← Isha JainCreative · Writing

Creative · Writing

Poetry

poems about science, wonder, and being alive

What are you scared about?
Look, your cells are creating music.

Trying to say I love you

My mother is a seashell Whispering stories into my ear of sun tickled hope I can hear waves crashing clutching her seafoam twisting as she tells me I can be whoever I want to be Sometimes i get scared I don't know who I am bright coral-spotted salty tears rushing But she reminds me everytime I bring my ear closer and somewhere far away the tides subside.
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words I keep coming back to

Everyone must leave something behind when he dies, my grandfather said. A child or a book or a painting or a house or a wall built or a pair of shoes made. Or a garden planted. Something your hand touched some way so your soul has somewhere to go when you die, and when people look at that tree or that flower you planted, you're there. It doesn't matter what you do, he said, so long as you change something from the way it was before you touched it into something that's like you after you take your hands away. The difference between the man who just cuts lawns and a real gardener is in the touching, he said. The lawn-cutter might just as well not have been there at all; the gardener will be there a lifetime.

Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451

Every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of the artist, not of the sitter.

Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890)

We could never have loved the earth so well if we had had no childhood in it, if it were not the earth where the same flowers come up again every spring that we used to gather with our tiny fingers as we sat lisping to ourselves on the grass, the same hips and haws on the autumn hedgerows, the same redbreasts that we used to call 'God's birds' because they did no harm to the precious crops. What novelty is worth that sweet monotony where everything is known and loved because it is known?

George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss
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