Herlore Regular, Poetry

Decluttering My Weapons|Jaysika Gupta

As the night arrives

I start stripping 

Layer by Layer

While the city sleeps, 

The mandir smells of, 

Flowers, attar & soot-

Makes me nauseous. 

 

First, I strip my weapons

Sword, trident, mace with other few

I have eight hands, 

None of them for me.

Removing the flower garland next, 

Smells nice but bugs bite me

I will keep one lotus for my hair

 

Now, this jewelry 

Tangles with my hair

Gave me marks all around my neck

Bangles, then crown 

I keep everything down

They pray to me for wealth,

Never knowing I would rather be them

 

The saree is pretty

But makes me itchy in summer 

I would like a cotton one with polka dots.

I wash myself off next, 

Dousing in vermilion

It seems like I am bleeding, 

Bleeding away my Goddessness. 

 

I dry myself under the fan

Braid my hair,

Put a lotus behind my ear

I wear a white saree, 

My favorite color. 

I put on nude lipstick,

And blue eyeshadow. 

I see myself in the mirror, 

This is so much better. 

 

I walk out of the temple, 

No one bats an eye

I don’t look or smell like a Goddess

One told me, 

“Come at 7 AM, mandir is closed now”

I smile. 

 

I would like to go to a café, 

Window shopping maybe? 

Eat something savory, 

All devotees offer me sweets. 

I stop a rickshaw, 

To take me to a market nearby

He agrees at 100 rupees. 

 

AUTHOR BIO

Jaysika Gupta is an author, editor, poet, and filmmaker who has completed her MA in English at the University of Delhi, India. Her professional expertise spans digital marketing to book editing. She lives in New Delhi, where she continues to explore the intersections of community advocacy and creative writing. When not writing, she is often found exploring the surrounding neighborhood which is her major inspiration.