Home
Loosened from the
narrative of my own living
is a world
that is 20 years dead. I am awake at night
doing modest things:
shuffling, sailing, remembering.
I am a cloud nomading,
I see the weight of my heart
adrift in the sky... beneath it I become the falls, aching
by the sand—its trembling hands hold me,
for a moment, I am inordinate;
pitch black Atlantic where I swim free with the sea,
the navel of my being
splits open before me like a pear.
No piece of me looks for meaning there,
but how do I memorialise this?
I hear, everyone is moving somewhere hollow—these
things mean nothing to me. White noise, chatter,
a great, big world where nothing belongs,
silence…barrenness placed next to my own life.
Beside it, I try not to become a ghost.
I have been reading the Odyssey,
feeling foreign even on my own couch.
There is not a thing I could salvage
from my own breaking, yet I must just endure.
I learn to remember some small details:
twice I die, passing through the ordeal
of feeling rootless,
the rooms grow errant,
yellow suburban light
morph into the shores, I weep alone in silence.
I tell myself through it all, and
carry my bones under sinking stars;
this brief, crepuscular life that breaks you
is a memory...
like death in a shell.
Remember always…Ithaca.
Snata Basu is a writer based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Her poetry has appeared on various literary platforms including The Opiate, Visual Verse: An Online Anthology of Art and Words, and Small World City.
Comments