The blood stained halves of the golden string | Bertha Fiona Mary

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Laying in the middle

Looking at the two figures

Sleeping with their back faced to each other.

The halves of the golden string

That connected them together once

Are being held by my little bleeding palms.

The question “How can love just disappear?”

Is wrapping its hands around my neck,

Choking me for the answer

I wish I had.

I have tried to tie a knot between them

But it always ends in

Sleepless storms,

Endless tears

And broken love.

Now I’m worn out and hopeless.

So,I'm going to let loose

And leave the absurdity

To the two ends of the string.

But occasionally one expresses their love to the other

Which makes me want to pull the halves

And tie it up by wrapping it

Around my strongest bone

Even if it may break me down

Till I’m dust.

জাগ্রত সৈনিক | Debashis Bhattacharya

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

হে বীর সৈনিক,

তোমার অমিত বিক্রম, শৌর্য্য-কীর্তি

সূর্য-কিরণ সম দীপ্তি

কণ্ঠে তোমার গম্ভীর নাদ

আকাশে-বাতাসে মুখরিত প্রাণ

কহিতেছে বারবার

ভারত মাতার মর্যাদা কভু

হবে না'ক ক্ষীয়মান।

বজ্র বাহুতে রাখিবো ধরিয়া

লুন্ঠিত কভু হবে না ঝান্ডা

আঘাত যতই আসুক সমরে

দলি'ব তাহারে পদতলে

দিগ-দিগন্তে হইবে ধ্বনিত

ভারত মাতার সন্তান মোরা

শত্রু দেখিয়া হই নাকো ভীত

দেশের জন্য সঁপেছি এ প্রাণ

দিয়ে জীবনেরে দান।

তোমারি বক্ষে নিয়া জন্ম

তোমাতে সঁপেছি জীবনাদর্শ

তুমি যে মোর স্বর্গরাজ্য

তুমি মোর বিধাতা।

তোমারি বন্দেমাতরম স্তবে

হলো প্রান সঞ্চার

জন্ম-জন্ম পাই যেন আমি

তোমারি বক্ষে স্থান।

আমি দুঃসাহসী, আমি অজেয়

তোপের সম্মুখে অগ্নি বিধ্বংসী

মিসাইলের গতি স্তব্ধকারী

আমি দধীচির অস্থি,

ভীরুতাকে করি পদানত সদা

শত্রুর সংহার,

অতন্দ্র প্রহরী সৈনিক আমি

ভারতবাসীর ত্রাণ।

আমার দেশের মাটি যে মা

বিশ্ব শান্তির ধাম

সেই মাটি কে জানাই স্যালুট

দিয়ে তন্, মন আর প্রাণ।

Why I Couldn't Write A Poem | Riya Vishwanath

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I sat quizzing myself for days at end.

I found myself staring at the darkness,

For inspiration was what I was trying to fend.

I looked through the mountains

I skimped through the views

I jogged through the memories,

Still couldn't find my muse.

As days passed by, so did my hope.

Smothered with worry,

I saw my chance slipping down the slope.

After days wasted searching in vain

Came the deadline,

and brought with itself agony and pain.

I scribbled, as if my life depended on it

For it did.

Fifteen minutes before the deadline,

Head berried in the device

I wrote a poem about why I couldn't write a poem before

And I think, it turned out fine.

I sat quizzing myself for days at end.

I found myself stairing at the darkness,

For inspiration was what i was trying to fend.

I looked through the mountains

I skimped through the views

I jogged through the memories,

Still couldn't find my muse.

As days passed by, so did my hope.

Smothered with worry

I saw my chance slipping down the slope.

After days wasted searching in vain

Came the deadline,

and brought with itself agony and pain.

I scribbled, as if my life depended on it

For it did.

15 minutes before the deadline,

Head burried in the device

I wrote a poem about why i couldn't write a poem before

And i think, it turned out fine.

But that's for the judges to decide.

The Army Daughter | Aarushi Kapoor

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

“I'll wait for you”

Baba cried while adjusting my badges

on the uniform.

I wiped his tears and dubiously asked him

“Am I your son now?”

“No, you're my daughter

and even thousand sons

cannot equal your glory” he said.

He kissed me on my forehead

and I left.

