I have my father’s feet (Sruthi Ranjani)

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​I have my father’s feet.

Not a pretty sight, you see…
Visibly veined, large and unwieldy
Not nimble, like a girl’s would be.

Cracked heels, chipped nails
And scars of mosquito bites
Add to the wretched suntan
That no sunscreen ever fights.

Pretty shoes with bows? — no,
They are but a forbidden paradise;
For I’m wise enough not to undertake
The quest for a fitting size.

I have my father’s feet.

Nervous of the performance ahead
I begin to brace myself, while amma,
Smearing mehndi on to my heels
Utters, with a surprising hint of pride,

“You have your father’s feet.”

I glance down, nonplussed

Strong, unbridled and free,
Feet that tread my village’s soils
Feet that dance, untiringly…
Feet that I inherited,
Smugly look up at me.

Dazed,
As I tie the bells round my ankles
My feet wink at me assuredly
And I wink back, in nascent faith,
At the heirloom that had chosen me.

Illustration by P. Suma