thrice already bungee jumped / said with much pride, but haven't yet learnt to not carry knots of tension in my shoulders to not clench my teeth together in terror to not dig trails of red into my palms with chewed down nails and not trap stale air in my lungs until they nearly explode let them turn the colour of rotting grapes as every last molecule of oxygen leaks from my nose
when all I want is for my muscles to let loose let go for my feet to stop clawing (desperately and at the very last second) to every ledge and corner because these hands and these lungs, these thighs, these eyes and this heart wants to go away -
far, far away, like that land from the fairytale my mother read to me at night to send me away (just like Hansel and Gretel's mother did when her bones got leaner like my mother's is getting, now) into a land she could only send me to - never follow.
my letting go was the paradox of sunshine on a snowy mountain, a mother's lies to her children - "I'm okay", "It doesn't matter", - my letting go let go only to slink back between the sheets and hold you close. my letting go wears love in its eyes stitches in hope from the sky and prays for what was let gone to come back; else, you were never mine to begin with but i, i am now yours, (and only yours) until the very end.
i was on the road. (uttarakhand +delhi trip, june 2016)