Thursday, 26 March 2026

Constipation

I come from

two contrasting generations of sperm cells;


a grandfather

whose poetry and politics

were equally loud and boisterous,


and a father

who chose subtlety

when it came to both words and wings:

so subtle

he could flip sides

without twitching eyebrows.


I was twelve

when I realised

the reason my grandfather

doesn’t speak to his brothers

is that they chose

a different flavour of communism.


Same tree.

Different branches.

And yet

that was enough

to make the roots of blood tremble.


I was twelve

when I realised

politics and petrol

should never be left out in the open;

give them oxygen

and they will burn down

entire civilisations.


Two decades later,

it is compulsory

to be political.


And being it

is not enough.


You must declare it.

Perform it.

Repeat it

until your politics

becomes tinnitus

in the ears of everyone around you.


Question one side

and you are accused

of being the other, 

with assumptions

too starved

to scrape past elementary algebra.


Call yourself apolitical

and they look at you

as if they are civilisation

and you are the jungle.


You see,

I have a persistent problem.


On one side,

a faith 

that diagnoses change for cancer, 

that worships the past

in the present

as the only future.


On the other,

a faith 

that calls change the singular truth, 

even when it abandons logic,

even when they can't quite add it up.


And I keep wondering, 

why can sanity not live

on the fringes,

in the middle,

or beyond them?


Why must thought

always pick a uniform?

Why must disagreement

always declare allegiance?


In a world

that cannot stop

emptying itself

loudly, publicly, endlessly,

and every street

stinks of ideological diarrhoea,

I refuse to flow.

I choose

to be constipation.

Wednesday, 25 March 2026

I Don't Wish To Paint Like You

I’ve never really been a painter.


You see, in my head

the word "painter" sprawls

in acrylic shades of a colouring palette.


And I could never quite find inspiration in colours.


It’s hard to, 

in a colourblind world

that sees skins

as pastel shades.


I paint what I see, 

how I see, 

in tinges and hues

of monochrome.


The colourblind call it

black and white.


Binary

is a convenient illusion

for the mathematically challenged.


I, though, call it

dwelling in greys, 

and the occasional burnt sienna.


I don’t sketch outlines.

I don’t reach for erasers.


I scribble.

I splatter. 


Blank page. 

Blank canvas. 


Bending lines. 

Pushing boundaries. 


A lot like 

the becoming of life;

no rough work,

no undo button,

no emergency exits.


But, 

what about 

getting it right

you ask. 


Right

isn’t the absence of wrong.

It is arriving

in spite of it.


In a world

that wants canvases

to look like photographs,

and photographs

to look like augmented realities, 

I am only

scribbling flawed faiths

and idiosyncratic incongruities

with absolute disrespect

for grammar.


How dare I call myself a painter?


When all I’ve done

is refuse

your colours, 

and still

paint.

Tuesday, 24 March 2026

The Syntax Of Survival

Life isn’t the story

you tell

after brushing lips with death.


That is spectacle.


A bullet.

A blade.

A bus. 

A bulldozer. 

A moment

loud enough

to be remembered.


Sudden.

Overwhelming.

Singular.


And singulars

are easy.


They arrive complete.

They leave behind

a clean sentence.


Life

is not written

in singular.


It stutters.

It repeats.


It refuses

completion.


Life is plural.

Not just

not dying once;

but surviving

again

and again

and again.


It is

not breaking the nib

when the hand trembles.

Not tearing the page

when the ink

thickens

into something

that feels like blood.


Because unlike death, 

surviving life

is not an event.

It has no witnesses.

No applause.

No language

that stays.


It is the discipline

of continuation.

And continuation

is not heroic.

It is mechanical.

A body

choosing

not to stop

without knowing why.


You are not alive

because you chose to be.

You are alive

because you have not

stopped.


And that's as hopeful

as hope ever gets. 


Hope

is not light.

Hope

is repetition.


And repetition

does not ask

if it means anything.


It continues.


So do you.

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

The Grammar Of Sinking

Grief ushers in

like rivers at the break of monsoon;

no warnings,

no lifeboats.


