• Home
  • Poem
  • Focus: How an Unending War Infiltrates Everyday Life
Image

Focus: How an Unending War Infiltrates Everyday Life

The ink dried on a treaty no one could touch,
And somewhere, two ministers shook hands
Over cups of tea brewed with denial.
They signed it.
They smiled.
They went home for dinner.
The guns fell silent for a while,
And the generals smiled in photo frames,
But the air still tasted of blood and dust.
That mother in Lahore stitched a prayer into her shawl,
Still waiting for the boots that walked away.
That father in Amritsar built a kite
From newspaper clippings of the ceasefire—
But the string snapped mid-flight.
In some alley in Kupwara,
A dog still howls at a burned wall
Because it remembers the boy who fed it
Before he became meat for the motherland.
A boy in Poonch
Has forgotten how to sleep.
Because silence reminds him
Of the five seconds before the shell hit.
He hears birds
And he hides.
He hides from peace
Because peace is suspicious.
Peace feels like the breath before a scream.

They said the war was over.
As if wars end.
As if you can unbomb a house.
Unshatter a skull.
Unhear your brother screaming on the radio.
“Tell Amma—tell Amma I—”
Then silence.
They said it's over.
And the flags were ironed.
The anthem played on full volume
So, no one could hear the mothers
But the war didn't leave.
It just changed clothes.
Now it walks around in school uniforms,
In soldiers’ prosthetic legs,
In a widow’s cupboard full of medals, she wants to burn
But doesn’t—because that’s the last thing he touched.
They said, “The war has ended.”
I say, The war is an animal.
It sheds its skin.
It moves into your marriage.
It eats the silence in your home.
It becomes your child’s imaginary friend.
It becomes your religion.
It becomes your mirror.
You look into it.
And it looks back with your own eyes, but gone.
You ask, “Who won?”
It laughs like breaking glass.
There is no after.
There is only an echo.
There are only
empty cribs.
letters that never arrive.
wedding dresses in bombed-out closets.
pictures burned around the edges,
but the eyes in them —
Still watching you.
Still asking:
Why are you alive and I’m not?

— Some wars don’t end. They go quiet enough to ignore.
— Until a child draws a flag, and it starts again.
— after the war, they taught peace like a forgotten dialect
— and everyone nodded, but no one understood.

Picture design by Anumita Roy

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Releated Posts

Ignite Joyful Rebirth: Yellow Palash Giggles

Debarati’s haiku in DifferentTruths.com blends mist-kissed cafes, lunar eclipses, and healing baths—whispers of twilight heaviness and playful rebirth.…

ByByDebarati Sen Mar 13, 2026

Unleash Mystical Baul Magic: Stars Dance with Fireflies

Neera at DifferentTruths.com unveils a Baul poet’s enchanted encounter with a mysterious girl, weaving stars, fireflies, and transformative…

ByByNeera Kashyap Mar 12, 2026

Epic Longing Awakens: Unmasked Love and Hope Triumph

Sayantani’s poignant verse on DifferentTruths.com captures unmasked life’s longing, love, and hope amid scars and silent healing. An…

ByBySayantani Mukhopadhyay Mar 11, 2026

Unstoppable Wars: Leaders’ Wrath Burns Humanity

Dr Molly’s war poem on DifferentTruths.com warns, ‘Cars careen out of control—mad leaders unleash endless wars, dooming humanity!’…

ByByDr. Molly Joseph Mar 9, 2026
error: Content is protected !!
Kindly Note: Articles can only be reproduced in other sites with due permission and acknowledgement to Different Truths. You cannot republish digitally or in print without acknowledgement. Authors & poets are also needed to heed to it. They too must seek permission to reproduce it elsewhere. They must help us protect their works from being copied and/or plagiarised.
This is default text for notification bar