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Stained
Crimson buildings packed like sardines
Windows peering into each other.
Narrow alleys of rock and dirt
Wind about underfoot.
And in the center, dominating the sky,
Gold glistens up above.
At the top of a mountain
The air should be clear.
Clean, fresh, alive, crisp.
Instead, the tight vicinity of memories
Makes my breaths choke me,
polluted, corrupted, foul, toxic.
I am reminded of my place
By my bare feet on the ground,
Disgrace, failure, outcast.
That golden tower shines as a beacon,
But no longer for me,
guiding, blinding, gone .
I can slip through the city’s mazes,
A hesitant home of mine,
Small, unseen, insignificant, cog.
But my familiarity remains in
Marble halls and engraved staircases,
Purposeful, desired, respected.
Even if I was given the chance
To return to where my heart remains,
Belonging, regret, mistakes.
I could never go back to
The person I used to be,
Irreversible, damaged, resigned.
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This piece is an ekphrastic poem, originally inspired by a photo of the Seda Larung Wuming Tibetan Buddhist Institute.