On the continent of mothering
At twenty-five, I stood in my kitchen
my body still being healed by turmeric-ginger
prescribed by my mother-in-law, continents afar—
boiling milk bottles and nursing guilt over bottled baby food—
listening to my daughter wail in her crib—too proud
to summon her father only a phone call away
even as I felt the great tug of worry that only
a mother can feel.
My daughter is that age now—
an entire length of continent away
on the other coast.
Sometimes, at dead of night, as her father sleeps
I awaken from dreams propelled by
some piece of news I’ve heard earlier
in the day—hearsay or authentic—
and let me tell you this—
I am alone again, in my mother-worry—
always alone on the continent of mothering.
*
Ritual
When it comes to silk sarees, elders advise
against draping them on hangers
or else gravity will pull at the zari
ruining the very ground, the field
that holds everything.
I fold them into neat squares and lay them
on top of each other on almirah shelves—
each stack a stratified rock—each layer
telling its own story. this one the day before
the wedding, this on the first trip back
to my parents’, and this, bought on a whim.
the gray and gold acquired when my taste
shifted to muted tones. and this one I’ve
yet to wear—see the zari darkened from age?
pull this one out, be gentle.
notice the brittle fabric, the deep onion color
that was popular once. how it bears
the strong naphthalene scent of my
mother’s iron chest—unfold with care
or else it might tear along the folds.
twice a year I air them out, refold them
so that the crease lines may breathe.
no crease is ever smoothed away and
old creases get in the way of new ones
like stubborn habits. and sometimes
the silk is willful and refuses to yield.
I fold and refold, coddle and corral. I wonder
how long before any ritual will prove futile.
*
The kitchen, your temple
Vivid, your kitchen, down to the way dust motes swirled
in the ray of slanted afternoon light. The lit triangle of the tablecloth.
The sweetmeat that arrived out of nowhere, which is to say
you made them without fuss. You never urged us to enjoy them
yet your silent yearning took on the curvature of the perfect
mowa and the pristine white of the coconut nadu. In midlife
I find recipes inscribed into your husband’s book of scriptures.
A scrupulous man, not devout, but who thrived on routine.
How he had taken to writing everything in that book towards
the end of his life. Names of five ancestors that preceded him –
all men. Addresses of sons and the one grandson who
became a doctor. Then ingredients started popping in between
odes to the divine. Poppyseeds and bitter melon—
banana blossom and the oddball spice. In your girlish hand
that was never invited to hold a pen. The learned man and his
unschooled wife. Empty vessel he called you once—
the woman who bore him seven children.
*
Sayantani Roy works out of the Seattle area. Her work appears or is forthcoming in several journals, including Alan Squire Publishing, Emerge Literary Journal, Gone Lawn, Heavy Feather, Grist, Ruby, TIMBER, West Trestle Review, and Wordgathering. She was a 2024 AWP fiction mentee and was placed as a semifinalist in the 2025 Adroit Journal Anthony Veasna So Scholars in Fiction. She reads poetry for Chestnut Review and Palette Poetry.

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Beautiful poems. Very sensual with all the colors, scents, taste.