Poetry

Dear Asian Girl

Dear Asian Girl,

Let me tell you a story 

She was young, at first

Young and proud, at first.

Roots nurtured by her ancestors,

she would lie on the ground

to soak up their wisdom.

Short, stubby branches reached out 

to touch their souls

and she would feel the life 

that once danced on this sacred land.

She would taste the golden nectar of her language

from the seeds her mother planted.

Her pride: the sunlight that fed,

her stories: the sweet water that nurtured,

her traditions: the soila structure of all things beautiful. 

But soon, her branches grew, 

grew into the unknown,

And she went into the world 

in search of greener pastures,

But instead she found dying roots.  

                                                      

Savage—they called her

Chink, Paki, Dink, Gook, Raghead.

They claimed she stung with her thorns

But they didn’t know her thorns were her beauty

And they tainted her sunlight, until the fire burned her insides

Casted a dry spell until it robbed her of her water

Stole her fruit,

Snapped her branches, 

Colonized her soil.

Until her songs became only a faint memory on her lips

And her stories, stayed forgotten dreams

But Dear Asian Girl,

Do not forget where you came from.

Lie on the ground again and 

turn back the clock.

Revisit your mother’s kitchen,

fill the air with notes of sour and sweet, 

And feel prickles of spice soothe your throat

And Dear Asian Girl, 

you know you’re home. 

Like that of a child,

let your people’s lullaby sing you to sleep,

Harmonize to a chorus so sweet

That you can taste the wonders on your tongue

Because Dear Asian Girl,

We sing our tunes in different tongues

Different swirls and different drums

beat the same beat, 

Our hearts still beat the same beat

And together, Asian girl, we create our own harmony- 

A battle cry so loud, 

you can hear it in your chest when you breathe

and smell the burning fire when you scream  

Look around you, 

see how far we’ve come?

Well dear Asian girl, 

we’ve only just begun.


Stephanie:

“Stephanie Hu is a 16 year old Chinese American living in Southern California. She is the founder of Dear Asian Youth, an organization that works to empower Asians from across the world. She wrote this piece to celebrate the incredible strength Asian women possess, especially during trying times like this." 


Tesoro High School | instagram: @stephaniee.hu & @dearasiangirl

Quaranzine Poetry

2:13AM journal entry

failed to fall asleep 

even though my body is 

exhausted to the core

my mind was thinking 

too much so I got up and 

drew in my sketchbook 

I am feeling nostalgic and

sentimental for the 

past, even though I would

never choose to relive 

the moments in real life

I much prefer re-living 

them through my journals

I am enjoying this

self-inflicted sadness

the kind that makes you 

appreciate life just

a bit more 

when your college friend

texts you a long

affectionate paragraph that

makes your throat choke up

with gratitude

and you think, oh no

when was the last time

I cried

and suddenly you are

hyper-aware of your 

emotions and the 

tumultuous state that

they are in 

back to being tired now

post-catharsis in this 

modern day love letter

DAWN

I’m going to try something new

even though new is out of my 

comfort zone (but what else isn’t) 

what are the barriers that stop 

you from pursuing the new?

are you living in fear of 

goodbyes that are too early and 

greetings that you don’t 

feel prepared for? 

that emotion that envelops

your core, do you know

what that means?

recognition of the unknown and

of the unfamiliar — that is 

what I’m chasing after but 

I can’t, no I don’t think I can, 

if the boundary between the 

core and the surface 

thickens

like a cell

I need to breathe

in the new day and feel

the gratitude that is meant to 

keep me moving in these uncertain

waves

like a fierce ocean clashing

against dawn.

EARTHLY PLEASURES 

Besides celestial bodies and 

interstellar happenings, let us 

thank our home on earth for 

enduring so much for us without

asking for much in return

I wish this could mean that 

the earth could last forever

but no, the earth needs love

too, just as humans seek

our own desires and lustful 

yearnings — as silly as it 

may seem

If we lived in a world without

physical contact, is this what 

it’d be like? Afraid of

breathing the same air? 

If we could only have each

other without being able to

touch, would we feel the same way? 

