Category: Poems

  • Stay away from her

    I showed the little one a rose,
    Which then arose a little smile:
    A half-moon toothless pure delight
    As flighty as a midnight kite.

    Her raven eyes of seven weeks
    Then followed the uneven path
    Along the branches of the rose:
    An avalanche of bugs were close.

    So, usually I let them be
    The butterflies I love to see.
    And yet today I knew I couldn’t.
    I fully squished my inner “shouldn’t”.

    The horror: itchy silky fur
    On milky, velvet baby skin!
    Avuncular protectiveness
    Effected swift effectiveness.

    I took my little angel back,
    And stacked my plans for bug attack.
    Remembering a previous rhyme,
    I let them climb a plate of lime.

    I saw them curl and shed their fur
    With relish of a predator.

  • Havana Sweet

    When CIA declassified
    A bunch of files on Berhampur —
    Oh yes, my little seaside town
    Was worth a couple local spies
    To CIA’s ongoing watch
    Against the rise of communists
    In Cuba, China, Russia,
    By way of Berhampur-on-sea —
    Allegedly, allegedly.

    So, yeah, when they declassified
    A bunch of files on Berhampur,
    I finally, then, understood
    Why Russian couples coupled here
    And left a little ghetto street,
    So full of “Anglo-Indians” —
    Allegedly, allegedly —
    Who smelled of books and something else
    My uncle called “Havana Sweet”.

    I finally, then, understood
    Why Russian novels sold so cheap
    In road-side stalls across the town,
    And every man of “cultured taste”
    Had shelves and shelves of Russian books
    In red or wheatish leatherback.

    I finally, then, understood
    Why Burmese teak was used to build
    These ornate crates for libraries
    Of certain naval officers
    Who steered their ships on certain days
    Away from currents in the sea.

    The CIA reports revealed —
    Allegedly, allegedly —
    Discrepancies in volume, weight
    Of shipped-in crates of sugarcane
    On cargo ships from Cuban coasts.
    Allegedly, allegedly,
    Evaporation was the cause,
    Along with all the “chipperings”
    Of rodents on its dried-up leaves.

    The sugarcane unloaded here
    And sat with “Anglo-Indians”
    Who also owned their own produce
    In greenery of Ganjam fields —
    The Ganjam fields that got their name,
    Allegedly, allegedly,
    From yields and yields of Ganja green.

    The Burmese ships that brought the books
    From mainland China, Russia,
    In ornate crates of Burmese teak,
    Returned towards the Comrade States
    With sugarcane, et cetera,
    For comrades sporting thin cigars.
    And Cuban ships returned their way
    With crates of priceless literature
    For farmers signing with their thumbs.

    Alas, the Winter of the World
    Was soon to freeze Atlantic routes
    With missile-loaded submarines.
    And Globalising India,
    Was soon to freeze Berhampur roots
    In greenery of Ganjam fields.

    Alas, the little ghetto street
    Is left with “Indian fishermen”
    Of questionable ancestry —
    Allegedly, allegedly —
    Who smell of fish and something else
    My father calls “Rangooni Gills”.

  • Anti-vegan Day

    I’ve found in me a new disease:
    A voice that tells me, “Give up, please.
    You need to rest, you need a break,
    To eat a slice of velvet cake,
    To crunch your way through chicken fried.
    It’s fine, you know? At least, you tried.”

    I roll my eyes, say, “Nicest try!”
    It simply smiles and winks a bye,
    Until again the ghrelin drips
    And shows me sizzling bacon strips.
    “A day a week is not so bad.
    Remember virtues Stoics had?
    So, practice bit of Temperance.
    You know what makes a ton of sense?
    The middle path the Buddha taught.
    A day a week is not a lot.”

    I roll again my traitor eyes
    And grab a fistful peanut fries.
    The extra salt I do not mind.
    I pat my tum, “Be kind. Be kind.”

  • Autoscopy

    It often happens late at night.
    I see myself with lizard sight:
    A foetal man with fatal flaws
    Engrossed in some subsomnic fight.

    I scuttle down the eastern wall
    To watch my arches rise and fall
    In step with rapid charging drums
    Of some subdermal martial call.

    I land upon the bed to scan,
    Despite the roaring ceiling fan,
    The dampness of a bloodied field
    In some subthermal shape of man.

    And back I go into my head,
    To see the lizard flee in dread.
    I hear its fear vibrate so clear
    On some subsonic brahman thread.

  • Reminder Prayer

    O Infinite within me, please,
    Remind me on my days of grief
    I live no more to only live.

    My life is worthless anyway
    Except on days I live to give.
    To give whoever I can give
    Whatever little I can give.
    To live enough another day
    To give enough another day.

