Early
Spring, a poem by Abhinav Aradhi
There’s a feeling in the
cemetery air,
Like a billion flowers
blooming at once,
A spectacle that would
light the world up
In an exhibition of joy
previously thought impossible.
And all down the street,
The houses have their eyes
wide open,
Because they’ve been
exposed to a cruel truth.
They now live with blissful
insomnia.
The sun has stitched
The mouth of the moon shut,
So it can no longer laugh
at humanity’s flaws,
Because who can really say
they’re flawless?
And what kind of nuclear
family falls apart?
Could it be that sanctity,
much like a rusty bolt
Holding together a
rollercoaster spanning skyhigh,
Is not an efficient glue?
Is it possible that the
traditions aren’t right?
That we live by a set of
rules so ironclad
That they weld our hands
with their harsh retaliation
If we do not fall in line.
When did we become slave to
our ancestors,
And what they thought was
morally acceptable?
If a tradition is a mainstay,
then surely morality
Must be passed on
throughout the ages, no?
Yet it has evolved,
Blossomed, into a
formidable plant,
One with gorgeous,
multicolored petals
That spans over cities like
a great looming cloud.
And all the little children
Grow up to shift the world a little further in the right direction,
Like little seeds planted
in a post-apocalyptic wasteland,
Only to turn the whole
world lush and green.
If, for every Janice,
For every Brother and
Sister,
And for every dastardly
Father, there is joy,
Then why would we need to
look to the past?
There’s little daisies,
Growing up out of the
cracks of graves,
And they seem to wave hello
To the flowers left by
visitors.
They’ll grow up to be the
prettiest little things,
And they’ll grow up to make
the world a little more beautiful,
And then they’ll bring on
the next batch,
Like the spin of a ceiling
fan.
C'est la vie, tradition.
We’re breaking our
rose-tinted glasses on your headstone.
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