Pantry Prose: Season of the Seditious Heart by Dr Ghulam Mohammad Khan

In the sensual, fleeting twilight of autumn, a man feels an urgent energy to connect deeply with the world and find love. He disdains artificial tourist spots, finding vitality instead in the crowded, noisy, and authentic heart of the city—its bustling markets, dusty streets, and the conspiratorial silence that allows passion to bloom.

He finds a kindred spirit in a bold, new colleague who appreciates his humour and style. Their romance becomes a pilgrimage through the urban landscape, a rebellion against societal judgement, culminating in a single, perfect night of the first snowfall. After being expelled from a hotel by a morally outraged owner, they embrace the winter night as their true sanctuary, finding a deeper freedom and connection on a silent, snow-covered lake. Their intense, seasonal love affair reaches its natural completion with the dawn, as winter firmly establishes its reign, leaving behind the permanent, gleaming memory of a passion that burned at the very edge of the season.

As Autumn, that seasoned artist, performed its final act, plucking the last of the stubborn, curled leaves from their tenuous hold and painting the mornings and evenings with the damp, grey chill of transience, a strange and familiar energy would stir within him. It was a quiet madness, a siren call that pulled him from his solitude and sent him wandering, not to escape the world, but to fall more deeply in love with its beautiful, crumbling heart. This was his season of confluence, a time to find a kindred spirit with whom to walk, their hands gently entwined, over carpets of desiccated chinar leaves, listening to the crystalline whispers of their passage. Together, they would devour the steam and spice from humble stalls, their warmth a defiance against the encroaching cold, and lose themselves in the vast, forgiving anonymity of fog-shrouded landscapes. He imagined they would be pilgrims on old buses and matadors, sitting tight, their closeness a haven as they would rattle through the city’s teeming, honking bazaars. He held no affection for distant, polished tourist attractions, those anodyne stages for borrowed wonder. Nor did he seek the seclusion of generic natural resorts, where every vista felt predictably picturesque. No, his heart was tethered to the city’s one conspiratorial attribute: its boundless, non-judgmental grace. The city never scowled upon those falling in love, upon those stealing moments of tenderness in its shadowy corners. It was a silent, knowing accomplice to the sacred, sensual world awakening within. He cherished its particular silence, not an absence of sound, but a resonant quietude found beneath the urban din, a deep, sonorous hum that seemed to stir the very core of his being, arousing a universe of sensation. He loved the press of the crowd, the democracy of huddled bodies grazing shoulders, a fleeting, intimate communion of strangers. He found poetry in the puffs of steamy breath exhaled into the crisp air, a visible sign of life’s persistent furnace, and in the raw, guttural calls of hawkers, the honest music of survival. The cacophony was his liturgy. The relentless traffic, the impatient honking, the unceasing hiss of the marketplace; all of it a roaring tribute to a world stubbornly, gloriously, and passionately alive.

The approach of winter settled in his spirit as a paradox; a tremor of disquiet intertwined with a boom of sensual energy. It unsettled him, for it bred a desperate yearning to make love, not merely in the physical sense, but to commune with another soul in the shared, desperate warmth against the coming silence. He was no hunter; the notion of hounding another for this solace was anathema to his nature. His heart sought a reciprocal grace, a silent understanding in another who appreciated his particular way of wanting this all; this layered, fragile confluence of body and spirit.

Yet, this disquiet was inseparable from a deep sensuality, for the late autumn, poised on the very verge of winter, was nature’s own most sensual season. He perceived the world as donning a final, breath-taking raiment of colour, a last, defiant flush on the cheek of the year before the pallor of sleep. And in this, he divined a universal truth: that the last moment of energy before a great silence, before a symbolic death, always carries within it a ferocious will to fight, to struggle, to be. Before the austere reign of winter could claim everything, the last, grand fire of autumn simply had to burn.

And then, as if the season itself had conspired to answer his yearning, he found her at his workplace, a soul who seemed to have been woven from the very fabric of that autumnal light. Her attention alighted first upon the quiet and elegant language of his attire, before settling with delight upon the cadence of his humour. She was bold in her spirit and held a firm conviction: that those who could not wield humour might possess a life, but had yet to discover the art of living it.

New to that place, she found herself drawn into what she would later recall as those first, ridiculously light moments, shared outside the makeshift canteen, bathed in the feeble, gilded sun of late autumn. For him, that light was a perpetual sensual delight, and in it, she appeared ethereal. He possessed that rare aura, an alchemy of wit and warmth that could hold anyone spellbound, and he knew, with a desperate, private certainty, how profoundly he needed the company of such a beautiful lady to relish the season’s poignant descent.

