A
jar of sugar, the cinnamon sticks you always eyed, neither
all sweet nor all sharp, refreshing your mouth if you had tasted
anything too sweet or too bitter. How does a plastic toothbrush stand
survive forever, remain unchanged all these years when everything
around it had changed so irrevocably?
All
the places I had dreamed at, the mirrors I had stared into, the
damned spot on the white marble which refused to be out – they’re
all there, at home even when I am not. The visitor who arrived in the
veranda in the evening and whom you greeted in the same fashion all
through the years still marks his attendance on desultory evenings,
inviting a shout-out from the veranda to the kitchen for a sweetmeat
which the children had appropriated that morning. The small figurines
struggle to hold their own in the big showcases, which were built
with so much ambition but could only house random birthday gifts like
‘You’re my friend’ photo frames and a brass plaque, a painful
reminder of older days which weren’t even luxurious. But the brass
plates were retained because those days still held the hope of better
days. Now they’re all lined up clinging to their dignity with all
they have. Pelmets without curtains, chairs without cushions:
everywhere the promise, not at one place the fulfilment.
My
adeptness too is still there, when it comes to slipping into my home in the house: crawling back into the foetus of my dreams to
escape the unpalatable reality.
Can
romance and repulsion coexist?
Or is it possible to meet the desperate need for a safe house - one
pure and unchanging, which purges everything you keep there, all
your thoughts and dreams and hopes, and does not change.
First published in The Brown Boat-RaedLeafPoetry India, 15 April 2014.
2 comments:
Isn't it always we who change, sometimes, perhaps too much and too irrevocably?
Is that always a bad thing?
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