    Remind, when things are tough for me,
    That having You’s enough for me.
    It may be years before I see
    That I am You and You are Me.
    Until the day, remind me, please,
    I live to give until I cease.

  • To do or not to do

    I feel embarrassed to admit
    I haven’t got the slightest clue
    Of what I want to do beyond
    A daily life of crafting lines.

    It’s not even my Ikigai.
    It’s not something the world will buy.
    It’s not something the world will need.
    It’s just a thing I want to do.
    And maybe I am good at too.

    It’s “good” in strictly private sense.
    Of all the skills I now possess,
    With crafting lines, I feel Success.
    It doesn’t mean I’m good enough
    To move a reader with my stuff.

    I know the lines won’t pay my bills.
    I know the lines won’t school my kids.
    I know the lines won’t cure disease.
    I know the lines won’t bring me peace.

    But lines are where I feel so true.
    And maybe I am meant for too.
    But maybe I have got no clue
    Of what to do, what not to do.

  • To do or not to do

    I feel embarrassed to admit
    I haven’t got the slightest clue
    Of what I want to do beyond
    A daily life of crafting lines.

    It’s not even my Ikigai.
    It’s not something the world will buy.
    It’s not something the world will need.
    It’s just a thing I want to do.
    And maybe I am good at too.

    It’s “good” in strictly private sense.
    Of all the skills I now possess,
    With crafting lines, I feel Success.
    It doesn’t mean I’m good enough
    To move a reader with my stuff.

    I know the lines won’t pay my bills.
    I know the lines won’t school my kids.
    I know the lines won’t cure disease.
    I know the lines won’t bring me peace.

    But lines are where I feel so true.
    And maybe I am meant for too.
    But maybe I have got no clue
    Of what to do, what not to do.

  • I’m an addict

    I woke up one day to realise
    My hostel room was a landfill dump.
    The universe under my bed,
    Which had promised me infinity,
    Was running out of appetite
    For plastic wrappers of my gluttony.
    It spit out all my basketballs
    Of crunched up crispy “party packs”
    I gulped down by the triple dose,
    Protecting fellow hostelers
    From evil junk food overlords.

    I was the segregation secretary:
    The plastic went under my bed,
    The tasty went under my skin,
    And though my bed gave up on me,
    My growing girth assured me that
    It will support me all the way
    Even beyond the edges of
    The judgy mirror on the wall.

    I couldn’t stand the wrappers, though.
    I couldn’t stand them on the floor,
    On the table, on the shelves,
    On the shut down window sill.
    Everywhere. Everywhere. Everywhere.
    Reminding me of treacheries
    Slumping out from underneath.
    I pulled the mattress off the bed,
    And tractored into the room next door,
    Announcing to my best friend that
    I will be sleeping on his floor
    Until the end of present term.
    And can I dump my stuff on yours?
    Was all he ever asked of me.

    No wonder I can’t stand the room
    Inside my digital marketing head
    When on a pillow on the floor
    I sit in meditation, quiet.
    No wonder I can’t sleep at nights.
    I run into my buzzing phone
    Into the strobe-lit 4K minds
    Of movie czars and YouTube stars,
    Bingeing bingeing bingeing on.

  • What it really looks like

    Someone who shares the house with me
    Someone who’s asked me many things
    Someone who knows me very well
    Has asked me why I never write.

    I say, I’m writing all the time.
    He says he’s never seen me write.
    And if at all he’s seen me write,
    It’s never more than half an hour.
    I say, I’m writing all the time.

    It doesn’t look like writing, though.
    I’m nowhere near a desk or chair.
    I’m nowhere near a page or pen.
    I’m nowhere near a key or click.

    It looks like kneading dinner flour.
    It looks like filling bottles up.
    It looks like tearing spider webs.
    It doesn’t look like writing, though.

    It looks like nailing finger scabs.
    It looks like charting lizard paths.
    It looks like pacing up and down.
    It doesn’t look like writing, though.

    It looks like jumping over dung.
    It looks like slipping on the mud.
    It looks like running from a bull.
    It doesn’t look like writing, though.

    It looks like glitchy office calls.
    It looks like sipping coffees, tall.
    It looks like slamming laptops shut.
    It doesn’t look like writing, though.

    And when it does, it’s mostly done.
    It’s mostly coming to the page
    And letting all this writing out
    By getting far away from me
    And trusting I have done the work.

  • Autumn harvest

    Grief ripens on an autumn tree
    With eight-legged persistence of
    A spider as its final leaf.
    A friend succeeds eventually,
    Believing he’s Robert Bruce
    Entangled in the web of Life
    Who’s trying trying trying hard
    To cut down all his earthly ties.