Friday, May 29, 2015

Cluck Cluck Cluck!

Born fourteen December nine-three,
the year of the rooster for me.
Excited, I am,
To fly with friends.
Can’t wait for great sights to see!


Agnes Lee
Topic: Cluck (day 30)

Thursday, May 28, 2015

The Soldier

He is amazing. His eyes gleam as he breathes my breaths.
The work he does can be seen on his face.
Each pearly breakout stems from the hardships
he faces for us, for my family. Each scar,
a memento of a battle with himself; stuck between
presence and protection of the ones he loves.
The dirt and grime of the forests he crawls and eats
and sleeps does not compare to the fondness of
her heart back home. Neither injuries nor hurt can compare
with the lost cheers of the boy’s first goal or the absence
of the small one’s first words.
The badges and awards tells of the tough decisions
made in the field but the white gold he proudly bears on
his face reads the hardest one yet.

He is Man. Strong. Resilient. Admired. Protector.
Almost impenetrable but the dots on that smile of re-unity,
they are the gateway to his soul.


Agnes Lee
Topic: Acne (day 29)

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Shoe Defense

The total of bones from the head to the toes
is two hundred and six at twenty.
The place with the most number of those
is the feet, 26 on each.
They say bones give you structure, the hardest part of you,
they withstand the success ladder climb.
They hold you up when you’re happy or blue,
but even the strongest need protection sometimes.


Agnes Lee
Topic: Shoes (day 28)

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Changes Everyday

One foot out and it's a new world.
The green of greens differ from recollections.
The air sandy, the ground humid, birds
sing hymns of rebirth.
The sun on your face pierces through you
again but never the same way.
The people hustle through the paths, the squirrels
nuts, lazy cat purrs.
Routines, but not constants today.


Agnes Lee
Topic: Today (day 27)

Monday, May 25, 2015

Weaknesses

So much power yet
if you think it hard enough
so little control. 


Agnes Lee
Topic: Weakness (day 26)

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Musings of a daughter (stolen from my Facebook)

I guess my friends will find this funny, because I have been constantly battling with my parents for as long as anybody can remember. The wrath and degree of control my parents exert has practically become the stuff of legends to my friends by now. In fact for as long as I myself can remember, I have, for my whole short life so far, harboured an excessive amount of anger towards my parents. It's not been an easy 20 years on either side. With the three of us having extremely volatile tempers and stubborn personalities, it's a wonder (and sometimes a blessing) that my sister is the type to hold her anger in. 

So anyway, cliched as this may be, I think that many people (including myself) have always failed to understand that our parents are human too. God, it does sound ridiculously cliched. Let me explain. Why do we fight with our parents? More or less, the answer is that we disagree on certain sentiments because of our different personalities. Being merely human, we are all flawed in some ways, some more so than others. But that's okay. We forgive ourselves, our friends and even complete strangers for not being perfect: "oh, to err is human", "nobody's perfect". Yet, we cannot find it within ourselves to comprehend and forgive our parents at the same time. Forgiveness implies that the one doing the forgiving was right in the first place and in a parent-child relationship, it only seems natural for parents to forgive their children's transgressions but never vice versa. Perhaps we are uncomfortable with the fact that we could, at times, be better, smarter, more right than our parents. Or perhaps we still hold onto the notion that our parents are always right (however subconsciously). Or even perhaps some might feel uncomfortable having to 'forgive' our elders, attaching to it the connotations of a warped sense of self-gratification at triumphing over those who are older and wiser than us. Personally though, I feel that we must realize: forgiveness has nothing to do with yourself and everything to do with the person you are forgiving. And technically, one does not forgive a person but a person's traits or actions/words. What I'm trying to get at is that forgiveness is not bestowed from a lofty, 'holier than thou' position, regardless if this person is figuratively in a 'higher' position than you. You do not elevate yourself above them but instead, you pull them off their pedestals and seriously examine them on a basic level as a fellow human being. In any case, forgiveness is the second step. The first one is understanding.

