VERSE | A DROP OF STILLNESS

My peace is like morning dew
Perched on a blade of grass
It sits there in sublime solitude
While teeming, streaming life goes past

Some days ago that pearlescent drop
Dropped off its subtle peak
Down into the earth it went
Into the soil it weeped

Since then I have been on edge
Where my dewdrop used to be
Filing life’s sharpness away
Filling me with serenity

My gut, my spine and my heart
Now beat confused paths within
Searching for the quietude
My drop of stillness used to bring

While it balanced on the silken beam
Of nature in sweet repose
Soothing from the inside out
Blooming gently like a rose

My pearl is lost, now anxiety
Has taken its tender place
I’m agitated, overwrought
There are new lines upon my face

But like the ceaseless quest
Of the moon for the furthest star
I’ll keep looking for my peace until
It’s poised again on a blade of grass.

VERSE | THE FLOWER MASSACRE

I heard it on the news 
Not the mainstream kind, no
Their stories unravel to a sepulchral beat
Where the truth lies buried under bones and teeth
This was another source
I read the caption and my heart
Burst again
Those men, women and children
Were shot, sniped to the floor
Because they’d gathered to collect
Food, that had been plentiful before
Growing in their fields and in their groves
Now razed into cavernous holes
Bleeding crimson into bare soles
Into bare souls
Bearing souls of loved ones gone
On hearts and shoulders cut and torn
Holding on to hope for one more hour
Budding gently like a flower
Reaching for a little flour
For loved ones that still breathed amid
The glowing flitter of their dead
They reached for hope spattered in red
They reached for hope pockmarked with lead
They reached for hope among their dead
They reached and were shot in their heads

Vermillion petals drift again in the wind
Blooming in the ether of Palestine.

VERSE | PALMS OF LIFE

My palm in the flower pot 
Has grown tall
Each frond strong
A testament to nurture
Mine, I like to believe
And the perfection
Of where she lives in our home
Hers and mine
Our spaces combined
She sits across from me
Diagonally
In the warmth of the floor lamp
An IKEA purchase
A capitalist ploy gone right
She sits light in her loamy soil
In the soft glow
From the 6 watt trio of bulbs
Sometimes of a late evening
My day done, when I’m thinking
Of nothing in particular, she
Waves a grand green frond at me
In a little conversation
A whisper in the quietness
A reminder maybe
That we’re still here
In our little eden of serenity
I smile at her my mouth lifting up
My spirits in its curve
She rustles happily
Lightening in that moment
Also the lines on my palms
Sweetening destiny
My palm in the flower pot
In that mystical little moment
Stirs the whole cosmos around me.
Image: Lara Meintjes

VERSE | EYES WIDE SHUT

This is an unlovely ode to bad relationships. It is also for all those still tempted to give toxic relationships chance number 2 and 3 and God forbid even more. May you keep moving ahead, above, beyond.

That gaze was just too intense 
My head felt like a beaten egg
Yolks and white all combined
To give me wishy-washy legs

I was usually in control
My heart never rested on my sleeve
But that stare, your yen laid bare
Made my ribs into a sieve

And so my sage old heart popped out
Of its latticed bulwarked den
It leaped gaily down my arm
And upon my sleeve I wore it then

It leaped and skipped all the while
That you sat to my left
I tried to brush it off my arm
But my heart dodged me, it was deft

By and by it took up the song
Of new love, brazen and bold
My thrumming blood picked up the tune
As it danced in its venous folds

I felt my eyes light up like stars
My face catch on wild fire
As you cast your eerie spell
Of infatuation and desire

The rest as they say is history
It doesn’t behoove my gentle pen
To transcribe and eternalize
Chapters closed with an amen!

Like loaded missiles, your eyes today
Once again bore into me
That day I was the prey you sought
But today I am armed to my teeth

That gaze is just deception cold
It’s so clear, now I can see
As back it kicks and ricochets
Into the desert of your being.
Image: A.J. Palmer

VERSE | A PRAYER

I hope, I hope 
That you find
Your version of paradise
With babbling milky streams
Sweetened with honey
Dripping from trees
There are no bees
(They sting you see)
In a vaulted other world
May it be your vision unfurled

But I have this feeling
Visceral, profound
This tug of awareness
In my gut
That the body so righteous
And ritual bound
Has lost touch
With the heart and the spine
They lie dormant intertwined
In the periphery
Of the small intestine

But that’s just me
I’m not saintly
Not a bit, no not a whit
But I have learnt to be a friend
I now know how to sit
With what lies deep within
My spine, my gut and my heart
That trio beating a path
Clear and bright
That despite
Myopic eyes
I can see and I can ply
So I can make this very life
My living, breathing paradise

And so I hope that you too
At some blessed point
Find your heaven as it awaits
With its resplendent pearly gates
I hope that you
Can grasp that thread
That quickening, vital line
That dangles down
Into mosques and synagogues
And altars divine
Leading you to paradise.
Image: DTG
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VERSE | UP ⏫ ROOTED

This is for all the girls and the women who are struggling to fit into the expectations, definitions and labels that have been created for them. Keep speaking, keep striving, keep moving until you are free.

