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90 · Jul 2020
The hanging tree
Ayesha Jul 2020
I thought you might be there when I parted the bushes,
stepping into our bygone kingdom.

Remember when we were no taller than the rose bushes by the lake, we would run by the shining water until the sky turned peach. We sat in the muddy grass, not caring about our clothes, and you made me necklaces out of weeds and roses.
And when we danced around like clowns in some vivid circus for an empty crowd, I stumbled on the slippery ***** and fell into the water.
Confess I will how we were little enough to trust the serene waves with our lives for we had come to adore them by then.
It was then that I first thought that perhaps the beloved lake that we drew on our canvases and carried along in our dreams, merely ached for the taste of our flesh.
Choking in the calm tides I no longer cared to see the world where mermaids lived nor dive down to the dark cave to meet the old wise fish; I just wanted to get out.
It broke like that- a little girl’s fantasy that was almost invincible. I saw the fairies and tales drown before I did, I saw the glimpse of lake opening its beautiful mouth and swallowing them out of my sight; then all I could do was go along.
Remember when you threw in a branch and begged me to hold on. I clung to my last hope, to you, as, slowly, you pulled me closer to ground.
Remember when suddenly the stick broke into twins and I gave out a sharp cry- one last notion of a falling lamb. It was just like the tales we used to live; you a prince with an iron sword- plucked from a tree- slaying a dragon to save the imprisoned me. But now the weapon was broken and dragon was nowhere to be seen.
Your eyes glistened like moon melting over an ocean as my cries faded away into my congested lungs.

You knew it then and I did too that the lake wasn’t the dragon you ought to fight, that it was my despair that roared in my blood. But we knew not what to do for never had we lived a tale with the victim and the villain dwelling in one being.
I thought I heard you scream, saying that the embracing water wasn’t the dungeon, that it was my own body- my numb arms and scared legs- refusing to fight the defeat. I thought I heard you scream for me to not lose hope.
How I wished to shout.
How I wished to say you knew nothing about water squeezing your ribs and nibbling your lungs away; how the sensation of being gnawed away by the current was a story we couldn’t share; how when you drowned, all you could ever do was go on.
How I wished to scream but my voice hid herself into the deepest caves of my throat and my lips parted only to spit and gulp in water.

But then I felt a hand- your hand- and then an arm- your arm- and I saw hope- your face- and I was pulled out of the dungeon I was about to call my home.
You brought me out, placed me under the tree whose trunk was engraved with our names and you called on to me until the water above me focused itself into summer sky, the waves incinerated into the warm air and my mind stopped whirling.
I felt razer-blades down my throat, my tongue sewed to my skin, my lips busy feeling the lovely air; yet still a voice I knew came out my mouth like a shy gust of wind and you got it. You held on to my two words and promised to never let go.
And then we laughed. Laughed like we'd done before at the irony of it all because that was what you and I did, laughed our aches away. But I remember your arms holding me tight even as we joked about our fears; I remember the alarm in your nerves, the grip of your fingers around mine as if I would sublime away into the thin air if you let go.

Remember when we were taller than the rose bushes by the lake, we would climb up the arid tree carved with our names and mold our stories and worlds until the sky turned grey.
We sat on the reluctant branches and talked about ironic lands where no future, no past existed; where memories were never lost and regrets never returned.
You plucked out a red rose and gave it to me with a pink smile. I tied it to a low-hanging branch with a strand of grass as a token of our lives.
Each day you gave me a blushing beauty and I hung it along with its long-ebbed lovers. We danced under the hanging corpses that symbolized our lives until our feet ached and our stomachs growled. We then ate up our foods and talked our fables.
Remember when we looked at each other’s reflections in the lake and smiled. Remember when you asked me if I loved myself and I, puzzled, asked you if my loving you wasn’t enough.

Remember when you shook your head and I turned red; not the red you often saw when you stroked my hair or gave me a flower. The red that you could have seen had you been under the water that day; the red that flowed in my veins, that ruled the very corners of my being- the red that I loved more than myself, more than you.
Remember when you held my hand but I ****** it away. I got up and yelled in the air as you listened in silence. You averred your apology but simply to calm me down for the fire on my face freaked you out. You turned around to pluck a rose but the bushes were grey and the only roses left were the bald buds hanging on the tree above us.
You asked me to dance but I denied, you sighed in defeat but I saw pity- remorse for the poor girl who was stuck inside her skin- you smiled with love but I saw pride- reminding me how I owed you my life- you reached out your hand to tuck a strand behind my ear but I only saw a snake slithering to me- to pull me out of the cell I had come to love, to strangle me up along with the flowers that you killed for me and watch me wither away, petal by petal.

You hoped for me, I only saw despair.

And I wish I could use that as an excuse for the painting that I drew but the water that splashed around me was unmistakably black and I could help not but think it was prettier than all the hues I had ever blended.
Your cries for help danced everywhere and I thought I saw myself scream and break a branch to save you from the starving dragon, as you once had saved me. I thought I held on to my weapon and hope and dragged you out of the prison  onto the grass. I thought I clung to you under the tree, sobbing, telling you I was sorry; that I never meant to drown you, I just meant to push you away for you scared me with your hope.
I thought I heard your faint voice saying the exact words that I had whispered with my feeble voice, “never go.”
And I took that as a sign of forgiveness and I smiled and I thought I saw you smile, too.

I thought I saw you smile.
I thought I saw you smile.

