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Formic Acid

Ants multiply, a silent war fought with domestic remedies. Like frogs, we share unspoken truths.

June 15, 2024

Surely they have multiplied.

From I-can’t-keep-leftover-dosa-open-on-a-plate
to Lock & Lock containers with leakproof lids
in my more frequent Nesto carts and our greige walls
splintering up like attic mirrors. You notice them first
in your house; diligently name them
by color, size, eyemuzzlelegs. I note the sting;
how each needles in, how each percolates connective tissue,
how each stays unrequited
in a pool of feigned ignorance,
a willful disregard to understanding.
Mealy-mouthed, we never draw up words
from the cabbage rings of our wells. We swim like frogs,
skin-breathing, veiling the truth that we are neither frogs,
nor do we possess ranine brooding or well-dwelling habits.

A connection is also a way to rupture. I am trying to erase
the line by widening it so much so that we become as definite
as what connects us.

I put up my ways of resistance: buy dozens of tangerines,
churn vats of lime, wipe countertops clean with powdered
anthills of citrous peels. You linger. I am forced to hand-pick
cloves out of rice, sweep ground chalk from my windowsill
after every morning coffee-and-call. You greet good morning.
I concoct remedies powdering sugar, pouring
half a pack of baking soda. I google: another use
for crusted borax stashed by emptied detergent cans,
abandoned peanut butter jars.

I know you must have waged your own war: spritzed vinegar,
sprinkled talcum powder, planted ant-baits. You retain
your frog traits of silence.

I pluck dead ants peppered on my fridge door casket.
My thoughts tweezer them off from the sleep-bundled bedsheet,
from laundered shirts, terry bars, moon-rim of the water pot,
from sealed-yet-infested almond packets.

You drill holes along your wall skirting, seal ant-gel in place.
Late in the evening, we sweep laterite dust
from your tiles when the workers leave. We linger
here: having to wiremesh-scrub with the raw, primordial
earnestness and enterprise to make something that exists,
something that breathes and lives
vanish. You bring in painters.

You know about their vespoid wasp ancestors. I know
that they survived mass extinctions. We keep
quiet like summer-frogs.

📖
PART OF A COLLECTION

Mothers Deal with Termites like Time and 5 other poems

View Full Collection →

Dr. Rahana K Ismail

Dr. Rahana K Ismail is the author of ‘Newtness’ released by Yavanika Press in 2022. Her poems have been featured or are forthcoming in the Yearbook of Indian Poetry in English (2021, 2022), The Penn Review, The Lighthouse, Usawa Literary Review, Muse India, POSIT, Alchemy Spoon, Ink Sweat and Tears, Barzakh, Bending Genre, nether Quarterly, Contemporary Haibun Online, Aainanagar, Aleph Review, Chakkar, Alipore Post, Last Leaves, Farmer-ish, Stone of Madness, Foxglove, Hakara, Qissa, Verse of Silence, Pine Cone Review among others. She has read her poems as a panelist of the session ‘Defiance and Daughters’ in the Glass House Festival 2024.

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