Ma died, lost her to cancer.
A little lump in the breast;
It proved stronger than all the meds, prayers and powers put together,
When she first discovered this beast, that devoured her alive,
I was 13 and my brother five,
That wail of hers, when the reports said Stage 4, The weeping, screaming and cursing of every deity she'd ever worshipped;
Is not something I want to remember, but am unlikely to forget.
Soon the sobs subsided and arose the hope,
Of conquering the crab, making it alive,
What if it was Stage 4!
Ma walked like a warrior to the Chemo sessions, smiled and laughed at every medication,
Three months, the doctors had announced but after a year she was still around.
Bereft of her Rapunzel locks, a shiny pate soon covered by baby curls, Ma was Ma, hair or no hair.
The crab was gone, that’s what they said, the doctors of the shiny coats and steely demeanours.
Ma had won this round.
Life went back, but this time around, we appreciated what we had, for it had almost been snatched.
A typical human trait, to value more, what is almost robbed;
Ma filled our seconds with hugs and kisses and laughter,
Every nook and cranny, filled with pictures of smiles bigger than the frame's dimensions.
We’d learnt to survive, no, thrive in the shadow.