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Daily Verse
 

Week 2, September  2024
 

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When Grief pours all day long
by Ranu Unyal  9th Sep 2024

I have been wanting to tell you

all about birds that wake up early

and by evening disappear in mid- air. 

I once saw a peacock being wooed by

a peahen on my Jhelum balcony. 

Kamra number ek so pachees Bhagwan Singh’s

voice looms all through the corridors

and I would leap out of bed.  Hugging my shirt.

 

Coconut Parachute in hand. 

Sanjai’s swift gentle touch. 

An oil massage - tabla on head

and Sona’s laughter lilting taanpoora.

Who the hell said life had lost

all meaning or music? I am getting old. 

Holding on to memories.  Have I not

anything else to salvage the innards?

 

Or is it true that we are the sum of

worn-out memories and often plug them

on to relive the youthful camaraderie,

afraid to return?  What I see today

is swallowed by the bin and on my door frame

hangs a key ring, a talisman of healing

from a friend who is no more. 

Venkat was killed in a blast in Kabul. 

 

Khursheed took the plunge one day

lost Rajeevan to diabetes and now you Sanjai. 

All that dies, grows again and then falls. 

All that is fertile will turn dry

and dryness will flower again. 

The tryst is the only truth.

Each day dies and we die with the day

and then we rise again. 

 

Is there a way out of this misery

this pain, this helpless ordeal? 

Even Gods have no answer

and the dead do not speak  

as for the living they are

afraid to speak.  Only I stand

in front of you and you stare

back at me.  Hushed silence.

Image by Aliis Sinisalu
Crayon

Haiku on Nostalgia

by Govind Joshi  10th September  2024

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mint leaves

grinding the chutney

on father's grinding stone

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stamp album

the world

of childhood

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screen door

a child listening to the guests

in the garden

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Lazy Afternoons

By Geeta Varma 11th September 2024

Lazy afternoons

Except for a few

All the birds are quiet

I walk on the dry leaves

Under the silent trees,

Smells from Grandma’s kitchen

Wafts in the air

She is happy when she is cooking

I can hear her laugh

As she talks to someone there

I wait for her to call me

Nothing moves,

Not even leaves

I sit on the low wall, waiting

No one can disturb me

This moment is mine.

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Micro poems on Nostalgia

By Sandip Chauhan 12th September 2024

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threadbare quilt

draped on a wooden rocker

patchwork dreams

and gentle lullabies

cradle the twilight

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fog settles

in the cracks

of a marble basin

the timeworn statue leans

toward the overgrown weeds

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worn-out shoe

on the curb

caked in grime

the street sweeper hums

through the heat

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Flower

Mother

By Satbir Chadha  13th September  2024

I have no picture anywhere of my Mom 

There were many but Dad would be disturbed so he put them all away

Like he put away all his poetry, I’d seen dozens of notebooks full of it

But when he passed I found none, and I remembered what he’d said once 

“Satvir, Im going to burn all I wrote, people have written masterpieces and left quietly 

Who am I to flaunt my petty rants

My silly adulation of beauty

That everyone else can equally see”

 

One small passport sized fading photograph of Mom we’d sometimes see

On his writing table, that was enough for him

 

I’ve no pictures to show my children or my friends how beautiful she was

None where an oblong Bindi shone on her calm narrow brow

Or the beauty mark on her left cheek

Her honey golden eyes or her dark wavy hair

Her loving gaze 

Her rare smile

Her work worn hands for she could never rest

Perhaps she knew she had little time

Often when all slept in the night she’d roast the flour and make ‘pinnis’

We’d see thalis layered with them in the morning

No surprise if some nights she spent polishing the furniture

Or painting a door gone shabby

Or cut and stitched the festival dress for the young daughter of the next door Aunty

 

There was time for everything but none for a picture that I could keep

And get it out when I missed her or talk to when there’s no one else

No time to tell us her journey was done

Only to leave us all just stunned

 

Like children counting stars and wondering where the first one went

Like watching fluttering butterflies, as they disappear before your sight

Like a rock we mark for ourselves but under the sea it slips

I never realised when she became will o the wisp 

 

Ahhh Mom 

Happy Mothers Day

Biographies of Poets

Geeta Varma is a poet based in Chennai. She has worked as a teacher and freelance journalist for some time. She has to her credit two books of poems and is a regular contributor to a few online magazines. She lives in Neelankarai with her husband Shreekumar Varma and has two sons, Vinayak married to Yamini, and Karthik.

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