Slowly, inevitably, they collided, not as two strangers, but as two long-separated pieces of a single, broken case, their edges remembering a former wholeness. He believed, with every fibre of his being, that in this season of fleeting warmth, the intense romance was found not in wandering through a solitary, pleasing feeling, nor in dying in a romantic gaze from afar. It was in the sacred, tangible truth of touch: the meeting of hands, the proximity of a seated form, the shared, unique warmth that was the only true bulwark against the coming cold.

He had always maintained a quiet distance from those at his workplace who held court on morality, who spoke in hushed, grave tones of the body’s inherent dispositions as a weakness to be disciplined, a fire to be banked. He avoided their glances that passed judgment on the flirtatious behaviours of others, glances that betrayed a secret bitterness born not of virtue, but of opportunity never granted. And now, in the thrall of this autumn, he cared for their opinions not at all. For he carried within him a singular philosophy: that our mortal journey is, in its essence, a long, slow mourning of our own decline, a procession toward the inevitable end. Except, and this was the sacred exception, in the season of Autumn, and in the first, hushed couple of snowfall. In this hallowed interval, the tyranny of the clock was undone. In this season, he did not merely pass through time; he commanded it. He passed for time, and time, in a miraculous suspension, did not pass for him.

She, in her bold and luminous wisdom, named him the moutt of her heart’s desire: the vagabond, the tramp of her most seditious longings. In doing so, she did not merely accompany him; she became the living embodiment of his autumn, rendering tangible what he had always known it to be: a cathedral of passion, a sanctuary of sensuality, a hymn of love-making. A walk with her through the colonnades of chinar trees transformed the leaf-draped landscape; the crisp sound beneath their feet became a symphony, the air itself turned breathtaking, and the moment etched itself into eternity. Alone, it had been merely leaves on the ground; with her, it was a ceremony.

Together, they travelled the valley, but theirs was a pilgrimage of the authentic. His soul thrived in the bastiyan, the congested, pulsating quarters filled with the glorious noise of people simply going about their lives. He loved the narrow, dusty streets, even those that carried the pungent aroma of the city, where dogs dozed in lazy patches of sun, hawkers cried their wares, and every face bore the unmistakable signs of a life being lived. He cherished the small, the cramped, the intimate, for vast things and open spaces made him feel insignificant and restless, a solitary speck under an indifferent sky. Therefore, they chose public places for their most private devotions. A bus ride rattling through the heart of unknown villages became a shared secret. Endless walks through the alleys and streets of Srinagar, smelling equally of dirt and love, with no destination but the journey itself. Sometimes, they would venture into the open, autumn-dry fields spread like a tawny sea between two beautiful villages, particularly when the fog descended with sudden, ghostly grace in the late autumn mornings. Sometimes, a shikara ride offered its gentle rocking solace. And sometimes, the sheer, irrepressible sensual energy would drive them to walk a full, trembling circle around the Dal Lake, until, spent and breathless, they would inevitably find themselves drawn to the steam and solace of a cheap roadside stall, relishing not just the food, but the profound poetry of their shared existence.

All the wandering, all the whispered confessions and shared warmth, culminated in what he would later recall with a sigh as the most beautiful night of his life, a night that held his heart suspended on the precipice of exquisite feeling. It was the night of the first snow, the precise pivot where autumn yielded to winter, a threshold etched in ice and silence. They had chosen to consecrate this celestial turning together, sequestered in a hotel room poised to witness the predicted descent. There, they watched the snow begin its silent ministry from their window, a scene rendered bewitchingly visible by the fading house lights scattered along the gentle slope beneath them and the hazy halos of the street lamps. Each flake was a slow-motion promise, weaving a tapestry of pristine white over the grime and memory of the world. The atmosphere within grew thick with a surreal sensuality, the quiet intimacy of their watch a counterpoint to the hushed frenzy outside. They were observers of a world being forgiven, wrapped in a shared, warming silence.

This sacred hour deepened, blurring the line between dream and reality, until the moment, just before the clock could strike its symbolic midnight, when a sudden, stark knock landed upon the door. It was a sound like the crack of fate’s cold hand, shattering the fragile crystal of their seclusion. A voice, foreign and imperative, called his name from the other side, demanding that he come out.

The voice that shattered their peace was a guttural roar, coming from a man both massive and animate with a furious righteousness. He was burly, perhaps in his late forties, with a beard that flowed down to his chest like an avalanche of condemnation. He stood there like an enraged angel from the snowy outer world, who had just landed on earth and found himself incarnated as a mortal vessel of wrath. He announced himself as the owner of the hotel, and without preamble, he began to spew the putrid lexicon of a moral order he believed they had defiled, a litany of the degeneration of the place to which they all, in his eyes, tragically belonged.

