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Girlhood in Delhi—Three Poems by Pratyan Chakraborty

  • poemsindia
  • 1 day ago
  • 3 min read

Three Poems by Pratyan Chakraborty

Girlhood in Delhi


Delhi is a city that wears its hunger well—

a neon beast swallowing bodies whole.

I walk through its streets,

hips choreographed to shrink,

voice rehearsed into a lower register,

practicing the art of passing,

as if my body were a faulty translation

in a language I did not choose.


Delhi is a city that loves its own reflection.

It does not stop to look at girls like me—

girls with borrowed voices and cautious lips,

girls who walk like they are both the prayer and the sin.


Delhi does not ask where I come from.

It does not care about

who once prayed for softer shoulders,

a different voice,

a body that didn’t feel like an apology.

It only asks if I can survive.

if I can wear my face like a war cry.


Some days, I surrender inside myself,

folding my shoulders inward,

as if I could disappear into the shape

they always wanted me to be.


My mother does not say my name,

but sometimes, in the quiet,

she calls me shona

There are nights I trace my own name in the dark,

as if speaking it softly will make it real.

There are mornings I look in the mirror

and do not flinch.

and take up space like I have a right to.


Maybe love is not a man’s voice in the dark,

not a reflection that always agrees with me.

Maybe love is the act of staying—

inside this body, inside this name, inside this life

I built with my own hands.

There are days I walk into love like I belong there.

Like I belong in the sun.

And maybe, just maybe,

That is enough for now.



I am tired of crossing roads


I am tired of crossing roads

And hurried metaphors

It was never needing and rather wanting

A dangerous craving,

I let them visit me at night,

Later get a tarot reading

To calculate my future,

But often for bodies like mine,

Desires are non consequential


It’s almost like becoming the leftover meal

You have kept in the fridge

And been wanting to eat.

I ride on a horseback from my room to the kitchen,

And I become the horse on my way back

No one sees,

Another failed attempt to fight the loneliness

That grows like tulips on my back.


I drain out blood and put my skin to dry

And think of gruesome stories

Only to Confuse them with rom coms

Then call myself a poet

No one laughs,

I feel the weight of loneliness growing

As my body shrinks


I have learned the process of anaesthesia

And to say yes at a young age

Because desires have so much to do with our identity

And identity is just the weight of miscalculations

And wrong statistics we eat as children,

But some bodies are just underfed.

So I let them visit me at night

And pretend to be consequential

By being on the internet 24/7



Wrecked


We are writing a sitcom

About fratricidal poems

Sitting side by side on a round table

In the middle of bermuda triangle

It is not a crime if you commit in poetry,

I put a sticky note over my head

To remind myself to stay alive.

Alienation comes in different shapes & sizes

You call it evil because it’s easier

When you can make villains

out of Gods and normal people.

I wanted something to belong to me,

Then I wanted to belong to something

But wanting is not enough.

I have wrecked houses and ships before,

And I am doing it again,

Last year we were dancing around the house

But this year I am laying on the sink,

Like used utensils

Waiting for someone to notice me,

Yearning to be cleaned,

To be touched,

To be reborn.


Staying alive becomes a house chores

When death waits outside your door.




About the Poet:


Pratyan is a poet, model & stylist based in Delhi, India. Their work mostly revolves around gender, identity, loneliness, grief and the mundanity of everyday life. She is currently working on their debut book.

1 commentaire


Invité
a day ago

Wow, you literally carved grief into a mirror and dared it to reflect something kinder in Wrecked! The line between survival and performance has never felt thinner than here. Also, "used utensils" broke me. That image is humiliating, heartbreaking, and so profoundly human. We've all been there, wanting to be touched not in lust, but in tenderness.

Another mention: "Alienation comes in different shapes and sizes” Now this is the kind of line I wish I had the courage to say aloud. You named a shapeless monster and gave it form.

The way all your poems cannibalize each other is genius!


~ sreeja.

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