Monday, 25 May 2026

What Will It Take To Take Me Down

It’ll take a lot more than sticks and stones

and marrow-hollowed bones.


It’ll take a lot more than whispers and charades

and rose-tinted princess parades.


It’ll take a lot more than matchsticks and gasoline

and brains shrink-wrapped in cellophane.


It’ll take a lot more than paper straws and a misplaced Plath,

and air-conditioned fits of rehearsed wrath.


It’ll take a lot more than black lipstick and kohl-eyed sighs,

and rebellion stitched into readymade ties.


It’ll take a lot more than revolutions sold as grocery,

and trauma repackaged as ancestral sorcery.


It’ll take a lot more than pastel scratches and iced teas,

and flightless birds and headless bees.


It’ll take a lot more than borrowed rage

sold in cafĂ© lights, 

and fashionable bruises mistaken for fights.



It’ll take a lot more than all of those and a frown,

to drown a thing that survived learning how to drown.

Scarecrow

Back when elephants grew on trees

and holy cows ruled the ill-lit jungles,


there lived a crow, who’d caw through days and nights

like cawing was the only thing she was made of.


She cawed at the cows,

and the monkeys,

and the pigeons,

and the leopards, 

and they all turned away,

because that is how the jungle learned to treat noise without teeth.


The crow thought otherwise though;

elated how every soul in the jungle was terrified of her.


She was a magician, and fear was her sleight of hand.


Then one afternoon,

she cawed at a wolf.


She cawed, and cawed, and cawed, 

and followed it too far to turn back.


And when she finally ran out of distance,

the wolf held her by the throat

and kept chewing at her silence

while her eyes stayed open.

Oh Darling, I'm A Romantic

Oh darling, I’m a romantic.


I love you

like the constitution loves its criminals,

like pesticides love writhing worms.


I love you

like a butcher’s knife loves flesh.

Press against me hard enough

and I’ll watch you drain out of yourself.



Oh darling, I’m a romantic. 


Stain me

and I’ll dry-clean you

on a rope strung oblique.

If Only People Could Be Particles

If faiths decided the virtue of believers,

and intentions were defined by revolutions,

if ideas were enough to civilise instinct,


every religion would function

with more consistency

than quantum fucking physics.

Emulated Epiphanies (Extended Beginning)

I heard someone once say, "the angry have a visible epiglottis", in the name of poetry

and I thought to myself, what a waste of words to throw up unadulterated bullcrap!


A visible epiglottis isn’t poetic,

merely anatomy.


If anger were a measure of righteous,

matchsticks would arbitrate justice.

If screams could weigh casualties,

autopsy rooms would be the loudest.


An epiglottis is as much an epiphany

as a shrunken ball-sac;

worth a thought when functional,

and an embarrassing metaphor

when it mistakes imitation for origin.

Emulated Epiphanies

A visible epiglottis isn’t poetic,

merely anatomy.


If anger were a measure of righteous,

matchsticks would arbitrate justice.

If screams could weigh casualties,

autopsy rooms would be the loudest.


An epiglottis is as much an epiphany

as a shrunken ball-sac;

worth a thought when functional,

and an embarrassing metaphor

when it mistakes imitation for origin.

Saturday, 23 May 2026

Weather Update

Last night, an acquaintance got small talking, 

it’s something acquaintances apparently do, 

and I’ve only just recently come to realise

there’s no gentle way to ask someone to fuck off,

so I indulged

in stretching the conversational rubber band.



“What’s with the weather?” he asked,

with politically correct politeness.



It’s the kind of weather

that makes you crave a good cup of tea.

That way you know

if you’d ever be invited over.


But more importantly because,

the one who was supposed to be selling tea

is presently unavailable,

preoccupied selling what a billion and a half

call a democracy, apparently.


I can neither confirm nor deny;

both require documented evidence,

and let’s just say,

our good old grandfather

isn’t particularly fond of paper, 

or as he calls it,

being eco-friendly.


The one thing he hates more than paper

is evidence.


Because imagine

every grandfather having to prove

all the rivers they crossed to get to school,

or the simpler fact

that they ever went to one.


Twelve summers

of broken spines,

jailed mouths,

London Bridges falling down

like architecture fell in love with gravity,


and an army of monkeys

scratching and biting

until you agree

the only colour this country

and its people

could ever bleed

was saffron.


Because crimson

is too reminiscent of criminal evidence,

and by now

we know

dear old grandfather

abhors the idea of evidence.


At an age

most reconsider life choices

and potential osteoarthritis,

dear old grandfather gathers around

his pack of hyenas, 

or as he likes to call them,

the petals of the lotus

he’s the epicentre of.


Lotuses are very specifically precise

to his peer group.


Both thrive in

and from

absolute and utter filth.


Almost as if

they are a walking, talking, breathing

washing machine —


or as he prefers being called,

the geopolitical Ganges

of a nation

being told

its past

is the only future

it ever had.


Dear old grandfather wakes every morning

complaining

how noisy and nosy

his neighbours are,

sipping imported tea

from saffron-embossed porcelain

bought and paid for

with taxes he collects

like inheritance mistaken for birthright.


He doesn’t read newspapers.

Partly because

one can’t quite tell

if he ever learned to read,

but more importantly because

he dislikes anything

that doesn’t have him printed in capitals

across the front page,

the back page,

and every page in between.


Every now and then

he reaches for his designer chappal.

Now don’t you dare judge him

for million-dollar footwear

while he hands you a list

of everything

you shouldn’t be buying,

because greed

is his sole inheritance.


He reaches for those chappals

every time he sees a cockroach.

Word has it

he’s been suffering

a rather severe infestation lately,

and it’s got his cholesterol-choked heart

beating rather fast.


A grandfather however obnoxious

you are taught not to pray ill for,

and we are, after all,

a land of cultured chromosomes,

so we ruin another night’s sleep

breathing through

his audacious farts.


I could have called him an appendix,

but appendices,

when arrogant enough,

can be uprooted overnight.


He is, to be factually precise,

a variant

of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus:

the Hindutva Immunodeficiency Virus.


A potentially lethal,

definitely contagious disease,

mostly spread

through unprotected mindfuckery,

commonly found

in civilisationally virgin nuisances

desperately seeking purpose

through the pointless pride

of a polluted past.


And the most fascinating thing

about the HIV virus

is how effectively

it convinces the body

its own cells

are the enemy.


Because once you wage war

against yourself,

death becomes

a matter of clockwork.


Imagine believing

you’re a martyr,

when all you ever were

was the last nail

in your own fucking coffin.

Imagine drinking cow piss

as beverage,

and still wondering

why your skull,

split open,

smells of stale bullshit

and fresh cow dung.



“I had just asked

what’s with the weather,”

is, I’ve just discovered,

a remarkably efficient way

to lose acquaintances.