Book Read Free

Roving Mind

Page 7

by Aluta Nite


  To bully the other to commit to something

  Or humiliate them to instant submission.

  REMINDER

  I may be a century in age

  But I am still Mom

  And Mom always knows best.

  You may be of golden or diamond jubilee

  But to my eyes you are still that child

  I nursed from nothing.

  Don’t take me wrong

  For children never grow in the eyes of Mom

  And Mom still knows best.

  I may not be wiping your nose anymore

  For you might be doing it to me instead

  But you are still a child to Mom.

  You may be well learned

  Compared to Mom,

  But Mom still has invaluable insight.

  It’s the nature of life and nothing can change it.

  Your turn will come and you’ll feel the same

  For nature stated so since days of yore.

  CONTINUOUS INSPIRATION

  I am an artist by day

  And by night I dream art.

  Fellow artists inspire me to do more and

  I thus get invigorated and ready to go.

  A singer’s emotions give me a kick

  To play my part.

  A painter’s details

  Tickle me to do something.

  An actor’s versatility

  Sends me thinking.

  A designer’s product

  Is a marvel to my eyes.

  An innovator’s ingenuity

  Makes me feel halfway.

  A craftsman’s finished work

  Causes joy to my heart.

  However hard I try to remain idle

  It doesn’t work for me.

  The urge is in deep

  And I just can’t ignore it.

  My pen does it for me

  But I still thirst to accomplish more.

  Writing gives me adrenalin rush

  And that is my dope.

  LITERACY AND IGNORANCE

  Casting a ballot was a right.

  One got a national identification

  And a voter’s registration card

  For a particular polling station.

  Schemes sprung up among parties

  That killed democracy to the core.

  Agents emerged and pounced

  On unsuspecting voters on D-day,

  With conning to go with it.

  Not knowing how to read and write

  Became very dangerous

  For one’s vote was in jeopardy.

  Paid agents

  Bullied illiterate voters

  As allies held their hands

  And they were made to X names

  On pictures they did not like

  Not knowing they were actually

  Choosing them over who

  They wished to vote for.

  What a sad day that was and still is!

  Back home they boasted

  How they eliminated so and so

  Only to be told that

  They actually backed

  The wrong horses.

  Agents had given them

  Two pounds of sugar or meat each

  To beguile them, as a thank you gift

  For exercising constitutional right.

  What a world we live in!

  COLOR BAR

  Desperate to get things cheaply

  In a designated store

  Shifa rushes there every Saturday

  When she is off duty.

  Shifa has shopped here for five years

  And she knows the cashiers by looks and name tags

  Yet, she's asked to show her picture identification

  Every time, to prove she owns her credit card.

  Her fellow privileged shoppers on the line

  Go Scot-free without the infamous question

  Except those created like her or

  Another color of minority.

  One shocked privileged observer saw it all

  And when his turn to pay came, asked

  If he was required to produce the same

  And the answer was thro’ a head shake

  That said it all and when he asked why,

  There was no answer because

  Shifa was still packing her wares

  And she would hear the negativity.

  This prejudice is unjustified,

  Demeaning, inaccurate and bothersome.

  This image of her you create in your mind,

  Is only in your imagination.

  THE LONG AWAITED LETTER

  One hot Saturday afternoon, the dreaded letter arrived

  To spell doom on the expectant whose inner selves

  Had shrank overtime to a point of being painless

  As it was no harbinger of first foul news

  For a few others had preceded.

  All the same, opening it was no merry making as

  All limbs trembled and the temperature rose.

  Even deep breaths couldn’t hold one still

  For the heart throbbed uncontrollably

  And resurrection was impossible.

  The contents were short and to the point

  For it gave little room for maneuvering.

  Fate was determined negatively and

  Action was swift and appropriate

  As pitfalls hang precariously.

  MIND RECOVERY PORT

  They come broken, frail and disgraced.

  They come with no dignity

  as they have no self-reliance capabilities.

  They come isolated, afraid and timid

  to start a fresh in this new land.

  UHHR, a trauma haven comes in handy;

  welcomes, rehabilitates, provides therapy

  and many more endlessly facilities

  till refugees and asylees become calm,

  gain self-control and learn to face life again.

