
Poetry Unbound Sanah Ahsan — Ramadan’s Greeting
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Feb 16, 2026 A reflective exploration of hunger, choice, and communal ritual during Ramadan. Listens to a short, meditative poem that contrasts light and dark, desire and restraint. Discusses the poem’s rhythmic pauses, sensual language, and the way the moon signals turning toward family and shared practice.
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Moon As A Turn Of Attention
- Pádraig Ó Tuama links the poem's moon image to lifting the gaze and choosing to turn away from the immediate.
- The poem frames fasting as intentional attention that redirects desire toward family, solidarity, and reflection.
Desire Meets Psychological Questioning
- The poem tightly weaves psychology and sensuality to examine desire and satisfaction.
- Questions like "Can we wash ourselves of ourselves?" probe whether wants truly satisfy us when fulfilled.
Language Shapes The Theme
- Ó Tuama highlights the poem's recurring W-words to show its focus on want and will.
- The language pattern reinforces the poem's interrogation of wanting and satisfaction.

