Sunday, May 25, 2014

Sulking on the Sly

Thieving through the multiple strains
Of voices in the room,
Eavesdrops that one conversation with relish.
Looks out the corner of his eye,


Winces at the eye contact.
Curbs his laughter at the
Joke for he wasn’t expecting it.
They gesture to him 
With a frantic wave of the hand,
He lets out a curt smile,
Walks on,
While they wondered
Whom had he smiled to?

Context? Just describing a situation I feel we have been in, once. Say, you're miffed with someone, you're giving someone the cold shoulder, for you'll wait till eternity till that person 'realises' that she/he must come to you and apologize, and you'll be the better of the two souls for you'll forgive him rightaway. Only, you must act like you don't know or like him for things you always did, being on the guard. I wonder why we do it. Yet I might catch myself in a similar situation someday, years later. 


Saturday, May 24, 2014

The Best Time to Write a Poem

When should I write?
When boredom gets sculpted into motivation?
When a distracting thought 
Bothers me long enough
To make me turn to it instead, 
With ardent concentration -
Thereby perhaps making it
The topic of my next composition?

Should I risk completing that sad poem
I’d been working on for a month now,
When I’m in the best of spirits, today?
Should I try and imagine
What being happy sounds like,
In an unfamiliar milieu of words
For the sake of completing my poem,
Hoping it’ll lift my mood too?

Should I scribble away
The cold downpour of tears with
The harmless, vicarious vengeance of my pen,
The one thing I half-guiltily hold dear
When my anger endlessly battles with helplessness?
[Or are they not worth being written about,
As many tongues would simultaneously utter?]

Must I write in a state of ecstatic frenzy?
       Or could I have to leave that precious thought 
                                   Annoyed, hanging in mid-air,
                                            When a trifling rush of new thoughts 
                                                  Crashed my way, making me forget, 
                              Why I was holding the pen in my hand, 
                                               after all.





                                                       Epilogue: 
                                               I think I must write now to find out,
                                               Before the ink of my existence dries out.


Sunday, May 18, 2014

Before I Touch the Sky

You're welcoming the future with open arms
As you shrink from your own reflection.
Lost in creating that Utopian vision 
Of the future
Which you think is waiting to walk up to you,
When all you have done 
Is to run to the past for solace,
And away from it when you were you realised 
You'd bore enough.

Before you soar off on the flight of dreams, 
Dreams you're afraid to call your own yet,
Watch where to your thoughts sway
Amidst the sands of time.



Friday, May 16, 2014

Presence.

I am
A question mark 
Slouching, lurking behind the wall
Waiting to stretch out 
Into an exclamation mark.




Sunday, May 11, 2014

Identity

They, you and I.
Are?
Interpretations, opinions, 
Fears and convictions,
Likes-dislikes,
History and anticipations,
Of life.
All, save the living of it, maybe?

A song heard months back in time
You mused over the major & minor,
I'd pondered over the rhyme.
Each of us 
As convinced about its presence.
Winter tastes different in my memory.

Epilogue
You must choose between
His bespectacled vision 
And my retrospective conclusion
But you must know 
Which you chose
And why.


Context: 

We live but one interpretation [actions being interpretations] of our experiences, chosen on impulse at times, shortlisted by some preset path on other occasions. Is it about the choices chosen and lived? It isn't so much about 'your' life really, that being a myth for we are constantly interacting with many other lives every day. An interaction of interpretations hence, converts to fears, beliefs, and so on. But what about our identity in essence?

Is life to be described in terms of the experiences [and their interpretation] that I may have had [hence unique to me and to the world] - like the difference in reflections of convex and concave mirrors of the same object, for instance. And how those experiences molded me [or I let them!], my beliefs, and preferences, since that too is a unique cluster held together under the umbrella of a name? 

What about the infinite lurking before and after - Are we the entity or the impressions?  

Wednesday, May 07, 2014

The Fear of Conveying 'Thanks'

The only feeling
I am sensitive to at times
[When someone says or does something,
Making me very, very happy indeed,]
Is the spread-eagled numbness
Gagging my thoughts.
Happy thoughts of gratitude,
Weren't those meant to be?

