“Just sit? Like so? And then? Do what?”
“Just sit. Like so. And nothing else.”
“But what’s the point in sitting so?”
“No point, no point. Just sitting so.”
“You sure that’s how we do this thing?”
“Yes, sure. Yes, sure. Just sitting so.”
“And that will bring enlightenment?”
“No, no. No chase enlightenment.”
“A stepping stone, then? Practice run?”
“No stepping stone, no. This is it.”
“Just sitting so? And that is it?”
“Just sitting so. And this is it.”
“And yet there’s no enlightenment?”
“Who knows? Who knows? Just sitting so.”
“It must be good for something, yes?”
“No, no. It’s good for nothing. No.”
“Then what’s the point in sitting so?”
“No point, no point. Just sitting so.”
“It makes no sense. No sense at all.”
“No sense, indeed. Just sitting so.”
“I came to seek enlightenment.”
“Desire, it is. Detach desire.”
“And that will bring enlightenment?”
“Who knows? Who knows? Depends. Depends.”
“On what? How well I’m sitting so?”
“No well, no bad. Just sitting so.”
“So, how to know I’m doing right?”
“No right, no wrong. Just sitting so.”
“In twenty years, you saw no change?”
“Oh, many changes. Quite a lot.”
“And zazen is what brought the change?”
“Who knows? Who knows? But there is change.”
“Which means, it’s good for something, no?”
“No, no. It’s good for nothing. No.”
“So, why have you been doing it?”
“No why, no why. Just sitting so.”
“No why? You find it meaningful?”
“Yes, meaningful and valuable.”
“So, that is why you’re doing it.”
“Effect, effect. Not cause, not cause.”
“If meaning’s effect, sitting’s cause.”
“Effect is cause of effect’s cause?”
“Exactly, yeah. It motivates.”
“Not motive, no. Just sitting so.”
“An act without a motive, hunh?”
“The act is motive of the act.”
“But why this act? Why sitting so?”
“No clue. It works. Just sitting so.”
“It works? You want it working so?”
“No want. Just see it’s working so.”
“But seeing makes you want it, no?”
“No want. Just see. Just act. Just sit.”
“You’re full of bullshit, Roshi dude.”
“You say I’m good for nothing, yes?”
“Desire? For a compliment?”
“Haha, you catch me. Catch me good.”
Category: Poems
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Shikantaza
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Heirloom bells
With every step, she stops to check
The source of all the jingliness.
But clever bells, before she tells,
Go hide inside a tingliness.She takes it off her waist, and yet,
No matter how much gummed or thumbed,
The little bells still hide so well
Inside her heirloom cummerbund. -
Gentle Tap
I wake up to a gentle tap,
Though no one could have come inside.
I feel it like I feel the air.
So unmistakeable. It’s there.
I see the clock and almost gasp.
The day has passed. Or, almost passed.
My pen, my paper – where are they?
My phone, my laptop – where are they?
There’s not much time.
There’s not much time.
There’s nothing on my canvas mind,
There’s nothing I can craft to words,
Except the gentle tap I heard
Inside my dreamless, solid sleep –
A tap that must have come from deep. -
Alien Primate
He says he comes from Germany
To study urban monkey tribes,
And how they mark territory
Migrating up the coastal lines.He flatters both our parents’ work:
His Physics, her Zoology.
Appreciates their influence
On research grant authorities.He flashes shiny tools and gears,
With sponsorships from big-big names.
And flicking through some photographs,
Recounts adventures in our state.He asks if we have spotted them:
His monkeys with the collar tags.
Why can’t he track their GPS,
We ask, if they have collar tags.He shifts a little here and there
And draws a lengthy jargon loop.
Our mother blinks and asks him straight,
“So, biped monkeys hazed a newb?”Gorilla German shrinks to Chimp.
The Alpha gives Omega shrugs.
And flicking falling strands of hair,
Recounts a mugging at a pub. -
If sleep arrives
If sleep arrives, it stays the night.
No more I’m woken by my dreams.
If sleep arrives at all, that is.
No more my mother hears my screams.The breathing forms, the prayer beads,
The air conditioner, newly bought –
They all invite my sleep at night,
But nothing’s like your tablets, Doc.They zombie me. They fatten me.
They make me lose my games of chess.
They make me make excuses, but
They bring my sleep like nothing else.Of course, I flushed them long ago.
Addictions I have quite galore.
That doesn’t stop me missing them.
I miss so much and so much more.Some nights I toss a coin and know
No sleep will come, no thoughts will go.
These nights, I sit and stare at stars
And watch the dew drop slowly grow. -
Callusing the mind
“You smell of booze and something wrong.”
“The something wrong is ganja, Mom.”
“I thought you touched only the cake.”
“I touch them all. Just don’t partake.”
“You passive drink? That makes you stink?”
“If spilled on you for saying no.”
“And why exactly do you go?”
“Because I’ve lived a sheltered life.”
“And now you crave the other side?”
“I’m simply callusing my mind.”
“And what exactly do you find?”
“How weak I am. How much I fear.”