“What evidence do you have to prove she is your fiancée?” he bellowed, his words a cold blade thrust into the warmth of the room. “Can we call her family to prove that?”

The threat hung in the air, more chilling than the winter outside: the police. It was at this moment, faced with the annihilation of their beautiful night and the exposure of their love to the cold, bureaucratic machinery of judgment, that a slight, defiant courage finally stirred within him.

“I am shocked,” he replied, his voice finding a steadiness that belied the tremor in his heart, “why did it take until midnight to tell me that. You could have denied me a room in the evening.”

The owner was struck silent, the simplistic logic a pinprick to the bloated balloon of his righteousness. For a moment, there was only the sound of the falling snow. Then, deflated and thus enraged anew, the man hollered again, gesturing with a large, fleshy arm towards the door, banishing them into the very night they had been cherishing.

And that expulsion became the sweetest, most triumphant part of their adventure. For they understood what the owner could not: that night transforms a place, stripping away the lifeless conformity of the day to reveal a living wilderness. Most people, cowed by the unknown, see no beauty in the darkness, believing only the garish light of day holds the meaning of life. But the night unfolds the real intrigue of existence; the whispers, the secrets, the raw, unvarnished truths that the blunt light of day simply fades into non-existence.

They found themselves shortly under a streetlamp, its glow a solitary halo in the vast, accepting darkness. Thick, chiming snow fell, slowly accumulating, painting the world in a deep and silent white. They had no cover, and they loved it. The snow had not trapped them; it had liberated them. The night beckoned, a vast conspiracy that mocked the owner’s wounded moral ego. It was the night that shielded them now, and the snow that sang their anthem.

They walked onto a bridge, their laughter a soft counterpoint to the crisp crunch of snow under their boots, a percussion of pure joy. In the middle of that span, between one bank and the other, suspended in time as they were in space, they stopped. They kissed, and held each other, as the night played on its grand, dark instrument. Even the waters of the Jhelum flowing beneath seemed to still their murmur, holding their breath to let the softer, more sacred song of the snowflakes sing louder. It seemed the very night had conspired to sculpt this moment for them, and the entire, silent universe stood as its witness. The shining, snow-covered brims of the streetlights were their congregation, the slowly sagging branches of the trees, bowing under the weight of fresh, pristine white, offered a solemn benediction. And as if summoned by the same enchantment that guided the falling flakes, a rickshaw materialised from the void of the white darkness, pulling up before them.

“Where are you going?” the driver asked, his voice a rasp woven from the fabric of the night itself.

“Take us to Dalgate,” he replied, joining her in the rickety cabin. As they journeyed through the muffled, sleeping city, he confessed to the driver their expulsion and the sudden appearance of this chariot in their hour of need. To this, the driver responded with a quiet, mythic gravity, “I am the Owl of the night,” claiming his role as a nocturnal guardian of wayward souls.

They walked the Dal Lake pavement then, as if no two lovers had ever walked there before. The snow, falling in relentless, elegant veils, might never have looked so profoundly beautiful, and they were certain no one had ever loved so freely within it. They were beyond care, beyond the fear of any further chastisement. Their world was their own.

Yet, the night had one more spectre to offer. At Gate 4, another burly, bearded man obstructed their path. But this man was different; his eyes held a pragmatic kindness, his voice the soft lilt of commerce, not condemnation. “Houseboat lodging for the night,” he offered, mentioning its English name to lend it legitimacy. They consented; their trust forged in the crucible of the night. But then he introduced a trick of circumstance, a whisper of necessary deception. “There are a few drunkards on the Gate, and they are watching us,” he said, his voice low. “I will first take the madam in my small boat. You will wait for me at the next gate. I will reach there in ten minutes.”

A new silence descended, thicker than the snow. A plan was laid, a temporary separation demanded by the harsh optics of the world. He agreed, his heart a tight drum in his chest, watching as she was guided away into the misty blackness over the water, leaving him alone once more under the patient, falling snow. He trusted him, for a while. But without her, the night began to speak in a different, older tongue, a dialect of sharpened cold, gnawing fear, and loneliness that exists at the very heart of adventure. Each second stretched into a minute, each snowflake a silent accusation. The world, so recently a conspirator in their romance, now felt vast and indifferent, and he was merely a man waiting on a frozen shore, his courage fraying at the edges.

