Torn from Morning’s Pink Azalea

    1. You are never warned,

      just intimated about your

      recent folly, aberration,

      like you meeting the fog on the day’s drive,

           blindsided, startled.


      In the middle of the room,

      on a dresser, there’s a looking glass.

      Through her, you’re swallowed whole

      into your past

          so full of colour, joy, sadness

      all quaffed by shame –


      Shame; so lofty,

      clinging onto your skin like a helminth.

      The pinnacle of your cheek is red,

      so are your ears – red, so distinctly separate

      from your body

      and all of a sudden…

      cold and hot alike.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             

         The hairs on your sweater stand up

      like as if lightning were to hit the land,

      like the earth, your body cracks at its centre,

      opens its mouth wide

      resigns to its own

         abyss.


      In your movie there is mitosis,

      you split into two identical parts –

      one; embarrassed, with stifled tears in

      the girls’ bathroom submerged under

      the smell of creosote oil.

      the other; watching you despise you,

      wondering how love for yourself is so

      excruciatingly scanty,

      riddled with guilt,

      next to 

             nothing.


      You spend the next few years learning

      love,

      through losing love. You say

      there is no learning without loss, but

      here you are; derelict,

      desperate to

          find

      things that you can lose.


      You emerge from the looking glass,

      time is like morning dew;

      tiny droplets on the Azalea’s chest

      beautiful,

         and ephemeral alike.

      When the dew drips from

      the petals, it makes the same

          sound

      as the drops of water leaking from

      one of the many eyes of that

      old bathroom faucet

         years ago….


      split into two;

      irreconcilable.

    Andal Srivatsan is a writer and poet based in India, and the editor of Pena Lit Mag. Her work has been published in various journals, including TBLM, Verse of Silence, The Chakkar, AThinSliceofAnxiety, BlazeVOX, The Sunflower Collective, Tarshi’s InPlainspeak, MeanPepperVine, and Literary Yard. She can be found on Instagram @andalsrivatsan, where she shares poetry and book reviews.

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