“You find this in the stink of beer?”“I find this when I’m shoved around.
I find this when they laugh at me.
I find this when they call me names.
I find this when they spit at me.”“My God! You could be anywhere.
You never have to see these men.
This town is getting to your head.
Should we just go to Mumbai, then?”“I’m not afraid of what they do.
My weakness isn’t helplessness.
These men are stuck here. I am not.
They want to scare, but they cannot.
These men are weak. They drink to puff.
They know I’m made of sterner stuff.
I’m weak because I lose my calm,
Forget myself, and get alarmed,
Despite my knowing they can’t hurt.
Before I know I start to blurt
The things I know will pinch them deep.
I’ve made a grown man almost weep.
I fear the weapon of my tongue.
No, not because I may get stung.
I’ve lashed it out on blameless friends,
Who challenged me from innocence,
Who stood up when I was at fault,
Whose words I labeled as assault.
I go because I’m insecure.
I get so easily provoked.
I go to learn to calm my rage.
As calm as if I’ve really smoked.”“May not have smoked, but you are drunk.
You like it when you lash your tongue.
You bully those who cannot speak
As well as you, and call them weak?
They drink, they smoke, get on their way.
That’s more than what you’ve done today.
Accept that there are things beyond
Your power to control. Respond,
Instead, by simply going back
To where you’d left your chosen track.
Its challenges are tough enough
To prove you’re made of sterner stuff.
You think it will not drive you mad?
Remember all the scares you’ve had?
You’re hiding from your actual work,
Because it’s easy now to shirk.
Your Dad is gone. You blame yourself.
He was beyond our mortal help.
No need to go somewhere and fight.
You have the time? Sit down and write.” -
Irresolute
The barber who came by today,
The one who claims, “I’ve shaved you all” –
My father (dead), my uncle (dead),
Their father (dead), their uncle (dead),
Their distant cousin (almost dead),
And me, when I was one year old –
Deduced I am “irresolute”.I laughed despite the blade he grazed
Against my prickly clover chin.
“And why exactly am I that?”
He blew upon my shaven skin,
And razed the Adam’s Apple slow.
“Just look at how your beard grows.
See, this way, that way, swirly, cursed.
A nightmare for our razorwork.
It’s like it’s trying to be rude.
Directionless. Irresolute.”“And how were my forebears’ beards?”
“Oh! They were straight and silk and sparse.
And nothing like your prickly brush.”
Before I spoke, I heard him hush!
“I’ll cut you if you move so much.
Unless you straighten out your ways,
You’ll have your bloody shaving days.”He sounded almost menacing.
This toothless, though unfrazzeled, king
Who sat upon his three-legged throne,
And held his court from door-to-door,
At least the ones that opened still.
“Your father had an iron will.
Don’t shame him like this anymore.
Make up your mind. Become his pride.
And get yourself a decent bride.” -
My body knows
Now, where is it? I wrote something.
About an hour, I wrote something.
My body knows I wrote it all.
Or, was it just a fevered dream?Anthropomising all my fears
As children I have tumbled with,
As faster boys in games of Tag,
As quieter girls in Hide and Seek,As little children beating me
In every game I play with them,
Except in chess, where I don’t lose:
They win because they blunder less.There’s nothing on the paper, though.
There’s nothing on my Google Keep.
My body knows I wrote it all.
But, was it just a fevered dream?The characters are fading now.
And not the way when I awake.
The way they do once I am done
Imprisoning them on a page.My soaken bed shows sweaty sleep.
My mother’s face, that I have screamed.
My body knows I wrote it all.
And yet, it was a fevered dream. -
My grief is…
My grief is not the woe of loss.
It’s all the love I have for him,
But cannot give him anymore.It’s all the chess I’d learned for him
But cannot set the pieces for.It’s all the books I’d bought for him
But cannot read aloud to bed.It’s all the want to join him now,
But cannot, in the land of dead.My grief is not the woe of loss.
My grief is woe of hoarded junk. -
Congratulations!
She came as soon as she had heard –
A newborn in the Brahmin house.
Perhaps, a boy? Perhaps, a girl?
If boy, they’ll give her gold for sure.
If girl, at least, a saree pair.
She stopped outside to catch her breath.
She stood up straight, then bulged a hip,
Then with a smile, she clapped her hands.
“Congratulations, Brahmin Sir!”
“Congratulations, Brahmin Maa!”
She swayed her hips and walked inside.
The twenty-somethings looked at her.
Then looked at fifty-somethings there.
The first-time mother cried aloud.
The first-time father looked around.
The fifty-somethings stayed inert.
“Come, take this devil out of here.”
A devil? What is going on?
“Hey you! Come here and take this out.”
She walked, no longer swaying hips,
To where an infant slept in peace.
A devil? Yes, a devil. Sure.
Not boy, not girl. Not human, so.
She picked it up and stood up straight.
With swaying hips, she smiled around,
And clapping breast, she sang in joy,
“Congratulations, Hijra Tai!”
“Congratulations, Kinnar Maa!”