Then, a shadow resolved upon the water; the boatman was ferrying back, as promised. And she was there, a silhouette against the dark lake, her presence a calming breath upon the storm of his thoughts. As he stepped into the small, rocking vessel, he felt the connection snap back into place. The night was no longer a void but a sanctuary once more, its language restored to one of whispered secrets and shared warmth. As the boatman prepared to turn towards the waiting houseboat, he found his voice, softened by the cold but firm with resolve. “Wait,” he said. “Before you take us to your houseboat, take us wherever you can into the lake. Let the journey take the whole night, if you don’t mind. We will pay you.” It was not an escape anymore, but a claiming. They would not be merely hidden; they would be immersed. They would make the entire, sleeping lake their chamber, and the endless, falling snow their roof.

Beneath the decorated canopy of the shikara, they huddled, a single silhouette against the immense, velvet dark. The boatman, now their silent Charon, rowed them deeper into the heart of the lake, where the world dissolved into a sublime nothingness. There was only the faint, ghostly loom of distant lights, the almost-silent sigh of the falling snow, and the rhythmic, hypnotic sound of the oars dipping into the black, placid water; a liquid whisper marking their passage into the void.

The lake itself transformed; no longer a body of water, it became the full, dark cosmos, its boundaries erased, its depth interminable. And this vastness was matched only by the sensual warmth blooming inside their own bodies, a private universe of feeling as infinite as the one that surrounded them. The scattered lights on the surrounding hills glimmered like distant constellations, sparkling jewels adorning the breathtaking aspects of the night.

Eventually, the houseboat received them, its wooden hull a capsule of warmth in the cold expanse. But the night did not end at the door; it merely changed its key, continuing its silent sonata for them outside the fogged-up windows. Inside, they held each other with a fierce tenderness, a final shedding of the world’s layers. They wanted nothing in between them; no cloth, no past, no future, no judgment, only the pure, unmediated truth of skin against skin, breath mingling with breath, in the sacred and embracing silence of the night.

The morning came with a changed face upon the earth. A severe, brilliant whiteness had erased the world they had known, silencing the intimate whispers of the night beneath a blanket of stark, unyielding light. As he watched the new sun glare off the snow, the signs of the season’s end dawned upon him with a quiet, inevitable weight.

Dr Ghulam Mohammad Khan was born and raised in Sonawari (Bandipora); an outlying town located on the wide shores of the beautiful Wullar Lake. Ghulam Mohammad believes that literature is the most original and enduring repository of human memory. He loves the inherent intricacies of language and the endless possibilities of meaning. In his writing, he mainly focuses on mini-narratives, local practices and small-scale events that could otherwise be lost forever to the oblivion of untold histories. Ghulam Mohammad considers his hometown, faith, and family to be the most important things to him. His short stories have appeared in national and international magazines like Out of PrintKitaabIndian LiteratureMuse IndiaIndian ReviewInverse JournalMountain Ink and more. His short story collection The Cankered Rose is his forthcoming work. Presently, he teaches as an Assistant Professor at HKM Degree College Bandipora, Kashmir.

You can find more of Dr Ghulam Mohammad Khan’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: Where Love Sits Quiet by Diya Baral

In the murmurs of beating hearts,
Love ignites a quiet flame—
Not in thunder or in triumph,
But recalling one soft name.

It does not rush like tempests,
Nor blaze like summer’s sun,
But whispers through the stillness
When all the cacophony is calm.

Beneath the moon’s slow rising,
Beside a flowing stream,
It walks in step with silence,
And breathes within an apocalyptic dream.

In the serenity of mountains,
Where moss gathered on stone,
Wind blows gently like-
Love flows in whispering tone.
Love exists in silence
Its the source of inspiration,
Its wrapped in stillness
With a journey in meditation.

Diya Baral completed her Master’s in English Language and Literature in 2025 and is now pursuing a second Master’s in English Language Teaching, driven by her love for pedagogy. A passionate writer, she crafts poems and articles, with pieces appearing in Setu Bilingual Magazine (Sept 2022, June 2024 –“Blooms in the Green Yards”), Ode To A Poetess (July 2023, Apr 2024), “Poetry Unites: An Anthology of Verse” (Feb 2022), “Youthful Elegies: Echoes of a New Generation” (Nov 24 2023, Nov 30 2024), and Spillwords Press (Aug 2025). She also presents papers and publishes articles in journals like “The Lakeside Review” and “Lekhamanjari”, blending academia with creativity.

Poetry Drawer: Writing Poetry on the Shore: Near the Brook by JoyAnne O’Donnell

Writing Poetry on the Shore

Listening to the seagulls fly
With white wings spelling angels talk
Hearing the waves clearing me
With a calming effect
Warm sand
Giving us land
With my chair and air
Umbrella for a cool moments
Tender days to sandy stars
Under my feet and swimming cars.