I wonder. If all we really 

yearn for are the sparks 

we feel in a moment of

excitement when we are 

calling for each other’s

skin, if the core of our 

satisfaction derives from

your body wrapping around

mine. But that is

forbidden now

so tell me

do you still want me

would you still want me 

in this war? 

GROWTH / DECAY 

An exponential change in feeling

does not eliminate the mundane 

nor should it! Daily life full of 

spontaneous conversations, endless

tasks to accomplish but never enough 

time to do so. Is this how each day

used to go? The mundane holds

power in itself and

credibility over the extraordinary

as a resting state, a baseline

to rely on, and isn’t that

something we could all use more of

Up and down

fluctuations intertwine with a 

steady rate of constancy 

companionship in a modern

lonely story 

do you hear the rustle of 

change? Disrupting the flow

of what the people are used to. 

I crave change but only 

the kind of change that will 

shift my light

forward, against all odds. 

IS ANYONE LISTENING? 

you are all wonderful

everything we could’ve asked for

I feel heard, I feel seen

in moments when I can take the

mic and speak to my 

audience 

we can control how we 

respond to events and yet I 

feel dominated by the other

voices; those of fear and

anxiety and rejection

pouring over my shell

I crave a listener

to receive my

woes with open

arms and 

turn them into 

silver linings

let me collect

these pockets 

of stillness to

soothe my soul


Hayoung:

“Upon returning home after leaving campus with the knowledge that I would not be coming back as a student again, I searched desperately for ways to cope with my despair. I turned to my journal, as I often do in these types of situations, and put pen to paper to create this anthology of quarantine poetry. I speak on loneliness, intimacy, and dealing with change.  


Harvard ‘20 | instagram: @hay0ung

Welcome to the War

We're fighting a war,

as if the enemy is new.

Avoid unnecessary contact,

as if we had a choice.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime rally

we've been fighting day in, day out.

Welcome - we've been lonely, we've been waiting.

Fear and relief strike in equal measure.

We're not alone now

for a moment it seems, before

the young replace the old,

the fit engaged in a wholesale raid.

The war will never be won; the young and fit

will soon forget their spoils, their bounty.

Soon you will wave goodbye, good luck, good riddance,

as we press on alone.

Welcome. We were here before, we will be here

long after.


Grace:

“I moved to the UK from Malaysia several years ago and also have a severe disability. This poem is meant to represent how a disabled person may feel during this pandemic, especially when some like me have always lived with a fear of viruses due to how we are at higher risk, and how others may even have been self-isolating for years. The world is now catching up with how we feel and whilst we all seem relatively united about not spreading viruses, etc, and I am hopeful that, for example, one result of the pandemic is that people will actually not go into the office sick, I feel that people are going to go back to their daily lives once this is over and forget this feeling. This poem serves as a reminder that this is what many disabled people have been experiencing all their lives." "

University of Cambridge | instagram: @gracehuiauthor | facebook: @gracehuiauthor | twitter: @gracehuiauthor

black sugar and honey

 
 

near the old bridge in new jersey, the last

chinese restaurant, shutters kicked in, plastic

bags strewn, grease traps and clogged sink 

smelling of sesame oil, remains 


my father came by on saturdays to order,

number 44, broccoli with beef, braised pork over rice,

reminder to put the forks on the side, an encouragement

in mandarin, a knot stuck in my throat 


i pick up the phone, and the words don't flow

like black sugar and honey, they crystallize on 

my tongue


please, i'll have the spareribs « qing 

wo yao paigu » the silence brimming


when the neighbors speak, english traced

with bengali, spanish, korean, the current subsides


but then it returns, a lifetime of words spilling

too many for my tongue, a spray of syllables

swirling from my lips, preparing tones that stumble 

& stretch & crack on my teeth, tearing & 

flooding my flesh, piercing & prodding 

my cheeks as the accents melt together 

& sugar dissolves into bitterness &


a click on the line


the cashier says nothing when i arrive

a rattle of coins, some scratched up pens,

plastic bag exchanged for bills


i return with a linger of sweetness

« xie xie » a taste of the 

saccharine sounds 


Sharon Lin is in her third year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is the daughter of Chinese immigrants.


MIT ‘21 | twitter @sharontlin | facebook @sharonlinnyc