What does it mean to feel — truly feel — in a world that rushes past emotion?
“Ahan” is a book about that moment before the heart hardens, before words turn into noise.
It is the tremor before confession, the hush between heartbreak and healing, and the first breath after silence. Across these pages, love arrives and leaves, friendship flickers and fades, and the self begins to listen to its own quiet pulse. There are poems about beginnings that felt eternal, about endings that came too soon, and about the small, defiant act of still hoping anyway. Some verses speak softly; others burn. Together they form a portrait of youth that is not naive, but brave enough to remain tender.
“Ahan” is not about who wrote it. It is about everyone who has ever watched the sun rise on something beautiful and known it would set all the same.