A word before you read

I am not really a poet and these are mere attempts to write poetry. I would conveniently call them free verse to escape criticism. I feel an urge to express an idea or a deep feeling or strong emotion or just describe a scene. The result is what you see.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Star Gazing



A power grid collapse can
tumble your surreally  lit world.
It’s then the hazy night casts
its coal coat over the earth
obliterating differences, neutralizing
everything in the light of darkness
except the distant starry ember topping.

Then when you peer into
the incomprehensible boundless void
of the countless star-studded heavens
realization jolts your entire being
of how false-safely ensconced you are
in your caged self,  your skin-wrapped universe,
with your space as large-little as your head
and how sagacious and big-headed
you pretend to be.

Then when you gaze long and steady
at those bone shaking starry void of heaven
Realization dawns
on the futility of expressing being
with mindless action of regressive progress;
on the wisdom of being  rooted in being,
wherein effortless becoming flows,
time dilates to the now of being from which you act.
Realization makes you
break into laughter
expand your being in inclusion
to throb in unison with the universe.

The stars will jolt you
and the heavens shatter you
on a night the power grid breaks.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

I You He


I’m a blue-eyed blonde
you are brown and he’s
black, you say
So what, I say
Scratch the micron skin
dig a little deep
we are all the same beneath:
tissues, marrow, blood and bones
a heart that beats and
a stomach that churns
you and he and I
in sorrow, grieve
in sadness, pine
in anger, roar
in joy, float
in jealousy, twist and turn.
So how are we different?
Did you say we are culturally different?
Beliefs, customs and art are not the same, I admit
but how does your colour argument fit?
A monotone one-cultured world
nature and nurture never unfolds.
Stop! Not again “this land is ours”!
Probe your history
‘whose land’ becomes a mystery.
Go up in space and look down
borders and boundaries blur
illusions of mind break down.
So drop your pretensions
wake up from your delusions and
walk naked my friend!

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Aged Beauty

Stooped she stands, a stick in hand
A gnarled tree, twisted and battered.
Her wrinkled face and shriveled arms
Like cracked barks of trees in farms
Mask tales of voluptuous flowery youth
And brisk fruitful womanhood
Of fleeting springs, ripe summers
Pleasant falls and bitter winters.

She sits with sunken eyes
Staring at vacant life, cold as ice
Her slipping thoughts are ropes to cling
To memorable things no more to sing.
The bulging veins on her neck and hands
Once gushed with vigour lush
And crafted life in the womb
Now congealed and cold.

Slow and unsteady steps she takes
On tottering legs that miled a million miles
Bones stretching feeble skin.
A clock whose wheels have clogged
Sinking into dust from whence she sprung
To rise again morphed and renewed.
Stooped, wrinkled, shriveled, unwanted
She stands, a lonely wilted beauty.

Monday, June 11, 2012

On a Chennai Suburban Train


During summer vacation in August 2011, I was travelling in a suburban train in Chennai when I witnessed this scene. I have seen such scenes earlier. But this time it touched me and I thought I should put it down in a poem. It took me almost a year to do the task due to paucity of time.

Also the passengers travelling in a suburban train have changed a lot over the years. I felt a stranger in the train. Not many from lower middle class were travelling in a suburban train anymore. It was more of the working class. The middle class traveled in cars or bikes or private vans. Whenever I traveled alone, I continued travelling on trains and buses. This was the form of transport I used when I was young.

On a Chennai Suburban Train

The sudden violent clatter of a drum chokes
The cluttering rhythm of the suburban train coach
Cutting into passengers loud and lousy chatter
Slicing the muted monologues of monotonous matter
And drowning the whining whirl of fans overhead.

A drum beating frail sareed woman
And a pony-tailed girl of six or seven
With ruddy lips, cherry plump, well-fed,
Polished nails and toes, silken dressed
And made up face, take centre stage.

She sings and dances to a popular Tamil number
Muffled by the beating drum and the train’s clatter
Then some flips and somersaults again and again
Balancing her petite body on the jostling train
Mechanical, vacant like the speeding train.

Her act done, the drum becomes silent, calm
With a bowl in hand, she asks for alms
Most part freely with two rupee coins
Manipulated to charity by naive innocence.
Alms collected, into the exit aisle she retreats.

Both fall silent waiting for another station
For another coach and begin all over again
As she waits, she drifts into a dream to linger
Prying the cracks in the wall with her little finger
A short interlude to dwell in childhood.

Her fate to be a breadwinner child
And miss the sparkle of childhood wild.
Or lucky to miss the fuss, groomed
In the sterile uniformed classroom,
Coerced into adulterated adulthood too soon.

A doused lamp among a million snuffed out lamps
By senile wars, clawing poverty and exploiting vamps.
Her body, doomed, like other lasses, in the womb
To be bartered across counters gloom
Buds nipped, never ever to bloom.