Spring Song (haibun)

    By Vidya Shankar

    It was the first time I was stepping out of the house after the hysterectomy.

    My husband wanted to make the ride special for me. He stopped the motorbike at a flower vendor’s stall. Not the fashionable florists who sell unappealing flowers but one of the several women who sit by the roadside in Chennai stringing fresh, alluring, fragrant jasmine.

    We stood watching her as she held one end of the jasmine string with the fingers of her left hand and measured it tactfully with her right all the way to her elbow and some more. Here, she cut it and gave me the flowers with a smile. I was tucking them into my hair when something nudged me from behind. Something with a big, wet nose.

    A calf, brown with a white patch on its forehead, was prodding me to pet it. I put my arm around its neck and fondled it.

    “You must be a kind mother,” the flower seller said. “Animals, especially young ones, know a mother’s kindness by instinct.” I smiled. Mine was a womb that had brought forth no offspring. And now, even that womb is gone.

    dormant plant…
    I see
    a speck of green

    Vidya Shankar, an English Language teacher and a ‘book’ in the Human Library, has been widely published in reputed literary platforms. She is the author of two poetry books, has edited four anthologies and loves exploring various poetry forms and experimenting with new writing techniques. Featured in a unique coffee table book, ‘50 Inspiring Women boys and girls should read about, Chennai Edition’, Vidya finds meaning to her life through yoga and mandalas. Facebook: Vidya Shankar Instagram: @vidya.shankar.author

    Subscribe to our newsletter To Recieve Updates

      The Latest
      • In Memoriam – Remembering Keki Daruwalla

        Keki Daruwalla leaves behind a profound impact—both through his accomplished

      • What Translators Talk About When They Talk About Love

        I am always struck by love

      • Kabir Deb In Conversation With V. Ramaswamy

        KD: Warm greetings, Ramaswamy Sir, I hope you're doing well

      • Upcoming Deadlines

        Ploughshares welcomes unsolicited submissions of fiction, poetry

      You May Also Like