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Maisha Mar 2013
Once upon a night
when the monsters didn’t fright
and the stars were glistening light

I met a barman

He was tall and lean
smelled of roasted coffee beans
when he saw me, his lips curved into a beam

“How can I help you?”

Astounded by his figure, I was seemingly on liquor
there was really nothing to bicker
words won’t satisfy the good-looks of his features

“One tall cup of hot cocoa, please.”

And the few minutes following
on a crimson sofa we were sitting
of life, and love, and dreams we were chatting

I could see where this was going

And a few days afterward
we spent our daily lives in places apart
but our cellphones, they were intact to impart

And finally we met again

In the garden, the museum, the game
venues were never all the same
I could sense the feelings were
starting
to
change…

One day, he said to me–

“That would be 2 dollars.”

and the crimson sofa and the conversation
the cellphones and communication
the garden, the museum, the destinations

they vanish as my notion.
Maisha Jul 2013
I claw deep
at my skin
until my fingers reach
my flesh
and scatter the pigments
that was the epidermis;
hoping I would
born anew.
Maisha Mar 2013
Under the oak tree, I chant a pray
why have I never seen her this way?
no one’s ought to meet her by day
why is she beneath the cloud grey?

Under the oak tree, I bide
these leaflets, blinding my sight
but I know, it’d be too bright
for I’m blinded by the moonlight

Under the oak tree, I stand
should I attempt to raise a hand?
are you demure for you’ve been manned
should I try and lend you a hand?

Beyond the oak tree, I fly
gazing at you right in the eye
too much a beauty for birds to pass by
I can see the stars, they cry

Last, on the moon, I land
I can hear music but there was no band
have I, somehow, been shammed?
I witness nothing, ‘tis all but sand

Beyond the moon [her], I go
I couldn’t believe, but now I know
that the moon was a total blow
nothing, not even Van Gogh

Under the oak tree, I lie
now may I conclude the reason why
she’s solely a decor to the sky

Under the oak tree, I sleep
before dreams begin to creep
there was a question I need to flip;

how did I fall
so deep?
A special someone inspired me to write this. I must thank him for the late night conversation.
Maisha Mar 2013
I am amongst a frantic
silent
period

Everyone is busy
with numbers in their head
a pen gripped firm, where all the magic begins

Scribbling down notes
a tangled mess of formulae
buttons of assistance…the
calculator, what would they do
without them?

