I may or may not
have memories from before I was born.
Mostly administrative footage.
Ceiling fans.
Doctors.
Rubber gloves.
Someone saying,
“Congratulations.”
My soul visibly trying to leave the room.
I may or may not
be a reliable narrator.
Memory is just gossip
the brain spreads about itself.
Every year,
my childhood changes details
like politicians changing ideologies
before elections.
At this point,
even my trauma
contains factual inaccuracies.
I may or may not
have a personality anymore.
After years of survival,
all my opinions feel like hostages
developing Stockholm syndrome.
You call it maturity.
I call it
the slow extinction
of original thought
under fluorescent lighting.
I may or may not
be hallucinating adulthood.
Everyone explains taxes to me
with the exhausted confidence
of prisoners describing weather.
“Bro, this is just how life is.”
Which is historically
what people say
right before revolutions,
murders,
economic collapse,
or arranged marriages.
I may or may not
have been in love.
Hard to tell honestly.
Loneliness is incredibly talented
at voice acting.
Sometimes the heart
doesn’t miss people.
It misses
who it became
when someone was watching.
I may or may not
believe in honesty anymore.
Every conversation now feels like
mutual advertising
disguised as intimacy.
Authenticity itself
has become a marketing strategy.
Even spirituality arrives
with podcast microphones,
thumbnail expressions,
and early-access discount codes.
Enlightenment, apparently,
is available at 30% off.
I may or may not
be mentally ill.
The problem is,
once self-awareness
becomes performance,
even breakdowns start feeling rehearsed.
I once cried genuinely
and immediately thought,
“This metaphor could work in a poem.”
That’s not healing.
That’s capitalism
occupying the nervous system.
I may or may not
hate civilization.
But I do find it suspicious
that we created skyscrapers,
satellites,
quantum physics,
and biryani,
yet still lose arguments
to men whose display pictures
contain sunglasses inside cars.
Evolution clearly
has loopholes.
I may or may not
fear death.
What scares me more
is surviving long enough
to become motivational.
Imagine suffering for decades
only to end up posting:
“Good things take time.”
That phrase alone
should disqualify people
from having political opinions.
I may or may not
want children someday.
Not out of love.
Mostly curiosity.
I just want to watch
a smaller human being
stare at existence
with the same betrayed expression
I currently reserve
for salary slips.
That’s not parenting.
That’s intergenerational field research.
I may or may not
be losing my mind.
But the world keeps behaving
like a group project
where nobody read the instructions
and the dumbest person somehow
became team leader.
Wars.
Riots.
Algorithms deciding relevance.
Teenagers learning confidence
from airbrushed existences
that look AI-generated
even in real life.
Every day now feels like
God accidentally sitting
on the remote control of reality.
Channels changing mid-sentence.
Natural disasters between advertisements.
Genocide sponsored by children’s charities and wellness campaigns.
I may or may not
have written this poem.
Maybe insomnia did.
Maybe accumulated disappointment.
Maybe thirty years
of overhearing adults
confidently explaining things
they clearly never understood.
Or maybe consciousness itself
is just the universe
developing anxiety
after becoming self-aware.
Who knows.
At this point,
even humans feel less like an actuality
and more like
a conspiracy theory
with excellent marketing
and no measurable proof of intelligence.