The Prize (and Price) of Progress

The Prize and Price of Progress
The Prize and Price of Progress

A reflective poem about what is built, what is broken, and the quiet invoices hidden inside every forward step.

Movement one

The overpass and the nest.

Progress, they say, is the overpass arching over the city.

But somewhere underneath its shadow

a sparrow once built her nest in the quiet of the reeds,

and raised her young in a crueller world.

To the builder, the span is progress.

To the sparrow, it is simply gone.

And progress writes its bill in vanished things.

Overpass above a city with reeds and a sparrow nest
Movement two

Learning in absence.

For once, in a forest older than ambition,

a boy stood at the edge of belonging.

Eklavya.

He learned in absence, from a teacher carved out of wood,

poured reverence into silence until skill answered him back.

But progress, it seems, demands sacrifice.

A young archer facing a carved wooden teacher in a forest
Movement three

The test sharp as a blade.

And so came the moment shaped like a test,

sharp as a blade.

Dronacharya did not ask for effort.

He asked for the thumb.

A small thing, we might say,

until we remember that it was everything.

But to gain a place in the story,

you may be asked to erase a part of your own.

Archer hand holding bow and arrow with the thumb absent
Movement four

The modern exchange.

The self you sacrificed at twenty

to become someone worth knowing at thirty.

Every gain is a grief in its Sunday clothes.

Every arrival, a departure wearing a new name.

Solitary corporate man walking through a monumental modern building
Movement five

A final definition.

So what is progress?

Progress is the sparrow's nest beneath the overpass,

the archer's thumb beside the drawn bow.

The art of letting go,

disguised as moving forward.

Veronica, 17, is a storyteller who believes emotions come most naturally to the human spirit. An extrovert at heart, she channels her energy into creating compelling characters, building immersive worlds, and crafting stories that resonate. She is especially drawn to exploring themes of identity, self-expression, and the quiet struggles often left unspoken. Through her writing, she aims to reflect the complexities of the human experience and the courage it takes to be seen and understood.

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