They told me that I should slow down
To put my roots into my soil
But when I did
When I trusted the hands that would
Nurture those tendrils, tender fragile
They instead beat them down
Crushed and strangled them in the ground
Burnt their life seeking ends
And everytime that they grew
When they reached for something new
They cut them down
Again and again they continued
All my tomorrows were carved out to be
Bleak as the ashen soil that held
My soles, my skin, my soul, my sins
Fusing them for the world and me
They were one, coalesced
That none could sunder
Save the keepers of the roots
And God himself
Resurrected in their image to suit
Him and him and Him and them
In a conspiracy of guilt and hell

So I uprooted myself
And I found someplace else

I slowed down and felt the ground
The soil was light, loamy brown
I sat down, took off my shoes
I dug in my soles, my soul, my whole
And that is when I found my roots.
Image: MidJourney

VERSE | DAS KATHARSIS*

This is an unlovely ode to drudgery of all kinds: professional, domestic, emotional and mental. This is also a bit of a kick to the steaming underbelly of corporatocracy or political capitalism. For those still in its grips, tomorrow is another day, and then another, and another …. This is to deep breaths, cathartic vocalization and despite it all, inner peace ☮️

I sit here with my tea
It is past dusk, nighttime has come
My day is done, the drudgery
For now, has been overcome
I know I should call it living
A productive life, goal-driven
One that should give me belly warmth
The kind that you find
In food that hugs your soul
While it slowly dissolves
Into dreams and hopes and
Forging on; wanting more;
The bar always moving up
There are no rests, there are no stops

But Drudgery O Drudgery!
When I call you out for thee
That word becomes cathartic
As it washes off the aches
The tiredness, the ire
The fresh and dutiful daily inks
Of brimstone and hellfire
It’s like a song, a one word air
It fills the air with daring
A momentary “damn it all!”
No fear of anything
Celestial, terrestrial or alien

Drudgery oh drudgery!
I have been taught to revere thee
In your sugar-coated entirety
But to speak of you
Honestly
In all your tri-syllabic impiety
Is to seek out fate
When she should be
Left alone
Picking at her murphied* bones

And yet Drudgery Och Drudgery
There are days when I acknowledge thee
For what you are:
A stinging thorn in my soul
A worldly curse, a profanity
And that is when I perceive
An adroit lightness of my being.
When I call you out, I feel
A joyful whoosh of relief
My hapless spirit is airborne
Again, and I am fortified
For another day spent in your arms
Ceaseless, easeless Drudgery
With a name that’s yet a purging charm.
* The title of the poem is an adaptation of Karl Marx’s critique of political economy - Das Kapital

* Murphied: The word is derived from Murphy's Law (Whatever can go wrong will go wrong). Victim of bad luck and circumstance.
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LONGLIST | ZHR PRIZE FOR WOMEN WRITERS

My story “THE GLIMMER” has been long listed in the Zeenat Haroon Rashid 2023 Writing competition for Women.

Zeenat Haroon Rashid (21 Jan 1928 – 8 April 2017) was the daughter of Sir Abdullah Haroon. She was a young stalwart of the Muslim League and founding member of the Women’s National Guard at the time of Independence, and throughout her life promoted a vision of Pakistani women as equal partners in the struggle for building a modern Pakistan. The Zeenat Haroon Rashid Writing Prize for Women has been set up to promote and provide support for women who wish to pursue writing as a career.

Thank you to this year’s judges, Amina Ahmad, Shandana Minhas, Mohammad Hanif, Sarwat Yasmeen Azeem and Shan Vahidy. Grateful and chuffed 🙏🏼🌸

YOU CAN READ THE LONGLIST HERE: https://www.zhrwritingprize.com/read-the-longlist

SHORT STORY | RESTFUL DREAMS

G— has passed away, love.

That was what I saw at 1 in the morning. My screen glimmered with the same vitality as it had when it had announced the birth of a nephew an hour ago, my cousin’s son. I stared at the message uncomprehending, detached, suspended in the ether of all existence for a moment. But just for a moment. And then the physical reality caught up with me, bound as it is in gravity and empty space that was once shared, and time that becomes agonizing in the thrum of organs that keen when tragic things happen. I felt an overwhelming grief. But it was a quiet grief, devoid of the frenzied heart-bursting pain that I had experienced only once before when my mother had passed away. Loss after that had become inevitable, unremarkable and oddly peaceful. Like I was now awake at a deeper infinite level and privy to a soul moving on to other things, embarking on new adventures in other realms, a sojourn for which i was still biding my terrestrial time.