No rain checks either.

It comes all at once.


Before you blink

it has you in a chokehold.


You try to put it to words.

But grief is not the loss of words;

it is the loss

of the meaning of them.


Your throat knots.

Your tongue dries.


You drink water.

It feels no different.


You wish you could erupt

into laments,

into screams,

into torrential downpours.


But the forecast says

overcast skies.

No chance of rain.


So you perspire instead.


Earlobes warm.

Insides parched.


A season

changing inside the body.


The kind that keeps you awake

through the night,

bedsheets damp,


as if the skin erupted

because the eyes could not.




Grief has definitions.

Definitions have boundaries.


And what is bound

eventually runs out

of breadth

and breath.


But what do you call it

when miserable indifference

becomes your primordial instinct?


Not feeling.


Instinct.


Feeling belongs to language.

Instinct belongs to survival.


What do you call it

when sleep each night

feels like sinking

another inch

into an unfathomable abyss,


and morning feels like swimming

towards a shore

in the middle of an ocean

that refuses to move closer?


Every night

the inches add up.


Every morning

you are exactly where you began:


dead centre

of a bottomless sea.




There is rage.

There is pity.

There is loathing.

There is pathos.


And beyond all of it,


hope.


But hope is light.


And when you have lived

with the lights out

for days

and weeks

and months,


sunlight

feels like assault.


Hope is different

for the floating

and the sinking.


Not drowning.


Sinking.


Drowning is sudden.


Sinking

is patient.


Measured.


As if time itself

has decided

to take its time with you.


For the sinking ones,


drowning

is hope.


It refuses

the slow-burning road

to a conclusion.


Befitting or not

is irrelevant.


Some semicolons

are kinder

as full stops.




You wish you could act on it.


The terrain is familiar.

You have been here before.

You have tried before.


But this time

you cannot gather yourself

even for that.


Even when the water

is already at your ears.


Even when letting go

might be the only mercy.


If mercy exists.


So you resist sleep,


because every good night

is another inch deeper

into the abyss.


And yet when sleep arrives

you hope


there will be

no more mornings.


But time

is terribly patient.


And the one thing killing you

is the only thing

keeping you alive.


Your cancer

is your cure. 

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Trial By Blood, Verdict By Water

I am the judge.

Robes stiffened with ritual righteousness. 

Gavel molten, breathing fire, screaming justice.

Conscience sharper than sharpened glass.

The floor trembles. Walls sweat blood and pus. 

Air coils like serpents whispering unholy.

Dust crawls away. Shadows tremble. I do not sit. I descend.


Judgement is inheritance.

By blood. By caste. By closeness to the gods.

My forefathers ruled here. Their verdicts were holy, sanctified in their blue blood. Their hands carved eternity.


On my chair. On the throne of a judge.

Verdicts passed where they must not.

What an absolute abomination.

A filthy stain. A defilement.

The gods recoiled. History shivered.

I inhale that sin. So I can exhale righteousness.

It is my duty to purify. To exorcise. To remake holiness.


And as I unleash Gangajal on the floors of a room sheathed in justice, it hisses like acid from heaven. 

Ink writhes, climbs walls, twists into screaming faces.

Rats kneel. Clerks vomit holy obedience. Paper bleeds. Shadows dance in homage to the ancestors.

Even democracy is a hallucination. 

Dalits breathing Brahmin air? Blasphemy. Horror.

The gods shudder. Faith trembles. History bends under terror.


I bite the pen. I lick the chair. I taste sin. I exhale holiness.

Walls convulse. Ceiling bleeds. Floor vomits dust.

The Dalit flickers; mocking, ephemeral, untouchable.

Judgment is not in his chromosomes.

He can only be judged. Only condemned. Only measured against eternal, inherited law.


I summon the chamber alive.

Ink twists into serpents. Rats scream prayers. Clerks twist, vomit, collapse into worship.

Air coils. Steam rises. Shadows writhe in grotesque obedience.

Gavel melts into molten judgment. Tea turns to bitter ash. Obedience is absolute. Judgment bends only to me.


