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sahana-h
sahana-h
Pun enthusiast. Green tea connoisseur. Spotify playlist curator. Aspiring writer. Post-it note addict.
Remember when, he Called me on that rooftop night, Just checking, to make sure I got in—pulled me in for half a hug. Joined me for a dance, Thought about the time he Told me that I’m so fun. One last night out, Young and free, before Careers kick in and reality sets in. It ended before I knew it, On the car ride home, Thinking about what coulda been, He tells me he’s crying, Begging me to stay—but Saying yes is not an option. Remembering when I found out, He was reading the book I had, Or felt he that fire in chest, About our political crisis, in a way like me, In a way I hadn’t seen yet. Spending so long settled in The idea of a man lesser than & Surprised to find the joy In expanding my horizons, Learning about my self imposed limits, Watching them crumble in, Realizing I am capable of Every bit of the life I wanna live. Found solace in the similar ways we think, A sketchbook of drawings, Connecting each & every limb, Far far away from spaced repetition. Death by a thousand cuts Ambition, something else That I didn’t think I was looking for. You took me by surprise, Chelsea boots in that kitchen, Didn’t ask me where i was from. Between the bridges and lights, Guitar riffs playing in the back You grabbed my hand, Spun me round, drink in another. Kinda hated the smell of your breath, The way you patted me on the head. When you begged me to stay, Under the night sky, every sway.
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Oct 5, 2019
Oct 5, 2019 at 6:04 PM UTC
summer's fleeting
BREAKING NEWS Lights flash: a shooting in a church. A white man who hates the black-- he thinks he can get rid of their "poison", their culture, their beliefs, their stories with bullets and higher-than-mighty flags stitched to his jacket. They call it a "tragedy." (it's terrorism) A few words of sympathy, even Hollywood is tweeting about it, holy cow! Isn't it crazy that they care? Ten seconds later, we're on to trending, trendy topic number two: something about Samsung cellphones. I think, maybe, these news people (journalists, they call themselves) they must be in denial, too. Cause no way, no way, would they brush that under the rug. The little girl who played dead, as a man physically lodged his "beliefs" into the heads, the hearts, the blood of her brothers and sisters. It must be denial. I pray that they will stop and see the mural in Charleston, SC, and help the paintbrush drop. Because 400 years of this supremacist crap is 400 years too many. And if a picture is 1,000 words let's start with one: equality.
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Jun 19, 2015
Jun 19, 2015 at 2:48 PM UTC
Charleston, SC
I'm in love with summer. Standstill air, dandelions drifting the weight of the sky pressing white heat. Cold, waves beating the shore, ceaselessly into the past, of when I was drowned in your dreams. I'm in love with autumn. Crisp air, Nudging leaves off gnarly oaks and tall, regal cedars. Lost in the anagram of colors, I see fire, I see blood red. I see a Faustian bargain but we won. I'm in love with winter. The biting cold in my fingertips, the solitude of confinement, walls of windows show snow that blankets every edge. And the birds that have left, to warmer places. Opportunity, that's what you said. And your bags, and you, were gone in the blowing snow. I'm in love with the spring. The clear blue waters, and ferryboats beating against the current, the gardens bursting into light, the promise of growth and of future and of hope. but, I guess, we weren't meant to grow old. And the sight of spring flowers and trees with bright green buds, makes me sick to my stomach. I am in hate with the spring.
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Jun 18, 2015
Jun 18, 2015 at 12:54 PM UTC
I'm in love with the seasons
Dear immune system, it seems you’ve got a vendetta against me, which I’m forced to take personally. Why did you offer free lodging to that vile germ? I water you (more than our sorry, dying garden) I give you antioxidants like it’s my job, and at lunch? I treat you to fruit. I wait on you, hand and foot, like a queen, (I wash those too, don’t want to get sick) Apparently, that’s to no avail. All day, you’ve been lazy. Your (evidently useless) white blood cells cower and can’t figure out how to get rid of the menacing virus that slithers into crevices of my bloodstream Now, I wouldn’t be angry, if I coughed a few times, maybe a sneeze, but you, arrogant imbecile, won’t retreat. your antibodies fill my throat, scratching the walls. Even swallowing becomes undesirable. All of your minions pile up in my nose, and spray debris everywhere If that wasn’t enough, you don’t let me taste -       a steaming forkful of noodles,            a rich morsel of blueberry pancakes,                or a refreshing bite of cool watermelon. My endless collections of t(issues), are like soccer moms, screaming at you to try harder to reach your goal, which, apparently, is repurposing my nose as a foghorn. 
