Author: Shakshi Sandil

  • Plural Singularity – A Family

    I walked a million miles
    Through vast deserts and countless trials
    I met a gypsy by the sea
    Carrying fun stories and spirit so free.

    A pale tiny looking man whose name was Von
    Peculiar habits that reminds me of a leprechaun
    A Hindu on the West Coast, a staunch practitioner
    Singing hymns and praises of Lord Krishna.

    Met a girl named Chou who specialized in herbal medicine
    She knew all the turns of the market, all the outs and ins.
    I heard a braided woman shout something briefly
    My little world knowledge hinting it to be maybe Swahili.
    A towering gentleman crashed into me
    With wares all woolen and a bottle of Hennessey.

    Walking past this crowd with divergent identities
    I wondered how different and plural were the complexities
    Yet there breathed a certain string of commonality
    A touch of flesh and bones and maybe humanity.
    I ponder whether our division is due to some anomaly
    Maybe, just maybe, the world is really one big family.

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