I smile at the person
Straining my eyes, 
So as to not let them blink 
As they look on at me, with a word of love.
While I,
Stoop within endlessly 
To pull out a few thoughts,
Clearing my throat
Hoping for a sentence to follow next,
However mindless;
Eventually falling silent.
I'd like them to know 
That's not me being cynically laconic, no.

I think -
The memories,
Charred with inadvertent retrospection
Wake up from their insomniac slumber
At such moments,
Rush to claim their place,
Smearing dust on the present.

P.S. Have you ever shied away from saying a thank you to someone who made your day?
It's not shyness being discussed here, of course. It's a constricted state of mind, feeling stifled enough to stop you from thinking at all, making you restless enough, though.

Sunday, May 04, 2014

Selfishness, Aged 9: My Prisoner of a Friend

Since I can remember, I had always wanted a pet dog, to fuss over, at home. I would ask my mother if we could keep a horse, or a rabbit or some such pet. And I'd make plans of climbing the meters high trees around my house, telling my mother that I would pick one or two baby birds from the nests on the tree, and then pamper them with food and have them in front of my eyes all the time, to make sure they were 'happy'. Oh, how sure I was that those baby birds wanted to be in my sight, as much as I wanted to hold them in my hands, and stare at them, gape-mouthed in awe and affection. This goes back to the time when I was a nine year old. One day, I finally spotted a nest in the backyard that I could climb and reach up to, so one morning around 4 I climbed up and gingerly took out one baby sparrow from the nest. My summer vacations were on that time, so I was content in my heart that I could take care of it all day. I would bathe it in water, sometimes stuffing a fly in its mouth, only to figure out that the bird wouldn't eat it, and then feed it with cooked rice and pulses, thinking in my heart that surely the bird was happy to be eating such good food, from the raw tid-bits its mother might have been feeding it with. I would keep it in a basket at night, covering it partially with a thin cloth so it could sleep. A few days later, I picked up another baby sparrow from the nest. 


              They both died within a few days of each other. I would keep the basket under the bed or in the cupboard for hours while they'd be crying out for food each time I would uncover the flap of the basket to take a look at them. And I would keep them in secluded spots because my parents were strictly against me keeping the sparrows at home. I was so caught up with how adorable these creatures looked, and blind to what they must have been going through, being separated from their mother and siblings. They'd try to nibble at my fingers when I'd try to caress them, and I used to mistake it for them being angry at me for no reason and then in utter confusion, I would pull the flap over and go back to doing whatever I was. One died because I overfed it with water, thinking it wanted to drink more, only to realise that its mouth had been left open because I had already fed it with so much water already. It struggled in front of my eyes, and died. The other, had just started to hop and fly around in the house, from the past few days. One morning, I discovered it lying dead, when dad told me that he was just turning sides in bed early in the morning when it must have gotten pressed under his weight, and died eventually, for he saw it lying still on the bed when he woke up. He kissed the bird to his lips, uttering a prayer as he handed it over to me.


        I had never felt as miserable in life. I don't know what I had mistaken love for when I was reaching out to the nest to take another baby sparrow. I buried them in the backyard and would light an incense stick there every evening, sitting there quietly for as long as I could before being called into the house. A few days later, the maid servant in the house called me out to the backyard, and I saw a fully grown sparrow, lying dead on the ground, while ants were beginning to collect around it. The maid servant, Savitri, looked at me and said, "The mother died of grief. You took her children away from her." I refused to accept the truth, outwardly. Inwardly, I was cursing myself. No matter how emphatically I may say that I love these wonderful beings called animals, nothing at all can make up for what I did that time, in a phase of selfishness at its peak. A few years later, my friend gave me a bird, for he knew how much I adored them. Not that I was aware that he would be giving me this. Only, this time, it was caged. Once again, my parents made it very clear that I could not keep it in the house, and that I must free it. This time around, I did not have the urge to protest. The only reason I had kept the bird at home for the two days that it was, was because he had then given it to me, I did not have the courage to give away something he had given to me as a token of affection. Talk about petty thinking. The evening after the third day, I took the cage to the backyard, and opened up the cage for it to fly out, shedding silent, happy tears, bidding farewell to my prisoner of a friend. 


