SATYA DASH
SATYA DASH
Fluke
In an enduring scene from a movie, the hero whispers
the one great longing of his life, hands cupped around mouth,
to a hole in the wall as a monk watches on, before walking down
the corridor of the temple like a soldier of fate, the screen briefly
frozen on an empty courtyard in the famous ruins of Angkor Wat,
the same courtyard that a friend and I had visited three summers ago,
spending the day with a cheerful guide, admiring the journey
of crafted heft to grand remainders and the gloss left by time
on the surface of stone. How ambling through the same passageway
of dark sandstone might have invoked the spirit of the actor’s tragic romantic
and how in a world of association like ours, it might have been enough
for me to persevere through the punishing aftermath of a heartbreak
that still seemed recent. After the movie, I obsess over the volta in sonnets.
From the turn of phrase emerges a privacy of yearning. All the while my phone
vibrates in resonance with the violence of the world. The video of an explosion
ripping through the port of Beirut leaves me parched. Daily, a volta scorches
a heart somewhere in the world, tenderness flickering out in despair
leaving a trail of ashen vectors for investigators to trace. When the quietness
of room returns, the journey of food and bowel resumes. What do you do
to invent inspiration? In the documentary – The Last Dance, Michael Jordan
confesses to making up a lie about an insult from an opponent for motivation
to perform better. I find this conceit remarkable, but when I try summoning
even the vaguely antagonistic, the words that come to mind are from ones
I love. How do you appreciate such bewilderment? While browsing, I read
about the story of the astrologer invited by the President to the oath
taking ceremony because he forecasted it in a consultation years ago. Closer
to home, at my maternal village, nestled deep in the woodlands of Eastern Odisha,
next to the meadows where I spent many childhood summers striking ball
with bat and sucking ripe stony hearts of mangoes dry, sits rooted under a Banyan
tree in the hours from noon till dusk a sprightly old man revered for his practice
of palmistry for as long as anybody can remember. My grandmother once revealed
that back in the day, the palm reader told her she might never have a grandson.
Apparently, I’m famous in the area
as one of the very few times
he got it wrong.
Satya Dash is the recipient of the 2020 Srinivas Rayaprol Poetry Prize. His poems appear in The Boiler, Anomaly, Chestnut Review, Rhino Poetry, Cincinnati Review, and Diagram, among others. Apart from having a degree in electronics from BITS Pilani-Goa, he has been a cricket commentator too. He has been nominated previously for Pushcart prize, Best of the Net and Best New Poets. He grew up in Cuttack and now lives in Bangalore, India. He tweets at: @satya043