Near the Brook

Near the Brook, time loosens it’s rough grip.
Water slides over smooth stones
Like ancient secrets, catching the glow and breaking it into silver laughter. The air is cooler here, washed clean by the steady breath of the stream, every ripple gleams to carry a quiver a promise of rest. Leaves drift past like unhurried thoughts and dreams.

JoyAnne O’Donnell is an author of Winds of Time, first book, Spring & Summer’s Veil by Kelsey books and Palace of Enchanted Day and Night by Cyberwit, Heavens Medal, Summer In The Breeze.

You can find more of JoyAnne’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: The Fault That Was Not Mine To Take: An Old Friend of Ours, Older Than I: Coated in Layers of Metal and Paint by Siha Park

The Fault That Was Not Mine To Take

Disaster in her face remains as my guilt
But I remember how we knew of the chance
I watch as the old man across the street smokes a cigar, its flame flickering like lost hope
He glances at his watch, watches as it ticks on by
Nowhere to go, his eyes seem lost as he stares into the distance, his dusty glasses perched
loosely across his face
His thumb traces the worn leather of his bible, and he turns a page
A little boy scampers towards the vending machine
In his hurry, piles of silver coins drop one by one
Kneeling, he picks them up clumsily, eyes strained with tears as one falls into a sewer
His mother, panting, reaches up with a yellow handkerchief, wiping away his sorrow
She offers him a lollipop, the strawberry flavored red one, and she smiles in relief as he takes it
There’s lines across her face, but her eyes continue to shine
A woman wearing a tailored suit walks on by
The click of her heels click at a furious pace
Her hair is tied into a neat bun, but a loose strand manages to stray

An Old Friend of Ours, Older Than I

I still remember it
Time had battered its soul
The faint whiff of my cat’s urine
The beeping sound it used to make
Crevices and grooves mark its skin
The claw marks on the left side of its arm
The peeling leather depicts a story of its life
Somehow, it still tries, whirring back to life, determined

Made of black leather
An old friend of ours, older than I
Sometimes, I’d sit back and allow sleep to take me away
Sometimes, I’d just sit down and do nothing at all
All of the moments, big and small, had healed my soul
Growing up, it had always been a source of comfort
Even now, there are traces of its massive body in the dust

Changes had been made through the years
How long has it been since the last time you held me?

Coated in Layers of Metal and Paint

Carved into my body are intricate shapes
Edges coated in liquid gold
Beauty caused by a single blade

Two faces, one hidden against the wall
There will always be an angle you choose to hide from
In another lifetime, another life will see me
What they see, a face they wear daily
Coated in layers of metal and paint
Disguised as a tool to show your face
The world I see will never depict reality
A reflecting surface seems to shine from below
Cold as the sheets of ice, it shows the world in a different view
Small and insignificant, it stands tall and proud
“Mirror mirror on the wall,” they say, but all I see is insecurity
One day you’ll stand in front of me, demanding what I see
But can’t you see?
The world I see will never depict reality

Siha Park is a high school student and currently lives in the United States. Siha’s writing focuses on observation, memory, and moments from everyday life. Siha is interested in how attention changes meaning, and how poems can hold what might otherwise be forgotten.

Poetry Drawer: in which war is always invading: amazon: train ride by Haeun (Regina) Kim

in which war is always invading

die as something, maybe. like a dog. why won’t i have that?
because the stove doesn’t have wrinkles, and a thing like that
won’t get far. i’m not at home anymore but forget me for a
minute. all i remember is lash, burn, trench. unsightly, unseeing. 
eyes eyes eyes. i await your order. what’s up with me? it’s like i 
believe it’ll back off if i run, trim the talking eyelids. it burns.
i finish my circles and then return to the cycle. i exhale the
sunlight. tear it into tiny chunks and swallow. inhale the boiling 
trench. please god i’m sick and i don’t trust sorry. was that
it god? should it? i gotta make a life. i want light, i want
the day. god is a watchdog. i watch the dark. two sore breaths.
it walls me in. i hate the stove. the ticking and the burst
of fire, like it’s calling me. i wonder if god has a dog too.

amazon

the door dings. slipped beneath is a plastic
package. a thin layer of film stretches around fabric,
sealed at the edges as if pressed with an iron. 
you will press the cloth inside with an iron, 
heat hissing as it seeps inside stitches. the fabric 
sighs, wilts, and sucuumbs at last. it melds with 
your fingers, molting as if you are shedding flesh. 
the neck of the shirt swallows you, fabric rippling 
around your torso as you move. and you move, 
because you need the iron now. you need to iron 
your shirt-skin. you hold the iron in your hand,
smoke wheezing into your eyes, and you click-
click-click and wait, coughing, until you hear
the door ding again. and slipped beneath it is a
plastic package. a handprint seared into the iron.
alternatively, the iron imprinted into your hand.
you tear the plastic away like an animal might
to a carcass. the door dings and dings and dings.
you are starving.