But I only saw the lake. Its disturbed surface going back to peaceful sleep. I only saw the sky turning red as the last remnants of our sun drained away.
And when I moved closer, I could still see your vivid image smiling on- no, in- the water but your eyes were closed and your skin was pink and glossy; you made no sound.

You looked like a freshly plucked rose.

If you could look back you would see the faint image of a stranger that I had become.
I still search for you in the water that’s the same vacant color as you. Your smell lingers in every rose about me. I can still hear you telling me I’m the dragon; and I know that if I could go back to the day you wilted away, I would only stand by the shore and watch you go because I’d not know what to do- we never imagined a tale about the dragon playing the hero.
Every cracking stem reminds me of my unused sword. Every break of dawn comes uninvited. Every empty mirror takes me back to your face under the lake, every silent night reminds me of the empty tales we dreamed.
How tragic that the dragon imprisoned in its own self failed to play the hero. How lovely that once upon a time I tried to fight my despair and I was saved, and once upon a time I chose to let go.

I part the bushes, stepping into my bygone kingdom,
I hope to find me there.
Pardon.
90 · Jun 2020
I thought I saw death
Ayesha Jun 2020
Today,
as I stared out the window
of a car taking a sharp turn.
Today,
as I was slammed back to the seat
of a car coming to a sudden stop.
Today,
as I mildly heard the driver say
his grateful prayer and then curse.
Today,
as I saw sudden glimpses of moon
shyly following me behind the trees.
Today,
as I stared a little too long at streetlights
and theirs colors melting on sweaty glass.
Today,
as I watched a car rush on the road,
slip on the water, then spin and scream.
Today,
as I heard lucky drivers curse at each other
for ****** dents on their worthless cars.
Today,
as I was drifted away with the vehicle
making its way out of the traffic jam.
Today,
as I looked at my insipid reflected
on the black trees lit by the crescent;
                                                       ­                    my eyes, cold and placid,
                                                        m­y skin, blue like the midnight sky,
                                                                ­         and my movements, slow,
                                                           ­                                     as if hopeless
                                                        ­                                           and extinct.
I thought I saw death
looking straight in my eyes.
I thought I saw death
give me a beautifully weak smile.
I thought I heard her say
that she had come for my being.
I thought I saw a moon
shimmer right through her face.

I thought I saw death
but really,
it was just me.
drowsily reflected by the cold glass.
Winter, Twenty-nineteen.
Ayesha Nov 2020
I sit on this leather seat
looking out a world
this pretty, pretty strange world—
houses laden with rubble and dust, yet breathe,
paints that creep away in nights, the loyal grey.
people—oh people! So bruised
People, so tired—
Freshly moulded, boldly wounded;
Hung up on chains and dried on flames;
fed to birds while the hearts still beat.

I sit on this leather seat
looking out a world
So huge, so huge—we’re out of breath
I could dissolve myself in her shallows
could open up this skin— split me whole
vessel by vessel—poem by poem
note by note
and bury it all beneath her pages,
Taped to her empty words—forever
over hills, in windy deserts,
under dusty, unheard, seas

I sit on this leather seat
as the car goes on—
Through days and years, it goes by
going nowhere, nowhere—nowhere
so used to bumps, it barely shudders
and the world passes by,
she waves her winds courteously at us
People pass by
And the sky is still—
as birds fly along the same route-less paths
And the car goes on
as I stare out the window
at the world so huge—so mine—so not

and I could dislodge myself
scatter around the sky—all his empty depths
his silent hues—oh the softness of those lips
as they collide into her cracked moors;
volcanic oceans—barely holding on against his
— her— serenity.
I could disband this self—wave by wave
—grain by grain—thought by thought

but I sit here on this leather seat
—as all the words crumple together
Folded and squashed, squeezed to wrinkles
Like intimate threads—inseparable.
Tucked somewhere in here—old, torn clothes.
Caged—all of it.
all of it, in here.
all of me, in this tiny self.
barely—barely in—barely so.
like when he licks her dried meadows to life,
as he touches all of her, yet none
and she shudders, and houses fall, and people run
she shudders—and she shudders—and shudders
and shudders still—quietly— out of breath.
shudders — and shudders on
— never explodes.

I stare out the window of this car
at a land that never moves, never stills.
a little pair of eyes looks at me through the glass
—so mine. So not.
89 · May 2021
*Untitled*
Ayesha May 2021
Hello poetry
Hello p**try
H'llo poetry

your 502 bad gateways are
freaking me out
I got no copies of
all my ******* man
Oyi Eliot, when’s the app coming bruh?
89 · Dec 2024
29/04/2023
Ayesha Dec 2024
Thirty minutes to go
The clock blinks, smiling
At the fidgeting class

Its green eyes shifting
With sly patience
Pulling everything along

Chairs scrape the hard-wood floors,
Rush, collapse against walls;
The second resets
And they are back again.

All heads sag
Like ochre leaves
We are all trees now,
The dry air of knowledge
Eats our skin.

