The Anatomy of Hunger

 






The Anatomy of Hunger


It begins before birth—
a longing older than thought,
that mistook motion for meaning.
We arrive not empty,
but already rehearsing want.

Some crave bread,
some applause,
some the silence that follows both.
A few hunger for power,
and call it purpose.
Others hunger for love,
and call it life.
But the hunger itself—
that ancient, unseen sovereign—
wears every face
and asks for more.

We raise empires out of it,
paint heavens,
invent gods who mirror our ache.
It builds music,
and it breaks peace.
It is the first architect
and the last wound.

Yet even hunger learns.
Through births and deaths,
it softens—
outgrows its own ferocity,
forgets its name,
and finally kneels
before stillness.

And in that silence
the soul remembers:
it was never empty,
only circling its own abundance.


Comments

  1. Outstanding!! I loved the last stanza. Superb!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Face We Show

HOME IN ITS FULL CIRCLE

The very notion of the second is the seat of fear.