train ride

Shut up, the woman says. her cheeks are berry flushed. i can imagine
her manicured fingers plucking out the seeds in her pores. Shut up shut up shut up.
the man cradles his head like it is a fragile thing, constantly slipping from his
slick grip. I, he tries. No, he begins. his nails curl around an armrest. then,
Shut up! he flushes berry red. i straighten my magazine page with a flap. the two
glance at me, anywhere but each other. mom takes the paper from me. I can’t
believe they’re being so loud on a train, she complains. quietly, at least. Mom, shut up,
i whisper. They’ll hear you. mom shrugs, rolls the magazine away and turns
to the couple. It’s a public space, mom says, not so quiet this time, and the woman 
blushes even darker, because she is always the picture of dignity and she has
never been heartbroken before. the man’s nails dig into his scalp, as if its on the verge
of breaking. he is terribly good at breaking things, perhaps. i avert my eyes. it’s like
watching a train wreck. metal sparking like fireworks and butterflies. mom doesn’t
look away. the man’s watch is slow, he hasn’t had time to replace it, probably.
he’s been sick with a cold for a week and he’s too tired of chicken soup to
keep it down. he needs tylenol and ice. the woman sighs. the train’s exhaust fumes
sigh. mom grabs my hand and leads me to the doors, slinging a backpack over
her shoulder. And don’t tell me to shut up, she says, the couple’s eyes
watching our backs as we slip outside.

Haeun (Regina) Kim is a student writer from Seoul, South Korea. An alumna of the Adroit Journal Summer Mentorship, the Sewanee Young Writers’ Conference, and the Sunhouse Summer Writing Mentorship, she has been recognized by Bennington College, the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, River of Words, and more. Her writing has been published or is forthcoming in Rust and Moth, Stone Soup, and The Galway Review, among others. An editor at Polyphony Lit, she serves as the founder of MISO-JIEUM. When not writing, she can be found painting in an art studio or struggling through amateur ballet.

Poetry Drawer: Middle of Somewhere: Errant Minutes: Press to Play by Sally Lee

Middle of Somewhere

Vaguely behind every winter of ambition 
Their eyes warm, and cookies sleep deeply through problems 
Hard-boiled eggs and children stretching 
And the days try not to half 

Playing football in a science school
You try to fit in a cool shirt, overdressed, overqualified
Youth cooled down while you put your tie—around your neck—red 
Spring cheats with a smile where passion left

Spotted beard pretends to know
Wake up to midlife 
Crisis baked and served
Problems with morning cereal

Laundry worn too many times 
White lies
Small sigh of relief or reminisce

Errant Minutes

This morning lasted four seconds—
long enough for light to change its mind, 
for the pot to think of boiling, 
and forget. 

Steam from the mug hadn’t even reached its curve
before light slipped from the table 
and onto the wall,
then off again. 

Voice folded into the air,
before the phone could ring its tune.
It waited there—
certain, I would need it later. 

As light finally held still, 
and my reflection—
breathing where I’d left it.

The air stiffened
and across that pause, 
something small and weightless unfolded in my hands—
not sound,
but just the quiet after it.

Press to Play 

Light spills across my face, 
portraits of other lives glowing brighter than mine. 
Smiles freeze in rectangles, 
perfect mornings that never end. 
I scroll until faces blur into one long pulse of brightness,
casting a shadow behind me of everything I’m not.

An afterimage hums behind my eyes,
light submerges into darkness 
until I only see sounds.
Footsteps cross the ceiling like timpani,
each one tracking the same path
as the neighbours pace through my dream. 

The alarm rings.
I press the same button, 
promise the same five more minutes. 
Light seeps through the curtain seam, 
thin as a paper cut. 
I move between bells, 
each hallway reflecting the last.

I return to the room that remembers my shape—
the sunset dyes the linen orange. 
Light seeps through to print a shadow
of everything I am.

The same blur of blue waiting, 
soft, faithful as breath.

Sally Lee is a student at an international school in Seoul, South Korea. Immersed in a multicultural environment, she draws inspiration from the diverse cultures and experiences around her. She is currently working on her writing portfolio.