G— was my partner’s best friend. By association and by the fact that he was larger than life wherever he went, he had become my good friend too. Every weekend we, A— and I, would bump into him somewhere as he floated around the city socializing and networking, and encouraging and supporting entrepreneurs, students and the odd soul who had fallen on difficult times. “Hello darling!” he would say to me, his ready smile lighting up his face.

G— was also a drinker and a smoker. His days had taken on a curious upside down quality where he would retire for the night at 6pm, stupefied and benumbed in the gaunt fingered clutch of alcohol and nicotine. He would be dead to the world while it heaved and glimmered in its nighttime cadence. He would then wake up at 3am, before any haplessly insomniac bird had, or any other creature that had suffered the rigors of a disrupted circadian rhythm. The sunrise and all its ephemeral promises of a better day, a gentler horizon, and the companionship of loved ones were therefore never seen or heard by him. He was already in the throes of a day a quarter spent by the time the sun and its new-dayness swept across the rest of the just-rising world. In his solitary state in fact, G— was quiet, wistful and melancholy. Unbeknownst to so many who considered him the epitome of a life fully lived, he was an unhappy man with a heart that beat to a forlorn drum. How did I know this guarded, covert state of his being? I wouldn’t have but for my partner who is intuitive and insightful in his own right. Even between them, there were things that were spoken and things that were not, and the un-uttered things had the loudest echoes, vibrating in the flesh of the heart and then settling somewhere in the left ventricle. In G—, these unsaid things beat pensive, irregular rhythms that flowed out into the world through some of the saddest eyes I have ever seen even while his face wore its sunny smile.

Over the next few days, G— circled the periphery of my thoughts constantly. I was home with my family: my father, my sisters, my niece and a bevy of aunts and cousins. And still, I found myself washed over by regular floods of sadness. G— had been a friend, a good friend, but the heartache I was experiencing seemed to go deeper. There was no time to reflect on the brimming emotion that I felt while I was surrounded by the energy and chatter of extended family.

Then I got back home to SL. Back into the routine of my life there. And I was able to finally sit with my thoughts. The fact that he had passed away just one day after I had spoken to him when A— had gone to pick him up from the hospital; the fact that he had sounded exactly like his usual self: cheerful and bright; the fact that he had only months ago begun to take an interest in the wellbeing of his body, his mind and his heart; the fact that at 48, he had died so young; and finally, the fact that A— had lost his best friend, and I, one of the purest souls that I have known, all huddled together in my head. I picked up each one gently and put it away where one safekeeps memories of loved ones. He would live on in our thoughts, mine and A—’s. Despite the grief not having fully settled, I had clinically unravelled the state of my sadness and addressed it as I thought fit. And that should have been the end of that.

And then it popped up. Like a ghost in my phone. A little message bar at the top of my screen: “Say hi to G—, it’s been a while”. I stared at the message and at G—’s smiling face. I have to admit, I felt petrified for a moment, but only for a moment, and then I let my gut speak. My wise one sits there. It was a message from beyond if you will; a little missive to say, I may be gone but I hope you haven’t forgotten me. And here’s a cheeky little hello from me. Over the next few days, again and again the message (a queer quirk of social media algorithms and I believe, a sentient universe) would skip out to the top of my screen, reminding me of unsaid final farewells. I knew then that I had to visit G—’s resting place to pay my respects, to say one last goodbye.

I also realized then that while I had neatly compartmentalized my sadness, I hadn’t sat with it until it had settled into its forever place. In my faith and culture, on birthdays and death anniversaries, one visits the graveyard to say a prayer and to scatter fragrant rose petals on the final resting place of loved ones that are gone. Even though in line with Buddhist tenets, G— should have been cremated, he wasn’t. There was a sticky little detail whereby the needful could not be done without the nuclear family being present; and as fate would have it, and in the ever mysterious meanderings of the universe, his next of kin, his daughters lived overseas. So now there was also a grave, a place where I could go and say a little prayer. There was no reason not to, and a luminescent cosmos of reasons why I should. I had to convince my partner. Paying graveyard visits was not a cultural norm for him. But we decided on a day for the visit. I got some flowers, white and yellow – the pristine for the purity of new beginnings and the sunny for the joy of new adventures.

A— wasn’t sure of the exact location of the grave so while we looked for it, I also invoked my spiritual sixth sense to somehow point us in the right direction. We found the burial spot ultimately. I gazed at the slightly despressed patch of fresh earth in front of me and then looked inside at the feelings that were washing over me now: Joy for the man G— had been, teariness for the loss of him and an odd elation for the cosmic trip that he had started out on. I laid the flowers and said a little prayer, Restful dreams, dear G—, I whispered at the end. There was a resplendent Indian laburnum tree just a few feet away swaying gently in the breeze, scattering dappled sunshine on G—‘s grave. Even as both of us stood there, holding his memories close to our hearts, I could almost see him leaning against the tree, eyes twinkling, his trademark smile on his face saying, “Thanks for the flowers darling. Take care of each other you two, and see you somewhere, sometime”.