What?
The soulless buzz of fans
Their bland sobriety
Sloshes, swishes

Past our feet
Like bees
Their honey dripping

Flooding the brains
Muting all images
The professor is a forever sound
We hear, we hear, we grow old

Twenty minutes to go
88 · Aug 2020
The life we lost
Ayesha Aug 2020
We bloom with our little hands holding on to abstract gifts that our beloveds in heavens gave us on parting. We hold on to them tight, as tokens of the memory of their faces bruised with sorrow—ravaged apart like wheat fields preyed upon by heartless windy nights; their artifacts stolen, life robbed—left with deserted desolation.
Open our eyes to the world, watch people fall in adoration with the transparency of magical liquid that lingers in our eyes and reflects the light into thousand shards of crystal hues like the dance of a pious river under an innocent sky.
They start to feed us with simple words, sing to us the rhyming songs, waiting for us to open chains of our tongues and repeat but we, we quietly yearn for one last note of euphonies we had grown used to in the paradise.
Stare at our mothers that hold us, smile, and we, mistaking them for angels that used to swim high above the skies—casting soft reflections of their glow on land—extend our tiny arms up to their faces and mold our own plump lips like gentle curves of the valleys that stood gracefully in horizons of our homes.

Sometimes we fall asleep and all the missing peace comes back like a goodly giddy fairy floating towards us, allowing the glittery dust to take us away to the land where we so lovingly belong, what we so patiently long for. We meet the strangely familiar faces through our dreams until someone far away makes a tentative sound and our sensitive ears drag us back to the roaring reality.
We then begin to cry and strangers try soothing us back to sleep with jingling toys and swinging rides as if playing a jolly jester could please the kings inside of us; we don’t stop our shrieks until the faces of our guardians appear before us for only do they seem like ones who could take us back home.
We hear people speak a stranger language before us and try our best not to listen for it is no near as beautiful as the music we hear in our sleeps. See our mothers mouth out some words to us, whispering us to repeat, hoping we would oblige but we never do. Sometimes they smile in response to our silence; but with time, our immobile tongues only cause a night to creep over their profiles. That right there, on our own mothers’ faces is where despair comes and introduces herself to us.
We we— merely to make her go—utter our first words.
We watch the sudden bursts of volcanic smiles on their faces as splendid shadows of shimmering suns crawl over their entire countenances; they call up in shrill voices for others to come over and watch us speak. Such queer it gets as we, raised as royalties, become the ones performing feats before a chanting crowd. But we do so, we do so to watch the pride on our mothers’ faces.

Pages of our books roll on; we start combining the scarce collection of our learnt words into broken phrases and try our best to fit our thoughts in those shallow bowls. Once upon a time we promised ourselves to hold on to memories of past and gifts of goodness we brought; but we start making friends that are just as little and confused as us. We invent our lawless games, play our lifeless toys, uttering our faulty speeches and the memory that we once lived and loved starts waking away without us noticing.

We still think about it but only in our dreams.

Day by day, we grow like petite seedlings forming into clumsy saplings. We fall down, scratch our knees, we get angry and cry out our rage; we laugh and bloom and watch people adore the scent of our flowery lives.
Our speeches become consistent; our sentences rigid. We began making our own hair, tying our own shoelaces and wishing for things we once thought unworthy of our love. Our eyes become translucent and dim. We try drawing shapes on papers that they call alphabets and start learning their patterns by heart.
Time by time, our alphabets, like stars colliding on ecstatic skies, form into words; words queuing themselves into clauses. We grow and grow, marveling our branches, polishing our leaves—living the world, dreaming the world and dwelling wholly on it.
We grow accustomed to the dark, learn that night is just as inevitable as day and to survive the blinding dark we befriend the monsters that claim to know the way to joy. When it rains, we question the sun for the sake of our plants, when it shines, we beg for rain to quench our dry tongues.

We, little babies that fell from the skies with giant flowers attached to our backs, pluck our wings away and grow into youthful, excited trees. Drowning in oblivion of our own secrets, we master the art of masquerade and learn to justify our actions with vacant excuses. We practice hunting and haunting and hurting only to be punched in chests by our spears.
The fungus of hatred grows inside our hollow trunks, ***** the goodness out like termites gnawing away a wooden charm and burns our smiles to embers— carving from them their evil twins: smirks and simpers. Fire of pain takes root in our leaves, squeezes our lungs, as if grasping a soaking piece of fleece by neck, making it puke out all its hope before hanging it to dry. We gasp and groan in sorrow and angst until despair comes to our rescue.

We, little crowds that once laughed and joked roam around the land like defeated kings and play the beaten pawns merely to move another inch. We spit from our mouths the made-up languages and handcrafted curses and allow those fictitious, barren and illusive nothing to divide us into groups and tribes despite the fact that we live the same lives, walk the same disguises and come from the same bygone, forgotten lands.
Our lives revolve around abysses and priorities the bewitching buds devoid of petals or pollens or life. The moon still shines and the sun still gleams but we have forgotten to notice for we invented our own suns and glued our own stars to the ceilings of our prison homes.

From the moment that we were born, we began learning a language that was empty of emotions and full of words. We let go of our memories and, at some point, our fingers forgot about the gifts. At some point, too caught up in ever thinking and inventing, we stopped feeling.
We stopped dreaming about the ever-lasting skies, immortal horizons smiling with goodness and glossy rivers shining in purity; the sweet scent of angels that glided in soft winds and silent air of the fluttering laughs that used to echo all around—from the tender dips of green valleys to sudden twists of proud mountains.
At some point in our lives, we forgot to live and all the darkness came sailing towards us and pushed our hope away. We began turning to beasts, fur bursting out our skins, our teeth elongating to daggers; we howl on cliffs of our own regrets on the dead of nights.

The despair who once was frightening becomes our only hope.

