Fragments of Forgotten Memory
As they say, “If you don’t continue to remember someone for one month straight, you forget them” Like a lost ship in a storm, I rush. To the lighthouse, they give. Like a fly newborn, I rush. To the fire, they feed. Like a drowning ship, I weigh. Dreaming of the shore. And end up with a pencil, ticking boxes. A tick before my light goes off. Making sure each day, I didn't remember you. Last waltzing thought before I let the unconscious run through me. I flip through old pages. Twenty-nine days in a row. And I tick once more to the box, I don’t remember you anymore!
Sridipa Dandapat
Sridipa Dandapat is a Senior Research Fellow (PhD) in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Patna. While chasing jargons, she often seeks solace in the soothing world of poetry. Her creative writings found home in Lekhajoka (Bengali journal) in 2021, Setu (Bilingual international journal) in 2021, and in the international anthology The Kali Project from the house of Indie Blu(e) Publishing in 2020.