Baba always wanted a son.

A son to fulfil his dream.

A son for the country

A son who could join army.

Younger me could still feel the

‘baba named' emptiness in my heart.

He never lifted me in his arms.

He never kissed me goodbyes.

He never picked me from school.

Until one day, amma died.

And baba promised to be my amma.

And from that day

I and baba would spend all the summers together

licking mangoes

under the banyan tress

in the community park.

All the winters eating ice creams

out of our guilty pleasure.

Hoping that the ice cream would reduce his guilt.

His guilt of not loving me.

His guilt of not hugging me.

His guilt of not treating me like his son.

He called me and with teary voice said

“You were great in the parade today

Sharma ji too shared your photos

on the WhatsApp group.”

“And you baba, how are you feeling?”

“ I'm feeling as if I always wanted a daughter” he cried and hanged the call.

A message popped on my phone.

‘I'm still waiting for you’.

Ode to unmarried and unemployed girls | Swathy Janardhanan

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Balcony doors wide open,

she sat on her hostel bed,

for last God-knows-how-many-years.

Everyday,

she waited for the dusk.

As a murder of crows wing away-

and city lights glare with painted eyelids,

she unfurled cobwebs of her thoughts.

Indian girl,

twenty eight and unmarried.

Five feet two inch and dusky skin.

"Seeking alliances?"

"Hell no, not now."

She's unemployed and uninterested.

Nested in failures of government exams.

And in her Indian late twenties.

First born of a broken family.

She is community's question mark-

and family's trauma therapist.

Acha's migraine and amma's heartache.

Victim of forced family conversations.

"Girl, stop telling others you've PCOS."

"Pray or fast unto death for a job."

Endless heaves and tears.

You postmortem her flat chest-

and polka dots on her skin.

She's the worst picture in gossip columns-

of neighbourhood Seema aunties.

They blabber about her boyfriend.

The one with long unkempt hair.

"I'm telling you again Beena,

not a pure virgin this one."

Fallen from lines of a rustic verse,

She's child of a golden past.

Romantic and creative.

But now a poster child of relative's sympathy.

Still chasing her dreams?

Who will want to marry her?

"That long haired boy?"

"Poor thing, he seems doomed."

Jinxed with real troubles,

she plays with fire and ice.

Runs in her high heels-

and sways in short hair looks.

Opinionated but understanding.

Outgoing but pensive.

She has eyes that are talking.

You easily brand her as a feminist.

Looped in a swirl of multilingual songs-

and over thinking time and again,

Uncertainty is her new friend.

The rest've moved into Canadian winters.

Breathless out of unyielding exams,

she wished for an apple to fall on her head.

But her hometown has only coconuts,

or God forbid juicy jackfruits.

As strings of thoughts slithered in,

hissing like her fallen hair strands.

She was not a Sita nor a Draupadi,

But a total Durga in the making.

You can call her unemployed,

or an unashamed Indian girl.

But standing tall by the balcony rails,

she was unafraid and unique.

looking glass | Siya Gusain

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

she asked me what I wanted to be when

I grew up, and I said with a sigh: breathless.

a winded echo, a fearful flicker, a lit handle,

side by side and twice the height, there when

I blinked colour into your empty wrist, did you

feel it? the love you left behind when you were

thirteen and craved the dark? I was there/I was

spirit and I was bone and I was the hate shoved

into the mirror, all cracked and soothed granite.

or do you not remember? my mellowed Macbeth,

life beside me is the fog and the fright, a myth you

tried to forget, a touch you would kill, if you could.

so what is it like? knowing that you live worse

than the girl in your nightmares? I never did care

like you wanted me to: the tick of a broken clock,

you said, and I did—tick. you saw me breathe and

you cried with one eye, fingers cinched and slipping.

I reached and you reached and the fallen wisteria out

the window whispered a story of pasts long forgotten,

plaid and old money and dust in our darkened fingers,

and I heard before you did: you can’t get past the glass,

affixed to something you could dig up, a web betrothed

and beyond: history, hidden and hollow, you would cry,

a breath, a lie, a girl and her innocence, or so the knife.

