
The first one burned.
I watched it go
all that careful tending
undone in a single blow.
I had borrowed against its roots,
leaned hard into its shade,
already named the fruit
before the fruit was made.
But the ground holds no grudges.
It keeps no kind of score.
It simply waits, dark and open,
and asks: What else have you?
So here is another seed
smaller now, less bold,
held in looser fingers,
planted in the cold.
No harvest charted out in hope,
no future self to feed
just this quiet, trembling act:
the courage to reseed.
The ash, it turns out, loves the soil.
The burning was a gift.
What collapsed became the bedrock
for what I cannot lift
into the light just yet.
Still, I feel it lean
toward warmth, toward air,
toward everything
a second chance can mean.
The wreckage cleared the view.
What I thought was losing everything
was only the land turning new.
I don’t know what this one will become.
I only know it’s in.
And sometimes that is everything
to try again
is how we begin.

March 27, 2026
Tawfiq Abu
A poem inspired by a mother and son’s quiet conversation beneath a barren mango tree.
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