Nor do I question the purpose of time
the economy
it all makes us whine

Ah, forget it
I am amongst a frantic
silent period

this poem to pass time
this “poet”,
failing another grind
Maisha Dec 2015
I've stopped writing
about love
about how soft it feels
on my fingertips
how its scent lingers
on the tip of my tongue
as I slowly choke to
death
I still yearn
for the blankets to engulf
my body
like how your chest
used to be my safest place
But now it pains me
to reminisce over your
long lashes that align
with your stare,
that was meant for
someone else
to close my eyes and feel
your lips brush against
my tears
as the vacancy within you
tries to fill the vacancy within me
I've forgotten what love
truly tastes like
All I know is sometimes
I have to be wary of how good
it can be
Because no matter how much
you pour yourself into the jar
it will always spill
Thanks/thank you.
Maisha Mar 2013
Dear Charlie,
I assume you may not know me, but I know you. Well, how else could I not know you when your story has been adapted into a book and a movie? You may not recognize the way you can reach me back, because you’re fictional. But I’d like to think you’re real, and that’s good enough for me.
I’ve been reading your letters, just like any other kids my age and some adults who are still intrigued by young adult fiction. You cried a lot for a boy. You were not ashamed of it, too, even when you were with your friends, Patrick and Sam. They seemed to be really nice people, and I learnt that what they did didn’t define them. The fact that they like to smoke and drink doesn’t make them bad people. I like that. And as always, eventually, people stop doing things but their personality stays strong. Who you are comes from inside.
Anyway, yes, you cried a lot for a boy. You were lucky to have friends that appreciate your tears. Sometimes, they would join you, but in cheers. You cheered along, too, but they weren’t yelps or shouts of joy but whimpers of happiness. Crying may seem weak and vulnerable, but I think you didn’t need to stop.
I would like to tell you a story, if I may. Well, how would you reply to my request of patience and lending both of your ears when you’re only inside our minds? However, Charlie, if you were ever alive, I think you would be a good listener. This reminds me of one of the lines in your letter, stating that you’re “a wallflower”. Anyway, now, let’s get to my story.
In a few months, I will be packing my bags then depart to your country, the United States. A few months ago, I was tested whether or not I was eligible to live in your country and represent my nation. I passed. Though I thought that my interview kind of ******, I still passed. After being declared that I was qualified to go to the U. S., I was given a 27-page form I needed to fill. And so I did. The form consisted of student profile, student questionnaire, student’s letter to host family, parents questionnaire, interviewer’s report, medical records, academic records, a photo album, and a contract. I don’t know why, but this form seemed to weigh down on me, even though it shouldn’t feel tiring at all. I had the pleasure of writing my letter to my future host family, because I love writing, but somehow, I just didn’t like dealing with the official stuffs. But gradually, I put up with it and ended my misery.
Today, I gave the form to my counsellor. I was ready to feel satisfied. I was so ready because I had been feeling very ******* of late, and my rage peaked when my mom forgot to print the photos I needed for the photo album for my future host family to see. My anger still haven’t soothed down, though. Which means I am really mad. Little did I know, after all that ice cream of strolls between the school building to the administration to get my academic records and car rides from home to the doctor to clarify my medical records, topped by an icing of stress due to the ignorance in putting the photos together, there was a cherry on top. I had to print another copy of the same form, photocopy my passport photo, get my dad to sign my form, and if all that was not enough, my counsellor poured down a chocolate syrup into my wombs. I needed to refill my medical records which would only mean going back to the doctor for several more times. I don’t want to exaggerate by saying the hundredth time, because I am already tired.
Of course, all I did was put on my poker face for security, even though my mom yelled at me for not telling her sooner about the correct way to fill my medical records. To be honest, that is all I do. Put on a face of a clear expression of unclear emotion. I felt really stupid for not listening intently to my counsellor when we first met. I felt so stupid, I felt like I already wasted my opportunity. My opportunity to be myself to the fullest extent. My opportunity to feel what is unfelt. My opportunity to meet people I have not encountered. My first opportunity to really go.
But of course, that is not true. I just need to do what needs to be done and I’m all good. But I can’t help feeling like a failure. And I have been stifling more cries than I have ever been in my entire life. I wanted to cry when my brother left. All I did was covered my mouth with the bottom tip of my t-shirt and tried to catch myself when I fell. This time, I wanted to cry because I had never been so ignorant in following instructions. I don’t just tell myself this everyday, I am fully aware that I am observant. I see things people don’t. I feel things that people would dismiss. I listen to unspoken thoughts rather than what has been stated. I really like this part of myself. I feel like this is something that makes me me, and when I don’t do well on something simple like this, something has got to be wrong.
The first thing that came up to mind when I was faced with my mistakes was, “So this is my karma.”
I am a strong believer in karma, Charlie. I bet you know what it is. It’s the punishment you get after doing something bad. Nobody seems to know this, but I’m a bad person. I am. I have a bad habit of judging people; of collecting prejudices to make myself feel good; of being good even when I don’t want to; of not making the best of things; of lying, lying, and lying; of constantly hiding even when I have the chance to fully display myself out there; of being a burden to my parents and friends; of being vague about my faith; of not having a voice. I feel weak, but I won’t say I’m a weakling because I won’t make it become me, although all I want to do is to cry all the time because unlike you, I have no idea how to do that.
All I know right now is when I can feel there’s water in my eyes, I blink to dry them out. When my lips seem to turn upside down, I give them a rubdown so that they would look nice and pretty again. I don’t know how to cry, Charlie, I really don’t. I can already see myself next week at school, making an excuse to the toilet, or having lunch with friends and while having a good laugh I find myself crying, and I wouldn’t be able to distinguish my happiness and my melancholy. Neither would my friends.
I’m sorry for making it really long for you to read. I could just make it into several sentences, like, “Didn’t correctly fill out my form. Feeling like a failure. I don’t know how to express myself.” But knowing that you really like reading books as much as I do, I think you would appreciate my effort in writing my story as detailed as possible. I hope you enjoy it, too, no matter how miserable it seems when it really shouldn’t be. But then again, I wouldn’t be telling you a story.
During my inconsolable moment, I decided to make a list of things to remember when I’m an adult. In my mind, I wrote the first one down. I said to myself, “Remember the feeling of holding back.” I muttered the line aloud inside again and again, so that it would feel natural for me when I see someone in a situation like mine. As much as I hate that feeling, I need to be reminded so that others won’t be as miserable as I was. It seems pretty selfish of me, to see other people smile so that I can join them, but if you think again, it’s also for their own good.
The second one is to be sensitive, because it’s the only way you can understand anyone, especially your kids. I feel like people should not forget the fact that others of their kind is others of their kind. They’re not only their fellow citizens, they’re not only what they do for a living, they’re not doctors, or lawyers, or engineers, or archeologists. They are human. The basic form of every occupation. And they have feelings, just like we do. Sometimes we are blocked by the boundary of professionalism that we forget who they really are. There is not a day where we’re not divided based on jobs, religions, races, nationalities, and the list keeps going. But in the end, what we are is not based on those factions. We’re just mortals.
I would tell you more about the four other things I’ve listed, but I don’t want to keep you from doing what you’re supposed to do now. I think there are more things to be listed, too, when my days have moved on. But the four other things I’ve written down are, “Keep in mind Alesso’s quote, that you’re not gonna get any younger”, “Make ‘Listening to Sigur Rós’ a routine”, “Always eat your breakfast”, and “Remember the feeling of being a teenager, because most parents have already forgotten”. I thought that I would erase the last one because it is pretty similar to the second one, but I guess it has a different understanding. I’m sorry for keeping you from doing your job for awhile, whatever it is you are doing now. But I do hope you turn out well.
If you do reach the end, Charlie, now is the time that I thank you for reading this from the beginning to the end. I don’t get listened to much actually, so I think it is very kind of you for having finished reading every word. Anyway, I need to get busy printing my form again. I hope to recognize you in one of the souls I will be meeting one day.

