I have lived many lives
inside the borders of this single one.
Not in different bodies,
not in distant centuries—
but here,
within the quiet revolutions
of becoming.
Each version of me
a life my soul stepped into
long enough
to learn what it came for.
And like any traveller of worlds,
I wore the clothing required
to survive the climate.
Some call them masks.
I call them migrations.
⸻
The First Life
In the beginning
I was sunlight and soft soil.
A child with open palms,
collecting laughter
like seashells from the shore.
Trust grew easily then,
wild as summer grass.
I believed people
the way rivers believe
they will always reach the sea.
But innocence is a brief season.
Even the gentlest gardens
eventually learn
the language of storms.
And so the first mask formed—
thin as morning frost.
Not deception.
Just awareness
opening its eyes.
⸻
The Second Life
Then came thunder.
Rooms where words struck walls
like lightning searching for ground.
Silence stretched tight
like air before a fracture.
In those moments
I became a quiet meteorologist of moods.
Reading danger in breathing patterns.
Watching shadows for sudden weather.
A slammed door meant rising wind.
A raised voice meant lightning.
And survival—
survival became an art form.
Another mask was carved.
Stronger now.
A face that could remain calm
while storms tried to convince the sky
to fall.
⸻
The Third Life
Time moved.
And something remarkable happened.
I changed.
Not by choice—
but by instinct.
Like a chameleon
learning the wisdom of colour.
Not to disappear,
but to understand the landscape
long enough
to cross it.
Green in places where hope could grow.
Grey where endurance became necessary.
Gold in the rare sunlight
where joy dared to return.
Every environment
etching lessons into bone.
Pain became a sculptor.
Pressure became a forge.
And somewhere between breaking
and rebuilding—
strength was born.
⸻
The Fourth Life
But transformation has its price.
There were nights
when I shed identities
like old skins of survival.
Standing in stillness
asking the mirror a dangerous question:
Who am I
when the masks come off?
The frightened child?
The silent witness?
The fighter who refused to collapse?
The answer arrived slowly—
like dawn remembering the horizon.
I was never meant
to be only one.
Every mask was a teacher.
Every wound a syllabus.
Every ending
a quiet reincarnation.
⸻
The Life That Rose From Ash
Now when I look back
across the path of those former selves,
I do not see damage.
I see alchemy.
Storms that sharpened my senses.
Fire that refined my spirit.
Darkness that taught me
how to recognise light.
Because the soul
does not waste suffering.
It transforms it.
Just as forests rise greener
after fire,
some spirits rise stronger
after breaking.
Perhaps that is the greatest secret
of identity:
We are not meant to remain unchanged.
We are meant
to evolve.
Again.
Again.
Again.
⸻
The Truth Beneath the Masks
So if you ask me now
who I truly am—
do not expect
a single face.
I am a corridor of lifetimes
walking inside one body.
Every mask I ever wore
still breathing quietly beneath my skin.
The child who trusted.
The witness who learned.
The survivor who endured.
The soul who refused to disappear.
Each one
a rebirth.
Each one
a lesson written in bone.
You call it change.
My spirit calls it remembering.
Because every time the world
tried to reduce me to ashes,
something ancient in my chest
leaned toward the fire
instead of away from it.
And from those flames
I did not return the same.
I returned wiser.
Stronger.
Unrecognisable
to the versions of myself
that once feared the storm.
So understand this—
I was never losing myself
through all those shifting masks.
I was shedding the faces
that no longer fit my soul.
And beneath them all
the same truth kept rising—
not broken,
not defeated,
but burning.
Mar 12
Mar 12, 2026 at 5:10 AM UTC
I have lived many lives
inside the borders of this single one.
Not in different bodies,
not in distant centuries—
but here,
within the quiet revolutions
of becoming.
Each version of me
a life my soul stepped into
long enough
to learn what it came for.
And like any traveller of worlds,
I wore the clothing required
to survive the climate.
Some call them masks.
I call them migrations.
⸻
The First Life
In the beginning
I was sunlight and soft soil.
A child with open palms,
collecting laughter
like seashells from the shore.
Trust grew easily then,
wild as summer grass.
I believed people
the way rivers believe
they will always reach the sea.
But innocence is a brief season.
Even the gentlest gardens
eventually learn
the language of storms.
And so the first mask formed—
thin as morning frost.
Not deception.
Just awareness
opening its eyes.
⸻
The Second Life
Then came thunder.
Rooms where words struck walls
like lightning searching for ground.
Silence stretched tight
like air before a fracture.
In those moments
I became a quiet meteorologist of moods.
Reading danger in breathing patterns.
Watching shadows for sudden weather.
A slammed door meant rising wind.
A raised voice meant lightning.
And survival—
survival became an art form.
Another mask was carved.
Stronger now.
A face that could remain calm
while storms tried to convince the sky
to fall.
⸻
The Third Life
Time moved.
And something remarkable happened.
I changed.
Not by choice—
but by instinct.
Like a chameleon
learning the wisdom of colour.
Not to disappear,
but to understand the landscape
long enough
to cross it.
Green in places where hope could grow.
Grey where endurance became necessary.
Gold in the rare sunlight
where joy dared to return.
Every environment
etching lessons into bone.
Pain became a sculptor.
Pressure became a forge.
And somewhere between breaking
and rebuilding—
strength was born.
⸻
The Fourth Life
But transformation has its price.
There were nights
when I shed identities
like old skins of survival.
Standing in stillness
asking the mirror a dangerous question:
Who am I
when the masks come off?
The frightened child?
The silent witness?
The fighter who refused to collapse?
The answer arrived slowly—
like dawn remembering the horizon.
I was never meant
to be only one.
Every mask was a teacher.
Every wound a syllabus.
Every ending
a quiet reincarnation.
⸻
The Life That Rose From Ash
Now when I look back
across the path of those former selves,
I do not see damage.
I see alchemy.
Storms that sharpened my senses.
Fire that refined my spirit.
Darkness that taught me
how to recognise light.
Because the soul
does not waste suffering.
It transforms it.
Just as forests rise greener
after fire,
some spirits rise stronger
after breaking.
Perhaps that is the greatest secret
of identity:
We are not meant to remain unchanged.
We are meant
to evolve.
Again.
Again.
Again.
⸻
The Truth Beneath the Masks
So if you ask me now
who I truly am—
do not expect
a single face.
I am a corridor of lifetimes
walking inside one body.
Every mask I ever wore
still breathing quietly beneath my skin.
The child who trusted.
The witness who learned.
The survivor who endured.
The soul who refused to disappear.
Each one
a rebirth.
Each one
a lesson written in bone.
You call it change.
My spirit calls it remembering.
Because every time the world
tried to reduce me to ashes,
something ancient in my chest
leaned toward the fire
instead of away from it.
And from those flames
I did not return the same.
I returned wiser.
Stronger.
Unrecognisable
to the versions of myself
that once feared the storm.
So understand this—
I was never losing myself
through all those shifting masks.
I was shedding the faces
that no longer fit my soul.
And beneath them all
the same truth kept rising—
not broken,
not defeated,
but burning.
This poem explores identity as something evolving. The “masks” represent the versions of ourselves shaped by different environments, lessons, and survival. Like a chameleon adapting to new landscapes, we change to endure. Each transformation becomes a rebirth, building wisdom, courage, and strength until the soul beneath it all remembers its true fire.
