To Nora
In a country where marriage
is a commodity being sold,
like exported goods
and appraised gold.
When all of the men you have ever bared yourself to have succumbed to pawning feelings.
In exchange of convenience and familial approval.
The sadness hangs like unpulled church bells. The desert heat seemed unfelt by your clammy skin.
(The leaves outside the window rustled as if whispering back your unrealised dreams.)
You sighed and went on saying
between the distance of you and him,
in the silence and detachment.
you found your ticket back to your comfort place in prescribed pills.
For a moment, I am convinced
that this world was designed to favor Joseph and not Mary.
I wanted to blanket you
from this scythe wind
to shield your purple heart
to armor you from this men-molded mortar
to tell you to never fit
our rebellious bones
into the norms of patriarchs.
(You reached out for the rays of the sun like they were raindrops falling on your palms.)
if I tell you, the fortress
of our fathers has fallen,
will you laugh again, love?
Oh, please!
Laugh.
Let these men wonder
about the joy of being a woman —
that even if they try
and make us cry
our once hushed lips would ne——ver shape their names.