Earth Day brings to mind vividly
a day from the distant past,
when the sky seemed bluer and the clouds whiter
the air was intoxicatingly fresh,
the water in the streams crystal clear.
The tall grass was greener
with its white toppings of flowers
dancing in the breeze.
Paddy fields smelt so yummy,
mixed with the heady fragrance of soil.
I seemed to fly
as my feet skipped on the red earth,
And my heart raced joyfully
As we laboured up a hill.
Sitting on an edge atop
and looking down on the blurry ground,
an immense joy broke out of every pore and cell,
sending cascading tears
as I felt my connection to the planet,
and knew I was its child.
Today, some three decades since,
I find it so difficult to feel the joy.
Fear has flooded in from all around
And I can’t seem to find a place to hide.
The water is coloured and cluttered
with strewn garbage and run-offs.
The air is smoky and the stench
of chemicals overpowering.
The trees look shrivelled and starving,
the soil insipid and dying.
Hill and mountain tops
have been claimed,
forests devoured,
and grey the colour of future.
How could I have done this,
Or any child to a parent,
what we humans have done to the Earth.
The connection is now stifled
with guilt.
By Jaya