I remember: a day that fate spoke of with shaking

fingers, red string, shackled wrists and waning eyes,

she held my hands and we watched a part of you/me/

fade, written was our tragedy, high in the stars they took

from your little hands. do you remember? a cement smile

and the pale irises? burning cyphers, aconite and the ash

in your heart, love, how they tore you apart, a rusty blade

you’d learn to repurpose and lay down near our heart but

how could you not? familiarity, a curse, a thing of fairy tales

that made you despise Aurora: all destined and dissociative

and dying. all we’ve ever known is deep sleep and blue moon,

secret grey and then not. pray, tell me: am I truly so unlovable?

Reflecting Masquerade | Anoushka Panda

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I stand, amidst a crowd of expensive wine and billowing skirts,

of manicured nails and polished pomade,

Khamaj hums around me, a steady drone of melody and litany

Chin up, eyes down, I stand, amidst a crowd of

unforgiving eyes and puncturing mouths,

Back straight, mouth sewn shut, I stand,

amidst a crowd of prejudice and pride,

Assuming eyes palm my back, twist my gut,

as sharp tongues vitiate my skin, permanently bruising

Composure tightens around my cinched waist, an unyielding leash;

Around me, the world speaks in hushed whispers of supposed sinners and saints, of debauchery and propriety,

Around me, the world does not forget and its memory does not forgive

I am tall, I am timid,

Suffocated, I gasp, gasp, gasp for breath and my eyes fall close

My jewel studded feet ache from carrying the woes of a lifetime, they move, involuntary, seeking solace,

A lock clicks beneath my palm, my eyes open, solitary haven at last; I breathe,

Looking, I see bespoke glass embedded in amethyst and topaz,

Looking into the mirror, I see a carefully masked face gazing back

Looking into the mirror, I see myself, I see a familiar stranger

I see countless withered words on my lips, dry teardrops beneath my lashes, dissonance in my eyes

Looking into the mirror, I see myself, swollen eyes and marred waist,

I see my inhibitions

My ragged heart, thud, thud, thuds against the scintillating glass,

emotions threatening to spill over onto the velvet carpet, rigid underneath my feet,

Looking into the mirror, I am tall, I am timid

I blink out of my chaos

As I move, I trip, momentarily losing balance

I catch myself before I fall, I always do

I am okay, I always am

Armed with sword and shield again,

I turn one last time to glimpse the glass

Looking into the mirror, I see myself, battle armour up, timid and tall

cracked at the seams,

I see a reflection of my fears

Slowly, I pick up my courage and let myself dream,

I see a world void of prejudice and judgement, a world void of cyanide and vitriol

Looking into the mirror, I let myself hope for a moment as I envision iridescent light, a luminescent tomorrow and I turn away

Chin up, eyes down, I walk,

Khamaj envelops me once more, as,

I face the world again.

Hope Beneath Broken Skies | Bhavana Gupta

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

In a world of shadows, I found my start,

Childhood scarred by pain and broken parts.

A tale of wounds, both deep and bright,

Finding my path, lost through this night.

Twisted relatives, distant and cold,

Love and care they never showed.

Witnessed fights, a dreaded scheme,

Trapped in cage, a bitter dream.

A tapestry of trauma woven tight,

Each memory a thread, a sleepless night.

For their fight like thunder in the air,

A constant storm that life couldn't repair.

My mother's pain etched upon her face,

Her struggles hidden in life's cruel embrace.

I stood as a guardian, though just a child,

To shield her heart, so fragile and wild.

A thousand tears, a silent sea,

Drowning in unbearable misery.

A life held by a fragile thread,

I stepped forth, where angels tread.

Torn between hope and aching dread,

I tread the path where emotions spread.

Watching battles escalate, voices rise,

Innocence lost beneath broken skies.

Tear-strained nights and lonely days,

Chasing the sun's elusive rays.

In books and knowledge, I sought my peace,

And achiever's spirit, a release.

But years roll on, the pain persists,

A family bound by fragile twists.

The fear of breaking, constant unrest,

A heavy burden that's hard to forget.

Days just pass, the weight still clings,

Uncertainty like phantom wings.

The looming thread of bond undone,

Fierce arguments beneath the sun.

Yet deep within, a flicker glows,

A longing for the love that grows.

For smiles to be real, not just a mask,

A family's bond, bound to unmask.

