The puppet who sleeps- Pragnya Rao

I’m talking to you today because this is important.

You see, you are on the evaluation stand,

you are on the brink of a catharsis

You, my dear, are me.

I exist in a different time, probably different dimension, if you may

where I am the perfect version of myself, which is you.

You are going to be tested, everyone will know how much you’ll score

Lucky you are from Earth 2023, you will have grace marks for yourself-

whopping 50 marks passed on over from the previous generations

where there was at least one damned fool like the one with the toothbrush moustache

that contributed to this concession by

making your planet a more difficult place to thrive in,

every time you could count

a country that didn’t have an Independence Day.

You’re lucky- damage loves upgrades

and the new contenders,

The leaders you would come to elect

Seem to have realised this before you will ever do

Come, come. I’m the ghost of your Christmas Past

I need to see what you were up to

When the world began shaping you to what you would be now

I see you standing in the ‘late-line’ of your school

Your head hung down in remorse and shame

Remorse because you could have chewed on your breakfast faster

And the half a mile walk to the school could have been done faster

You think you can fight this intense shame

But you can’t, you came when the prayer was over

When everyone was moving on

Look! Look! You will break into tears while

Still standing like a stone for the National Anthem

You will feel the exponential amount of exposure

That you would not be able to nullify by closing your eyes

So you blink faster, harder- trying to catch a smaller glimpse of

what was to follow

All their eyes on the top-ranking student

Who was standing in the punishment line- somewhere she shouldn’t belong

Oh, I remember this- I was told I would be absolved

of punishments, of consequences of everything that I could have done

Absolved on the account of someone else’s’ sins or the lack thereof,

Absolved only if I reach the top of the pyramid- you were the fittest,

Your parents told you- you would not merely survive but rule the world

Because that was the only hope a generation that was afraid of the future of their inactions

Could pass on to a generation trained to believe they can never make mistakes

You chewed on the eraser of the white Camlin pencil with those pink-green flowers

Every time a necessary mistake felt like a blunder and made you think of

Everything that your mother told you would go wrong with you

The society’s eyes are on you, you are supposed to be the best

-the best self-preservation machine your mother could bring up

And show everyone the ticket to the glorified pawn

that could join the army of the Greater League

Those that carry the eternal flame of their ancestors

In the name of the sacrifices ONLY they made

The army whose eyes burn with the flame-

So much that it makes it so difficult

To see what it took for you to beget this generous spotlight-

The countless forests that were burnt- the homes that were ravaged

Your half-a-mile walk for someone could mean 5 villages

But you were told you are the gifted one, different from the

One in four of your age that would remain out-of-school

Of whom you would never hear from- even in the fictional village of Palampur.

I remember reading chapters in Social Science with blind faith

At which time I first began to see that the world was more grey than it was black or white-

Something I was never taught- it had to be learned through falls

The world never liked extremes, and I was one

The top position, I was told, could only host one person-

that power was not meant to be shared or distributed among

those who didn’t deserve it- the ones safest in the middle of the spectrum-

‘Don’t be an average’ they said.

You will be celebrated- this is a journey that is lonely- but this is your purpose,

my parents would reassure-

every time I first learnt what it meant to cry in desperation,

In the realization of getting the rules of the race wrong-

that all of us were meant to be together

I was lied to- my percentile meant I was better than

99.6121 per cent of children in my country- correction

You need to know your subtraction better

99.6121 minus 68% of children who were never eligible to receive a percentile even

Because they could never make it to completion of mere school.

Open your eyes, do your homework child

Your love for time travel, for science fiction

And you obsessions of what-if’s and could-be’s are telling you something

You are uncomfortable. You have been lied to

You have been lied to

Every time you were made to dream of being a woman

Who would be satisfied

With the thought of marrying a man who could happily eat

pan masala standing on top of his mountain of heritable achievements

- which included you

A trophy wife, a special girl, someone who had access to sanitary pads

The elite 12% of women bleeding in your country

In whose households, 45% of routine harmful waste is generated

On the pretext of reassurance that they were contributing to charity,

Doing the society a favor-

Every time they bought a pack of pads,

Every time they said they would not give a man a rupee

Because they were certain he was going to waste it on alcohol.

I know how you are feeling now though-

Confused, feeling jolts of empathy

On a barren river of monotony

That you are ready to fill up with your tears

Begging for someone to throw in seeds of hopelessness

so you can show the world how you could plant a forest with them when all else is lost

You only do this because you wish that these wild and restless creatures

inside of you somehow will finally find a way home

Home to a spoiler-free world, a planet consumed by FOMO and YOLO

Where you could be a puppet who sleeps on drugs

That would make your anxiety better, your sadness disappear

Because you are still afraid of exponential exposure

To the fight with the strings, not knowing who is pulling them

You want to be an anti-hero so bad because

You would rather be anything else but ‘cringe’ material.

I’m talking to you today because this is important.

You see, you are on the evaluation stand, you are on the brink of a catharsis

I’m glad we had this meeting

This class

Although it could have been a mail

Or better on books

Because it was time for performance feedback

You, my dear, are me.

And you need to hear-

your privilege check just told me

That you have so much more to do for the many more

That are not entitled

That need you to imagine

What if you,

Everyone you love,

Everyone you know,

Everyone you don’t-

Could do better,

Could love better,

Could be unafraid.