SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.
With Rumi in my purse (I’ll be in the waiting room a while). Without waterproof chappals. With Bandra in monsoon. With Fem21 powder mixed in cold-pressed celery for a morning routine—chaste berry ashwagandha. Without last month’s savings,
now replaced by Fem21. With periods that arrive like my anger: always late. With child-wed great-grandmothers whose angers could not afford to be on time. Without a tongue that knows Marwari but loves to French. With Dadi saying zits are the worst
thing that could happen to a woman. With a face full of pockmarks. With Dr Siddhu’s voice in my head: that happens when DHEA is high. do sport. move. Without knowing how to swim. With idiocy enough to raft in the Relli’s high tide in an ill-fitting lifejacket.
With Spotify looped to "Running Up That Hill." With a father till 391 days ago. With my mother’s anger at her mother. With an ache to make myself fall in love with my body. With chipped burgundy shellac. With a childhood of hearing you have piano fingers. With a love for eating dosa at Sunday breakfast
with my piano fingers. With a love for eating dosa at any time. With a secret sisterhood shared with Chughtai’s post-colonial daughters: from wanting to forever veil my face like Goribi to wanting to bat my lashes at every man who owns a house in our hood, like Lajjo. With Dadi scrubbing
masoor, malai on my skin—to make it white. With a Google search for Dali’s shapeshifting phalluses in yesterday’s web history. With Regé-Jean Page’s trench-deep voice, toasted like a husk of tobacco, lulling me to bed at 4 a.m. Without enough melatonin. With telling myself I’d never get a guy
like Regé-Jean Page. With an ache to have faith in God. Without a single god (from our thousands) to call out to when called whore in public. With knowing it’s no better in private. With 13 years of muscle memory that cannot erase the Odissi squat. Without a single
headstand. With knowing my privilege to buy into self-care as I squeeze a drop of copaiba under my tongue. Without a mirror from which my Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome does not stare back at me. With telling & telling & telling myself that I am not that.
Vasvi Kejriwal received her LLB from Queen Mary University London in 2019. She has been a previous winner of the RATTLE Ekphrastic Challenge. Her works have appeared in Mekong Review, The Alipore Post, and The Yearbook of Indian Poetry in English 2021-22.