"One Thing Led To Another" is a 100 day project by Ana Wang. Each day contains a 2-colour gradient paired with a prose poem.

New worlds daily: March 3, 2025—present.

  1. Read more: What is a metaphor

    What is a metaphor


    On the day you were taught what a metaphor was, the test to confirm your understanding of the topic: How is snow like a mother’s love? You jot down answers at breakneck speed, wanting to be the fastest with the most right answers. You don’t get to read yours out loud. No one does. And anyway, if it were really a test, you would’ve failed because twenty years later it hits you after an argument about how you ended up like you, why you can’t be like xyz, and you don’t have a good answer except you never thought you were strange, after all your mom is exactly the same. Stifled by the implication that gravity was upside down, you walk out the door into a chilly night in January, look up at the stars like seeds once dipped in glitter to see the first snowflake drift by, alone and unsure as a baby deer on a highway. It keeps falling and never touches the ground but when you wake up the next day, the ground has been covered by a layer of stardust reconfigured as snow.

  2. Read more: ROYGBIV

    ROYGBIV


    Home hums, the air thick like the inside of an overripe cherry split open. Kool-Aid stains on the counter, a bowl of Froot Loops dissolving into milk colouring it sweet, and a chair always slightly pulled out. Seat’s warm. Honeyed light drips through the blinds, just behind the boxy TV that’s been left on too long now making low buzzy sounds. Outside, the sun shakes. Vines creep through the cracks, flickers of backyards and then plants everywhere, dying, dying then replaced by new plants. The floorboards remember every step of your light-up sneakers and then the clack-clack of stilettos when you were learning to walk for a second time. A mirror splints into every shade of blue, folding into the hush; it’s the only thing that’s seen all of you. All the shadows and stairways leading nowhere, plot twists and close encounters, and then, finally, somewhere—a doorway, the shape of something just before you wake, realizing you’ve been singing the wrong lyrics to a song for years, and off tune and off path, here and alive and with a cloud in your belly, you still managed to make a home.

  3. Read more: Nostalgia

    Nostalgia


    You just finished milking the cow and smelling like hay and thunderstorms, you head back in. The leftover pasta has gone cold. The extra basil and every cherry tomato, the kind that bursts, stale. There are bottles on the table, uncapped and utterly un-arranged. You turn on the TV while you wait. The barn is made of aluminum alloy and the cow is 50% real. What milk, there hasn’t been since you left earth 14 years ago. You drown the silence in more extrait de parfum, let it fill the air with solid ground and ideas of a former heaven. It feels closer than ever but you're in the bubble eating ice cream.

  4. Read more: Blue Night

    Blue Night

    9:43pm in June and the night is ripe. Dyed dark denim, skinny. Blueberry stained lips. A lukewarm, slow-beating pulse still wishing for things to change. Blueberry milk nails. Faded baby blue jeans, wide and saggy. 5:42am twenty years later. 

  5. Read more: Mythic telephone

    Mythic telephone

    The goddess on the moon isn't real but the story still get passed on. Your mother said Pearl was her favourite name when you asked, then two decades later when you asked her again she says she doesn’t remember. All this time you took her words to heart, thought about her dumplings every time you walked by the fancy jewelry store, caught yourself staring at the rounded edge of your Mac mini on the corner of your desk. There is no one out there but the stars burn bright and lovely. Pearl farming was once a science experiment, and you were once a dream.

  6. Read more: Carnival vs carnivore

    Carnival vs carnivore

    Next to the mall for old people, a cacophony of youth. Spring break, fresh puddles, a bed of cotton candy. The smell of waffle cone and rubber boots, the garish plastic tarp that can't hide car fumes from the parking lot. You are holding someone’s hand, their face is vague. An obnoxiously loud alarm sounds. You jerk awake, the candy apple has been bitten. Your fingers open like a jellyfish releasing its prey, a reflex you learned by now and a memory of a memory escapes; an echo.

"Nature abhors a gradient."