But even in all this blindness, I sometimes catch a glimpse of the shy moon behind veil of clouds and I stare, a little too long, at all it scars wondering how it still manages to shine. Wondering if it bleeds out its light only to guide us back home.
I, sometimes sit down on the grass and allow the vastness of this generous sky to gulp me in and, surrounded by the echoes of sleeping humans and ringing of insects as little fire-flies whirl about me, my mind shifts back to a memory I don’t remember recording.
I try and try to grab the feeling, to clench at it; that strange nostalgic emotion that sings to me the chapter of my book I never wrote in these words. I struggle to grasp at it, it slips away, I reach out my arm, it backs away and so the battle in my skull goes on.

Sometimes, I can swear that I hear faint, remote sounds of distant harmonic laughs and smell the aroma of merry and love but I can’t trap the sound in my ears nor convince the fragrance to stay. I can’t tie that peaceful pulse, that stays for a fraction of second, with ropes to my being. All I can do it hold on to that second and never let go. So i do.

I cannot say that I know what those voices are or where the sudden glimpses of moon-stricken faces come from but I can tell you this: I believe that someday or some night, in the dungeons of our enigmatic emotions, you and I, we can sit by a fire on a grubby moor, or rock on a silent hill or a wall of a sleeping house—or just where we currently are—and look into the sky; past the clouds and beyond the stars to the distant land that calls us home.

I cannot say we will finally find all the answers but I can and will say this: if we stare into the bottomless bottoms of the sky around us; and we listen to the morning chirp or night yawn as the wind around us grows into an infinitely vast ocean full of distant tides and friendly waves—dancing and bobbing around uncountable stars and suns that shine in glory—and if we stay completely and ardently silent, we will be speaking a language devoid of words and full of emotions.

And if we cling to it, the language might translate the mysterious mirages of songs that sometimes play in our sleeps; that translation might lead to understanding and the understanding may guide us to remembrance.

And what do we need but the remembrance of life we lost on our way to survival.

Sorry this is long.
88 · Sep 2020
Ghost verses
Ayesha Sep 2020
Haunting nights, wild winds
snarling skies in seas ablaze
I once burned a poem.
Ashen metaphors creeping in my sleep.
Ayesha Nov 2020
Sun! dear sleepy sun.
Do you know what the squirrels are saying?
Say they heard from mice and moles
there’s a land beneath this land
Could you believe so?
These rooftops that you melt on
These trees— these roads— these waters—

But the lakes there, a frog exclaimed, are colder than dark
The buildings are grey skeletons— sometimes lesser
And trees— leafless— fruitless; tongue-tied with the winds.
threads stretching out in those nightly depths.
And humans— oh humans
but the snake shuddered at the mention

They’re raw! He hissed
like coal! Like a child’s burnt sock, alone on a blasted road.
there’s no flesh, no blood, sometimes not even—
But they’re alive, continued a worm
I heard ‘em talking—
Walking soundlessly in those ruins
saw crowns glimmer vividly over their heads

Sun! dear yawning sun.
I see you’re beginning to fade
I wondered if the folks there knew about you
—There’s no light there, not even a flicker!
but the snake told me.
and birds soar deep, wingless though they are,
in a sky choking of mud.
No one breathes for there’s no air to spare.
And the rat trembled,
and when I asked him why he did so
he only shook his head, closing his eyes.

And I thought
There’s a girl beneath my feet
A girl— withered and alive; alive
her inhuman sounds scaring away ants and spiders.
a sparrow up that bough
a crumbled mess of bones below—
And as your crimson colours pour over these silent moors
we put on our white-gold tires, and diamond rings
lay our worn-out daggers down to sleep
with only the dusk as witness

But sun! O should I admit
That I was bewildered
What land do you talk of? I asked.
The land below, said a rabbit, then pondered.
No, this land you talk of! a sky moulded and pounded
ash-white trees, sooty chirps,
vanquished beings with kingdoms and gems
— living and talking and—
and a squirrel scowled—

But I see you’re exhausted now
Here, I’ll cover you up with these clouds
And draw all of the curtains
the moon is only a street light far away
and stars, our locked up jewels
And I’ll guard this mortal sky for you

You, my sun, shall now be off to sleep.
I hear a cry under my feet—
86 · Oct 2024
Idk
Ayesha Oct 2024
Idk
Ik ik I get it
It's 6 am, I have not slept and I am
SO HAPPY
or was before I stopped.
I think. It was, it was... I am an eletric tower
My fingers are copper
It was like a surge of joy, electric, buzzing
I could not stop i could... I had to dance
But i typed instead to people so many
People who were
Also typing and then i was in there
In the wires, i was dancing, my wrist
Had started to hurt but the people
Kept coming my way to talk
In my ears, they were, in my eyes
In my eyes eyes my fingers were
Mine but what a possession it was!
What absent pilgrimage, i
Analysed myself. I was... it was a dream
I say. I am awake. I forgot to sleep.
I say, it's okay. You are body
At the end of the day. I am. I am
But i say it everyday so much i say it
So much. Body, body. I am

I must sleep. It is dawn. There is
Finally silence in my mind
There is Finally room
For air
01/10/2024
86 · Jun 2020
The first poem
Ayesha Jun 2020
The first poem that I ever painted
but never wrote was not about a
pretty princess with a dress,
it was about a princess with a pretty dress.
Because that was exactly how I drew it.
I didn't make the cloth red so it would go with her pink lips,
I made the lips pink so they would adorn the red dress.
First I sprinkled the pearls and planted the laces
with great precision and perfection,
then I added one last stroke of a crocked smile.
Though I knew something was not right,
I let it be for it was all about the dress that night.

