The constant calls of the cuckoos, stirred me up from sleep. It was still dark. The air was moist after the heavy downpour. South-west monsoon had made her way into our mangled, ransacked valley.
It was my second day of school, after the long summer break.
I was elated to go back, since I had to cross an entire stretch of Western Ghats
Mountain range, every day. As I crossed, my soul glided away into the different
unknown, endless corners of the dense shrub forests of Anaikatty.
After a long and tiring school day, the bell finally rang.
It was 4pm. The government bus usually arrives by 4:10, so I had to rush. To my
pleasant surprise, my mom was waiting outside to pick me up in her bike. We
started heading home. The cold, moist air made me shiver as our bike made her
way into the woods. I closed my eyes. Everything went blank.
But this time, the constant sirens of an ambulance, stirred
me up from my unconscious state. I could taste blood. I wanted to scream out
the excruciating pain, but only air came out of my blood-filled mouth. I felt
as if my left leg was cut into two pieces, from my thigh. Every bump on the
road felt like a horrific nightmare. As soon as I reached the hospital, I heard
beep sounds, waves indicating my heartbeat, a ventilator helping me to breath,
surrounded by a swarm of doctors and nurses. I felt as if I was in a movie scene.
I had fractures all over my body. I was bleeding from my eyes, nose, ears and
mouth. I lost my consciousness. The soul
which glided-away into the different endless-corners of the dense forest, has
now been mangled into an unknown-figure, that I never knew.
I spent countless days in the ICU, trying to fathom this
mangled unknown-figure. I was told that, we were hit by three drunk homo-sapiens
and my mom left us all on the spot. I refused to believe.
Alone, I cried everyday. Seven months passed by; my eyes
searched for-her everyday. She was nowhere to be found, except for her lifeless
picture on our wall. As she smiled back at me, lifeless, my lips started to quiver,
I said to myself;
“My lips cannot speak how much I loved you,
My mind slowly starts
forgetting the way I used to call you,
But my heart knows
how much I miss you,
In our home that is
lonely today”.
As the lifeless smile, I turned sixteen. The pandemic
started to roll on, I was left-alone to suffer PTSD.
Soon, I keep hearing the muffled calls from the ailing valley
in the depth of the lengthy nights. Thus, my conversation with her streams began.
“Its raining for the fourth day. The warm land has cooled down.
There is joy everywhere.
Like me, you remain broken for the past many years. The
brick-kiln owners have frantically dug you up, as the drunk homo-sapiens drove on
us. The places of your injuries, hold the flowing water for a long time, to
quench their burning pain. The flow has stopped in many places. Bay of Bengal
and many wounded sites downstream are moaning to receive your flow.
This rain has evoked a sigh of joy and melancholy in you and
all us life forms.
Deep inside me rises a despair of hopelessness and I weep.
As the tears flow, there is a sheet lightning, in the night horizon. The
downpour becomes heavy. It’s getting colder once again and I shudder. I lift my
hand to hug you.
Do not worry my dear,
WE SHALL OVERCOME”.
At this moment, I knew that my question was answered.
The future is born when the post are written. Keep running like a river.
ReplyDelete♥️
ReplyDeleteThrough your loss pain and trauma you have found two things, the power to express and your passion. Follow the inner spirit that is guiding you.
ReplyDeleteHugs ❤
ReplyDeleteVery touching
ReplyDeleteIts a life without soul,sorry.. pls do continue your writing. You are gifted to write.one day you will become a best among the rest.
ReplyDeleteI miss you Akka , but you gave US a super girl saandhu for us , thank you my angel ,,,
ReplyDelete