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Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Unyielded Heart: A Lament Against Solitude 

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A poem that frames loneliness not as peace, but as a thief of hope and a stifler of purpose

By Kousar Ahmed Rather

Oh God! Why solitude,

Though You created us in pairs?

You bestow love upon humans—

Why do You keep them alone?

A man without family is

Like a fertile field without its yield.

Isolation limits desires, snatches hopes,

Brings pessimism, and causes hope to be lost.

May the Almighty keep no one in solitude,

And bestow upon everyone a happy family.

​The human heart is inherently designed for connection, yet the experience of solitude often cuts against this fundamental need. The poem, “The Unyielded Heart,” serves as a profound lament, opening with a direct, anguished question to the divine:

Oh God! Why solitude, 

Though You created us in pairs? 

You bestow love upon humans

Why do You keep them alone?

​This is the central paradox of the piece. The speaker acknowledges a creator who established a world of pairs and love, only to then witness individuals suffering in isolation. It is not an accusation, but a deep plea for understanding why sorrow is permitted in a world meant for joy and togetherness.

​The most powerful image in the poem is the metaphor used to describe the state of a person deprived of family and intimate ties. A man without connection is likened to land that cannot fulfil its purpose:

A man without family is

Like a fertile field without its yield

​The soul, the spirit, and the potential for giving and receiving love are all fertile. They possess the capacity to nurture, to grow, and to produce a rich harvest of happiness, support, and meaning. When a person is kept in solitude, this potential remains locked away; the love is unyielding, leading to an emptiness that is felt not just as loneliness, but as a lack of fulfilled purpose.

​This isolation is not merely a passive state of absence; it is an active force that harms the human spirit. The poem powerfully details the destructive, psychological toll solitude takes:

Isolation limits desires, snatches hopes,

Brings pessimism, and causes hope to be lost

​Isolation systematically dismantles the foundations of mental and emotional well-being. It stifles ambition (“limits desires”), erodes the future (“snatches hopes”), and traps the mind in a cycle of negative, self-defeating thought, ultimately resulting in the loss of hope itself. Solitude is thus rendered a relentless enemy of the spirit.

​The poem closes by turning this personal lament into a universal prayer, transforming individual pain into an altruistic wish for all humanity. The speaker seeks divine intervention to mend the broken pattern of isolation:

May the Almighty keep no one in solitude,

And bestow upon everyone a happy family

​This final supplication expresses the ultimate human desire: not just the absence of loneliness, but the positive gift of kinship, belonging, and a secure family. “The Unyielded Heart” is therefore a moving testament to the fact that for human beings, connection is not a luxury, but a fundamental requirement for a life that is truly fruitful and fully lived.

The writer is a teacher at Higher Secondary School, Pattan

ko************@***il.com

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