The first poem that I ever wrote
but never painted was not about
how pretty moon looked in the velvet sky.
It was about how she encircled the earth
and how all earths bowed before the sun.
How the sun too had a hero she revolved around
and how the hero too had a sun that he respected.
If each universe was whirling around something,
I wrote, each infinity was doing it's own dance.
And wasn't that what we all had become?
Infinities envying infinities trying to be bigger
than the others until our mere existences mattered no more.
Wasn't that what we were, I asked the words.
A million suns dancing about a million suns dancing about a million suns dancing about a million suns dancing about....
Though I knew it didn't end well,
I let it be incomplete, for that was all it was about.

The first poem that I never wrote
and never painted was about my Grandma.
I drew a short, tired figure holding a cane
to support her wilted body.
I drew her beautiful
because that was exactly how she was.
I made her snowy hair into notes of violin
and molded the wrinkles on her face
into rows of sunflowers across a moor.
Her hands, I adorned them with gems,
her lips, I filled them with flavor of her youth.
Her eyes,
her eyes were perfect.
They were the suns that encircled themselves.
The moons that practiced immortality.
I then gave her the usual battered clothes and worn out shoes.
Though people said they sensed something wrong,
I knew no one could look more perfect.

The poem that I'll never write
and definitely never paint is not about
how you look charming in that dress
but about how the dress looks charming
because it's on you.
How the thousand sumptuous suns
burn in the night sky for you to see
but you're too busy fearing the stormy sea.
I'll draw a million moments compiling up
for a single you to like them and
you breaking yourself up into pieces
for the worthless world to like you.
I'll craft your lips into a beautiful smile
that you used to wear back in the days
before the kids pushed you off the slide
saying you weren't invited and
the crescent of your face broke into two
as I watched from a distance, immobile.
I'll stir the bottom of your eyes where, I believe,
all your light has settled now, and
watch as life comes running into your placid eyes.
Though it will feel a little criminal and wrong,
I will leave it be for this is all I've ever known.

But that is just my wishful thinking.

The first poem that I ever wrote
and ever painted, I did in black.
It was not about the jet-black depth of your eyes
but weak bloodstreams that often
lingered there like spider-webs due to your sleepless nights.
I wrote about blood and how it knew
each part of you better than anyone else
and how, when it flowed, it could move people
to tears or screams, or laugh and cheers
I wrote about the blood because that was all I had
seen the day I had kicked open the door and
seen your being sail away.
I wrote about violence because that was all I had done
as I had silently watched you curse at your reflection
in the dejecting, clear surface of the lake.
I wrote about pain for that was all I had felt
when you had given me a bleak smile
in reply to my inquiry about your heart.
I wrote about death for she was the only one
you had missed and remembered and loved
in the last eternities as she lifted you up
and drifted away with your weightless life.
Though the honesty of my words took my breath away,
I let them be for that was all I had wanted in the moment.
A tale.
85 · Jun 2020
Nostalgia
Ayesha Jun 2020
You were burnt by the ashes of the polaroid
whose fire once kept you warm.
I had to dig this one out of the abandoned chambers of my mind.
84 · May 2021
*Untitled*
Ayesha May 2021
My life is being shredded away.

— my little brother while shredding cheese that he was bullied into doing by mother’s threats of having his Laptop abducted away
82 · Jun 2020
I swear it wasn't me.
Ayesha Jun 2020
It wasn't me I swear, it wasn't me It was the monster I swear, it was him It was he who committed the ****** It was he who burned down the town It was he who lit up the first spark It was he who fired the furious shot I swear it was him and I know you say you saw me but I swear it wasn't me. It was he who came in in the dense of  night It was he who stuffed himself inside me It was he who saw through my cracked eyes It was he who walked in my broken disguise I swear it was him. I know I sound unbelievably strange but believe me I know not who he is.
Or maybe it was me.
81 · May 2020
Ocean
Ayesha May 2020
Even the ocean
it slowly gets tired and I
am a mere human.

--^-^-^-^---------
80 · Dec 2024
Feast
Ayesha Dec 2024
My teeth are blunt from leisure
I refrain from bite, the flesh
Is just short of spice, but it
Would suffice, would that I
Willed; would that I. My jaw
Bolts shut like a fist and I ****
My body in on itself. Close, all
Movement close, I shall take
Nothing of this. I shall
Lie here, pale and pure as
Sterilised steel and let the
Earth steal what is due but
It will not grow, not one sour
Bloom from my sterile stew.
Let it taste and grimace,
Ransack then my sallow face.
And cold or old, my jaw will clench
Ever as bold and when all is done
In heavens and above, let it
Bellow upon God's flat face:
I did not take. I did not take.
09/12/2024
79 · Jun 2020
Blinding bright
Ayesha Jun 2020
Yes, we look for Him
in pain. Who hunts for stars when
sun is blinding bright?
<>
78 · Nov 2020
nothing
Ayesha Nov 2020
while here is the moon
sun—I dare not see
and thee—

stars under our bleak forest
and jasmines
and Mayna birds who pluck them away

this vacant, insipid ocean;
with dead ravens and crows
—so full
and free.

