Bigger Questions
‘An evil wand turns abundance into scarce.
The diamonds are cheaper than fresh air on the hills
Greenlands are getting rarer, and it painfully hurts
We pay to watch the bird sulking in glass rooms.
We pay to kill the boredom from stacked houses.
We pay to let nature come to us and whisper secrets
Sceneries are getting costlier, for we made it rare. ‘
Sitting in a paid resort, watching the flowers,
A group laments the loss.
The pain of waiting to see a prayer fulfilled,
And knowing it’s impossible makes us cry
But the world is crying daily about the future
Yet keeps exploiting nature as though it’s necessary.
I mourn for my future descendants.
For they will never see the pristine streams
Or play with the breeze or the mud
The trees may not be there if today’s men never woke up.
I wish the woods die no more but live eternally.
May earth not lose its water to men’s greed, I shout
My desire for a change, change one day when I hear,
Experts cry about the exploding population
I stop by and say let it go as God wills
Cause I couldn’t see a friend cry of childlessness
But it has to be done; someone cries louder
Which one to choose, the future or the present?
The dilemma of my mother is easy to solve
Should I prepare rice or chapatis for dinner?
I reply politely. It’s your wish, ma.