Confessions
Things I have
A dead bird
in my verandah
A two year gap
in my youth
One emerald ring
from a penniless ancestor
A four-storey inheritance
of regret
I have
Bad posture
and a weak spine
An aquarium with
blue water and no fishes
Four empty pints of vodka
An uncanny affinity
for pavements after dark
I have a nagging
memory, of what I wanted to be
A miniature of a city
perennially receding into the ocean
Blueprints for a murder
I cannot execute
In my pockets I have
just enough courage
for one more tragedy
Some marbles from 1996
And a creased photograph
I have a few more things
yet to acquire
This list is incomplete
But I am willing to share
All the distractions in the world aren’t enough
To keep it at bay
There aren’t enough bars
That much has been established
There aren’t enough street lights
For this city
There isn’t enough traffic
To keep away the silence
It’s not enough
There are too many bus stands
With too many old men in them
They don’t speak much
There are too many parks
And too many people in them, smiling
It all seems suspicious
The hour long phone call that you made wasn’t enough
Going back home for Christmas wasn’t enough
Running away wasn’t enough
Though it might have felt as the only thing worth doing at the time
Falling in love isn’t enough to keep it at bay
Though it does put up a fight
There aren’t enough books
And the ones worth reading will only make it worse
There aren’t enough theatres to hide in
There aren’t enough songs to fight it
It’s not enough
It’s never been enough
It’s always there
In the midst of intoxicated crowds
Dancing
And solidarity marches against Time
It’s in your mother’s warm embrace
Inside the smell, the country soil
Leaves after rainfall
It’s in your mirrors and your coffee shops
In the art galleries and brokers’ offices
It’s in the lunch served at the subsidised canteen
And the sigh after an orgasm
All the fast fashion clothes you wear aren’t enough to stop it
All the martyrs dying couldn’t stop it
All the teenagers having sex won’t stop it
It will come
It will come in the month of December
It will not come when you are asleep
It will come in broad daylight
As it always has
It is all we can hope for.
All images shot on film, courtesy the author.
Amartya is a young multi-disciplinary artist from Kolkata. He is a recent graduate from the Film and Television Institute of India (FTII) specialising in Film Direction and Screenplay Writing. His documentary and short fiction films have travelled to national and international film festivals. He is also a photographer shooting primarily with the analogue medium, which he is exploring as a practice. Amartya has been a singer-songwriter and lyricist in the Kolkata independent music scene from his undergrad days (which has been a companion art practice to his poetry). He has been writing poetry since childhood but is averse to the proclamation of being a poet. However, he is in the process of compiling a collection which he plans to publish in the form of a book. His themes deal mostly with urban alienation, personal memories, and the disquiet of the human soul.