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I think I let this blueness overflow a bit Mother’s being tender again She talks to me like a bee does To a sleepy sunflower And does not mention the missed classes Does not remind me of the exams She says to me ‘Ayesha,’ she says, ‘Ayesha, you brood too much.’ And I know mother. And she jokes that she might have to Burn this notebook I keep scribbling in Because it does not make me happy She says to me, ‘I know you’re brooding when you write And all that writing makes you grey.’ She says she’ll have to throw it out In the street But I know she never will She’s too tender Too tender, my mother. I think, ‘Will I have to myself then?’ And I think, ‘How many will I throw?’ And I think, and I think till the sun goes down But I brood when fairies are on their way To the stars And mother, Why are dead things always the scariest? Sorry, I know I’m supposed to be Focusing on these Orbital radii But I can’t stop, mother The atomic structures Keep mingling with dragons And their pretty eyes Mother’s being soft again I am a little child stumbling up the hill And she never asks me to help in the kitchen But when I wander around Light as a wind She lets me chop the vegetables I do There goes an onion, so quiet Chop, chop, chop Mother, do you think if trees bled We would still butcher them to pieces? Chop, chop, chop Mother, who carved this goddess out of my name? It feels heavy now, wings mighty and huge I can barely stand this mortality Chop, chop, chop Mother, does it not pain you Seeing all the coriander dry in the pots? The dirt that birthed it from a quiet seed could not keep it alive. How are you so strong? Mother, mother It reminds me of my Morning Glories Last year They bloomed so happily every morning And they’d wilt by the evening And the next day The slender plant would make more blooms They kept dying, mother All of them On and on and There was nothing I could do Nothing the stems could do I watered and watered and watered, they kept dying Born to wither And in the winter, when the sun wasn’t as cruel Cold did the job And all the leaves fell down empty plastic wrappers, they were And I pulled the hollow vine off the railings We burned it that night, I and Faizan The fire ate away what was left, and Ate herself when nothing was chop goes the last lamb I sacrifice a lot to my wolves The sparrows outside ask me why I do not talk I do, mother, don’t I? I talk a lot, a lot, a lot, my skin gets tired of hearing The silence hops around the kitchen, a mad cat Mother wipes the heat off her forehead The stove whispers on ‘You’re brooding again, Ayesha.’ ‘Whatever, I told you it was not just the poems.’ Everything’s a poem to you, Ayesha No mother, I’m just tired—
0
May 30, 2021
May 30, 2021 at 6:02 PM UTC
Too tender, my mother
I think I let this blueness overflow a bit Mother’s being tender again She talks to me like a bee does To a sleepy sunflower And does not mention the missed classes Does not remind me of the exams She says to me ‘Ayesha,’ she says, ‘Ayesha, you brood too much.’ And I know mother. And she jokes that she might have to Burn this notebook I keep scribbling in Because it does not make me happy She says to me, ‘I know you’re brooding when you write And all that writing makes you grey.’ She says she’ll have to throw it out In the street But I know she never will She’s too tender Too tender, my mother. I think, ‘Will I have to myself then?’ And I think, ‘How many will I throw?’ And I think, and I think till the sun goes down But I brood when fairies are on their way To the stars And mother, Why are dead things always the scariest? Sorry, I know I’m supposed to be Focusing on these Orbital radii But I can’t stop, mother The atomic structures Keep mingling with dragons And their pretty eyes Mother’s being soft again I am a little child stumbling up the hill And she never asks me to help in the kitchen But when I wander around Light as a wind She lets me chop the vegetables I do There goes an onion, so quiet Chop, chop, chop Mother, do you think if trees bled We would still butcher them to pieces? Chop, chop, chop Mother, who carved this goddess out of my name? It feels heavy now, wings mighty and huge I can barely stand this mortality Chop, chop, chop Mother, does it not pain you Seeing all the coriander dry in the pots? The dirt that birthed it from a quiet seed could not keep it alive. How are you so strong? Mother, mother It reminds me of my Morning Glories Last year They bloomed so happily every morning And they’d wilt by the evening And the next day The slender plant would make more blooms They kept dying, mother All of them On and on and There was nothing I could do Nothing the stems could do I watered and watered and watered, they kept dying Born to wither And in the winter, when the sun wasn’t as cruel Cold did the job And all the leaves fell down empty plastic wrappers, they were And I pulled the hollow vine off the railings We burned it that night, I and Faizan The fire ate away what was left, and Ate herself when nothing was chop goes the last lamb I sacrifice a lot to my wolves The sparrows outside ask me why I do not talk I do, mother, don’t I? I talk a lot, a lot, a lot, my skin gets tired of hearing The silence hops around the kitchen, a mad cat Mother wipes the heat off her forehead The stove whispers on ‘You’re brooding again, Ayesha.’ ‘Whatever, I told you it was not just the poems.’ Everything’s a poem to you, Ayesha No mother, I’m just tired—
Ayesha
Written by
21/F/Pakistan
May 30, 2021
May 30, 2021 at 6:02 PM UTC
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