~on returning home
The dust in Lubumbashi
during the dry season—
makes me feel lucky I’m alive,
Or maybe it’s just a strange welcome
mat from my ancestors,
A way to re-enter my lungs,
My veins.
At the botanical garden,
I rub a mango tree leaf
& say hello to my grandmother
Slowly,
I’m starting to believe that she hears me
From beyond
She says “bonjour Ya Lolo”
She used to call me that or Loriki
or nothing when she knew I would
Always answer to her call.
On Thursday afternoon
My uncle stood facing the mosque
He was shorter than I remembered
We met again after 20 years
& an ancient language came alive within my blood…
maybe I never left
maybe some people never let me go
~on how I love
At the botanical garden,
I’m shown the bright yellow flowered
plant from America
That grows anywhere,
That takes up space
The guide tells me that he wanted to get rid
Of it but changed his mind
When he watched its dead
body turn to food for
The very plants it seemed to suffocate.
Maybe this is a metaphor for overbearing love
That wants to be seen
That wants to give until it’s dead- even
When it’s dead.
Or maybe I’m just a poet
~on how I loved you
Today I thought of you, hunched over
Our brother’s cot, crying
I could still hear you say
“Why can’t mum fix my teeth?”
It’s strange, really.
We had fought many times before
I’d seen your body crash through
A glass table
(the day we went
To bed at 4pm)
I’d made fun of the spots on your body
Of that naive skin of yours!
But it was a comment about your smile
That broke you down.
Later that day, you mocked me for comforting you
It was a comment about your smile that broke
Me too.
You laughed, I was embarrassed
But I know now, that I loved you then
Despite your ugly laughter.
~on how I think you’ve outgrown the curse
When I came to you panting,
Sleeping on your couch
You didn’t seem to be running
Out of breath.
You need to show signs of escape
You’re not panting,
Have you not been running?
You’re my blood, you must have run
Yet you hide it so well
~on a blue bird that could’ve been you
Your uncle Daddy
Breaks the right wing
Of a little blue bird
& ties a string around
Its left ankle
He tells you that the bird
Won’t fly away,
It will stay here for you
The following morning
You and your brothers find it
Dead
You don’t say a word to each other
& discard the body.
Listen,
This poem could have easily
Been about freedom
Or a blue bird missing the sky
But I ask you instead,
Can you see how this
Is a metaphor for your life?
***
Photo by Kunj Parekh on Unsplash