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Dipti  Vyas's avatar

It’s a constitutional crisis handled with dignity.

What moves me most is that neither side is villainized. The heart is not mocked for its loyalty. The mind is not shamed for its boundaries. You allow both to speak in their native language: devotion and law. That’s rare. Most people crown one and exile the other.

“Not from cruelty. From clarity.”

That line lands like a verdict delivered without malice. It’s the moment the poem matures.

And the image of the heart standing at the gates of a closed door? That’s devastating. But what I admire is that you don’t let it break in. You let it ache. There’s strength in that restraint.

The closing turn is especially wise. You don’t frame the future as a replacement for her. You frame it as a return of color. That subtle shift matters. It suggests you’re not waiting for the same story to resume, you’re leaving space for a different palette altogether.

If I were you? I wouldn’t surrender to either side. I would do exactly what this poem does: let them both speak, then choose from selfhood rather than fear.

This feels less like heartbreak and more like integration. And integration is never dramatic, it’s deliberate.

Beautifully steady work.

Seungyeon Jeong's avatar

If a civil war does not lead to ruin, it becomes history.

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