“Kitna Maza” by Maleeha Farooq

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Kitna Maza” by Maleeha Farooq.


Kitna Maza

By Maleeha Farooq

Isnโ€™t it nice? To speak, out loud, names you havenโ€™t spoken in years.

Something my Nani said to me two weeks agoโ€”

so simple I couldnโ€™t get it out of my head.

Offhand, between stories of my momโ€™s childhood

and her momโ€™s recipe for alloo chawal.

(I tried translating what she said in Urdu

and thereโ€™s none of the weightlessness

or any of the music.

Itโ€™ll have to do.)

To taste the hours shared with people you knew a lifetime ago.

To pronounce familiar names, old names, nearly forgotten names.

But then, if theyโ€™re still alive, theyโ€™re not old ones, are they?

Maybe youโ€™re just not good at keeping in touch.

Something sinks its teeth into your middle.

A quick flash, something like a memory.

Their names fit snugly in your mouth,

sweet sliced fruit, sitting easily on your tongue,

a swan song filling a dusty room inside of you.


Copyright ยฉ Maleeha Farooq

Previously published in Sky Island Journal, Issue 31, 2025.

Maleeha Farooq is a Canadian-Pakistani writer from Toronto. Her poems have appeared in Queenโ€™s Quarterly, Contemporary Verse 2, and Sky Island Journal. You can find her on Instagram @maleehaslibrary.


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