreams twitch under heat lamps—
larval things
too stubborn to die.

Hope?
Hope’s a half-smoked, laced Newport
balanced on a baby’s lip
next to a trash fire
named Jesus—
too high for resurrection,
too forgotten for a siren.

Last week:
a girl—
breasts bare, pants soaked,
her eyes rolled white
like God unplugged her
mid-sentence.

No one stopped.
Not the bus.
Not the clouds.
Not even the man
who stepped over her

like lint
on his pressed
Sunday best.

And me—
I didn’t stop.
didn’t even swallow.
I watched,
one hand buried in my coat,
the other holding
a prayer
that never made it
past the flicker
of a piss-warm lamppost.

Self-excoriation,
performed in the dark—
a private ritual,
scraping shame
into the marrow
of my thin-sin skin.

There’s a church on the corner.
Padlocked.
Its sign flaps
like a dying wing:

SUNDAY: ALL WELCOME.

It’s Thursday.
She won’t make it
to Sunday.

Behind Rite Aid,
a boy slumps—
Spider-Man backpack,
veins dammed sewer pipes.

The sidewalk tucks him in
with spite,
gravel,
and the excrement of things
that used to be dignity.
piled like human detritus
in the shadow of convenience.

A needle juts from his neck
like a crooked antenna,
tuned to some final station
where deliverance never broadcasts.

What kind of God
lets the body rot—
weeping pus—
before the soul
opens its eyes?

What kind of city
whitewashes grief
with slogans
no one reads
on walls
no one dares to touch?

I brought bread.
blankets.
verses I thought
could raise the dead.

They ate them
like roaches.
rats.
mouths numb—
rats the size of cats.

Grace—
a broken syringe
on the altar
of already-too-late.

This isn’t pretty poetry.
This is splatter—
brain-matter
curdling into blood.

This is an elegiac psalter
etched in body waste
on a Campbell’s soup can’s
rusted belly.

This is communion
through a needle.

“Thy kingdom come”—
scratched in fecal blood
behind Family Dollar.

And the miracle?
Not salvation.
Not even survival.

It’s her—
two blocks down,
still humming something
like a lullaby
for desecrated corpses,
as she trades her last dollar
for an hour
of dissolving, drifting
in her collapsing,
gangrenous,
abscessing veins.

And me—
I didn’t come
to write this.
I came—
to what?

yes—
to what?

to scream
until my throat
bled bloody mercy?

But I gagged.
Like always.
Like we all do.

Instead, I write—
because I’ve seen angels
trying to fly
with wings wrapped
in devil-black foil.

And you—
reader of tragedy,

ghost-scroller,
voodoo of comfort—

you’ll blink.
scroll.

you’ll bless this poem
with your silence
or a comment
like
“that’s enough.”

You’ll sip brandy,
setup a lunch date
sanitize your hands,
call it brave.

Say someone
should help.
But not you.
No.
Never you.

If it were your daughter
on these broken
and brutal streets—
shirtless, soul-prone,
boils blooming
like blasphemous flowers—

would you still scroll past?

Zoom closer.
See that infection reflection?

That’s you—
stepping over her.
a daughter.

That’s your shadow—
nodding off
beside the boy.
a son.
fading.
degrading.

slobbering.
snotting.

Soon—
police chalked in sidewalk.

That’s your apathy
badly tattooed
on every necrosis-cracked spine
curled in a god-forsaken alleyway.

That was your mercy.
And it festered your birthright
as it died.

There’s a needle
in your reflection too.

Only yours—
was filled,
brimming
anesthetic apathy
in the synapses
of unremembering.

Copyright © Daniel Henry Rodgers | Year Posted 2025

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Date: 8/3/2025 11:16:00 AM

Raw and salient. We isolate our poor and drug addicted neighbors. It has been proven that connection is the gateway to recovery. This piece is important to help people develop empathy. I hope it goes viral.
Date: 8/2/2025 2:27:00 PM

"or a comment like “that’s enough.” - I wish I could comment in some way to make it right for her. Your raw imagery shows your heart, Daniel. I could barely believe this as I read- I mean we see it, but seeing it through ~your words~ really makes it seem more like reality that touches you and me both. God bless you for writing this.
Date: 8/2/2025 12:10:00 PM

An evangelical may believe that the solution lies with Jesus opening our hearts to help those who need our charity. It rarely solves the issue. I’m compelled to mention authorities can sweep up the undocumented-- who work hard to feed there family, yet they leave behind in the streets, the stench of street denizen's who try our souls. Hypocrisy is palpable! Breasts are symbolic of nurturing, when the disgust of the starved spirit unbares itself, we can no longer turn the cheek. The degradation of the least of us is a reflection upon our corrupt and uncaring culture. Daniel, I am phased and faving your testament, pleased you shared __Anaya
Date: 8/2/2025 8:59:00 AM

