I am constructing my reality with unreal, otherworldly materials. It is almost poetic, this outstanding self manipulation. -Sylvia Plath
Tuesday, 22 September 2015
Thursday, 17 September 2015
Sunday, 13 September 2015
Bare Minimum
Help me craft paper boats
Of love
And set them to sail
Through muddy puddles of rain
Which hold the sky
in their wake-
Perhaps, one day,
Before drowning,
They will reach
Where I couldn't?
Of love
And set them to sail
Through muddy puddles of rain
Which hold the sky
in their wake-
Perhaps, one day,
Before drowning,
They will reach
Where I couldn't?
Help me fold love along
The highway roads of our initials and see
If the bends meet up somewhere
To link your destiny to me.
Perhaps, one day,
While cruising,
I would be set free?
The highway roads of our initials and see
If the bends meet up somewhere
To link your destiny to me.
Perhaps, one day,
While cruising,
I would be set free?
Help me dream verses of love
In the color that I bleed
And let them seep through my being
Coloring all my need.
Perhaps, one day,
As I bleed,
All pain would cease?
In the color that I bleed
And let them seep through my being
Coloring all my need.
Perhaps, one day,
As I bleed,
All pain would cease?
Help me set love on fire
And leave it to crackle
Through fireplaces that gather dust
Inside my heart-
Perhaps, one day,
While raging,
It will burn me to ashes?
And leave it to crackle
Through fireplaces that gather dust
Inside my heart-
Perhaps, one day,
While raging,
It will burn me to ashes?
Help me hold love tight
In the death grip of my fist.
In the death grip of my fist.
Help me restrict my love for you
To the bare minimum.
Saturday, 22 August 2015
Krishna in Him
Even though I am not great at eye contact,
I See Krishna in Him.
Sometimes, in those jet black eyes,
Sometimes, behind his dimpled,
naughty smile,
When he locks his eyes with mine,
I see Krishna in Him.
Sometimes, when his lips part
And i can hear the soft sound of his breathing,
Somewhere, I think I hear, too
The faint, fragrant echoes of a flute.
His voice, his notes find

I hear Krishna in Him.
I see Krishna in Him
When he dismisses everything-
The world, pain, love, our bond-
everything as illusory.
Because Krishna said to Arjun
Things he unknowingly says to me...
I see Krishna in Him.
While he loves everybody with similar intensity, I,
I egoistically believe
I am his favourite, though
I know it can't possibly be so,
He has so many people to love,
to choose from.
I see Krishna in Him.
Playing pranks, pulling my leg
making faces, hurting me-
He has liberties, all of them
Perhaps, he knows that, too.
I am his property, just as I belong
Ultimately to the blue-bodied god;
I see Krishna in Him.
When he hugs me hard, crushing me at times
And plants a sweet little kiss on my cheeks, on request,
I guess, I can say, I know
That is exactly how divinity is spelled.
I see Krishna in Him.
He is five-
and sometimes, in that little child,
My god tries to come alive.
Sometimes, when i look just right,
I see
Krishna in Him.
Wednesday, 12 August 2015
On Religion...
Disclaimer: This piece doesn't intend to hurt your sentiments. It is just a means to express mine. Thanks for being tolerant :)
I envy people who can drape accoutrements of their religion by
the dozen on their bodies. I envy their security, the surety that comes from
knowing that at the end of the day, they have somebody definitive to praise for
the miracles and blame for the curses in their lives. I envy how they fast on
certain days and feast on others, disguising all their suffering and reveling
in all the joy that belonging to religion brings.
In archaic forms that still need me to label my religion as
a part of my identity, I put down Hinduism, albeit a little apprehensively.
I do not fast on Shivratri; I am perpetually confused as to
why we celebrate two of them in a year (hoping my limited knowledge in this regard
is correct). I like Janmashtmi for the beautiful programmes held at temples in
the night, for the super cute figurines of baby Krishna, whom I absolutely adore,
for the swings I get to give him- a number of times over, for the colourful balloons;
for the idea that my favourite God could have a birthday, too! I do not know of
the significance of the fervor and the gaiety that preceds Ganesh Visarjan on
Ganesh Chaturthi. I am blissfully unaware of the varied forms that Maa Durga is
worshipped in, during the auspicious Navratri.
My routine doesn’t involve recitations of aartis or Hanuman
Chalisa every morning at 5 am. I do not go to temples regularly, and even if I do,
instead of actually praying, I end up looking at the serene, simultaneous
figures of Krishna and Radha in awe, wondering if Krishna loves all of us as much
as he loved Radha! (I Hope he does, or it will break my heart!)
Maybe, I am not a Hindu, after all.
My mom believes in
Guru Nanak Ji. The gurudwara is a place I visit daily. I dutifully kneel before
the Guru Granth Sahib across my city, despite not being a Sikh in the
traditional sense of the word. If I concentrate,
I can impart meaning to the soothing voice of the raagis singing the shabads- sacred
hymns in Punjabi. I sport one of the 5 Ks of Sikhism, the Kada, on my wrist. It
is the only outer display of belief I allow myself the liberty of, because, inexplicably,
it makes me feel protected and looked after. Yet, I cannot help but feel a slightly disparaging
sense of alienation that churns inside my stomach when I glimpse men and women
carrying Kirpans draped across their sides, as warriors of the gurus. I have
never done the nitnem religiously because I couldn’t fathom the language in
totality. I get a haircut every once in a while.
I am not Sikh, either.
Churches fascinate me with their aura of peace. The mass is
a beautiful congregation- not only of people, but of attires, tongues, voices
and tales. The stained glass windows hold my gaze for moments on end; the filtered
sunlight surprisingly adequate to awaken the light of joy, within. Yet, I have never
touched the Bible. I envy the cross that dangles from the necks of the
Christians. I miss the happiness in decorating Christmas trees and looking for Easter
eggs and being able to talk to Jesus as if he knows it all. I miss all of it
despite having no apparent cause to.
I am neither Catholic nor Protestant, nor do I connect with any
other sect in Christianity.
Buddhism and the theories of Zen find a resonance with me. I
like to see monks and chant Om Mane Padme Hum- their Golden Mantra randomly
during the day. The scenes of Azaans in movies bring a smile on my face. Mosques
fascinate me. Yet, I cannot label myself as a Buddhist or a Muslim simply on
these grounds.
I envy people who belong.
I envy that they do not go to gurudwaras and whisper prayers
in English, the way I do, because Punjabi isn’t my area of expertise, exactly.
I envy how simply they purchase flowers for offering to the deities
while all I seem to visit religious shrines for, is to say thank you and send a
prayer for the well being of people I love.
I envy their knowledge of customs and procedures and hate
myself for not being proper in my conversations with God, at times. I wonder if
they fight with their Gods, too and challenge Him/Her to prove existence.
I wonder if I am doing it all wrong, somehow.
I believe in a superpower that runs things we are far too naive
to grasp. I half-agree that God is nirgun- without a tangible form. Yet, I love
the ideas and myths of existence of some Gods more than others. I am not an atheist,
because I believe.
The only question I haven’t figured out the answer to is what
I actually believe in.
Someday in the near future, before they do away with ‘Religion’
on forms, I hope to find that out.
‘Belonging’ may not be everything, but, ‘knowing’
just might be.
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