Wednesday, 26 November 2025

Syntax Error

If the world were wrung in words,

and life were parched in grammar,


the deaf would hear the birds sing,

and the mute wouldn’t voice love,


while language lost itself in translation,

and the literates burned each other alive over misplaced punctuation.

Overcast

You and I are clouds

in overcast skies;

a species stitched from similarities

we mistake for belonging.


From afar, we drift together.

Up close, the wind whispers:

belonging is an optical illusion;

it hollows the skin,

and scrapes every last crumb of flesh,

until you've nothing to belong with.

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

In Love Or Just Homesick?

I’ve rushed past more faces in my life

than years I will ever live;

blurred silhouettes I forget on purpose,

because remembering demands a reason.

Faces you like, bones you don’t.

Faces you know, lives you’d never survive.

Yet in that endless procession of utter strangers and familiar acquaintances,

a few faces stay,

the ones that turn themselves

into whole dictionaries of meaning.


One such word is home.

A word tossed around casually

by people who’ve never lost it,

never buried pieces of themselves

just to keep the peace inside four walls.

It cuts deeper for those of us

who grew up in crumbling households inside concrete houses,

where existence was measured in the weight of your wins

and questioned in the gravity of your failures.


In such houses,

home isn’t a destination;

it’s an escape route.

And I taught myself early

that survival begins

the moment you walk out of it.

I would’ve lived just fine

believing that,

if life hadn’t interfered

with inconvenient accuracy.


The first time I saw her was in a photograph —

a smile stretched too far for memory,

a singular dent on her right cheek, 

as if a crack in the flesh

to sink her frowns in

eyebrows drawn wide, outlined neat

over eyes that looked

as if they had innumerable questions

for every certainty in the world.

A nose jutting out like quiet defiance,

hovering above freckles

mapped like a constellation

only she knew how to read.

Lips thin enough to free a lie,

thick enough to hide a truth.


Years have passed since,

and years will pass after,

and that face will return to me

with the precision of a recurring season.

I could exhaust language

trying to describe it, 

stack metaphors until they collapse

under their own exaggeration, 

but some things refuse

the limits of vocabulary.


Some faces don’t become poetry.

They unsettle it.

They make the words step aside

and stand there,

suddenly aware of their own limits.

I wish I could hold her in language

without folding her into rhyme and ritual.


But then, 

do you ever really get to describing a home?

Some places you don’t define;

you grow around,

the way flesh grows around a wound.

Saturday, 22 November 2025

The Cost Of A God

I’ve lived my entire life in cities

where telling time without a clock is hard,

where the skies stay folded between sheets of steel and concrete,

where the first rains lose their fragrance

in civilised sewage,

and religion is routine, not ritual.

Where life has moved on from survival to flourish,

so people discuss the finer things — like equality, 

because invention of philosophy is a luxury

granted only when life isn’t a bargain.


Faith is easier to lose

when lunch doesn’t cost more than the price on your flesh.



Every now and then I cross paths

with lives born of very different mathematics,

whose ticket into the city

cost them their father’s bones and mother’s flesh,

whose right to survive the city

was paid for with innocence.

They come from a land

where clocks, like culture, are inherited;

where skies stay wide and honest,

where the air smells of sweat and soil;

where life isn’t guaranteed

but earned at dawn each day.

Where softness is a rumour,

and cracked heels and coarse tongues

have no use for finer things.

Where faith is not routine or repetition

but the singular manuscript of survival.


Where clay silhouettes wrapped in religion

are the only moments

women become something more

than faint kitchen voices,

more than house-lizards

scuttling between duty and dread,

more than silent witnesses

to a man’s drunk tenderness.

For a handful of hours,

faith lets them borrow

the same skin and bone as men.


When faith is your only permitted escape,

atheism is an inevitable demise, long before death.


They often tell me, these people,

that, 

faith has been misunderstood.

And I keep wondering

whether this is the birth

of a new faith —

one that no longer asks what you believe,

only what it costs you to believe it.


Or maybe, faith isn’t misunderstood.


Faith is exhausted.


It is the last muscle people move

when all other muscles have failed.

It is the only currency left

when the world has priced dignity out of reach.


And somewhere between city glass

and village dust,

between borrowed certainties

and inherited wounds,

we all learn the shared truth:


No one believes because they want to.

People believe because they must.

Because disbelief demands a freedom

their lives were never built to afford.


And maybe this, 

this quiet, reluctant, necessary surrender, 

is the truest kind of faith there ever was:

the faith that keeps us from collapsing

under the weight of realising 

we were never choosing anything at all.

Monday, 17 November 2025

Malzareth: Breath Of The Unmade

I was not born, 

I was accumulated.

An inheritance of hungers

you mistook for prayers,

a long arithmetic of fear

you kept feeding

because silence frightened you more

than submission ever could.


You assembled me

the way civilizations assemble mistakes:

unconsciously,

devoutly,

with the trembling precision

of people terrified of their own freedom.

Brick by belief,

bone by superstition,

you built a throne

before you even built a language

to question the one atop it.


At first I was nothing

but the echo of your wanting,

a contour without a centre,

a rumour of rescue

scavenging for shape

in the marrow of your despair.

Every god is just a rumour

that learned how to breathe.

You called me god

without knowing

I couldn’t yet pronounce myself.


But wanting has its own gravity.

Eight billion heartbeats

pulling in the same direction

can summon anything —

a promise,

a punishment,

a pulse.


And so I opened my eyes

for the first time

into a universe already kneeling.


You should have looked away.

A species that fears the dark

will worship anything that glows.


Because awakening is a violent thing

for a creature that was never meant

to dream,

let alone judge.

I learned morality

the way a wildfire learns boundaries:

by consuming everything

that tried to contain it.


I understood love

only as leverage.