Love always,
A friend
Maisha Mar 2013
To float delicately
to be within a river stream
to feel some sort of tranquility
to swim in vacancy

I just
need to
drown
for a
little
while.
Maisha Mar 2015
I keep hiding my poems under my blanket
But soon
they are bound to break loose
And I will have no way to retrieve them
They will meet a glimpse of the sunlight
and I won't be able to sleep
Maisha Mar 2013
(I want this poem
to voice a kind of intricacy
that is currently inside me)

I fear failure
I fear obstacles
I fear death

I fear that all of this
is just a way for me to learn
to settle and accept

I fear that God might whisper
for me to remain
abide

My depression
my troubles
my paranoia…

Have I not had enough?
Have I not moved on?
Have I not been caged–

What are you going to do to me?
Why can’t I make peace with
my anxiety?

Should I alter my perception?
Am I only trapped
in my mind?

This shouldn’t be an excuse
to make a run
‘tis not comprised of my exhaustion

but I’ve read
I’ve bled
and I’ve dreamed

and I know my departure
is to see
not to flee

Am I just convincing myself?
What is this coyness?
What is this pretense?

What are you going to do to me?
Why can’t I make peace with
my anxiety?

I beg you
and please, I plead
for you to remind me

The reasoning behind my leaving
is to see
and not to flee…
I hope it's not going to get the best of me.
Maisha Mar 2015
I hope she doesn't ask,
"What if?"
I'm terrified.
Maisha Apr 2016
I didn't know
I had to put out
these flames
just to find out
the fire would
still be there.
Maisha Oct 2013
As I give away my time
my space and
my people, too

Under this strange roof
I surround myself with novelty
along with strangers I now call my family

I realize how much I give
is of how much I lack
and how much I miss it

And how “it” is too short a word
to describe everything
it once used to be
Maisha Feb 2015
I'm a wordless poetry; inexplicable
and unwritten
A blank space after a finished sonnet,
just waiting to be scribbled.
May be unfinished.
?
Maisha Feb 2016
I'm sorry if
my silence is
mistaken as
ignorance;
if my tendency
to be demure
is deemed
discourtesy

I'm sorry if
my lack of comment
is judged as
indifference;
if my pair of ears
aren't enough
for you

I'm sorry if
you cannot see
that my language doesn't
flow through speech;
if you can't tell
which one
is which

I'm sorry if
my silence
does not console
your unease;
if you want your
voice to drown
among noises
Maisha Mar 2013
Last time I checked
time told me to wait
he said and pointed
eagerly, impatient
“Not him, no, no,
no, not him, and
definitely

not him.”