I rotate the pen thrice. I pour gangajal. I sip molten tea. I bite the pen.

I taste impurity. I exhale holiness.

Walls sweat blood and pus. Floor trembles. Ceiling convulses.

All bends. All submits. All is mine.


I am the judge.

I am divine.

I am eternal.

I am the eye of law.

I am holiness incarnate.


And yet…

The Dalit exists.

Invisible. Untouchable. Defiant.

Like sins do.


Forever beneath me.

Never presiding. Never judging. Only judged. Only condemned.

Cockroaches in my kitchen corners have more power.


I pour more gangajal.

Ink writhes like vipers. Chairs twist and split. Rats kneel, bleed, sing holy songs.

Clerks vomit, choke, weep in obedience. Shadows fold into themselves.

Walls bend. Floor cracks. Ceiling screams.

All bends. All submits. All is mine.


I sip tea. I bite the pen. I taste sin. I exhale holiness.

Obedience is absolute. Judgment bends only to me.

I am the judge. I am divine. I am eternity.


The Dalit flickers.

He is untouchable. Defiant. Haunted.

But he will never sit.

He will never judge.

He can only ever be judged.

He can only ever be condemned.

Like cockroaches crawling my kitchen corners.


I pour gangajal on the air.

On shadows. On ink. On trembling clerks.

On the ghosts of Dalits swallowed by my forefathers’ holiness.

All bends. All submits. All is mine.


I am the judge.

I am divine.

I am eternal.

I am law.

I am holiness incarnate.

I am God’s own hand, His wrath, His eye, His voice.

The only. The truly.



The molten gavel drips Gangajal onto the floor where corpses of forgotten Dalits curl into prayer, and even the shadows writhe, seared with the eternal scars of my justice.

Monday, 2 March 2026

Scar Tissue

There’s hope.

Ointment.

Scissors.

Knives.


For scar tissue

ECGs and X-rays can detect,

opposable thumbs can reach.


For the unreachable,

the undetected,

poetry is blister.


No cure.

Just ruins recollecting rummage.


If I could, I would have saved

all that paper, all those ink blots

pretending to be meaning.

If I could, I would have been eco-friendly.


Paper and poetry are futile brilliance to be paid for in lifetimes.

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Kingdom Of Grains & Bones

Is it the king’s foot soldiers

or the farmers cooked in sweltering heat

that let the kingdom breathe?


When the crown inhales,

is it smoke from rifles

or steam rising from wounded earth at dawn?


Answer carefully.


Every empire has mistaken

the sound of marching

for the sound of survival.


Is violence fodder for civilisation,

or is fodder what civilisation fattens

so it may auction violence

beneath ceilings lacquered in obedience?


Do you think a throne can stand on femurs of steel?

How long can a ribcage hold a rifle

before it forgets how to hold hunger?


Can you build a kingdom of starved sentinels,

feed them flags instead of bread,

feed them enemies until appetite becomes allegiance,

feed them obedience until their spines

calcify into permanent salutes?


Would you trade grains for bullets?


Would you grind harvest into ammunition

and baptise it patriotism?

Would you salt the earth with blood and bones

and call it fertile?


If you would, 

you are where you should be;

buried in the marrows of history,

carved into the sculpted silence of stone.


But if you would not, 

tell me this:


Why do you riddle the house of grains with bullets each time it dares to speak?

Why must every barn that questions blood

become an altar?

Why must the soil prove loyalty

in corpses per acre?


You say the kingdom must survive.


But survival is not dominion.

And dominion is not breath.


Gunfire does not germinate.

Rifles do not photosynthesise.

Anthems cannot be boiled into porridge.

Borders do not sprout from bone.


We have mistaken blood-boots for heartbeats.


You cannot salt the earth with men

and expect wheat to forgive you.

You cannot starve the hands that feed you

and then blame the famine on dissent.


The kingdom breathes, yes —

but listen closely.

That is not oxygen.

It is a wheeze.


A throne pressing its full weight

on the ribs of the hungry.


And when the ribs give way, 

the kingdom will finally learn what it was built on.


The mouth that demands worship swallows its own tongue.