So I held on tight, my heart's refrain,

Trials endured, through the pouring rain.

In the depths of darkness, I plant a seed,

For a future where love is all we need.

Through the story of pain, I'll find my way,

Hoping for a brighter, peaceful day.

A chapter of healing, of love's embrace,

To mend the wounds, to find our place.

A Masked Sinister | Gauri Joshi

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

They said if with the caretakers she would stick, she can be uncaring of the wordly dooms.

But In the corners of her own haven, if only she knew what danger looms.

Birthed in the cradle of neglect, predators infest not on exterior road,

but infiltrating the walls of a seemingly secure adobe.

They paint an innocent facade, agreeable manners feigned in the spectators' sight,

but the shadows is where their real twisted minds alight.

The curious little legs run right into his embrace, for she thinks distrusting him absurd,

while a wicked smirk invites a gullible mockingbird.

When the eyes of world turn blind, a monstrous hand extends in the absence of a fender,

ready to unveil horrors that she should never have witnessed in an age so tender.

Since he said this little game she was to enjoy, terrified she holds her tongue.

With no cure for an entitled psyche, letting them touch a skin so unripe and young.

History and hope, all would watch powerlessly impassioned,

eyes bowed in shame, as life loses compassion.

The one to cut open a flesh so fresh, wasn't swords or guns or rage,

the sins enacted by the hand of a caregiver who was her only salvage.

Her throat painfully obstructs, a welling dam threatening to break

and spill from the eyes flushed wet,

a silent scream stabbing her chest,

for a reason so vile she couldn't comprehend yet.

Abashed she keeps the secret circumscribed until it manifests into an insidious cancer.

An illness that disguises itself as her own failures and flawed answers.

Time flies fast but her head always hung low,

a hasty pace in the presence of her haunting past, some things she can never show.

A broken will, not enough drive, all that which they said, she could've worked hard on.

In her stunted state she can never thrive, so they decided to indifferently march on.

Voices growing in her misty head tell her to desert the last straw,

eternally freeze the contracted lungs, enough air they're unable to at last draw.

But courage finally blooms in her caged heart.

She ought reject every unbelieving eyes,

and looks of disgust of her supposed lies,

breaking the walls and childhood theft

of a false home that failed to protect.

A bitter thirst for avenging control, no longer on bed is her frail body curled.

From the heavens she was sold bringing upon hell to the rotting world.

The unknown fears of the outside now looked like a better place if nothing else.

The devils never dare stray near

for she was born into the hands

of Satan himself.

Archives | Mohammed Ehsan Ullah Shareef

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

When time's lost track of me

And I've cracked all of the reaper's codes

Would I rather be remembered or flushed down history?

To have freeze dried flowers thrown at still feet

And every memory wiped with lemon scented alcohol

Till nothing remains of it but glycerin and honey

Trembling on yesterday's eggshells while

constantly battling hordes of silver flies and dust bunnies

Only to be tied to pedestals then thrown onto shelves

To die once more among white washed pictures and musty attics

Or to sink into the comforting oblivion

Spirit falling from strangers that I once knew

To have my fingerprints on the world fade

My fantasies and footprints washed away

Instead of clawing desperately up time's curtains

Being an unseen soul dancing in the dark

In the hushed spaces between the stars

For here in the dark it would be quiet

Here in the dark, I could hear my own voice

I wish it wasn't about how green the grass was

But if it were, then I choose the ivory fence

Its silver gleaming in only a few pairs of eyes

With flashbacks that replay stifled giggles and our borrowed wisdom

Carried by dandelion fluff that once cradled our wishes

And you see me,

Just for a moment

In the shaky breath before the awaited chorus

In rhinestones shimmering on your suncatchers

in the doodled margins of our scribbled history

Whispering my love onto cherry blossoms and the sweet papaya air

To be carried off again into autumn- scented leaves and marmalade skies

To Women | Manasi Sharma

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Don’t you cause any trouble. Be calm. Be still.

You’ve got so many issues. Relax. Be chill.

That’s way too much passion. Simmer down. Be cool.

Why ask so many questions? Be quiet. Follow rules.

Wait your turn to speak up. Sit down. Be humble.

They’re watching every move. Walk straight. Don’t stumble.

