Want To Listen To The Article Instead? 

 

Unlike refugees, who don’t have a home behind or infront of them, we have a home. But,

 

Will it remember all those mornings that the woodpecker made mating calls from its roof?
How on sleepless nights, someone read and made notes from a borrowed J. Krishnamurti’s Notebook?
All those times, we listened to “Ae zindagi gale laga le”? (Hey life, come hug me.)

 

Will it remember, how many times the kids yelled, “dumb” and “butt” and “dumbbutt”?
How friends partied and parted at the threshold of the front door?
How in those late hours, the kids slept on their parents’ shoulders as they left?

 

Will it remember, the silent farts and the loud snores, the confidence its privacy brought?
How we lived a week without a child when we packed and shipped him off to boy scouts camp?
How it greeted us solemnly when we came back to it, after losing a parent 8000 miles away?

 

Will it remember, the tents we built, the cards and carroms we played with cakes smeared on our faces?
How we stole scoops of ice-cream from one another, and tucked the kids quickly in, to watch HBO after dark?
All those arguments that we had, but can’t recall even one of them now, thank heavens!

 

 

 

 

Will it remember, all the plaques, certifications and mementos that used to be hung on its walls?
The conference calls for work and the FaceTimes, on those days we were snowed in?
How we took refuge in the kitchen and the pantry everyday or foamed up our driveway washing our cars?

 

Will it remember, to forgive us for all those holes that cable companies drilled into it for antennae?
Our ignorant thoughts that a big backyard or a little stream behind it would make it a perfect house?
The times one of us would unearth a lost earring behind a cupboard while redecorating the room yet again?

 

Will it remember, how we took professional help to clean, and cooked the same curry a million times?
How it lived like a river surrounded by life and love, death and destruction, yet never showed emotion?
Those good old days, or look forward to visitors when a builder buys it and rents rooms at Airbnb?

 

Will our home remember, what it thought of us as it stood firmly despite not having deep roots, when we came back to eye it with diminishing value, after visiting a friend’s “better looking” home?

 

– 0 –

 

About The Article Author:

Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.

One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.

Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.

Poetry

Why Reading Poetry Still Matters in the Age of Dank Memes

Why Reading Poetry Still Matters in the Age of Dank Memes

Just A String Of Words?   A good poem demands the dignity to be understood. History repeats in its resounding words. Repetition is a poem's strongest flavors. Poems are words with life because they're current and most urgent with their message to humanity. Yet,...

read more
The Mother Of All Emotions – A Poem by Rachana

The Mother Of All Emotions – A Poem by Rachana

-   Before you think you can put a finger on love,remember the size of the butter stickin your mother’s pie. Think of how all your lifeyou’ve worked to make her proud,yet glanced up to see if the world noticed. Remember your teenage self,distancing from her...

read more
Still Standing, Still Standing.. – A Poem by Rachana

Still Standing, Still Standing.. – A Poem by Rachana

-   The below is a first person account of a village tree who lost the friendship of a small boy to the big charm of the city..    -   At day break, I wait for your shrill cries of laughter to pierce my ears..I ponder while I drink the primary...

read more
You Know You’re a Mom When.. – A Poem by Rachana

You Know You’re a Mom When.. – A Poem by Rachana

-   You've wondered about your fear of death, when the only thing you have always been petrified about is your child digging into that forbidden closet or the bathroom cupboard to find out the secret stash of “things”? You've looked down on the bathroom floor to...

read more
Momentous: A Poem On The Value Of Time

Momentous: A Poem On The Value Of Time

*   It’s not the lack of money that makes me cry like my heart is about to burst.You want to know what it is?   It’s something you have or don’t more than I do, because there’s no straight finish line here.It ticks away silently mocking our indignant ways...

read more
ప్రియ శరణార్థీ! నా జీవితం ఇలా నడవనీ.. (Dear Refugee, My Life Must Go On..)

ప్రియ శరణార్థీ! నా జీవితం ఇలా నడవనీ.. (Dear Refugee, My Life Must Go On..)

-   The original English version: Dear Refugee, my life must go on..  This poem appeared originally in The Saaranga Magazine HERE.    -   నన్నల్లుకున్న వెచ్చని కార్డిగన్, మెత్తని నా అరచేతుల మధ్య పొగలు కక్కే ‘లికరస్’ టీ........... పౌర హక్కుల్ని...

read more
Why Darkness Can Be a Gift – A Poem By Rachana

Why Darkness Can Be a Gift – A Poem By Rachana

As humans, we are wired to create and not consume. And that's why when we create a piece of art, we feel alive. This poem is a tribute to the struggle of creating something out of nothing.    - Want To Listen To The Article Instead?  -   Years ago, you...

read more
Dear Refugee, My Life Must Go On.. – A Poem By Rachana

Dear Refugee, My Life Must Go On.. – A Poem By Rachana

- 0 -   The translated Telugu version: ప్రియ శరణార్థీ! నా జీవితం ఇలా నడవనీ.. This poem appeared originally in The Saaranga Magazine HERE.    -   It's not too unthinkable,sipping licorice tea in my cardigan,And day dreaming of a life of civil liberties....

read more
error: Content is protected !!

Discover more from Rachana Nadella-Somayajula

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading