I and you won’t be Two unfamiliar women of our land. I’ll not leave you to the radio To swallow up our history, We’ll have phone calls and photographs Transported between seasons and changes And barracks of old classics Drilled in between our conversations.
You don’t leave the land, abstract- Smell or your braced triangular family But I, your daughter, a nomad Demands change, unbuckled knees, Thunder and lightning than a Frozen damp lake. I don’t know if this absurd let you down Being a floating female disc Without a silver hanging off her neck.
Your cotton sarees and senseless arguments, Modest gestures and peripheral smiles Walked miles with me. My uncivilized ways and half assembled days Somehow compromised your 7pm calls. You didn’t declare an ownership Or terrified me with protection But your roots branches and leaves Held me with an irresponsible luck.
You did want to walk with me, Comprehend your traditions and family tree But you grew obsessed over my books, My anglicized friendships and father’s ways. I don’t want us to wrap up stories Let us be ‘us’, flesh and blood Without English comprehensions, Fork and Spoon- The world is desperate to squeeze in between ‘us’.
I want to sit next to you every eve Even when I’m miles apart Sip your ginger tea and gossip with Leela And I know you have more of Mukundan, MT and Padmarajan Jolted in between your memories Wanting to be told, to be felt.
Retreating monsoons, half naked veranda ‘Shifting houses’ and ice cream spoons you lost Bridged the gaps of a dysthymic brain. Your diary and worn-out scribbles Lifted an awkward silence, I ignored. And I know there are plenty of Conversations Separated by a trigger.
Your four loud aunts and their- Disproportionate-pinches, The main house and its innumerable doors And the single toilet your grandad possessed Will always be ‘our stories’ with mango pickle And little almonds I recollect as your curfew years.
You need not worry, I will not- Sit with bubbles in my mouth. I can pinch your cousins and Exchange few golden bangles. I can walk the temple lanes with your- Mother, silken skirts and jingling anklets. And I know the family recipes, The exact nicknames and garlanded gossips. There will be days, get-togethers and Photographs Added into your prized collection.
A subconscious music flooded my psychology When chlorine water, light-lit-days, And flirtatious silly men Swung in fine tune next to me. There was always a detached-attachment That translated a traditional ghost Who announced a corner for itself Somewhere exact I cannot pin point.
Let us not freeze the prologue We can walk door by door Between generations and blue window panes In a coordinated tune guided by- Voices of our ancestors. The genes inside me needs a Second hand journey With-out an altered you and me.