By Daniel Lawless

Freundenschreck
—from Definitions

Freudenschreck, or “intense pleasure-fright“ – leave it to the Germans 
To coin a word for the fleeting sense of being seized
By such an inexplicable joy it verges on terror. 
Or maybe it’s inexplicable terror pretending to be joy. 
Also, a physical phenomenon: neurologists say the amygdala 
Glows red as a jack ball whether subjects gaze at images of planetesimals or gallows.
Picture a joyride, the Appalachian pin-brides of Eugene Meatyard. 
Put yourself in the shoes of Aiyana Clemmons, 44,
Of Peru, Indiana, a long-time congregant of the End Days 
Christian Church according to the Gazette, who may have had a seizure 
That caused her to “shiver all over” although another passerby reported
Hearing her shout “Praise Him!” or “Praise God!” before “she sort of rocked him” 
Before casting that beautiful child into that cold river.

First published in Ploughshares

The Importance of Arts, Culture, The Creative Process, and how this project resonates with you:
 Of course, The arts and humanities are...everything, or almost. I love this project -- anything we can do to promote the arts is very much to the common good.

What was the inspiration for your creative work?
A newspaper article, actually.

Tell us something about the natural world that you love and don’t wish to lose. What are your thoughts on the kind of world we are leaving for the next generation?
I love the Falls of Ohio. My friend, a visual artist, collects debris that washes up there -- styrofoam, buttons, disposable lighters, etc. -- and fashions cultures from it, thus reminding viewers -- of the despoiling of a beautiful, and historical, place.

Daniel Lawless’s latest book is I Tell You This Now, from Červená Barva Press. Recent/forthcoming poems in Asheville Review, Barrow Street,, Dreaming Awake: New Prose Poetry from the U.S., Australia, and the U.K., FIELD, JAMA, Los Angeles Review, Manhattan Review, Massachusetts Review, New American Writing, Prairie Schooner, Ploughshares, Poetry International, SOLSTICE, upstreet, among others.. A recipient of a continuing Shifting Foundation grant, he is the founder and editor of Plume: A Journal of Contemporary Poetry, and the annual Plume Poetry anthologies.