Can you handle the pressure? Be composed. Don’t crack.

You take up too much space. Retreat. Step back.

Are you sure about that? Reconsider. Think twice.

Don’t frown or get angry. Smile. Be nice.

They’ll call you emotional. It’s okay. Just feel.

They’ll ask you to bow down. Stand up. Don’t kneel.

They’ll pose many obstacles. Rise up. Stay brave.

They’ll try to intimidate. Resist. Don’t cave.

They’ll order you to shut up. Don’t listen. Express.

They’ll question your clothes. You decide how to dress.

They’ll limit your options. Only you get to choose.

They’ll pressure you to say yes. If it’s no; Refuse.

They’ll doubt your actions. Go ahead. Just do.

They’ll tell you who to be. Ignore. Be you.

Don’t you cause any trouble. Be calm. Be still.

You’ve got so many issues. Relax. Be chill.

That’s way too much passion. Simmer down. Be cool.

Why ask so many questions? Be quiet. Follow rules.

Wait your turn to speak up. Sit down. Be humble.

They’re watching every move. Walk straight. Don’t stumble.

Can you handle the pressure? Be composed. Don’t crack.

You take up too much space. Retreat. Step back.

Are you sure about that? Reconsider. Think twice.

Don’t frown or get angry. Smile. Be nice.

They’ll call you emotional. It’s okay. Just feel.

They’ll ask you to bow down. Stand up. Don’t kneel.

They’ll pose many obstacles. Rise up. Stay brave.

They’ll try to intimidate. Resist. Don’t cave.

They’ll order you to shut up. Don’t listen. Express.

They’ll question your clothes. You decide how to dress.

They’ll limit your options. Only you get to choose.

They’ll pressure you to say yes. If it’s no; Refuse.

They’ll doubt your actions. Go ahead. Just do.

They’ll tell you who to be. Ignore. Be you.

Mr Paiper | Aman Saryal

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Mr. Papier

Is a friend

A lover until the very end

Mr. Papier

Doesn’t mind

If you scribble one day, then conveniently turn blind

That you only come back

When it’s time to unload the sack

Mr. Papier

Is a waiting kind

Patient, mute, still, in a bind

With the writings struck out

And sometimes vigorously erased

Mr. Papier

Is tattered on the edges and visibly frayed

Tiny craters form where your words start

Poking Mr. Papier

Occasionally piercing his heart

Mr. Papier

Lives to be forgotten

And be casually put away

In a messy pile

In a drawer somewhere

Mr. Papier

Hopes to live on

Carrying with him the years long gone

And if one day

There isn’t enough space to write

And if your hands reach for the drawer

To grab a fresh pile

Mr. Papier

Wishes to remind you to turn overleaf

For Mr. Papier

Has two paper hearts that equally bleed

Reverence | Aashreya Rajashekar

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Dear reader,

Here is a story I have not told in a while.

It is a story about magic and monks and spice boxes.

about art that held time captive,

about commoners who help strangers without a motive.

A song of praise for everything that dares to live.

Here's my secret, listener, I love this country.

Despite her overwhelming flaws that

confront me every time I walk by a shabby road,

question me, every time a woman cowers.

I love both the debris and the treasures of my home.

Because there are humans on the border,

fencing their home with every auricle and ventricle in their heart.

Because somewhere, in the deep blue sea,

There is still a trace of the martyrs’ ashes.

Martyrs who gave too much,

Ashes that freed the country.

I love it because of the poets,

who wrote under a flickering but persistent lamplight.

Because of the paintings, the Madhubani, the Shakuntala,

that document life itself.

I love her, you see, because although she is all marble castles and elaborate forts,

She is also reverent in humility.

She is magnificent yet so close knit,

Diverse yet so one.

I see these tourists racing with time to look at all these monuments.

But who will show them the real monuments?

The India in every yarn of a saree, the India in the decadence of maa’s idli,

the chase of the rickshaw, the sweet, tinted rain and the absolute sorcery in a cup of ginger tea!

Because what is India if not a mountain heap of small treasures!

The jingle of clinking bangles, the fresh blooming lotus,

the hibiscus, the lavender.

A hundred gods, a thousand languages, as ancient as voice itself.

Who will show them the India in me?

