What is life without me there?
Is it same or better?
Our house somehow stands on rotten columns.
I know your life stoops like the guava tree, ma,
Bowed you are by the wind.
Thoughts come wading to me through flood waters
And rush like the neighbourhood dogs.
Mother of Chandan, they say you let
A piece of your body part from you.
What makes you stand there and chew
Your thoughts? Last year
Ma, when the current pulled my brother
Not the grains or clothes, you ran
Loose-haired, screaming witch-like whirlwind.
Ma, on your chest have grown thorns.
Teacher said I am flimsy as the flying pollens.
Uncle said I have angelic skin.
My face scratched and grubbed Deta’s chest
To make way into his soul.
I understand there is none as he.
But what will your life be without me?
My friends used to ask me what is red, mother.
Then, I only knew the krishnachura flower.
I have learnt the red of blood.
Groping, gripping and staggering I stood
By the lily blooming lake in the morning sun.
Take me there again.
It is so much dark in here.
End note: Deta: Colloquial reference to father in Assamese
Krishnachura: The flowering plant Delonix regia, known as royal poinciana or flamboyant.
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Ankur Goswami is an Assistant Professor in English and a research scholar presently working at NEF College in Guwahati. Apart from being an English teacher, Goswami has also been imparting training on communication skills and soft skills for more than 20 years now. He loves writing poems and has been published on several national and international platforms.