You can find more of Sally’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: Not To Dream: As I Lay: I Almost Said It by Lauren Kim 

Not To Dream

Drink a cup or two of heavy caffeine
          I suppress my own urge to spit the bitterness out
Lean uncomfortably on your stiff back
          I feel the cold wooden chair pressing on my spine
Keep the hands busy, although it may be pointless
          I crack my fingers to break the silence
Make sure the eyes are wide open
          I bear the weighty lashes, constantly blinking
Do not lose the tension on the shoulders
          I keep my elbows away from the armrest of the chair
Avoid the pleasure of the warmth
          I enjoy the shiver as much as I wish
Desire not to dream
          I keep myself out of the swift absurdity leading to obnoxiousness
Keep the space bright and artificial
          The unceasing LED lights blur my exhausted vision
Plead with the sun not to rise
          The closed shades should protect me from the new day

As I Lay

The flashing light brightens the room
In strobes of color
A plant’s shadow projected on the white wall
The blurred outlines, a tint of purple
In the darkness, the air still shimmers
The remanence of objects flickering 
As if it is still there

The ladybug crashing to the ceiling light
Irritates the atmosphere
Failing to resist the temptation of the bright warmth
The wings flap and twitch
The legs are fragile and pendulous
It moves and vibrates simultaneously
until it is abruptly compressed by a tissue box
marking a two-dimensional print on the wall

The wind blows the light into the room
Filling it with the lustrous gleam
soon cancelled out by the winter breeze
Each blow pushes against the shade
The wooden handle tapping the windowsill
Bouncing back into the room,
Its movement is ceased by gravity
The window is locked
And air pressure is now behind firm glass

I Almost Said It 

The cracks in the paint 
on the ceiling
was partially scraped off
Revealing the bare grey concrete

I almost asked for help

My finger dialed a familiar number
That has been lingering in my head
Since the day you disappeared
I hovered above the green button

The room was empty
the disgusting solitary
Reminded the warmth
Once pressed upon the shoulder 
by the weight of your head  

The walls seemed too white
once shaded
with two orange shadows
at sunset

The water in the glass
remained still and untouched
Subtly reflecting my face
Too colourless to be shown


Lauren Kim is a high school student with a fervent love for both poetry and visual art. Her work delves into the intricacies of identity, the nuances of nature, and the emotional currents of teenage life. Through her poems and mixed media artwork, Lauren seeks to capture and convey the beauty in moments of introspection and everyday experiences. When she’s not writing or creating art, she enjoys exploring the outdoors, reading contemporary poetry, and experimenting with new artistic techniques. Lauren’s work has been influenced by her diverse cultural background and her deep connection to the natural world. She aspires to continue growing as an artist and a writer, sharing her unique perspective with others.

You can find more of Lauren’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: The Navy Man: The Portrait on My Pillow: Staring Out into the Ocean  by Ah-Young Dana Park

The Navy Man 

The time he wore navy, what looked like a towel 
When we stood to meet, we felt another wrinkle and smiled
And to think that the hair in each lid of our eyes lives?
I’ve seen it flicker for him.  

His camera was muted when we hiked
His pedals creak when we bike 
Looking distant and smiles fade, but when seen close, 
His blue eyes do first.

How I still imagine when our eyes glistened in pictures
His thoughts are deep, never back are we never 
How his eyes were in every pose 
His eyes were covered by a headband I sold 
We’ve tied each other up, knowing he was I 
But those like him continued

The Portrait on My Pillow 

Each corner unravels in sleep,
Breathless in years, 
the pillow lies flat, airless. 

At a corner of the pillow sheet,
a black mouth opens at the seam–  
where ink bled through paper,
where dreams learned to weep.

I fell some nights,
as rain, as wheels on ruined roads
Till I awoke, with beads of sweat
that sank and shaded the pillow 

Every scream sewn inwards,
some days I cried till my face melted into
wobbly linings of my eyes and nostrils– 
A jocular portrait, I still laugh to 

And below the faded sheets,
It still faintly paints 
the colors of my fears and dreams 
when I lay my head down.

Staring Out into the Ocean 

There was a huge painting 
hung on an endless white wall.
The back of a woman and a man, clutching their hands
staring out into a vast blue ocean.

“What are they looking at?” I asked
“There’s nothing interesting about the ocean.” 
My mother shook her head, then said,
“What makes you think it’s an ocean?”

“The thin white waves, look.” 
I pointed at the wobbly acrylic lines
“What makes them wave patterns?” 
She asked, with a faint smile. 

Then I saw her still figure, staring into the painting 
Into the ocean, as her fingers
traced the wrinkles near her mouth,
her eyes distant, hollowed by the empty silence.

The woman and the man were small, 
dwarfed by the ocean ahead.
Two lonely shadows,
Staring out into the blue.

Ah-Young Dana Park is a high school student in Boston, Massachusetts. Her poetry often explores memory, interiority, and fleeting moments. Beyond her writing pursuits, Dana enjoys singing, painting, and exploring other artistic fields.

You can find more of Dana’s work here on Ink Pantry.

