Your hands shook the whole time
burns on my fragile skin. December. Tell me it’s
Winters feel less like winters, the sun
burns on my fragile skin. December. Tell me it's
December. Forget the dirt in my hair. When
I was 10; I hid myself far away. A spectral
shape amidst dust and sawdust. One
with dying furniture. Nana found me, climbing
all five stories, morning fog in his breath. I wake up early
nowadays, collapsing into the dew. January
fog in my hair, green now against this light
that turns twice and faces you in a revealing glance.
somedays I am still in that minibus which became your
altar. An altar is a collection of things you love. Like
a story, pieced together in each breath. I inoculate
each word with meaning, somehow this poem is about
you. Why wouldn't it be? I am made from your bones.
When I was seven, you wrote me a letter. Your
hands shook the whole time, I imagined you writing
in the cold. When I was twenty-three, the letter broke
into fragments in my hands. We make altars wherever
we go. At night I surround myself with the desire
to disappear, opening my window to the dogs barking
outside, there's the gap between two buildings where
moss grows in the rain. I imagine myself laying there, an altar.
Raian Abedin is a poet, a student of Biochemistry, and a contributor to The Daily Star.
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