We are not a mistake
to be corrected,
We are just humans
on our correct path;
just needing sometimes
kind, loving, caring words
from our fellow travelers.
Without poetic seed there won't be prose. The entire network of branches, twigs, flowers, fruits and leaves is nothing but a commentary on the small poetic seed. So all ye wannabe writers, nurture the poet in you, who understands the value of pause in life, who moves slowly to watch everything, sight and smell everything. Brushstrokes of poetry softly touch the soul without disrupting its restful muse and bring out nuggets of love, compassion, harmony and peace. All content © Sandeep Dahiya
We are not a mistake
to be corrected,
We are just humans
on our correct path;
just needing sometimes
kind, loving, caring words
from our fellow travelers.
The sad musings of a lone pine on a weather beaten ridge:
Where have the birds gone?
Too many of them used to roam
the sky over my head,
And play, love and make nest
at their joyous best
among branches mine,
Now my pine's soul doth pine,
Yesterday, I saw a bird couple too sad,
Are many of them dead?
I ought not have a sad tear in my eye,
Nor a pining heart's sigh,
My roots are now the soil
that fuels the fresh leaves' toil
for new smiles and fragrance,
Much of what was once above
is alive now below!
Past and future
are parasitic in temperament,
Always seek to expand, grow and stretch
beyond reality,
beyond practical limits.
The poor ‘present’ is a casualty,
It’s like a pointed peak,--
small but high, lofty, uplifting
where the upslope of future
and the downslope of past meet,
intersect and forget their tension momentarily,
And that’s when we actually live.
In childhood, we’ve more of ‘present’
and hence we’re lively,
The youth’s a run for the future,
As we walk, we leave behind a trail
and future shrinks,
past stretches,
There comes a point
when all we’ve is the ‘past’
in our old bones, dimmed eyes,
Again we arrive
at a phase of dulled, dimmed present,
Just a grave to look forward to;
few surviving memories
in the tiny vanishing puddle of life,
mired in mud,--
a few fishes flapping sometimes,
The past meaningless
and the present
almost a curiosity about death.
That’s how I gathered her,--
a sad pile of
shards, fragments, broken pieces,
But that’s love,
Broken pieces feel like
soft rosebuds in your arms,
They bleed the skin
as you press with gentle warmth,
You become a maker or mender,
The broken pieces get together
and acquire a shape in the kiln
of your care and share,--
a lovely woman in your arms,
full of dreams and desires;
strong, confident, vigorous.
Love first softly brushes,
then sadistically crushes,
Now it’s your turn to be broken
and spill out of her arms,
Get shattered and scattered,
Waiting for some enchanting
treasure hunter of love
to see the potential in the broken pieces,
To gather you up, your fragments
in her lovely arms,
Love will sprout again,
Giving you a new shape
in new arms with fresh charms.
If you allow loneliness to push you,
it’ll gorge on your choices and confidence,
It’ll corner you like a little mouse
shivering with fear,
seeing snakes and cats
in all that which moves around.
Loneliness is the crazy lover,
It’ll pursue one, always,
That’s its nature.
Whom does it catch?
The one who can’t outpace it.
Who are its prey?
The ones heavily burdened,--
with guilt and anger of the past;
or foolish illusions of the future.
Beat it, outpace it, confidently,
Like unburdened, swift horses,
Light like wind,
Swift like arrows,
Clanking their hooves on the cobblestones,
Pacing to the tunes of the present,--
Now,
Not an alley, side street or crossing
misses their confident eye,
They make choices,
They are self-assured,
Loneliness lags far behind them,
The bulb of their presence
dispels the darkness
where the night-bugs of loneliness
sprout like poisonous fungus.