Day One: On Leaving A Home


For it felt, as if
The windmills sensed my sorrow,
The trees faked a smile upon my departure,
And the mountains held me by their hands and begged me to stay.

But every bird must leave the nest it calls home.
The wind bid me adieu with a gentle breeze,
The grazing cattle nodded along in understanding,
And fields swayed along to the breeze blowing past them.

A certain beauty about one's home,
Is that even a ray of sunshine can make an unforgettable memory.

A small drizzle comes my way,
Upset that I was leaving but wishing me safe travels ahead.

A silent promise was made that day, to never forget,
My nest, my paradise, my home.

Wistful goodbyes are left on a joyful note,
So one may have happy travels ahead,
But even the sky was a paler shade of blue that day.

The plains and woodlands around me stretch far into the horizon,
Which leaves me wishing I had stayed around longer.

It was ironic, truly.
Everyone wishes to leave the nest they call home when they are in it, yet when it is, indeed, time to go, leaving is the single hardest thing to to.

I pass by a field of daffodils in full bloom,
However, they too seemed to be upset with my departure,
Their heads dipped low.

A small stream follows me beside the road,
A welcoming sight in a sea of concrete.

As I kept going further away from my paradise, the scenery was getting desperate.
The mountains looked misty and foreboding.
The wind started getting desperate.
A gentle drizzle turned into a storm.

Fog and mist started forming around tree plantations.
Soon, I entered unknown land,
And all the trees of fire that I had passed had soon faded into withering corpses of a land once known as a jungle.

Yet now, the mighty jungle that once ruled this foreign land had been reduced to a pile of cement and people.
I still live in this pile to this day,
With only the occasional glance back home.

– Maya Desdemona

More on the Upcoming 30 Day Journey

The subcategory of this blog, marked as the 30 Day Journey, hopes to entail the consistent posting of some form of writing or another from my end in order to entertain the reader over the course of the month of April. If you, dear readers, would indulge my experimentations on poetry and prose for at least a minute a day, it would greatly satisfy the minds and souls of reader and author alike. After all,

For Thirty days I present my art,
For Thirty more I remain a lark,
When Thirty years come to pass,
You shall find me, without alas.

– Maya Desdemona