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  Werner Kho

  Finding home

  Werner Kho

  First Edition

  Copyright © 2013 Werner Kho

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the author.

  ISBN: 978-1-310-99821-8

  Table of Contents

  The permanence of black lines

  Leaving

  Black hole consumption

  Coming home

  A long distance farewell

  House cleaning

  Stumbling

  Finding home

  Spirited

  Homecoming

  The permanence of black lines

  My mother tells me, that I will regret

  getting the world tattooed on my wrists

  the ink in your veins, won’t lead

  you to where home is. It is a compass

  telling you to settle wherever the earth

  settles, but never where the sea decides

  to break against the shore again and again.

  The tattoo artist tells me to get some

  feathers on my ankles instead

  birds fly wherever their folk

  fly. Even if they lose their way,

  the scientists will guide them home

  with a GPS and fancy monitors.

  I don’t tell them that getting something

  permanent

  scares me, but the black lines upon

  skin remind me of ECG lines, beeps

  like a GPS over and over again.

  Maybe, home is simply where I

  know I need to breathe.

  Leaving

  I’ve been told to 

  go through the doors, doors

  that have been opened wide 

  but seem so large they 

  threaten to swallow me whole

  But I yearn to break out 

  of my sheets, elbows grazing

  the surface until a hole forms

  just big enough for me to

  fit through in my entirety.

  Black hole consumption

  Black holes

  they take everything in

  while being absolutely

  nothing

  in the middle

  of everything

  Lost in space

  consuming all that comes

  without complaint.

  Coming home

  Rolling her hardy luggage plastered with stickers all over it at her side, she stopped in front of the gate and surveyed her surroundings. Some people around her marvelled at the scene for it was their first time, but she stood still, all too familiar with what she had left behind.

  -

  Ever since she had saved up the bare minimum, she made the decision to pack up and leave, and go wherever the wind would take her. She didn’t leave anything behind, but at the same time she left all that she had.

  On the morning she left, she cleaned her room, making sure everything was free of dust. She wrote a simple note telling her family not to look for her and not to worry, and that was the last time she thought she would ever step foot into the house.

  She decided she would go to America first, as that was where she had always wanted to go.

  It felt so different when she stepped into the land of the free. It truly felt like she was free, unshackled from expectations and growing tensions she could not bear.

  And so, her adventure began.

  She was happy during her time in America. She found a simple motel to stay at with just the things she needed. She made friends with strangers much friendlier than the ones she had encountered before. She took pictures of all the sights so new to her. She walked wherever she could, trying to be the daring explorer and finding places even some locals didn’t know about.

  Her trusty guitar and her deep melodious voice helped her to earn some money. She took a part-time job as a waitress at the diner near her motel, flirting with some of the customers along the way, but never getting serious with anybody. She knew better than to get shackled down again.

  But soon, America’s charm grew weary and so she did she.

  So she quit her job and checked out of her motel, not even saying goodbye to the receptionist.

  And soon, she was on a plane again, travelling to another destination.

  -

  A year had passed since she had left and now she was in Korea, her fifth stop around the world.

  Every destination of hers was filled with adventure. Her camera had seen more than some people ever would. Her luggage and guitar case were plastered with more stickers than a child’s book. But yet, she couldn’t find what she was looking for.

  She had left in order to escape what was left down for her, something she could have lived with. But she was never content with what she had, and there was this constant emptiness within her that she could not fill. She thought that travelling around the world would help her find what she was looking for, but yet it had offered nothing more than some simple joys.

  But one day, a letter had arrived at her motel room, something she had not seen in the entire year.

  She recognised the stamps and immediately knew that it was from home.

  “Home,”

  It felt so strange on her tongue.

  She looked at the letter with trepidation. She knew she had left no clues behind so how this letter had reached her puzzled her greatly.

  Picking up the envelope gingerly, she moved her fingers over the address written on it. Only her sister would write that small and concise.

  Uneasiness gripped her as she opened the envelope and slowly unfolded the letter.

  Please come home. Mom doesn’t have much time left.

  -

  The next morning, she was on the earliest flight home.

  -

  She was too late by the time she had gotten back. Her mom had already passed away, the letter reached her too late.

  She expected the whole world to blame her for her irresponsible behaviour. She blamed herself for her irresponsible behaviour, but finding blame would not erase her mom’s death.

  Her sister was quiet the entire time and that made everything worse.

  Now standing in front of her mom’s niche, she could only bow her head and think of all the times they had fought but she was always too stubborn to say sorry. She loved her mom deeply despite their differences but it was too hard for her to express it well back then.

  She felt her sister’s hand around her shoulders and the tears she had held back started to drip down her cheeks.

  “I was angry that I couldn’t find the courage in me to leave just like you did. I was angry that you had left me behind to take care of mom. I was so angry, but I know why you had to leave.”

  She sobbed even harder, and collapsed into her sister.

  And so she stopped running, stopped flying, for she had found what she was looking for all the time.

  She had come home.

  A long distance farewell

  you are flying off

  into seas where I can’t reach 

  through glass screens I wait.

  House cleaning

  House of straw, house

  of brick; the vandals have

  come to tear down those

  walls. The windows are

  smashed in, glass shards

  cutting the light at angles.

  Everything is debris, cut

  up rocks, cut up flesh.

  The remains are burned,

  the ashes sifted. This has

  become a
ritual to purify;

  bleaching dark stains

  till the whites burn your

  eyes, toxic fumes to

  fight the poison.

  Stumbling

  I.

  The pen twirled within your fingers

  pinned to the back of your ear

  occasional cigarette with exaggerated

  puffs, now lies between your lips

  only filled with nicotine

  burning at the ends, burning at

  your lungs.

  II.

  Mint leaves sit at the bottom

  crushed absentmindedly, stifling

  heat, stifling air -

  I should have asked for

  mint tea instead.

  III.

  You’ve fallen after attempting

  to walk for the fifth time

  in a straight line.

  The laughter echoes behind

  and you scream and shout,

  wiping leftovers from your chin.

  You try to walk for the sixth

  time and you finally succeed

  but there’s no longer any

  laughter behind.

  Finding home

  It has become

  the red lips on the plane

  the cracked shelf about to fall

  in a bookstore across the street

  the coaster with faded logos

  where hands crossed

  the quaint spot to watch

  the deep quiet that sits within.

  Spirited

  Balloon rising

  within you,

  sandbags

  thrown down

  with abandon.

  It’s time to float

  a dandelion

  blown apart

  scattered,

  land in

  someone’s

  hair, behind

  their ear.

  Catch a wind

  catch a breeze

  catch a wave

  catch

  yourself trying

  to find

  a pull,

  strong enough

  to bring you

  down.

  Homecoming

  Inhale birthday candles

  lighted in memory of

  something forgotten.

  You have been away

  for too long.

  Set the case on the floor,

  watch it turn to ash. Your

  footprints disturb the dust

  settling in the cracks.

  Navigating the silence

  like threading water, you

  are a ripple in a pool

  gone cold.

  It’s time to relight

  the cobwebs and set

  the sheets. It’s time

  to come home.

  About the author

  Based in Singapore, Werner Kho is the author of four chapbooks, with three forthcoming in 2014. He is an avid writer who concentrates more on poetry and short stories. He chooses to focus more on writing contemporary works that are more relatable to the everyday audience. He has also been placed in the Gardens by the Bay: River of Life competition organised by The British Council for his poem "Emerald in the Sea". While he isn’t concentrating on getting his first collection of poetry out, he is trying to find ways to be as wrapped up as comfortably in a blanket as a burrito.