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Nipuni
Nipuni
F I am a poet who shares her work on online forums and in the print media.
Clipping my poems so that they look cute on instagram so that they huddle like chickens bound in a butcher’s lorry making way for pictures feet- in –a tangle, like snipping a plant for Bonsai you think it’s the branches that you prune but it’s really the roots that you mangle.
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Jun 5, 2024
Jun 5, 2024 at 2:52 AM UTC
Poems on instagram
Losing you, like a moon beam fallen onto my palm solidified in the absence of my gaze grown terrestrial in my naivety heavier-earth-bound, both of us victims of gravity.
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May 4, 2024
May 4, 2024 at 10:53 PM UTC
Like a moonbeam on my palm
I see the fear in your eyes That I will not fit within Encircled arms; And that I will spill over Arrangements and customs- Slide through gaps in bonds Like a hare fleeing a farm; That I will question Even facts- Woo contention, Talk back- Not valiantly smile when snubbed, or purr contentedly when rubbed. But walk through with you I will This life, if not this world- Guard you against adversity, Cherish you with a fierce motherliness. I will bless you If not with beds, With great robust bushes of roses So, take me, But take me in small doses.
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Jun 8, 2021
Jun 8, 2021 at 9:29 PM UTC
Take me in small doses
Back then at school, We had life-skills- Every week we would be taught, the girls, Handicrafts by a gentle, lady-like woman. They taught us macramé, well after it went out of style. How to unravel and tie-up spools and spools of thread- Into fancy knots and whirls. You could hang it on your ceiling Just beneath the fan, or over your bed. Then there was the letter box, Made out of cardboard and wrapping paper. But not to hang outside, of course. The glue would dissolve in the rain water. And the letters would all cry out in jets of blue ink. Speaking of ink, we made a miniscule brush Out of old, old pens And human hair. It measured about four inches And you could clean the ridges between tiles With it, or brush your moustache if you had one. The class was always there You couldn’t skip it, miss it or play truant. Life-skills, you will need them when you grow And you’ll thank me when you flaunt- Them to your cynical mothers- in-law. Nipuni Ranaweera
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Apr 29, 2021
Apr 29, 2021 at 5:38 AM UTC
Life Skills
A poem once came to me. I was pouring water On my infant’s fragile head. I didn’t want to lose count So, I let it slide, down and down And it lay there, on the ground Quite dead. A poem once winked at me Skulking beyond the shadowy shrubs Where my child walks before being fed. But because he must return, and Not miss his customary turn- I turned it into a lullaby And wheeled it home to bed.
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Apr 22, 2021
Apr 22, 2021 at 8:49 PM UTC
The Never Poem
Like obstinate waves upon a composed beach- I pound on you, vertically, I crash on you, horizontally. I lash at you in all manner of ways, In all manner of waves, Because you are there -so solid- Momentarily obscured by spray But never really out of reach. Each time I come, riding Triumphantly on sea horses- Or simply pushed ashore by other forces, a gutted residue, a hapless prey you are always there- unsmiling, you wait for my unpredictable beat- eroding ever so slightly- a little, each time but providing, as always- Land for my feet.
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Apr 20, 2021
Apr 20, 2021 at 11:59 AM UTC
Land for my Feet
( After the Easter Bombing, 2019) To daily travelers like me, Mr. Aziz was a common sight on the train. Small and bearded, clean and bright He was the perfect train companion. Newspaper in hand, brief case clutched tight He would smartly stand up for the ladies, book tickets and hold parcels For the less fortunate. An old hand in the Kandy line His neat little person ideal For walking between temperamental Carriages, rubbing intimately Against ill-fitted hinges, Despite creaking bolts And rusty fringes. When the trains started again, mid-May He was a changed man. Suddenly his clothes hung on him loosely And people looked at him askance. They slithered further from him In the ticketing queue- And no ladies wished to hold his parcels. There were subtle evasions And cruel barbs- And one day he comes, his beard gone The valleys and shadows of his face open to Our stripping gaze. He settles himself awkwardly in a corner-seat Wishing himself invisible And somehow, I know, That this is the beginning of an end, He will perhaps retire a few months in advance, Sit on his porch in glum silence- Recalling the magical sway of old carriages, Rubbing with familiarity through tunnels and lanes- Like old lovers, though ill-matched, arrange creaking limbs on creaking beds. Despite creaking bolts and corroded chains.
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Apr 1, 2021
Apr 1, 2021 at 9:47 PM UTC
Mr. Aziz- A passage to Colombo- 2019