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By Uma Menon

My first instinct is to translate
the word. Make it easier to understand
without saying the word itself.
I feel guilt for this mistake—
for changing languages instead
of describing. Isn’t this an easy way out?
My mother and I are playing charades
alone. We make this mistake over &
over, our tongues
too quick to learn. After all,
isn’t this what we are used to?
When one language fails,
we try the next & the next
until someone understands.
A syllable escapes like a captured cricket,
singing for its love of freedom. It is too late
to go back now, to jar the language
we first learned. We do not want to,
either, so in this game, we swallow first.
Card, swallow, describe, flip.
Card, swallow, describe, flip.


Uma Menon, "We Play Charades" from The Massachusetts Review, Spring 2021.  Copyright © 2021 by Uma Menon.  Reprinted by permission of Uma Menon.

Source: The Massachusetts Review, Spring 2021 (The Massachusetts Review, 2021)

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Poet Bio

Uma Menon
Uma Menon is a writer from Winter Park, Florida. She is the author of Hands for Language (Mawenzi House, 2020) and My Mother’s Tongues (Candlewick Press, 2023). Her work has appeared in the Huffington Post, The Progressive, The Massachusetts Review, and other publications. Menon was the 2019–2020 Youth Fellow for the International Human Rights Art Festival and a 2020–2021 Encore Public Voices Fellow. See More By This Poet

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