What happened over the next one minute has left such a deep impression on me, that I can never iterate it in words. The bird stood still, still. I realised, it wasn't aware, that now, it was free. I held it with my hands, took it out of the cage and let its feet touch the ground. It stayed there even then, but started to look around, with its head tilted. I did not want it to wait for another second to realise that it was finally free, that it must fly away to freedom, every moment that it still stood in front of me, was torture to the bird, according to me. I gave the parrot a gentle push, and it flew, for the first time perhaps, and perched itself on the wire running near the street lamp outside the boundary wall of the house. I felt happy, and free, at last. Since then, I have cursed myself innumerable times over what I did to the baby sparrows, as a kid. And have never kept a bird as a 'pet' again. 



P.S. After that incident, the only times I have held a bird in my hands, was when I was leaving for college one day, when I heard a thump on the ground. I saw a baby pigeon, lying on the lawn ground. I rushed to it, holding it in my hands to see if it was injured, or dead. Its body was warm still. It had died of the impact, I assumed. I looked straight up to see three-four eagles circling the sky, several feet up, in the sky. I buried it, and left from home finally, with a heavy heart. Another day, I saw a pigeon in the backyard, struggling to stand still, and keep its neck straight. I went closer to realise that it had probably injured its neck in such a way, that its neck was getting bent over and over again, while it was struggling to get it up straight. I put some water into its beak, and let it rest in my hands, holding its neck straight, and it stayed this way for an hour or so. Of course, the pigeon didn't struggle to move away, being helpless as it was, but also realising that I meant it no harm. My parents were standing right behind me, feeling as miserable as I was. Eventually, I left the bird in the backyard, my parents assured me that it'll manage to fly up and reach its nest somehow, we just needed to leave it alone. A few minutes later, I went to the backyard again, to see the bird gone. And till date, I half hope that it managed to fly away, and half fear, that a cat ate it up. 

I wonder, did I not know what love meant, as a kid? Does one learn it, with time? For how is that possible, if we are born out of love, as they say? What blinded me from realising what I was doing to the birds, when I was happy thinking I was giving them a good life? Indeed, I have no answers till date. 

Thursday, May 01, 2014

I Imagined a Poem

Life is
Just as I'd
Declared it
In my scribblings.
[It is] precise to the extent 
Of the [now] most appealing and repulsive
Contours and intricacies,
Some overwrought with older etchings,
Made darker by attempts 
At rubbing them out- 
Of where, pray?
[The eternal itch of perfecting the complete, you see.]
I'd dropped them 
Into a box called time
Shuffled into compartments 
Of past, present and future.


We mistake dreams for reality.
And then
Do you mistake imagination for imagination nowadays?
In your sleepwa(l)king consciousness?


The weaved hollow of Empiricism,
The added undulations of space and duration.
Somewhere, one's interpretations
Sewed into another's visualizations
Vis-a-vis
The maze you charted for yourself
To be/get lost
Where all that has existed yet,
Is the reality of the imaginary.
Knowing there would arrive a juncture
When you would be breathing
Into a kaleidoscope of chaos
Waiting to wade into patterned perfection, 
Eventually, when; Alas! 
You fell for time, again, time and again!
And shifted to the infested realm 
Of hackneyed manifestations.

As the universe thrusts that sheet of paper
On to the pen in my hand,
In my quest to trace and quench 
The voices sketched somewhere
In the white void of the sheet,
As I pen verses of salt & pepper.


P.S. Reality gets as real as the illusions we create. Reality is a vulnerable entity that never existed. Imagination is mistaken for unreality, were that a legit term, to explain the context better.






Sunday, April 20, 2014

Living Things

I often have conversations
With objects around me -
From
Mindless banter snowballing into
Heart-to-heart conversations,
To
Waking up in the middle of the night,
Fumbling for the right switch in the darkness
To put the lights on so I can see
For a split second,
Things obligingly lying still in their place,
As they stagger through burdened time
To lull myself into sleep
With an assurance of familiarity.