Maybe there are people, like me when I was younger, who assumed that the phrase of "oh your parents are only human, you must learn to understand them more" meant that my parents are also prone to being angry, tired, having a long and annoying day at work and therefore is highly irritable. Those are all true, of course. Yet, what we don't often examine is the side that not many people want to see. That our parents could be angry and irritable not only because of a long, tiring day but because they may be people with ridiculously short tempers. They are quick to anger. They are unreasonable. They are narrow-minded. The list is endless, as is the list of sins stemming from our fault of being 'merely' human. These aren't particularly terrible traits. Many of us possess one or more of these traits ourselves. So is it really so hard to imagine that our parents, the people who passed their genes onto us, can have these characteristics too? And if we can forgive ourselves so readily for being 'merely' human, why do we hold our parents so much at fault for being like us too? As we grow older, we realize that our parents aren't perfect. However, there seems to be a gap between realizing and understanding. We may realize, but we do not understand the implications of our realization. And in failing to do that, our attitudes will forever remain clouded and narrow. It wasn't so difficult for myself to realize that my parents weren't perfect. What took me a lot longer was the understanding part that hey, it's okay that my parents have these flaws that I dislike. And I can't stress this part enough. Because I went through a very angry, though thankfully short, phase at being bitterly disappointed at my parents for not being as morally righteous as I was. Or open minded, or whatever. It was very hard for me to accept this at first because there are certain values that I hold very dearly onto and I was just unable to back down from my stand that others should believe in these ideals too. However, I guess it occurred to me after one too many times of feeling disappointed that I can't blame my parents for not being a certain way. If I don't blame my friends for not being like that, I figured that I can't blame my parents too, nor anyone else. And that's when I fully realized the extent to which we are blinded by the current lines dividing the roles of parent and child. As we grow older, we expect our parents to treat us like adults. But do we treat them like the adults they deserve to be treated too? Kids (of all ages, may I add), can we ever look beyond the pigeon-holed labels of 'Mom' and "Dad' and actually treat them with the respect and consideration that all human beings deserve?

Our parents may be lots of things. Some positive, some negative. From what I've heard, they can be bigoted, selfish, narrow-minded, racist, chauvinistic, tyrannical, unreasonable and sometimes just plain mean. But so can we. So what gives us this moral high ground to judge them by? Their age? Wisdom? Life experiences? Surely these factors do not make them (or us) into perfect people. And if we can find it in our hearts to forgive them, there'll be a lot less hate in the world. Because seriously, "I hate my parents" is no longer an acceptable form of talking about one's parents the older one gets.

I'm not advocating for a drastic change like some crazy parent-child role-reversal situation. Nor am I asking for parents to treat children as their friends and for children to absolve their parents of all faults. I just think that it'll be good to see how terribly flawed we all are as human beings, and to maybe show some understanding to the people who perhaps need it the most, our parents. It may not be much, like I'm pretty sure the relationship between me and my dad won't be all that different, but at least it removes some of the hate and anger from the equation. I guess that's a good start.

- Wen Zhen

The Smell of Her Locks

I brush her gold luscious locks and dry them
roughly with the towel. As my fingers run
through her silk, I get whiffs of the shampoo
she uses. Rose has always been my
favorite flower.

I carefully pull her fringe back behind those
dainty ears and twirl the ends of it between
my pulsing thumb and long index before setting
them down nicely at the side of her face.
Her lips still wet from her shower.

Make sure my hair is neat for my guest.” Don’t
worry Missy, my hands know how to make you
glow. I braid her mane into two rows, intertwining
her threads tightly. A little pain is interesting. She
may command me, but I hold the power.

In an hour’s time, she will stand naked in front
of the banker’s son and he shall see the glorious
curls I am so familiar with. From the other room,
I will tear into those blond screams with
savage hunger. Just one more hour.

Agnes Lee
Topic: Hair (day 25)

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Pink Is The New Black

Pink is the saltiness in my eye.
Pink is the shivers down my spine.
Pink is the tension in my shoulder.
Pink is the fingers going colder.
Pink is the anger in my fists.
Pink is the lines on my wrists.
Pink is the blood on my hand.
Pink is the betrayal of men.
Pink is the hate in my heart.
Pink is my soul torn apart.
Pink is the vacant broken shells.
Pink's for the fallen in hell.

Agnes Lee
Topic: Pink (day 24)

Spun Smoke

Look down
The webs wound round your
Wrists, strong as iron: this
Past that refuses to clear away,
Suffocates.

{Claire}

Friday, May 22, 2015

Tug of War

For the persecuted Muslims in Burma.

She hangs by her neck like the majestic colored
flag of her country. The sons beside her,
nine and five, upright and dead.

From afar, you can barely see her.
Against the brick red wall, she is but a speck of taint.
Should you go up close, she will tug on your heart strings.
The yellow floral dress brings you back to the
one you passed in the store. The lipstick used to
mask her pale kissables are the same shade as the one
in your purse. You see the resemblance.
She is as mother, as daughter, as friend, and as woman as you are,
but where you have pearls, she has rope.

You can see the bitter-sweet in her lifeless face,
the sadness endured of losing her boys accompanied
by their prompt reconciliation in the next cruel world.

In a short while, the birds will feast in celebration.
Then, she shall soar with them into the sun.


Agnes Lee
Topic: Strings (day 23)