I’m just a few hours away from meeting you, but it’s been a long time since I’ve known you.>
I can feel your face on mine, and the soft gentle soul that makes your eyes shine.>
I’m incredibly nervous about that smile of yours – I’ve waited for that since I first wanted to be yours.>
I can hear your laughter in my ears, I can feel it in my heart – we’re finally here and not apart.>
I wonder what the universe has planned – what’s the place on which we’re supposed to land?>
Why was I meant to feel this way? The universe knows I hate the greys.>
Why do I see so many connections between us? Is there a future lying ahead for us?>
We may not even be running the same race; it’s funny how the heart operates with all it’s vulnerability, immaturity and grace.>
It doesn’t seem to respect profound logic;
It wants to go through it – something that the mind’s sure is tragic.>
But such are the stories of the heart. It makes you feel that you’re not too far apart.
When the reality is that we’re from two separate worlds – the universe just decided to shake up the moulds.>
It’s funny how I already feel you – here, in my arms; with your eyes and nose and lips on mine – I can feel the tension slowly unwind.
If only my dreams were the truth, they’re not.>
So I must come back to the ground – which is my hope’s melting pot.>
I’m going to meet you tomorrow. For the first time. I can feel your wind coming towards me. I can feel your smile slowly raising my petrified hopes – I wish I could let the words flow. I wish I could let my ‘me’ flow.>
But, I cannot. Because I’m scared that that’ll set us forever apart.>
The heart’s confused and the mind’s running races.>
But it’s still asking the same question – do we even run the same race? If not, why is the heart progressing with such a pace? We surely don’t want to see the black music we’re going to have to face.>
But hope is what’s fuelling the heart. The hope that maybe we don’t have to be so far apart.>
The universe has defined it’s plans: for both you and me.>
But, will you even see me?>
Eshaa Joshi is 18 years old. She is interning with Shaheen Mistri, CEO of Teach for India, on a project called Kids Education Revolution, an attempt to reimagine education in India. She writes poetry too.>
Featured image credit: Christopher Sardegna/Unsplash>