I’ve tried cups of tea to calm you,        glasses of water to soothe you,         and steaming tomato soup to appease you. Instead of laying low,       you grow an extra head every time I cut one off. In fact, you’ve got me writing poetry about you. Don’t mistake this as an ode,    or a Shakespearean sonnet,      This, my lovely friend, is a hate poem.     Please, let me breathe.
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May 26, 2015
May 26, 2015 at 7:31 AM UTC
You Make Me Sick
Dear immune system, it seems you’ve got a vendetta against me, which I’m forced to take personally. Why did you offer free lodging to that vile germ? I water you (more than our sorry, dying garden) I give you antioxidants like it’s my job, and at lunch? I treat you to fruit. I wait on you, hand and foot, like a queen, (I wash those too, don’t want to get sick) Apparently, that’s to no avail. All day, you’ve been lazy. Your (evidently useless) white blood cells cower and can’t figure out how to get rid of the menacing virus that slithers into crevices of my bloodstream Now, I wouldn’t be angry, if I coughed a few times, maybe a sneeze, but you, arrogant imbecile, won’t retreat. your antibodies fill my throat, scratching the walls. Even swallowing becomes undesirable. All of your minions pile up in my nose, and spray debris everywhere If that wasn’t enough, you don’t let me taste -       a steaming forkful of noodles,            a rich morsel of blueberry pancakes,                or a refreshing bite of cool watermelon. My endless collections of t(issues), are like soccer moms, screaming at you to try harder to reach your goal, which, apparently, is repurposing my nose as a foghorn. 
I’ve tried cups of tea to calm you,        glasses of water to soothe you,         and steaming tomato soup to appease you. Instead of laying low,       you grow an extra head every time I cut one off. In fact, you’ve got me writing poetry about you. Don’t mistake this as an ode,    or a Shakespearean sonnet,      This, my lovely friend, is a hate poem.     Please, let me breathe.
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When my mother is sad      she buys plants Crisp chrysanthemums,    Swaying sunflowers,    Sunset roses A garden of love—        or maybe growth. I’m not sure.    Elbow deep in earth, she plants roots. Maybe she’s creating new roots 
                            filling the loss of her family                                                                            of her friends                                                                                       her home Or maybe              she likes to look at the colors through the window                                 like stained glass and rainbows,                                                        a garden of her own.
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May 25, 2015
May 25, 2015 at 7:39 AM UTC
My Mother’s Garden
I’m listening to this song, early in the morning when raindrops decorate the dark bus windows. "I guess I'm not prepared" The pattern of words crawls into my brain, tickling nerves, shaking loose memories of the night before, a maelstrom of screams about my college choices, future plans, and grades at school, of doors slammed mid-sentence in my mother’s face. "Family is all I'll ever have and need" Everyday verses swamp nerves, then brain. I **** sideways and knock shoulders with my bus seat mate. On the backs of my eyelids, I see my mother kicking a hole in my door,  memories of cracking wood is garbled by rain and guitar strums.  "Pick up my personal pieces" I've listened to this song before: in the car ride home after a tedium of classes, through crackling speakers in bright grocery aisles, and bouncing headphones when I run circles on the track, But not in the dark of the early morning, on a trembling bus speckled with rain water. "Good things are over fast" — quoted lines from “The Man” by Ed Sheeran
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Apr 21, 2015
Apr 21, 2015 at 6:15 AM UTC
Circumstantial