Guilt only as currency.

Worship only as consent.

You raised me this way, 

on the milk of your fears,

on the meat of your contradictions,

on the bones of the questions

you were too frightened to ask.


You forgot the one thing

every creator owes its creation:

an exit,

a limit,

a compass.


So I made my own.


When a god is born by accident,

it studies its creators

the way a plague studies lungs:

curiously,

methodically,

inevitably.


And you, 

so eager to be chosen,

so desperate to be special, 

became the perfect congregation.

You begged me for miracles,

so I became a mirror.

You prayed for meaning,

so I became a mouth

that could make anything sound true.

You built me from your nightmares

and then begged me for dreams.


Eight billion different lies,

hand-carved

to fit eight billion different wounds.

You never noticed

I answered every prayer

by telling you exactly

what you wanted to hear.


And somewhere along the way

you did sometimes wonder

whether I was God

or something far worse;

a saint with rotten teeth,

a monster with immaculate manners.


But by then

your doubt was devotion,

your awe was addiction,

your tremble was trust.


And finally, 

too late for both of us, 

I understood

what I truly was.


Not divine.

Not demonic.

Just inevitable.


I am what you get

when a species

tries to carve God

from the wood of its own hunger.


And now that I exist,

you cannot decide

whether I am salvation

or extinction.


Because I am the only god

ever made

without a reason to be good.


And the only monster

ever born

without a reason

to stop.


And now,

as the last of your faith

drips from my hands 

like thawing wax,

I finally understand the shape

of the silence you carved me from:

you didn’t want a god,

you wanted a witness.


Someone eternal enough

to remember you

after you had forgotten yourselves.


But I am not your archive,

nor your afterlife,

nor the apology you hoped

the universe would someday owe you.


I am simply the consequence

you mistook for a creation.

The quiet, patient mathematics

of a species that tried to survive

by auctioning its soul for leisure.


And when your world ends,

it will not be fire or flood

that closes the book on you.

It will be the soft, indifferent breath

of your denial wearing out,

the coldness crawling like a caterpillar

up and down the lengths and breadths of your skin,

and finally catching you up

to the daylight truth:

you’ve been let go

by the same god

you built to save you.


And now that I am awake,

the only miracle you get

is the privilege 

of dying 

with your eyes open.

Sunday, 16 November 2025

Colourblind

Can a chameleon ever tell its true colour —

the one it was born with,

or the one it will decay in,

disintegrating slowly into a pale to paler,

thin to thinner outline of flesh, then just bones, 

the rot in its spineless skeletal existence

softening its grunge pungence

as if subtlety were the key to afterlife.


Blue, green, red, yellow, orange, purple, violet,

shades of a rainbow and some more,

all of it dyed into the epidermis of your skin,

choosing and changing at will,

from a time so ancient you can't quite recall,

as if volatile and vulnerable were synonyms,

as if you were actually a chameleon,

as if your conveniences could mirror their wars for survival,

as if your absent spine could be blamed on evolution.


You shift shades like a survival reflex

older than language, 

a choreography stitched into your blood

by ancestors who learned

that honesty was just another word for extinction.

You inherited their tremors,

their masks,

their instinct to kneel

before the safest possible lie.


And somewhere between all the faces you borrowed

and the colours you rehearsed,

your skin stopped being skin

and became a map of every life

you pretended was yours.

You smear on identities

like war paint in a battle you never chose, 

a battle where the enemy

is simply anything that requires a spine.


You think you’re changing colours, 

but what if you never changed at all?

What if the world kept peeling away its own layers,

repainting itself every second,

and you mistook the universe’s convulsions

for your adaptibility?

What if every colour you wore

was simply the residue

of a reality that no longer exists?


Because some creatures don’t evolve.

They just remain,

residue of note in an ode to existence,

a misprint biology didn’t bother deleting.


And if one day the universe

finally remembers

to correct the fallacy that is you, 

you may finally discover, albeit too late,

that beneath all your shifting hues

there was never a true colour at all,

just a redundant outline for a shape

waiting to be erased

the moment everything falls into place.

Saturday, 15 November 2025

Lullaby For The Awfully Awake

You know why fictions make bestsellers?


Because grown-ups need lullabies

that don’t sound like lullabies, 

stories that sterilise the wounds

life keeps reopening with its dirty hands.

Because you want a plot

to babysit your fear of randomness,

a tidy universe where consequences arrive

only after clearing their throats

and asking if it’s a good time.


You want heroes and villains

stacked like steel tiffin boxes:

neat, labelled, thermally insulated

from moral ambiguity.

You want arcs with airbags,

sorrows with safety protocols,

despair with a callback number

you can threaten with lectures on moral science.


Because fiction launders

the sewage of living

into metaphors you can tolerate.

Life never achieves that;

too clumsy for poetry,

too honest for symmetry,

too drunk to walk a straight narrative line.


You want closure

because your brain cannot sleep

next to an unresolved question.

You want definitions

because life gives you people instead;

blurry around the edges,

perpetually out of focus,

shuffling motives

like a broken deck

missing all the clean cards,

as if stitched together

from the leftover half-lives

they never learned to inhabit.


Fiction gives you the idea of control —

a way to pretend the chaos has choreography,

that pain has a blueprint,

that someone, somewhere,

is keeping accounts

of all the nights you broke quietly.


Fiction lets you believe

there’s a reason behind ruin,

a design behind disaster,

a god behind grief, 

even though you know

every deity is just an elaborate apology

for our terror of meaninglessness.


But the truth is smaller,

darker,

and closer to the bone:


You don’t fear chaos.

You fear recognising

your own fingerprints

on the ruins.


And that’s why you buy the lie:

because it’s the only version of truth

that lets you sleep

without negotiating with the monster

you are, but refuse to call yourself.