Petals tied to the bird
bird—to leaf

I, thee—the bee nest
I, thee—the honey

I, thee— the feast
cleaned and cooked
then beautified and gnawed away

while here is your shallow
caverns— I shan’t know

bitter honey
—and thee.

sun—I dare not see
I, thee— the nothing

bound and tied to a single chain
shore and her betrothed sea
—and how they kiss and never meet

I, thee—
the nothing.
filled to the brim, this empty chalice.
as the ****** wine stirs
—restlessly patient

I, thee—
the nothing.
Whisper this poem.
77 · Jun 2020
If I were a bird
Ayesha Jun 2020
If I were a bird,
I'd fly over the houses, all around the world. Peek inside the windows, watch people live by their lives and stare at faces get old. I'd look closely at every face that shone and every that did not. I'd look for You in every laugh and then in every cry, In every excited child and in every insipid adult. In a person begging for an ounce of life and in a person running from it. I'd look for You in the drowned and the one dissolving in dirt.

If I were a bird,
I'd fly high above the skies, jump above the clouds to have a glimpse of Your light. I'd ask the moon for directions to Your house, I'd trick the stars into leaking Your address. I'd ask sun who he worshiped and inquire abyss who she feared. I'd ask the owls, the eagles and the vultures the secret of a high flight so I could reach up to You and knock on Your door.

If I were a bird,
I'd fly and fly as high as I could in search of Your Grace. Use all my skills to reach You, and even though I would fail eternally, I'd still try and try until my wings withered to ashes and my being blended in with gusts of tireless wind. I'd then visit the places with wind that I could not with wings, I'd look for You till the wind too got tired and decayed in struggle.

If I were a bird,
I'd look for You in all the skies and even above.

But since I'm not
and since I can't soar high above or talk to stars or even see the whole world.

Since I'm powerless and fragile, and finite;
I'll just bow down till my forehead meets the ground that You carved only for me, I'll just cry and cry till You open your doors.
I'll wince and sing till my being starts dancing on the beat of my own sobs, I'll dance and dance till there's nothing.

And when I'll close my eyes,
in the darkness of unexpected but fully invited light,
I know I'll find You.
I know I'll catch a glimpse of You.
I know You'll be there.

You're always there.
You're always here.
73 · Aug 2020
Dusty petals
Ayesha Aug 2020
Flower does steal hearts
but I wonder how the petals feel
wonder if they enjoy their lovely imprisonment
if they ever think of breaking free
when a flower dies it's all but humanly
does not laugh one day, still the other
does not walk down the road unsure of reaching home

death's patient like that
it too enjoys a good show before taking a shot
too likes to play before gulping down its food
first the sepals turn yellow
then mustard like sunlight through dusty glass
then the blush starts to fade
and petals begin to wither
like an old woman, her pretty face sleeping
blanketing them, the tired leaves curl up
waiting for wind to wash 'em away

I wonder if they actually die
if freedom's life, I wonder if they've just been born
I pluck a sunflower and I pull at it wings
I collect all and hand them to the wind
tell her to be gentle, she promises, relieved
I bid them a goodbye, they're too shocked to reply
so I watch as the wingless birds soar around the sky
yes, soon the wind will tire and let them fall
yes, they'll settle down and rot in the dirt or drown in sea
but they'd have rotten anyway

yes the last remnants of their existence
will depart with the gusts but they always did
so I tell the plant her babies are finally free
I don't see her smile, I don't need to
I never saw her cry for her flowers
quietly she'd let go, a little to serenely
as morning breeze took their corpses away

I never was a fan of flowers anyway--
I see them everywhere, in castles, in glass jars
in gardens and stone mansions, pressed in books,
taped on windows, tied in hair, ever so pretty, ever so.
washed and clothed and jewelled and caged
Someone shouts at me from the street
saying their kite just fell on my roof; if I could return
I take in their dusty profiles, and ragged clothes
faces lit by the splendid smiling suns--
I think my petals have settled down.
Have you ever seen the smiles of Syrian kids in refugee camps? There's nothing more beautiful.
72 · Dec 2024
Flaw
Ayesha Dec 2024
On the wicked turn, that sour slant angle
Of my face that slipped
Beyond the veil of hair: everything I am.

I fumble, my hands contort, the hinges
Of my fingers know no tandem
They work only to dissolve
The slip into conversation. But
Your gaze moved - just enough.

And all the buzzing hum, you heard too well
And however firm I steer the sea
I cannot stop the sinking
You rush within from the little crack
Perhaps without wanting to, perhaps
Even with pity, and then I am full

Bursting, heavy with intrusion
And all day long, my heart drums itself
And I can sense the strong Incoming,
Slinking through to inspect
What my stubby hands could not correct

Then the night, then the dawn,
And then day day day.
Then something lets loose and
The plank unravels from plank and
Then there is nothing to fear

However stark the spotlight of shame
How sweet it is to have sinned
How sweet to flirt with flaw
And to push it little, little. To push it
Vain and bare, past the edge, down
Through nothing and then

Firework: shards are glittery with grief
The wine stretches its limbs to the world
And the ground drinks it up.
27.11.2023
71 · Jul 2020
Grave-digger's song
Ayesha Jul 2020
Weeping winds, gothic gusts
Overfilled pots refusing to puke out the rain
-stumbling vines, suffocating trees
Obsolete stones clothed in moss
Bygone leaves carpeting their beds

They; the lovers and the liars-
the rulers who swam in lakes of hope
They; the killers and the goners-
the dreamers who carved their own skies

velvet robes embracing their carcasses
vanishing bones stained with drying flesh
-rotting pearls, chocking gold
Wounded wooden skies coughing in dust
musical silence, uninvited mourners

So lovely do they hum,
     yet every leaf shivers.
So silent does she come,
     yet every dying hears.
So high do they soar,
     yet caged with dirt.
So loud does she roar,
     yet never heard.