On days I enter my room 

With bottled thoughts, when these things
With all their weathered, withered strength
Spur me on to etch out utterances at length
Knowing as they do, 
You don't always seek 
A response, reaction, remark, judgment, 
To something you nevertheless feel the need to speak, 
Which at times starts to turn incomprehensible
To yourself and to the other, 
As your tongue rolls them out
In the gibberish of vowels and consonants.


So I start off on a mindless rhyme

At times confessing my mind's crimes,
Scraping out fears rusty with neglect
Pulling out halted thoughts from a staggering stack,
Laughing as I admit to myself that joke was funny.
Crying with relish for I won't be accused of being weak.
Stretching out a tune I'd only ventured to hum [in public], 
Into a song, hearing my voice sing & strum,
In a long time.    
                           [Hitting the table with a pen 
                           To make up for the beats.]
Dancing with awkward steps on my two left feet,
But dancing nevertheless.
[Thank goodness I have feet to dance.)


P.S At times, when the familiarity 
      Of my own presence poses a threat,
      I need their company, these non-living things, 
      The only solace sensitive to my minds' mutterings.

“I do not believe,” [Edison] said, “that matter is inert, acted upon by an outside force. To me it seems that every atom is possessed by a certain amount of primitive intelligence. Look at the thousand of ways in which atoms of hydrogen combine with those of other elements, forming the most diverse substances. Do you mean to say that they do this without intelligence? . . . Gathered together in certain forms, the atoms constitute animals of the lower orders. Finally they combine in man, who represents the total intelligence of all the atoms.”

“But where does this intelligence come from originally?” I asked.


“From some power greater than ourselves.”

Sunday, April 13, 2014

To Be Continued



I've snuggled in your embrace,
Smuggled and sneaked in 
On you on tiptoe
(On the tip of a bubble)
Kissed you a million times,
Cringed with shyness,
Pretended to scoff at you
To break into laughter
And clasp my hands with yours.
Bumped into you 
At some street, on some staircase,
Letting you spiral down a step further
Into my soul's merkaba.

I have sketched you in fervent hues
I have penned you in vivacious blues
I have perused you numerous times
In my pursuit of you.
Fondled you after fumbling for you
In my dog-eared memories
Of my portrait of you
On a blank wall of my reality.

I've often visualised you
Lurking around the corner of a street,
On another day, in a library maybe,
As I gleefully offer my mind for you to read 
In lieu of the book that we picked
At the same instance.

At times I let these scenes 
Play on a little longer in my head,
(None of it ever happened anyway)
Till the juncture when you walk up to me 
(in those scenes)
While I
Freeze the moment then and there,
When you're probably just about to utter
Something I may have been longing to hear.
To then move to a distance
And admire that still frame I'd set, 
Picturing a dewy winter morning
On a summer evening.
Till the sounds, sights and smells disperse

Till we part ways like always,
Without having met, yet!
To meet again in an unfamiliar setting 
Against the backdrop of familiar feelings
Born anew 
In the thrill of anticipation (of)
The certainty of uncertainties.

Trust me my dear,
Your visage will fail 
To do justice to my portrait of you.
Let us meet  and be lost 
In my mind's tangled sketches alone.




P.S. Fell in love with my imagination of him whom I have never known, yet met a million times in my mind. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

The Company of Solitude

Now, I seek solitude for company
Waking to the spectrum of vitality within,
Enough of your rhetoric,
Now's for my soliloquy.

Beneath the semblance of the Silence,

On the verge of bursting any moment.
Silence, spelled as chaos,
Sitting in fear till now,
At the sight of sound and the voice of light,
Stabbing itself with self-consciousness.

Where no one can reach

Neither the notorious comfort of darkness.
Nor the shadow of light.
Neither my thoughts, 
Nor my circumstances, can reach.
For they just are.
And I just am.
When no one's watching,
When I'm not thinking.
(For to start thinking,
Is to not be yourself.)

