Memory long gone
etched vivid and framed on wall
modern photograph
Siblings
With joy the house filled
as mother’s womb with child
second offspring twas to be
and the forefront of attention
became therefore the first one
master of the second place
jealousy knocked on the door
as they rolled up the new born
warm and soft in woollen blankets
that were once the older one’s
hatred raised its ugly head
when toys, they handed down
retrieving from the archives
rattles unseen in many years
a nightmare school became
setting an example, the older
teaching and taking care of
shepherding the little one
ages went by in mute anger
bosom brothers of a mother
never tormenting the big was
ever in support, yet still in rage
with poison his heart filled
whilst younger’s with admiration
Falling

In love a tree falls
come hither every arm calls
reaching for the skies
Everywhere

Scattered and messy
as sea shells on sandy beach
human blobs on earth
Hello, stranger
“Just send me a message if you need help.”
That was the last thing I told her. She was neither a friend nor a family memberโjust a colleague. I wouldn’t have met her if I hadn’t stopped by a friend’s seating location at workโshe’d joined their team a few months ago and was, along with my friend and a few others in their team, expecting to attend her first corporate event in the United States. They were all preparing for the visa interviewโfilling up forms, double checking spellings and passport numbers, cross-checking each other’s details, and raining me with questions of what to do and whatnot.
It was amusing. I’d gone through the same nerve-wracking experience two years ago when I first applied for a visa. And so I was only too happy to help out these first-timers.
Every one of them was excited beyond words, making plans, discussing which places to visit, and what to eat on the plane. Tiring is an understatement when referring to the journey from India to anywhere in the USโit involves around 22 hours of flying time and additional transit times. No first time traveller has any idea of how they’d endure it. And every far fetched idea they do have evaporates when the plane takes off. I saw the same conundrum in their eyes. I could understand of courseโgrowing up in a developing country, the only thing you want more than to visit the United States is to visit the United States.
But she wasn’t like the others in the lot. Although she, too, was excited, nervous, and earnest in her effort, she had more than blatant thrill in her eyes. She clung to it as if she couldn’t believe she deserved it.
She died in a car accident yesterday.
She should’ve attended her visa interview sometime this week. I’m sure she would’ve got through despite all her fears of not. I’m sure that would’ve cherished the jet-lagging journey and discovered a different side of herself in the new found land. She would’ve brought back more than candy for her friendsโshe would’ve brought back countless memories and an endless ocean of inspiration for her work. For she was an artistโone who inhales the world with new eyes, expelling a brighter, moe hopeful, version in a consortium of colours.
I never got to know her as a person. And yet, I felt a deep sorrow descend on me when I heard of her death. She wasn’t a friend or a family memberโjust a colleague I met by sheer chance.
It’s strange how much we under-appreciate the impact of people in our lives. We seldom realise how much we retain from even a brief conversation. I spoke to her only about three times in total. She wanted advice to clear the visa interview. She wanted assurance, and I was there at the right time to tell her it’ll all be fine. However, every time I spoke to her, I spoke from the top of my headโsharing my experience, my lessons, and my joys. Those weren’t deep, soul searching conversations, but they swirl in my head, haunted now, still in shock that the person whose pupils dilated upon hearing my adventures is no longer alive.