Poetry Drawer: Small Thing: What life must take: Glimpse by Jian Yeo


Small Thing

Life fears me with mortality,
making me urge for more ends,
until the last moment of urge I will make
–when I compromise,
      it should be illusory, yet I’m not trying to debunk the impermanence of life.
      With my closed views of the world,
      I isolate myself from the beauty of life I have dreaded to live in.

The terror haunts me.
View yourself; such a temporary thing you are
with an unknown void that would soon disappear
it whispers life’s weight, reminding how I would forget everything I cherished;
Nothing remains; everything is wiped away by time, by sand, by ocean.
The echoes of life the waters ushered blends into the horizon with mine
       And where do I find that end to the horizon!
The tighter I hold, try to control, the faster time slips away,
toward the echo of a voice I once knew,
instantly thinning into light
The ocean mocked me with its eternal rhythm and soon
plunged me in its currents
The last breath—it was fragile,
but the world resumed
So I gasped out of the blue and screamed into the wind!
      Yet my voice thinned,
      dissolving into amorphous matter

What life must take

I circle around,
yet to face the same quiet stage.

Odour of the mats spring with an odd echo
–it anchors me down with an anvil;
it drowns me;
it pounds me;
only a blur of light above.

The light reflects against the fragmented mirror,
then splits their way across the room,
adding much gravitas in its dense atmosphere. 
The drops of sweat–dark and heavy–
engrave on my body.

The blur sharpens; air thickens; and
I grasp them with my calloused hands, 
only to see them draining through the gaps while 
ink bleeds from my arid hands–
where’s the fresh green?

The carving gets deeper;
fond shades of the ink soak the ground I stand;
I cannot teach what life must give.

Glimpse

Chimes of distant bells echo my heart
–ethereal they were, with the plumose exhale hushed in my ears.
Lavender petals settle down on the brim of my delicate helix,
pollinating the resonants of exquisite fields of life:
Yes, I remember, the tranquil soothings of water–
they slowly enveloped my eyes that braced for their last glimpse of beauty
of silver, celestial ripples 
floating immensely across the auroral midnight, and
how I then was too late… too late to grasp it,
with my eyes already liquefied with those wrinkles.
I wondered then,
whether the beauty was ever mine to keep—or was it just too much for an ordinary life,
and maybe I am destined to enjoy the dim world, the duty of dull, repetitive cycles.

Jian Yeo is a poet based in Massachusetts, where the changing seasons and scenic landscapes serve as a constant source of inspiration for her work. She is currently a student, balancing her academic pursuits with her passion for writing. 

Poetry Drawer: In Retrospect: In my childhood: Thomas Hardy: Reckoning by Dr. Susie Gharib

In Retrospect
A man with no past is a tottering tower with no foundation.

I constantly revisit my past,
whose resurrected associations
are at times excruciating,
but at others quite exhilarating.

I dwell in the past
in an array of haunting songs,
of unfulfilled dreams
and ever-delayed gratification.

I dwell in the past
in the day before you came,
when my temple was un-trampled upon
by your dissonant feet,
and every consecrated altar
was beyond your reach.

In my childhood

In my childhood
I had witnessed the witch hunt for butterflies,
though not convicted of witchcraft,
but for preservation,
which happens to be an art,
the crucifixion type.

I had seen troops of ants
crushed by people’s feet
with glee,
and the bagworm that glued itself to our garden wall
to shelter its soul
have its bag ripped to pieces.

They’ve all become intricately interwoven
with all that is obscene
in this digital age that has bred Epsteins.

Thomas Hardy

In Westminster Abbey he was laid to rest,
but his cut-out heart had chosen Dorset,
where Bathsheba rode her horse astride
and Tess of the D’Urbervilles had fought with strife.

He tirelessly roamed the streets of London,
the ‘monster with four million heads
and eight million eyes’,
shunning its much-hated crowds.

Reckoning

I hold you accountable
for every frozen deer and duck,
for erupting waters that instantly gulp
cities and hamlets with suffocating mud.

I hold you responsible
for turning a blind eye
to the laceration of every sky,
to the white deaths of adult and child.

Dr Susie Gharib is a graduate of the University of Strathclyde with a PhD on the work of D.H. Lawrence. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in Adelaide Literary Magazine, Green Hills Literary Lantern, A New Ulster, Crossways, The Curlew, The Pennsylvania Literary Journal, Ink Pantry, Mad Swirl, Miller’s Pond Poetry Magazine, and Down in the Dirt.

Susie’s first book (adapted for film), Classic Adaptations, includes Charlotte Bronte’s Villette, Virginia Woolf’s The Waves, and D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover.

You can find more of Susie’s work here on Ink Pantry.