P.S. Not a narcissistic retreat of self- pity, this.

       I look within myself,
       To rise above myself, eventually.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Choking for a Lifetime

Over-hearing the familiar glare
Signalling the same struggle
Pre-destined to defeat to follow.
The rising voice, the shadow of a raised hand.
Divided by a wall,
My presence reclines to a shadow
Cowering under the blanket,
Fists clenched, trembling,
Twitching to sounds anticipated to be
The final hit.
The final scream
To be heard,
Silenced by her own tears.

Years later,

The scene replays in my head,
Choking on screams in nightmares for help
That failed to come out as my voice
Then and now.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

The Evacuation

Skin flaking away to shreds
Breathing a fresh whiff of mockery your way, my way,
Shrouding their compliments and
My pride that turned stale
As they were uttered.

Alphabets 
Lisping out of my mouth
Numbers
Trickling out of my mind
(Not a hospitable host,
This existence of mine, they recount.)
Fears & dreams 
Going into comatose.

Clock-hands pointing at me, 
At the stroke of wakeful realization
Like arrows, yanking out and
Darting past me, in all directions
On a time-bound mission.

Sounds, gone out of tune inside of me
Screeching out of my ears
Favourite colors, smells, sights 
Now driving me nauseous
A choking cough that echoes 
(Was it not supposed to stifle it, like in movies?)
Of all of these
Crashing at me, 
Trying to weave again
That familiar path on that train
That leads to the crossroads of that maze
Of self- destructiveness 
That I seemed destined for,
No matter where I'd exit from.
("The exit is only a dead-end!", a fleeting voice quivers)
As I stagger under weightlessness
While familiarity squints into a blur 
and
Alienation burrows a happy home
Mute stares from my end lasting three nanoseconds
Angry for they still don't get it
Thrilled, breathing a sigh of relief.
For I get it, lest I should forget it,
This, where I had arrived.

Or

Was I inhaling stagnant complacency 
Slipping into the reprieve of familiarity again,
Of accursed i-dent-ity
Wait. Am I getting familiar with myself?


P.S. Things you held dear
Where are those now?
Were they yours to admire?
Or mine to own?

Sunday, March 09, 2014

Conversations in My Head

Now, I utter words
Thinking them twice over
Overwhelmed as I am
In your presence.

Hesitate looking up,
Prefer staring blindly at my hands
(Knowing you're happily staring at me)
Risking that sheepish smile
Which would eventually
Give away feelings, mine,
Acknowledge; yours.
Anticipate and weave 
Conversations I'd like to
Have with you, someday

With childlike glee 
End up thinking in my head
Of things you'd long back said,
Making myself happy over & over again,
Breaking into half-embarrassed laughter
Then hide behind a coy smile
Thinking of the few times,
When I did not turn away
Pretending not having seen you.

P.S. Beating about the bush
       Till now in words
       Giving the matter a push
       Through this corny verse.


Thursday, March 06, 2014

Women's Day and no Men's Day

Women's Day is here. For some, it means attending seminars, for some others, it's about forwarding text snippets wishing each other a 'Happy Women's Day.' For me, it may be about writing a tactful copy line for my company's newsletter content informing customers about how we mean to acknowledge this day, by offering an 'irresistible' discount of a few dollars on outfits on our site. And more such claustrobhic cliched images blurring past your sight that drive you crazy. It'll be there to greet me, and many other humans, next year too, I'm certain. 

Celebrating Women's Day? Commemorating this day, is an acknowledgement, or a feeble but sinewed hope towards promulgating egalitarianism. Or so I would like to think, not believe, yet. Keeping in mind instances, like the stature of transgenders in our country - the government a little to eager too boast of having given out 1600-odd Aadhaar Cards to transgender residents in Delhi way back in August last year - when members of the community do not even have the prerequisites for applying for the Aadhaar Card, for obvious reasons. Besides the stench of notions about them that have floated in the form of furtive glances and whispers all along, in the country. What about the fact there's no 'Men's Day' in the calendar? In a country where gender has always been misinterpretedly veiled under monochromatic extremes, forever struggling to code gender as binary opposites, love as pink or gay, where the majority seems to be unable to cope up with the acknowledging/accepting that the question doesn't end at a simple 'You're pardonable because you haven't committed the act of rape in real. (Oh but he's fantasized about it with quite as many women passing by him, at a bus stop, maybe?') 