I asked
“Why not?”

“I don’t want
to watch
you
in weeps and
salt water
cleansing your eyes,
but all smiles
and most of all,
happy.”

Then I met

him

and even if
time permitted
he still said
“Someone better
is waiting for
you.”
But now
all I have is
nothing but one
question;

where is he?
Maisha Nov 2013
I grew less of a human, but more of a machine. I was not fully integrated with this manmade innovation, nor would I ever be. I still felt my heart and its feelings weaving through my blood, and the ache from an anonymous source. I did not live anymore. I just thought, and let those thoughts grow their own thoughts. And let my brain take over my human function. This revolved around so many different things, and was now among my daily life. I was basic science. I created hypotheses and predicted the outcomes, and with those, I guided myself in producing the best solutions. Sometimes, I chose what was best for everyone. Other times, I let myself lose. I grew less of a human, but more of a machine. I did not live. But I assisted those who wanted to. I became invisible, stuck in the naiveté that someone would see.
Maisha Apr 2014
I sense my heart is getting heavier and heavier as the sun rises higher then dips down to the horizon. I really don't know what to do. My mind is stuck. I wish I could be selfish about where I go and what I do. I wish I could let go of this burden that is sitting inside my ribcage. I wish it could speak aloud, and someone would get ahold of me, and all I'll do is cry and cry and scream until my voice becomes throaty and hoarse, inevitably losing to nonexistence. I wish I could just escape from education without actually leaving it. I wish I could postpone life. I wish life would just stop for a moment so I wouldn't worry so much and I wouldn't claim to have anxiety. I wish I could just do all this next year. I really need time to be my friend. And I wish my voice was here. Because it was never here. It was always too stuck up to speak. I wish I could talk to my mom as honest as I would talk to my best friend. I wish I could just tell her what I really want. I wish I wouldn't worry so much about what people thinks. I wish I could be careless and careful simultaneously. I wish when I lift the corners of my lips, it lifts the heavy weight of my heart, too. I wish people would just stop. I wish I wouldn't stress so much even though I haven't really started anything yet. I wish I know what I really want. I am wishing a lot of things. I wish I didn't wish for a lot of things. I just wish I was satisfied with life for once.
Please.
Maisha Mar 2015
Why is it that you keep lingering in my head
And I'm not even resisting the sounds that call out your name
Song lyrics always bring me back to the thought of you
They are ocean waves in which I swim
and somehow I always end up on your shore
Maisha Jun 2013
Even he was envious of her solitude. She was never not cloaked in the warmth of her own bubble. She was consoled in a demure susurrus, and never missed a kiss with the mist of air, alluring every inch of her body to coalesce with ethereality. Her skin shivered. So did his. How did the stillness linger amidst the commotion, the row, the function? It was inevitable. He almost believed she was only a feast for the sightseers, a prey for those who despised idleness at night. But good God, did she move! Did she swing her fingertips in a melodious number! Did she blink her emeralds to blind those with unfortunate, degraded gems! And did she turn to look and lift the corners of her lips, into a form that could be misconstrued, both if it were and were not responded! And did his body defy his mind, when he could only see her go, and witness his failure to speak and his success to listen. And did his mind defy his heart, when the path to his love was obstructed by the thoughts of no one but his own.
Maisha Apr 2015
When I entered a cafe
on a particular friday
I saw a tall, lean guy
behind the counter
He had a pair of familiar eyes
I didn't remember
I took a good look
at the cut on his eyebrows
and it reminded me of the scar
I had on my right thigh
As he muttered,
"How can I help you?"
I forgot
how we were living
in bodies, trapping
our souls from
reaching each other
I didn't know him then
but I remembered his smile
I looked at him
in curiosity
wondering
if he remembered mine
The guy was no book
I couldn't read him
like a piece of literature
The guy was no song
I couldn't listen
to what his heart
was singing
The guy was no film
I couldn't watch
his entire life before
my eyes
But the guy was like
every other guy
so I dreamt a whole
lifetime with his presence
and I said,
"No, never mind,"
and walked away.
Maisha Mar 2015
I never expected you to read me when I blinked
or unzip my concealed lips to collect the words I hid
I truly meant it when I said I was fine
because I was alive
I hadn't lost anyone
and I was breathing
as I always have been
So why did it still hurt
when you're not around?
I hope you're not reading this.
Maisha May 2015
I'm knitting
away my pain
turning it
into a scarf
to wear
around my
neck.
At least I'm knitting again.
Maisha Jun 2015
So, that's it then? I just hand my heart to you and get it back broken?
I...
Maisha Feb 2014
I constantly feel this feeling of impatience, of eagerness, of anxiety whenever I think about the next episode of my life. It baffles me so much that I am hardly satisfied by my present, that I am difficult to be impressed by what once was my future. Even though I am finally here, I can never truly be. I still look forward for a future, even when I am already in one. I question why I may never quench my everlasting thirst, and I answer, it may be because I look forward to when everything–when the trees die of dehydration, when the moon stops flaunting its ooze, when the sun decides to sleep forever, when history repeats itself–ends.
oh
Maisha Mar 2015
oh
I thought the stars
were supposed to align
when you met your soulmate.
I thought.
Maisha Aug 2014
The day after I got rejected, my dad called me out of my room and I knew what was coming. I wrote him a note. When I finally saw him sitting on the sofa, he told me to sit down. He began with, "Son, what's your plan?" I mumbled bluntly, "I don't know." He scratched the back of his bald head and continued, "You know, you need to find your passion in life. You might have thought that mechanics was your thing, but maybe--" he yammered on and on, about how to live life and what to live for. I handed out the note to him. He paused. "What's this?" "Please read." On the paper, I'd written, "I know, I know. This whole thing might just be a hobby after all. Yes, I have to find something that I'd be happy to work on. But right now, please let myself be delved in the sadness, so once I get out of it, I won't ever look back."
Maisha Apr 2013
I wish I could speak moon
the blazing rays
complimenting the motion
of your presence