Hissing hearts, venomous veins
Seductive starvation of ever shrinking skin
-calm storms, empty floods
Succumb souls clothed in charming chains
beaten masquerade guarding your soul

You; the painter and the poet-
the coal that blooms in pools of blood
You; the warrior and the war-
the saint who seeks his shadowed deeds

Devouring dress, scarlet bones
thirsty parchment imprisoned in sea
-whistling rain, blushing sun
Another day falls over the insipid pile
Dreamy night dissolves in sleepy day.

So when she crawls up to me,
don't shout out loud, let me hear her song
I need no tears, save them for your late-night prayers
I need no help, let me go for once.
So when I go still,
let me hold my hands, let me cross my feet
I need no flowers, let them live some more for me
I need no masks, let me frown for once.
So when I'm one in the earth,
let me spread my wings, let me take a flight
I need no name on stone, save it for the good you do
I need no visits, let me alone for once.

My anxious blood has come to a final rest.
I stole this poem from the rain.
71 · Jun 2020
Refugees
Ayesha Jun 2020
Pull all the weeds away.
Rows of caravans- unwavering oceans
- cold, ****** tides; under and over
the wandering moons and the weeping stars
Grab by the necks and
pull the unwelcomed out-
this sacred dirt will have no more.
Pull out, like the sea did in-
Echoing, chocking, musical screams
Bloming, wilting, weightless beings

Once more yet once more!
Come! The hungry void will hold some more.
Once more then once more!
How many were not puked out on the shore-

Rugged beds stabbing the skins
pre-engraved with tales untold.
dripping canvas of bruised camps
Let the clouds bleed over; they stained our
streets with their spitting wounds.
Let the winds wash away, far from here.
Take them along, O draining sun!
These dirt-stained faces can't blend in ours
unborn shivering, tired in wombs-
newborn silent, still as windless skies.

Once more yet once more!
Come! The starving dirt will take more treats
Once more then once more!
How many were sublimed off on the streets-

Flocks of lambs, follow they, the burning sun
Broken glass- scattered shards- missing, lost
Snarling lions, waiting, in bushes- in bygone homes
Thirsty seas, desperate for survivors- forgotten shores
Tempted despair, devours and embraces the petite lives
Impatient death being impatient death ebbing them away.

Uninvited unbidden unaccepted unwanted-
embers roaming the vacant sky, searching home.

Pull all the weeds away
- this is not their home.
- in memory of the boy who knew the secrets of ocean and beyond- Alan Kurdi- and all the children and maidens and men who dream of going home.
70 · Dec 2024
Blackout
Ayesha Dec 2024
Factory blackness, fingertips almost metal
Moon a cinder, mother ash. All about
Stretched walls of godless steel,
And a house like a chapel, unlit and firm.
I had known no such vacancy. Brevity
Of moment, bright with wit. Brittle now
In memory as the world works again
Tell me, were you the darkness that
Awoke me, or the dawn I sought
To pull forth with my will. My madness,
My disbelief. Were you mother?
Shivering, I piled my limbs to pyre--
Were you the interrupting current
That sped through wires
and shook the nerve. Were you myself?
Still and stone despite the show,
Shaken, stale, never the same again.
30.07.2024

Power went off and all around us was a pure unlit city. We were new to the place, I was worried about my mother... it was strange night
70 · Jun 2020
Lovely massacre
Ayesha Jun 2020
What if flowers screamed
when you plucked the petals off.
Would you still go on?

What if every shriek
only made you want for more.
Would you be afraid?

Would you be fearful
of all the lives you shattered
or your own numb heart?

What if flowers flinched
whenever you made a move.
Would you still not stop?

I once saw a rose
shivering under your snarl.
I heard her quiet cries.

Looked lily in eyes;
vacant rooms where no no nos
Echoed in disguise.

Sunflower; frozen,
sweating, its light extinguished.
I once saw her die.

I saw you walk out,
leaving the stars on the street.
They never recovered.

Did they make a sound?
No wonder they tried to scream,
but they were not heard.

What if flowers died
when you plucked their wings away.
Would you still go on?
A bunch of Haikus petalled together.
69 · Aug 2020
Come over, baby girl
Ayesha Aug 2020
Come over, baby girl, come over
Let’s play with your barbie doll
I know she’s too old for her school
But don’t blame her, love, not her
She was made a desire not a child
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing with me the orchard song

Come over, baby girl, come over
Let’s put your barbie down to sleep
I know her crib’s under the rubble
But grass makes this bomb shell soft
Lay her down, love, close her eyes
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing with me the song of dawn

Come over, baby girl, come over
Hold my hand, don’t you cry again
I know mother’s not here tonight
But her and baba loved your smile
This lonely, love, lasts only till dawn
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing with me our grandma’s song

Come over, baby girl, come over
Let’s not think of home or this mess
I know the strict lady, she scared you
But she has a home, some friends
she'll never let your stomach growl
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing, love, night too needs a lullaby

