Mother, I won't go to America I don't want to work the desk job in the high-rise at the edge of the city, waking the nights nesting code. Mother, I can't buy you the dream home. This is how I am. This is who I've become. I weave a nest for the birds of dreams to roost in my soul. I'm a poet. I'm peregrine. When I come home, can I sit by your side and not talk? Not talk of marriage and children and property and bank balance? I folded my kites up and my boomerangs and studied the nights. The glass filings on the manja cut sores in my heart but I succeeded, through university and adversity. But this is who I am: a poet. I weave a fabric and print tales of shadow and light. Here, they come to roost, the birds peregrine. I don't come home to eat what you cook. I don't come home to hear about struggles and disappointments. Yes I have failed in some sense. But there is so much to say that is better said unsaid. But this is who I am: a poet. I'm peregrine. Can I just come home and sit by your side at sunset?
Expectation. And after a while that seems all to relationships. So turning the clock back might help.