  This is a sanctuary for sobs, moans and wails

  depending on individual state of psyche

  for their pain is right underneath the surface

  and relived every time they tell their ugly stories

  or a reminder of sorts comes around

  and will live with them

  so long as they are above the ground

  as it is only possible to heal slowly

  but not forget.

  Rehabilitation helps them pick up the pieces

  to enable them get involved in cultural activities:

  creativity, art, dance, song, play, cuisine and dressing.

  Some become volunteers, translators;

  others teach would be visitors to their former nations

  their national languages or mother tongues.

  They learn English language if they don’t know it

  in order to get immersed in the new communities.

  They train, get employed and gain their dignity back.

  A shoulder to cry on is the staff of this institution

  without shading a tear however sad or bad

  for if the therapists become vulnerable

  then who would console who!

  The pains vary from physical to mental or both

  and attention is to all regardless of weightiness

  for ignoring is haunting and devastating.

  They sign for the jobs as a calling

  knowing how patient they must be

  lest they become failures to the wounds

  gaping at them every day they report on duty.

  Moral support to court they provide

  and arrangements to medical care they make

  for they deal with people who know no direction

  in this new home of development

  as most emanate from less advancement

  and with language barriers

  the problems become compounded.

  POOR TREE PLANTING

  It’s no wonder that huge trees fall unexpectedly

  Due to windy situa
tions or rough weather

  All over this developed part of the world.

  I have noted with concern on television

  When experts are busy planting trees

  Near buildings and anywhere else.

  The size of the seedlings appear

  Too big for transplanting

  And the permanent holes look too shallow.

  The roots get no chance to form deep down,

  To create base and hold the fort;

  They simply remain lateral and weak

  When Mother Nature makes a rough call,

  Trees simply come tumbling down

  As the centers, cannot hold.

  Structures, vehicles and other items get destroyed;

  People are killed, injured, maimed

  And the process continues over and over.

  CALAMITIES

  Developed nations have the capacity

  To warn their own of coming calamities

  In order for them to move to safe havens

  And sometimes with relocation assistance in

  Transportation, accommodation and sustenance,

  But stubborn beings refuse to obey the know

  And decide to remain in their quarters

  As if they are above Mother Nature’s

  Destructive mannerisms.

  One can’t compete with calamities

  Like tsunamis, floods, landslides, fires,

  Tornadoes, hurricanes and whatever else.

  This land is vast; one can shift to other areas

  And start anew instead of insisting of going back,

  To rebuild yet history keeps on repeating itself.

  Even if you moved and nothing happened

  Doesn’t mean you’ll be spared again

  The coming season or another.

  It’s merely gambling with life

  Yet somebody isn’t a rock and even

  Rocks get eroded through weathering.

  TECHNOLOGY AND MAN

  Creation provided no technology

  But gave enough know how

  For life to be viable;

  Man’s desire for more and more

  To enable him live luxuriously and lazily

  Has made him invent danger.

  Through the technology he so loves,

  Guns are used on each other while

  Trains, cars, ships, planes et cetera kill people.

  Sometimes, people wishing to commit suicide

  Use transport systems above

  To finish the job under disguise of accidents.

  ICE RAIN

  Thursday, January twenty fourth, twenty thirteen

  Is a day I’ll always remember!

  The day it rained frozen water,

  Folks woke up to a strange phenomenon,

  Not familiar to many.

  With piles of snow on the ground

  From previous storms,

  One would have thought it was black ice,

  But far from it.

  Cleared slabs at entrances, pathways and roads

  Looked like greased trays ready for baking.

  It was impossible to walk while looking up

  For eyes had to scan the ground.

  Soles of shoes one wore didn't matter

  For shoe grips held no ground

  As it was spinning and slipping all along

  With skating and sliding.

  Babies in first few months of walk or

  Centenarians, move faster.

  It was gliding and skimming the ground

  Besides slinking and sliding.

  We did the dance of tiptoeing and slumping

  And serenaded the ground with our bodies

  As our voices cried foul, but

  Continued daylong skidding and sliding

  In the end, many were injured

  And some hospitalized

  With broken ribs, joints, arms, legs

  And sprains all over the battered bodies

 

 

 


‹ Prev