Come over, baby girl, come over
Let’s not weep for your barbie doll
I know she’s too young for a trade
But man said her looks make up for age
lovely enough for a month's worth grains
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing, for tomorrow I'll be far away

Come over, baby girl, come over
Hold on to me and your barbie doll
I know it’s ugly, take this bomb shell
Plant in a rose, love, watch it grow
We’ll be there, you won’t be alone
Come over, baby girl, come over
Sing, for soon we'll be on our ways
Syrian Refugees.
66 · Jun 2020
One last poem
Ayesha Jun 2020
While spilling buckets of water
Into the ocean
to save the ship from drowning
You try and try
To pour your thoughts on paper
Spill by spill
Your body tiring, energy failing
Word by word
Why does the ship keep choking?
You ask no one
Panting and sobbing, streams of your
Tears and sweat
Praying and hoping, striving to stay
Live some more.
You hope you hope you hope
And write.
But the tides are way too strong.
Ship gives in.
Drowning and dying, so do you.
Hopeless, empty
you put your numb self on a wood
And endure
Until that too tires, into the blank waves
one last word.
One last verse. One last poem. One last.

A thousand more to come.
If our thoughts were finite, each poem would be a leaf shedding away from the stem, finally free.
14 year old's notion.
64 · Aug 2020
Say something
Ayesha Aug 2020
See the rocks falling
soon this mountain will give in
why can't you hear me

wind rips at my skin
my flesh melts with the sunset
Why can't you see me

sky mimics my screams
this silence stabs at my lungs
please just say something

---
Say something I'm giving up on you.
62 · Jul 2020
Hold on.
Ayesha Jul 2020
Shallow ocean- empty yet going.
Hissing gusts, clouds roaring-
sky, a child dissolved in covers, trembling.
Sun- what sun? The placid air hides it all.
Stars, mere scattered leaves with
Stems, the broken ribs and
birds- fluttering heart beneath the mess.
Houses, firm as bones-
bleeding, sweating, melting.


Hold- Hold O dying tide
and never let lost!
You touch my skin
I disband to embers-
blown, then, out of the face.
pushed, then, out of the way.
Kissed in the hair, punched in the face
Licked on the neck and kicked in the chest.
O mighty wind, break and crush,
then take along!

Picked plants, chopped fingers.
Bleeding gutters, open lips.
Entangled howls embrace in-
Devouring shadow-less beings
whirling about.
Tear-stained sky, deserted abyss.

Gleaming streets- wingless birds-
racing litters- eclipsed countenances-
cursive rain- beautifying falls-
choking trees- coughing chimneys-

yet a dusty, dry I.

O lonely wind! Hold on.
A strong, furious wind blew yesterday and
when I stood inside it's reign it was strong
enough to defy and ******* away.
I had a strange feeling that my thoughts
had escaped my mind, out into the sky.
53 · Feb 14
Pickle
Ayesha Feb 14
I waited: the winter
was draped over my feet
my eyes were beginning to pickle -
the lamplight was oil
waiting was the flavor -
slowly... they softened

and then,
some time after midnight
I hear the clatter of stars
as you bring your stories in a basket
the sky spreads itself for you
and you speak so much
everything begins to yawn

I close my eyes to sourness
and feel the months fall around us
bouncing, not quietly,
not loudly, just
enough for company
and I cannot sleep while you speak
I... am waiting.
09/12/2024
To Aayan
52 · Jun 2020
Ink
Ayesha Jun 2020
Ink
She cupped her hands to collect the rain and I thought how if the palms were words and the rain all the eternities that went through our heads, then all that poetry could ever hold was the left out droplets of clouds sleeping peacefully on the soft of her skin.

The short verses that I write may be beautiful but it's the long, raw poems where I truly reside.
43 · Feb 22
Untitled
Ayesha Feb 22
But I will still change the water
I do not care for flowers
I will rearrange them
Of course, I will - you gave them to me
I sit and paint them
And the day blissfully droops to eve
And I think: anger never betrayed me.

But all my criticisms and objections
Fall limp to an empty night
Please, speak.
Provoke me, oppose me. Interrupt even.
My principles hold no power
If they cannot fight you.

I love the simple silhouette
Of your pesky little spirit.
Please, speak.
22/02/2025
26 · Feb 22
Baby
Ayesha Feb 22
Baby drinks to the sense of pompous stoicism
Baby will laugh not even once
I contort my face to emotion
See me! Please, see me.
I am close enough to kick
Your skull unhinged
When it dangles to a side
I will cradle, I will kiss
Your neck entirely.
Baby goes so so so far away
And ignores my texts
How many lives did baby live
When I was waiting
Shall I make him a playlist?
Shall I smash my cup o' tea
Shall I practice punches
Or shall I imagine his jaw
Ooof. I blast modern Urdu rock
And I go - you you you
All day long. You can hear the music
From across the room.
I missed the full moon
I missed the first spring rain
In the garden, carrots grow
I lie to my therapist
I spare her the burden of you
Every hour, thirty, twenty, ten minutes
No text no text not a single
Godforsaken reel
Did my baby ride off to war?
Did he forget my name?
In my bed, I hold him harshly
And sleep.
22/02/2025

I am aware that this is a pathetic poem/rant, but I was in a pathetic mood and this helped me. And besides, I can't be bothered. I have of late stopped trying to compete with the more accomplished poets. I have no desire to refine my poetry-writing skills, nor do I see any reason to.

— The End —