Ghar | Nehal Jain

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Yun toh hazaaron haath badhte hai meri taraf badhayi dene ke liye,

par sirf ek haath milta hai mujhe meri nakamiyabiyon me saath dene ke liye.

Adhere mein bhi roshni wahi laata hai,

aur agar zyada roshni hojaye toh kaan pakadh kar ghar ka raasta bhi wahi dikhata hai.

Mere girne par pura ghar sir par woh uthata hai, aur khudke lag jaane par uss chhot ko shirt ki sleeves ke neeche chupata hai.

Meri harr ek jeet par woh jokeron jaise naachta hai,

yeh dekhkar mera dil har baar bharr aata hai.

Duniya mein sabse zyada pyaar ussi ne diya hai,

aur jo maanga agle din mujhe mere takiye ke neeche mila hai.

Mere harr ek aansu par,

mujhse zyada uska dil ka dukha hai

aur meri ek muskaan ke sahare

woh apna harr din jeeya hai.

Mere kamre ko usne mere harr ek pasandida khilono se saja hai,

aur khud ke kamre mein dhang ka tv bhi nahi rakha hai.

Haan, thodha gussa zyada aata hai usse,

par pyaar shabd ka asli matlab bhi ussi ne sikhaya hai mujhe.

Mere bolne se bhi pehle,

sun leta hai woh,

meri aankhon se hi meri harr ek pareshani padh leta hai woh.

Pure ghar ka bojh akele uthata hai woh,

aur madad ke naam par sirf thodha sa pyaar aur khushi maangta hai woh.

Sabke liye jitna kar paata hai karta hai woh,

par phir bhi na jaane kaise hamesha akela padh jaata hai woh.

Andar hi andar rokar,

Hooton se muskuraana jaanta hai woh,

mujhse zyada mere sapno pe mehnat kar jaata hai woh.

Khud daantein toh thik hai,

par kissi aur ke mujhe kuch kahene par khud ke peeche chupata hai woh mujhe.

Sabko khush rakhne ki koshish mein

khud ki khushi woh khoo aaya hai kahin,

ek makaan ko ghar banata hai wahi.

Bas aise hi akele puri duniya se ladhta hai woh,

aur mere muh sirf ek shabd sunne par duniya ka harr sukoon paa jaata hai woh,

PAPA.

The 'Harry Potter' Diary | Sonika Batra

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Today I held time.

Flipped through it,

With my hand!

I pulled it out,

And lovingly dusted it.

Time slips like sand.

But it hadn't changed,

Only I had.

My best friend, my lover.

My favourite diary,

Same silver stars

On the navy blue cover!

"Reminds me of Harry Potter!"

I would often say

And hid it with great care.

Only my mother knew

And her daughter

Of the wonders within

That now lay bare.

As this night gets hotter,

I am transported back

To my magical childhood!

To fairies and gnomes

(Even timetables and notes)

And fantasy wood.

Remember how we noted numbers?

And dialled them with landline?

It's a list of my friends then!

And rants about chemistry

O how I hated it!

Time has passed, how and when?

A piece of my heart I found

And at long last,

Even the Neopets password!

"Hope they didn't close the website,

I used to have two Neopets

And one if them was a bird!"

Torrents, downloads and

Yahoo Messenger chats,

The 90's kids would know!

Makeover games were thrilling

So were stappoo, pithhoo

FLAMES and Friend or Foe!

I see again the drawing

Of the balloon seller

My father taught me.

The inspiring notes

My mother lovingly wrote

Are there for me to see!

Memories you can touch,

Ink you can feel across time.

Parts of me, I remembered

Parts I had forgotten.

O song of memory!

You are a melody unheard.

I find myself again

In the yellow pages

Of my childhood diary.

As I hold it to my chest

A gentle fire burns

At once sweet and fiery.

Some pages are blank

And full of hope

For you to write again.

To grow and do great things

Remembering your essence

As today,

Becomes another memory lane.