Oh Daniel, no words for this, absolutely nothing but tears and sorrow. They say you don't know what a person goes through unless you have walked their path and felt what they felt, I don't know what the answer is, but I bet God is crying too. This should never be on any street here on earth, yet it is !!
Date: 8/2/2025 8:29:00 AM

Wow! Dear Daniel, the power of your pen to illuminate the dark world of addiction and our apathetic response to it is blinding it its scouring light. Your imagery is soul striking, forceful as it cuts through and electrocutes one's psyche like lightning! A visceral piece! A brutal reality captured through the lived experience of your savage lens and projected with the brute force of your poetic pen. This poem is a steam roller. You've captured addiction and "anesthetic apathy" with a bold anger, yet with emotional space for compassion and tenderness beseeching readers to find in ourselves the strength and the will to do something and not just "step over" those in the trenches of addiction. My admiration for your poetic expression grows ever greater with every poem I read from you. A Fav! Warmest wishes, my poet friend.. ~Susan
Date: 8/1/2025 7:19:00 PM

Dearest Daniel, my eyes are filled with tears, my heart is heavy. I'm unable to truly place down 'in words' how I'm feeling right now after reading this. (After seeing these images in my mind). I'll just say, I feel lost. Sad. Hugs, Brandy
Date: 8/1/2025 1:34:00 PM

her eyes rolled white like God unplugged her mid-sentence...I saw a young woman laying in the streets of Atlantic City and a man on a park bench, both passed out, looking unnatural, like something from “The Walking Dead.” So disturbing.
Date: 8/1/2025 12:06:00 PM

This is the most powerful piece of poetry I think I have ever read anywhere...it is simply astounding. You need to keep submitting this until, as Anne says, it gets published in a big newspaper. An amazing write. You can only pen somethng like this if you actually see it. I could not write poetry like this poem of yours...I have never 'lived' it. Superb, Daniel. :) john p.s should be POTW.
Date: 7/31/2025 9:22:00 PM

How apathy and empathy works. Your poem gave light to the brutal truth of reality. You are a true poet, my dear friend. Your poem goes deep into the reader's heart and opens the vault of empathy. "would you still scroll past?" This question hits hard and awakens the senses of the reader's mind. I truly believe that everyone should read this poem. Your poem should be published in a big newspaper because your poem has the potential to change the world.
Date: 7/31/2025 9:22:00 PM

May this poem get the recognition that it deserves. With love and respect always, Anne
Date: 7/31/2025 9:16:00 PM

Dearest Daniel, you have shown the part of the world that people often ignore. Your poem is really thought provoking. The kind of poem that leaves the reader thinking and staring at the wall for hours. The first question that came to mind after reading your poem is that if life is a beautiful journey then what about that girl's journey mentioned in the poem? If life is a gift then what about her gift? If life is a dream for some, some dreams are nightmares too. The absurdity of life is confusing
Date: 7/31/2025 5:20:00 PM

Con't ... I need to pray now and ask for help to do what I can for other. May your words guide many into the reality of how many out there need our help. God guide us, and God bless and protect those that are unable to even see the reality of their condition. May God's mercy be on us that have forgotten we are here to serve other. Bless you, Daniel for your sharing of your meaning poetry with us. A FAV for this effort, my friend. Bill
Date: 7/31/2025 5:16:00 PM

Your poem is picture of reality no one want to look at, but a reminder that tragedy is breed in places just like these you so accurately describe, my friend. I feel ashamed that my merger efforts have done little to truly help. In my younger days, I thought I was so good for giving up Thanksgiving with my family to serve meals at a local shelter. I was so shallow and, to be honest, afraid to get my hands dirty and walk among them and offer some form of hope. Thanks for the reminder, Daniel
Date: 7/31/2025 4:55:00 PM

your poem bears witness to a tragic truth, prevalent in so many cities worldwide. Downtown Dallas is rife with homelessness, drugs, and other assorted crimes. Sometimes I ponder, "how did these cities get this far with the problem. I suppose folks were/are turning a blind eye. Well penned, Daniel. Have a blessed evening, Sara
Date: 7/31/2025 2:46:00 PM

Brutal, honest portrayal Daniel. I've seen the videos and even wrote my own Kensington avenue poem. Ever watch the Soft White Underbelly vids? I've seen several. The problem of course is more complicated. Addiction, mental illness, chronic unemployment due to many being unemployable, etc. Some of these folks have received help from multiple agencies multiple times but they keep relapsing into their old ways. Again, complicated with no viable solutions, kinda like the AI problem here on PS
Date: 7/31/2025 2:41:00 PM

WOW!!! What a powerful write/quote. The question is, how did things get so bad, so out of hand??? Today, what does life mean??? Little to many but much to God. God did make each one. How does one lose their life to evil??? Have a blessed day writing away.........

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