Mother’s Instructions To A Daughter Who Wishes to Write |
by Ranu Uniyal
I must show a raw interest in birds and bees, flowers and trees; I must smell the fragrance of laughter and be ready to sip at intervals, be ready to lick the gentle rain that often gets trapped in the stammering banana stalks, never feel offended by the neighbour’s dog and his ghoulish bark. I must be always ready to pull and prod my mother’s tongue like the mushy earth and let it blossom with curses broad as sequins, much in vogue. I must burn litanies of silence and let the trees speak in a dialect with no sighs of green. I must be ready to wait for the spring to churn sorrows into tales of celebration and welcome each spray of autumn without doubts and discomfort. I must be the garden that seeks consolation in the grass that turns brown and is then burnt without a sound. I must bear the burden of script stain it with the mother’s milk and let her blood seep through my pen. As for tears I must I must garnish them with tiny drops of honey; if my kitchen is empty steal it from the neighbour’s garden and let the bees hum with surprise. |