Chhorh Diya Hai | Parul Doonga

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Khwahishon ne ab

phusphusana chhorh diya hai

Haan maine bhi

gungunana chhorh diya hai

Chalte chalte ye aa gaye kahan

Ke maazi ne bhi

ab mujhe bulana chhorh diya hai

Bachpane ne ab

ladkhadana chhorh diya hai

Choodiyon ne bhi

khankhana choorh diya hai

Kaun apna kaun anjana

kya maloom

Chidiya ne jabse

aashiyana chhorh diya hai

Nazron ne ab

khilkhilana chhorh diya hai

Isharon ne bhi

hichkichana chhorh diya hai

Jazbaat ne jabse pehena zaroorat ka libas

khwabon ne bhi

aana jaana chhorh diya hai

Umra ke bojh ka ehsaas kuch yun hua

Ki ummedon ne bhi

khatkhatana chhorh diya

Jali bujhi si tamannaon se ja ke keh do

Ki ab humne bhi

maatam manana chhorh diya hai

Lonely Desert Tree | Dr Anish Kumar Adya

Sometimes I feel like that lonely tree

Stranded in a dried up sea

With clouds of dust choking away

And mounts of sand,with the wind,that sway

The scorching sun relentless too

Gets to have a say

Pounding ruthless at my veins

Charring, within,to my dismay.

The darker nights

Offer some respite

Cold and distant they can be

And I spend moments

Counting the stars

Shivering,till the next days heat.

So scores of years have passed by me

Receiving, what is fate's decree

Wondering,if this is life

Hoping,for a better lie

However,it is the twilight tones

That make the day bearable

I wait for dusk and the morning hue

And let the sweet calm breeze imbue

And am filled with zest for a while...

For them countless colours and moments of bliss

I am grateful life,for your guile.

Lust for Life | Sidra Raihan

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I think for too long, it has been us:

Writers and storytellers,who have stolen away the limelight of being ideal romantics to fall in

love with.

I, for one, have always wondered, what would it be like to date a fine artist?

My best friend tells me

Watch the way he sketches you

When he says that your morning face

Is like his breath of fresh air

Does he really mean it?

Can he draw you

Just the way you are

When the first rays of sunlight kiss your drowsy eyes?

Does he paint the locks of your hair,

Sitting unkempt and asymmetric about your face

Or does he hide away the dark circles underneath your eyes

Telling you that the hue matching them

Was too scarce for his palette

Ask yourself

Does he sketch you for you?

Or does he sketch you for him?

And in that moment,

I pause

I reflect,

And I respond,

“He sketches me for both of us”

Because on my worse days

He would tell me that my tears were like dew drops

They could breathe life into dying lillies

Even in the dead of winter

She grills me, further

What about the days when he was the dead winter?

What was that really like?

Ermm…can we skip to the good parts?

Me, sitting in his studio

While he would put on the final touches

And all I ever waited was

To see the sparkle in his eyes

Him running towards me,

‘How does it look’?,

‘It’s ..it’s beautiful’,

And in that moment

I saw his eyes turn hollow

Almost devoid of any emotion

I wished I had more than just clichéd adjectives to offer

To tell him what I saw

To tell him what I think he wanted the world to see

And the spaces where it felt missing

But even a writer’s vocabulary can sometimes fall short

When it comes to deciphering art

It wasn’t really my fault!

Poetry

Unlike Art

Didn’t beg you

To remember the past

Of wars

Of revolutions

Of the fall of empires

It reminded you

If it wanted to

In alliterations and repetitions

Poetry

Unlike Art

Could be written by anyone

By a soldier at the border

Writing the last verse of love for his beloved wife

By a child in an English class

Penning down words on a card for Mother’s Day

By a lover reeling from his heartbreak

Writing to heal himself

Poetry

Unlike Art

Didn’t have to be locked away

In museums and art galleries

Only to be honoured by the elite

Poetry

Unlike Art

Was written in language you and I could feel

Art just didn’t the speak the same dialects

Think about it,

For most us,

Art was about sketching mountains, rivers and grasslands

And when I saw that landscape painting

I didn’t know

If it was an artist being nostalgic about his countryside home

Or maybe,

Just a traveller seeking to fulfil wanderlust

But he scoffs at me

For being kiddish

Says,

I am comparing the grandeur of art

To my 5th grade paintings

Well,

When someone can paste a banana peel on a duct tape

And mount it on a wall

Selling it for millions of dollars

Was it really me being the child?

