Poetry: “WHEN MY FATHER TELLS ME TO TAKE MY EARRING OUT” by Arya Vishin

“When he handed them over, earrings dripping with teeth—the heavens / howled in protest & the silver tigers cried out.”

Arya Vishin tactfully uses imagery inspired by the epic story, Mahabharat, to delve into the nuances of devotion. In the end, reclaiming a sense of pride and dedication to one’s own life. The erratic spacing adds a layer of excitement that deepens the poem’s unique beauty.


WHEN MY FATHER TELLS ME TO TAKE MY EARRING OUT

I think of Karna           from the Mahabharat, whose ornaments made him
invulnerable, unable to be killed in combat                & even knowing that
+++++ he still gave it all up                   when asked, speaking of             no choice
in the matter. & with that dagger I bet               he traced the cartilage slowly,
his fingers still dripping carmine         the blood of his chest not yet coagulated
+++++ when he handed them over, earrings dripping             with teeth—the heavens
howled in protest            & the silver tigers                cried out. they say he was
tricked into it but the truth is              he was kind & he wanted to die           remembered
+++++ & he worshipped his father more           than his own life so he pushed his
kundala boon into someone else’s hands. my father almost named me           after him:
+++++ Karan               ear                            for those auriferous earrings
but he didn’t which is to say               I am leaving my single gold hoop in
+++++++++++++++ & I will live forever


Arya Vishin

Arya Vishin is a mixed Kashmiri-American writer from San Jose, California. He can be found on Twitter @thewodensfang.

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