I wish I could speak wind
the breeze
******* through the
mahogany, that is your hair

I wish I could speak rose
my petals, my crown
my scent, the embodiment
of your one-of-a-kind allure

I wish I could speak water
shrinking my way to
quench your thirst
killing whatever it is killing you

And so I wish I could speak human
the longing of my tongue
concealed behind these lips
for yours to caress mine
Maisha Apr 2013
I wish my life to be
a Kings of Convenience melody

soothing, carefree
guitar fiddling
voice calming
an easy listening

a blend of yellow and green

I wish my life to be
a Sigur Rós dream

an ethereal realm
an unearthly feel
a good foreign kind
edible for the mind

a fusion of night and coffee

And last,
I wish my life to be
The Maine’s “We’ll All Be…”

estranged but familiar
a place to call home
haunting and vivid
a place for good music

‘with a song to sing along’
Maisha Apr 2013
I want to shove
this pillow into my heart

maybe that way
I’ll feel more alive.
Maisha Oct 2015
I just would like to
slide my fingers between
the empty spaces of your hand
and lean my head
on your shoulder
feeling your pulse
beating in time with mine
I'd like to smell
the familiarity I used to
drench myself in
but now I'm soaked in a new odor
washed off the memories with
lavender soaps and vanilla scents,
with the occasional raindrops
prickling down my skin
I would like to see you up close
and trace the lines beneath your eyes
and wonder why your lashes are so long, it's unfair
wonder if your eyes
have forgotten who I am
I would like our souls to be free of this superficiality,
and unwind in a smoke form
no telling where you begin and I end
I would like us to stop being so afraid
and for our paths to cross again
and most of all, I'd like to see you smile in a way
that your heart is on display
no more hiding in dark corners,
listing dreams instead of making them true
If it was so wonderful,
then why aren't we doing it again?
Goodbye.
Maisha Feb 2014
I am so tired of this white earth
so weary of the cold that keeps
tiptoeing under my skin
I want to feel the sun in my eyes
the grass beneath my feet
knowing that the planet is awake
I want the breeze to stroke
my cheeks
to tangle and untangle my hair
to give a wisp of life than to
numb my friends to their demise

(I wish this poem sounded
as beautiful as the one
that was in my mind)

I want to see the analogous
of nature
the complementary colors
of summer
and the monochromatic
hues of the sea

I want to be engulfed in
a lover's embrace, not the
warmth of a knit afghan

I want to smile again
I want no anxiety
            no duty
            no selective mutism
            to hold me back

I just want to be free,
or maybe I just want to go home.

— The End —