So he finally declares

That the next time I plan on visiting him,

I am no longer going to be a passive seeker of art

Says

I have given way too much to poetry

How do I confess

That my childhoods have been spent

In limericks, haikus and rhymes

My teenage in

Slams, mini sagas and free verse

And as an adult

I am still learning how to write

Sonnets, ballads, and saudades

And, I may have no energy

To choose between his charcoal and acrylics

To fit within greyscale or color

And maybe,

I want to be a passive seeker of someone else’s art

To be a speck of yellow in a dark blue sky

And for him to be the Van Gogh of my Starry Night

My friend cautions

Look closely at those bright orange orbs in his art

Swirling waves of ferocity and fury

I tell her

That’s him being dreamy, moody, and magical all at once

He’s quite a rare find

She warns

These are hidden signs of a tortured mind

Burning with indignation

I clarify

That when an artist loves

He pours himself

Passionately with vivacity

Expecting little in return

And when a man can pour himself for days on a blank canvas

Bending and twisting his strokes

Until the early hours of dawn

You know for a fact

That he will never ever get tired of loving you

He will love you

Passionately with vivacity

She intervenes

Passionately with vivacity

He will love you, perhaps, in extremes

Maybe, without understanding boundaries

Until the spaces between you have intertwined

And you are breathing each other’s air

As you cough the smell of cigar

Lying in bed with him

You realise

How everything’s

Covered in nicotine and tar

And you wonder

When did your own home become so stifling?

Was it every morning when you left for work

Reminding him to fix that goddamn leaking tap

And right now

In the middle of all your memories

You can still hear drops of water

Pitter-platter against the bathroom floor

Remember how he would laugh it away

Telling you that the sound of water

Was music to his ears

And there was rhythm and rhyme

In a leaking tap

I couldn’t see

Until one day, the faucet ran dry

And then came the storm

the screams

the clatter of pots

the smashingof glass

And I saw five years

Of memories spiral into ashes

A month later

I saw him coming back to me

This time,

He was genuinely sorry

Wrapping his fingers around mine

He whispered

That if the Japanese could join broken pieces of pottery

Mending it with liquid gold

Then my poetry and his art

Could fill in all the cracks and crevices

Between us

Maybe, they could

But I was too formed

To be broken

And mended all over again.

For I was now, bisque fire!

Insight of Depression | Avani Tiwari

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

In this dark room trapped,

I just yearn for freedom and solace.

My eyes, they are never dry,

my pillow is habitual of rain

as I cry.

but I must say,

what a good actor I am,

I don't let any known to know,

as I won't have a reason to throw.

fear and frustration,

Travels like blood sucking worms through me,

and all it reminds.

No matter how I try,

those feelings,

they never say goodbye.

I never desired to be this version of me,

but what can I do now,

when this is how it all turned to be.

confusion greets me everyday,

Doubts decked up as hay,

in the middle of it I lay.

I am sure the scars are healing,

with the fading marks,

then why does the pain still retreats whenever the flashback starts?

I weave a web around my brain,

don't know,

why still I can't stop the train,

of emotions as it sprain,

My happiness and life is what it drains.

The pain,I now consider it as an old friend of mine,

It hurts yet I say, yeah! I'm fine. darkness has started engulfing me,

Oh now,even my shadow is scaring me

My thoughts are such,

that I can't read.

I take permission,

Even to breathe.

I am part of a competition ,

I didn't wanna be.

I feel like a puppet, and it won't stop,

doesn't matter if I scream.

Tired of it,I just wanted to be free.

and the darkness engulfing me,

heard the plea.

breaking the fake bonds,

And forgetting the threats,

Like my beloved, I hugged my death.

But, it was of no use ,

And left me just more confused.

That day I learned something,

about death,

and it changed everything,

People say it helps you to be free,

While,for me ,

it just indulged sorrow into a never ending cycle,

Without a way to flee.

Violet Vale | Arka Ghosh

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

In the hush of dawn, brimming with violets,

I wandered to the wild side,

Where whisper of wind told tales,

Of secret buried deep within the heart,

Of a valley untouched, untamed,

To essense pure, a silent testimony,

To natures undying vow.

As dusk descended, shadows played,

With colors fading, yet hope remained,

For in this sacred, silent space,

The soul finds, solace and love sustains.