Embroidery

Kerfe Roig

She was weary of her fragile subsistence, of the looming and
inevitable collapse of any scaffolding of support. The gatekeepers
distributed no methods of survival, only rampant indifference.
Despair mingled with neglect. She floated on swirling waters that
never seemed to drift towards any shore. Her solitude ached like a
dark tunnel too small to hold even the palest of light.

Each day became an impossible pilgrimage through the immensity
of her hunger, her grief. Where was she going? She did not know.

in the beginning
empty hands—gathering, then
listening, feeling

Her hands became entwined with the rhythms of the circles she had
traveled, over and over, spinning the earth’s gifts into fibers that
shimmered with their own light. She passed them through the
portal of the needle, the intersected web of fabric, in, out, over,
under, through.

thread transformed—
trees, birds, landscape, sky—
sanctuary


A resident of New York City, Kerfe Roig enjoys transforming words and images into something new. Her poetry and art have been featured online by Silver Birch Press, Feral, Pure Haiku, Zen Space, Visual Verse, Collaborature, and The Ekphrastic Review, and published in Ella@100, Incandescent Mind, The Raw Art Review, The Anthropocene Hymnal, and The Polaris Trilogy. Follow her explorations on her blogs, methodtwomadness.wordpress.com (which she does with her friend Nina) and kblog.blog.

This poem appeared in What We Hold On To: Poems of Coping, Connection, and Carrying On — Winter 2026, published by The Chaos Section Poetry Project. We’ll be featuring each poem from the collection individually in the weeks ahead. You can read the full collection or download a free PDF of the chapbook here.



22 responses to “Embroidery”

  1. “thread transformed” 💙

    1. Thanks Merril. That’s the beauty of it.

      1. You’re welcome, Kerfe.

  2. […] I’ve also had three poems featured in “What We Hold On To”, published by The Chaos Section Poetry Project. You can find “Embroidery” here. […]

  3. Beautiful in describing a type of salvation in creation, artistic vision.

    1. Thanks Dora. Stitching has been my refuge for a long time.

  4. I love the threading and creating in Kerf’s poem that strings the heart in beauty and transformation! 💗

    1. Thanks Cindy. Those threads are what bind us.

  5. Bitter sweet. The poem tranform grief into refuge. And Nature as an embroidery work. 💙

    1. Thank you. To work with our hands is often to find refuge I think. And nature is the best inspiration.

  6. This is beauty with a long, dark shadow

    1. Thanks Robbie. They are often intertwined.

      1. Yes, I agree. Like a frozen rose 🌹

  7. I’m still not clear which I like more, Kerf’s artwork or her words, but I know for sure that I like how she melds both and makes it her own. I love reading her words. Here and in her blog. Thanks for sharing. Wonderful work.

    1. Thanks Selma. I’m always hoping the words and art compliment each other.

      1. They always do. It’s your trademark my friend. Never doubt. Always lovely.

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