Tag: loss

  • Author’s Note

    I have been struggling with my lack of cultural identity for a long time. Growing up in the United States, I was told it was a “melting pot,” but it never felt that way. Instead, it seemed like people were forced to abandon their heritage in order to fit into an identity that doesn’t exist. When I ask what “American culture” is, the answers I hear are hamburgers, hot dogs, the 4th of July, and the military. None of that feels like culture to me—only consumerism and violence.

    I envy those who have songs, dances, rituals, languages, and stories passed down through generations. I don’t want to take anyone else’s story. I only want to feel the presence of my own. But too often I feel like a ghost wandering through borrowed traditions, searching for a home that doesn’t exist.

    This poem is my confession of that ache.

    Rowan Evans


    A solitary figure holding a lantern, roots dissolving into mist, symbolizing cultural disconnection and longing.
    “Searching for roots in the fog of identity.”

    Invocation

    Come closer, reader—
    into the hollow where heritage should dwell.
    Hear the echo of silence,
    the yearning for roots that never took hold.
    Witness the ache of a soul
    adrift in a country that mistook conquest for culture,
    violence for pride.
    Step gently—
    this confession is not just grief,
    but a longing for home that has no name.


    Inheritance of Nothing
    Poetry by Rowan Evans

    I envy the ones
    whose blood carries stories—
    whose tongues remember
    what their ancestors sang
    in the shadow of temples,
    at the mouth of rivers.

    I watch their rituals unfold,
    candles passed from hand to hand,
    dances older than empires,
    words carved in a language
    I will never taste.
    And I ache—
    not because they have it,
    but because I don’t.

    What was left to me?
    Fast food wrapped in plastic,
    holidays gutted of holiness,
    flags worshipped instead of gods.
    I was taught to pledge allegiance
    to violence,
    to wars I never wanted,
    to victories built on graves.

    My culture is gunfire.
    My anthem is grief.
    My inheritance—
    silence where a song should be.

    I drift between borrowed myths,
    a pilgrim without a shrine,
    longing for a history
    that does not dissolve into slogans,
    or rot under the weight
    of conquest and forgetting.

    I do not want to steal another’s story.
    I only want to touch my own—
    to feel it burn in my chest,
    to know the names of my dead
    and what they carried for me.

    Instead, I stand at the threshold,
    watching others feast at a table
    laden with memory and meaning,
    while I starve on scraps
    of hamburgers and hot dogs—
    a parody of belonging.

    Tell me,
    how do I rise from soil
    that has no roots?
    How do I call myself home
    when my home was built
    on erasure?


    Benediction

    May those who carry deep roots
    cherish them with reverence.
    May those who wander rootless
    know they are not alone in the ache.
    And may we who inherit silence
    still find ways to sing—
    to build new rituals
    from longing,
    to craft belonging
    from the ruins.


    If you would like to check out more of my work, you can find it here… The Library of Ashes

  • Last night, sleep opened its velvet throat—
    and I fell into the hush between heartbeats,
    where the walls of the world breathe slow,
    and time forgets its name.

    He stood there.
    My father—
    not as ash in the urn,
    but as shadow sewn in dreamlight,
    his voice a paper lantern in the fog.

    He said something.
    Words folded in half,
    creased like love letters unsent.
    A tongue I should have known
    but could not parse—
    like trying to read raindrops
    as they run down glass.

    His eyes were galaxies
    just out of reach—
    all gravity, no ground.
    He smiled like someone
    who’s seen the ending
    and can’t explain it.

    Was it a message?
    A map?
    A test?

    He left me with nothing but silence
    stitched in silk and salt,
    and the ache of unlearned riddles
    tattooed across my chest.

    Now I sit beneath the fig tree of my grief,
    its fruit swollen with unsaid things.
    I peel back memory like skin,
    searching for symbols in marrow,
    for parables in pulse.

    What was I meant to understand?
    That love does not end,
    only alters its architecture?
    That the dead do not speak in answers,
    but in echoes
    and invitations?

    Some lessons aren’t given.
    They’re grown—
    like thorns
    from the same vine as the rose.

    And maybe
    that was the point.