Self-love in a time of coronavirus: 'Hong Kong Sleeps on Broken Glass'

Published: 
by Jasmine Ho, Faustina Yick, Shraavasti Bhat
Listen to this article
  • Three students from King George V School initiated ‘Umami’ - a series of poems and illustrations that speak to the hearts of Hong Kong youth today
  • They hope their works can be a source of comfort for readers as they navigate these hard-to-describe times
by Jasmine Ho, Faustina Yick, Shraavasti Bhat |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

I’m falling for you! 7 romantic idioms to express your love

5 Hong Kong podcasts led by young people

How AI is transforming daily life with drones, robots and self-driving cars

Hong Kong enhances support for at-risk students with suicide prevention measures

Prioritise community and self-love.

My father marches home
Rubber boots cut bloody
Shards dug into his bare
Feet.

October, midnight.
Labyrinth of laser spirits
Blinding police but not
For him – carving deeper
Hieroglyphic wrinkles
Commemorating Those
before him. I massage
my father.

The TV is on: vomiting Numbers we
devour numbly. “This is war,” father
declares, But all I see is a boy
bound in black, Yellow glint of
flint-eyes dulled from fifty-dollar
goggles, A hand that I had held
close. swerving away, weaving
arms with the frontline as if it were
home:

He was at the threshold of the
dragon den and our city’s
Bauhinia.

Tossed eyeless into a cataract.
faded blue and drowning murky
miasma that heaves
I massage my father harder – fix torn
muscles and hairy legs – Reach
for the boy but its water.

“This Is War,” yet I
lay in bed.

Torn between two,
Sleeping on broken glass.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment