Sunday, November 27, 2022

Ravi Shankar

Picture


Exile


There's nowhere else I'd rather not be than here, 
But here I am nonetheless, dispossessed,  
Though not quite, because I never owned 
What's been taken from me, never have belonged 
In and to a place, a people, a common history.  
Even as a child when I was slurred in school - 
Towel head, dot boy, camel jockey - 
None of the abuse was precise: only Sikhs 
Wear turbans, widows and young girls bindus, 
Not one species of camel is indigenous to India . . . 
If, as Simone Weil writes, to be rooted 
Is the most important and least recognized need 
Of the human soul, behold: I am an epiphyte. 
I conjure sustenance from thin air and the smell 
Of both camphor and meatloaf equally repel me. 
I've worn a lungi pulled between my legs, 
Done designer drugs while subwoofers throbbed, 
Sipped masala chai steaming from a tin cup, 
Driven a Dodge across the Verrazano in rush hour, 
And always to some degree felt extraneous, 
Like a meteorite happened upon bingo night. 
This alien feeling, honed in aloneness to an edge, 
Uses me to carve an appropriate mask each morning. 
I'm still unsure what effect it has on my 

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