if I’m going to write a love poem
By Nadia Kirmani
so much depends upon
whether I can separate
ash from dirt
yesterday, the snow was fresh –
the way it tends to fall early morning, (I admit)
it reminded me of your voice, when you let it
be gentle & tea became kitchen lullaby so I started
coating lies a maternal pink
that sunset gave me
*
when I read the Quran, dirt-crusted
fingers trace right to left,
striving to feel
where there is no structure but silk song
& orange sun he wove into my hair
I cling to anecdote now,
to stitch open wound – the way my immigrant
parents do – let it seed my voice box & flower
hyacinth in throat
*
today, braced for barefoot
winter, he left a handful
of congealed snow in my palms
threatening the laws that govern ice.
Nadia Kirmani is a first-generation immigrant from Karachi, Pakistan. She holds a BS in Biology and BA in English from Duke University and is currently pursuing an MD at Stanford University School of Medicine. She writes poetry on faith, grief, and preservation.