The rampant and forever unacknowledged inequality that women face, and all internalise, as natural, for the rest 364 days of the year, in all spheres - does a 'global' celebration actually boil to even an echo of the 'ideal', at a home, cultures, geographies away, is the question.


Thursday, February 27, 2014

Regretting Smiles

A genuine (or not?) smile 
Caught from the corner of her eye,
Returned with a beaming smile
Now awoken to her own presence
With innocent glee
She smiled,
For she was smiled to.

She read his tears 
Frozen into words,
Cried with empathy,
Glad at last,
For pity would 
Haunt her no more.

She wonders now if she
Had imagined the smile?
(She prizes her tears for now.)

Friday, February 21, 2014

With Love, from Death

You've sketched & sought eternity,
Throughout the map of history 
In effulgent hues.
And what prompted it, pray?
Futile attempts at
Squirming out of 
The shell of mortality.

Of course you don't seek death.
You haven't been living life either.
What then, is it that you
Lived all these years?
Had you been living
The fear of death instead,
Lurking near?

I've been subjected to
A tirade of judgments from you  
But then you've judged life too
All along anyway.
(You've judged it more, 
And lived it less.)

P.S. (Achilles was wiser, 
Must I say.)

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Word is Out

An encounter with words in life hitherto
(Brought me asking yet again a helpless -
"Now, where to?")
For company was all I had back then       
An ebbing ebb of 
Self-assuring words at times, 
To a frenzied slew 
Of words, twisted & few 
Which sapped & gnawed away 
My spirits into mute stillness.
Like no adversary had ever managed.
Then another capricious turn
To a voice of rhetoric that mocked,
At every occurring thought 
In my breathing existence
Angry at what, I knew not.
Every mono-syllable I pondered over, or dropped.
Words plundering away words 
I had uttered, memories earlier,  
Words I saw, heard, smelled, lived -
Were they ever in my favour?
Or was it a path, I ought to have taken not?

Those words had more life in them
Than I then did, let me tell you.
Now and then, a war of words with 
The consciousness of words 
They and I had created
A dialogue, now supporting, now doubting,
I had become a dilemma.

Words are all I had at all those times,
And they failed me when  
I needed them most.
They sought a different muse.
Conscious of their mistress's dormant existence
Stammering her way through life,
Were they teaching me a lesson?
To take ownership of my articulations
With courage, wisdom & tact,
That which I probably lacked

Here comes news
Within dreams, with strides taken, 
With gestures, glances, I awaken
As I cross paths again with words,
Uttered - un-uttered, 
Now knowing their worth
Breaking the slumber 
of 
Clenched fists, 
Asphyxiating knot of syllables,
Scripting now, 
Drops of ink 
That shall make a million think.


Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Blast from the Fart

Us shaam woh Valentine's Day manaane chala tha
                                                        ghudsavaar ho kar,
Man mein laddoo phoot rahe the soch kar 
Ki uski premika khud ko sawaar rahi hogi.
Ki use hawaaon ki sasaraahat sunaayi di,
Pata chala woh payt dard ka shikaar ho baitha tha,
Uske shareer se gas ka aandolan faraar ho chuka tha.
Ye dekh kar kaanp utha uska tan-daban,
Usne perfume chidak daala in shareer's ang-ang,

Uski premika ke pahuncha jab woh nikat,
Dar gaya woh yeh soch kar,
"If I fart again, there'll be no ifs and buts,
But only many a kick on the butt."

Smitten by her smothering kisses he was lost,
Till she heard odorous hisses and then 
A blast from the arse.
She struggled with uttering a few syllables
Swooned to faint & fall into his arms.

Thinking she'd accepted him in all his airs,
He exulted with one final resounding fart,
Exclaiming, "Farting ain't nothing less than a glorious art!"