The Lost – Poet: Aida Mahmoud

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No one sees me
crossing the bridges within myself,
a city whose lights
go out all at once.

I gather what is left of me
from the edges of a drifting day,
set my tired heart in order
like a table abandoned
after careless guests.

“I’m fine,” I say.

The mirror says nothing,
yet returns a face
I do not quite recognize.

I begin again
to learn silence.

I write my name,
then erase it,
afraid of how easily
I might belong to it.

Sometimes I sit beside my soul.
We grow quiet together,
listening
to a small, stubborn pulse
that refuses to yield.

It says:
you are not lost,
you have not arrived.

I postpone my tears,
as I always do,
as if sorrow were a promise
I am not ready to keep.

My solitude finds me
like an old companion
on winter nights,
not chosen,
but known.

And still, something in me burns:
a small, defiant flame
that will not go out.

It whispers,
not yet,
but not forever.

To be lost
is not the end of the story.

It is the unwritten beginning.

I hide my weakness
in the fabric of an ordinary day,
wear a strength
that is not mine,
yet holds.

I speak with the night:
argue once,
befriend it twice.
It is the only witness
that never asks why.

I take pity on my heart,
a child worn thin by crying,
and tell it:
hush now, this will pass.

And in the far reach of exhaustion,
where no voice can follow,
something opens,

a chrysanthemum
breaking through stone.

I know this now:
to feel lost
is not an ending,

but a difficult road
teaching me how to arrive.

And I will arrive,

not because the path is kind,
but because I can no longer bear
the weight of wandering.

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