I live on a road,

a long magic road,

full of beautiful people.

The women cultivate long mocha legs

and the men sculpt their torsos

right down to the designer curlicue

of hair under each arm.

The lure is the same:

to confront self with self

in this ancient city of mirrors

that can bloat you

into a centrespread,

dismantle you

into eyes, hair, teeth, butt,

shrink you

into a commercial break,

explode you

into 70 mm immortality.

But life on this road is about waiting –

about austerities at the gym

and the beauty parlour,

about prayer outside the shrines

of red-eyed producers,

about PG digs waiting to balloon

into penthouses,

auto rickshaws into Ferraris,

mice into chauffeurs.

Blessed by an epidemic

of desperate hope,

at any moment,

my road

might beanstalk

to heaven.