Self-Esteem

Satya Dash

The time of the day when light breaks 

a body like a loaf sliced into parallel planes

is sometimes known as truth,

the sequence of events tell me. 

In my autumn garden rotting of absent 


mindedness, birds confuse the occasional sunlit 

flower with a shock of gold. Their definitions, 

their paradoxes, I think, must deal with the same swirling 

complexities as mine. It goes for any natural being 

in a patch of wilderness. The world eternally in half-mast 


melancholy mourning the graying of a tree, 

an ant stomped, a neck slashed; death, utterly serene 

in response to the clamor of its procession 

like a regal groom on a mare following the unfolding 

spectacle of his baraat. I wish I were hysteric enough 


to understand the nuances of your dance. I tried 

my hand at the skill but the art of madness decrees 

a binary diagnosis— you feel it or you don’t. That quiver 

I saw in your tremulous eyes, fearing revisions 

of what was so impossible to see clearly—


the past — how it moved like the eyes of a mercury 

eyed monster silvering his way through your sleep 

to trenches of arcane depths in irrecoverable trails. 

I don’t think I spoke about this: as a boy I once licked 

a Dead Sea facial mask, spit out its bark of russet milk


convinced it was some sort of exotic chocolate 

perhaps I didn’t have the taste for. Forgive me, I still find

it’s difficult to discern. Which is why I’m licking my wounds, a truly 

animal satisfaction, indulging, waiting as long as it takes 

for your reflection to appear in the trembling lake. 

 

The Child After War

Satya Dash

is still a blossom. The moon after cyclone

doesn’t become chalk. I’m not in

the business of revival but I’m in

the business of living. Which means lacing

anger with dew. Which means

every hand washed by water

grows watery, every face splashed

wet becomes saliva gelling

from inside. I don’t know how this face

became my face. My mother rubs her lips

to check if winter’s here. I look

forward to seasons turning skins

to skeins. A backdrop mushrooms,

a hallway of mirrors make an image

a river. All you see are tributaries. You,

a mouth that spawns bones of glass.

Someone walks into that bright room. A lover

is blinded. It’s the sun. How your body bows

like the lip of a jug pouring nectar. Further

into the backdrop, a rumor floats how blood

is the secret to nectar’s stickiness. The startling

viscosity of character. Further back, in the confused 

air of Delhi’s December, a fat fog sings 

of fatigue like a guest who knows well

they have overstayed their welcome.

 
 
 

about the writer

Poet Image 5.jpg

Satya Dash's poems have been published or are forthcoming in Wildness, Redivider, Passages North, Cosmonauts Avenue, The Florida Review, Prelude, The Cortland Review, and Poetry@Sangam, amongst others. Apart from having a degree in electronics from BITS Pilani-Goa, he has been a cricket commentator too. He is a two-time Orison Anthology and Best New Poets nominee. He spent his early years in Odisha and now lives in Bangalore, India. He tweets at: @satya043.