The sky was
cloaked
in gray.
the clouds
were weeping.
As I walked today,
tears began to
fall on me—
and they made
me fertile.
I saw golden leaves
lying crushed,
flattened
by footsteps
that never paused.
Nature often
held me,
gently even when
she grieves,
And I wondered—
If God had told us
That fallen things
were sacred,
Would we
have loved
them better?
Would we
have tread
more lightly?
Seen beauty in
their break?
Found grace
In letting go?
Would we
have stopped
Before the
bruised things—
Not out of pity,
But reverence?
On sharp stones
Lay orange
flowers,
Their sleep
just ending—
As if they were
still dreaming
Of the sun.
And in their quiet,
Something
inside me
softened, too—
A stillness,
A small bloom,
A reminder
That even
broken things
wake beautifully.
Zahra Ali is a Pakistani poet whose work weaves surreal imagery, emotional intimacy, and dreamlike landscapes. Her poems explore memory, femininity, spiritual longing, and the hidden weight of everyday moments. She writes with a soft urgency — often inventing worlds that mirror the quiet strangeness of the heart. Her work is currently unpublished and part of a debut poetry collection-in-progress.
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