Wednesday, July 1, 2026

The Rarest Gift of All

There are birds that seem to have been carved from the oldest chapters of the earth, and there are birds that appear to have been invented by the wind. In the forests surrounding Dehradun, the Great Hornbill and the Indian Paradise Flycatcher live beneath the same canopy, yet they could hardly embody more different imaginations of life.

The Great Hornbill is a monument disguised as a bird. Its immense yellow casque sits atop its bill like the weathered dome of an ancient temple, and every beat of its wings announces its arrival long before it comes into view. It does not seem to fly so much as proceed with authority. Even the forest appears to acknowledge its passage. There is something deliberate in its movements, something stately and almost ceremonial, as though it has inherited responsibilities from an age before human memory.

The Indian Paradise Flycatcher belongs to another order altogether. It is lyrical. The white male, with his impossibly long streamers of a tail, seems less an inhabitant of the forest than a sentence written briefly across the air. He darts between branches with sudden changes of direction, vanishing almost as soon as he appears. If the hornbill resembles an emperor walking through a palace, the flycatcher resembles a child chasing invisible music through an abandoned garden.

Their personalities seem to echo these forms. The hornbill invites reverence. It suggests patience, endurance and quiet confidence. It asks the forest to accommodate its presence without apology. The flycatcher asks for nothing at all. It is playful, restless and curious, moving through the world as though each branch might conceal a delightful surprise. One commands attention merely by existing. The other receives attention only because beauty refuses to remain unnoticed.

Perhaps these are not merely different birds but different philosophies of being. Some lives become significant through permanence, accumulating weight and consequence until they resemble old mountains. Others become significant through moments—brief encounters, fleeting gestures and the delicate astonishment they leave behind. The world needs both. Grandeur without play becomes tyranny. Beauty without substance dissolves into ornament. Between the hornbill and the flycatcher lies the full emotional vocabulary of a forest.

One evening in Dehradun, as the last light softened the Sal trees, a white ribbon floated above the clearing. An Indian Paradise Flycatcher drifted effortlessly from branch to branch, its tail streaming behind it like silk caught upon an invisible current.

The grey dog noticed it before I did.

His ears rose first. Then, with complete seriousness, he turned his head upward until his nose pointed almost vertically into the sky. His pale eyes followed every impossible turn of the bird. There was an intensity to his concentration that bordered on disbelief. His entire body remained perfectly still, except for the slow rotation of his head as the flycatcher climbed, hovered and disappeared behind a spray of leaves before emerging again somewhere entirely unexpected.

Watching him, I found myself smiling.

There was nothing strategic in his gaze, no calculation, no instinct to possess. It was pure wonder. He watched with the absolute attention that children reserve for things they have never imagined could exist. His expression carried that rare innocence adults spend much of their lives trying to recover—the willingness to encounter the world without already knowing what it is.

Perhaps curiosity is the deepest form of intelligence. The hornbill teaches us that the world contains ancient presences worthy of respect. The flycatcher reminds us that it also contains miracles too light to be held. But it was the grey dog who revealed the greater lesson. Before knowledge names the bird, before science classifies it or poetry compares it, there exists a moment of uncomplicated astonishment. To remain capable of that astonishment may be the rarest gift of all.

 

The End of Argument











The rain begins

the way all important things begin —
without announcement, present
where a moment ago it was not,
touching the river's surface, in a cadence
she did not choose to hear and cannot now
unhear.

She is sitting on a wall. This is the whole fact.
She is sitting on a wall, above a river
in a city that has been arguing with itself
for a thousand years, and has not resolved anything
and is still here, still beautiful,
still turning in the afternoon light, like a thing
that has forgotten it was supposed to arrive somewhere.

The boats pass. A leaf trembles.
Her breathing is doing what breathing does
and she notices this —
notices the noticing —
and something in the noticing, quietly steps aside.

Shankara told the story of ten travelers
who crossed the roaring river
and wept, because they could count
only nine.

Each one counted the others. Each one forgot
to count himself.
They mourned what was not missing.
They stood in their own light
and called it darkness.

Until the sage on the bank
said: you are ten.

And the counting stopped, because the counter
had been found, and the counter
was the tenth man all along, and the tenth man
was the one looking, and the one looking
was the river and the bank
and the counting, and the grief, and the sage
and the instruction
and the moment of recognition, that is not
an acquisition of something new, but the ending
of a subtraction that was never real.

She is sitting on a wall
above the Bosphorus.

She is the Bosphorus. She does not know this yet.
She is beginning
to know this.

Lao Tzu did not argue.
That was the teaching —
the Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao,
which is another way of saying:
the thing you are reaching for with your hand
is the hand.

Wu-wei.
The watercourse way. Not passivity —
the river is not passive,
the river is the most active thing
in the landscape,
it is just that its action does not fight the shape
of the ground, does not insist
that the valley be elsewhere,
does not argue with the stone
about the stone's position —

it only finds the way through,
which is always there, which has always been there,
which is only invisible
to the thing, that is busy insisting
on a different way through.

The He Tu knew this —
the Yellow River's map
of cosmic order, not imposed, not argued into existence,
but revealed in the self-generating symmetry
of water finding its level, of nature's quiet arithmetic
that needs no calculator, and no proof
and no one to believe in it
for it to be
true.

The mosque across the water, was built by someone
who understood geometry as a form of listening.
The minarets do not argue with the sky.
They merely rise into it,
the way questions rise, when the questioner
has finally become quiet enough
to hear, that the question
and the answer
were the same sound
all along.

Chao-chou was asked
about the nature of Buddha.
He said: go wash your bowl.

This is either the most unhelpful thing
ever said
or the only helpful thing —
depending on whether, you understand
that the bowl is the koan,
that the washing is the path,
that the complete attention brought to the ordinary task
is indistinguishable, in its quality,
from the complete attention, the mystic brings
to the absolute —

that enlightenment is not somewhere else,
not in a different bowl, not after the washing,
not achievable by someone
more prepared than you —

it is the washing itself, complete,
without the mind running ahead
to what comes after the washing
or behind, to what came before,
only the bowl, only the water,
only the hands that already know
what to do, if the mind
will agree to stop
supervising.

She is breathing. The rain is falling.
The city continues without requiring her attention
and this is the gift —
that the city does not need her
in order to be beautiful,
that the river does not require
her watching in order to flow,
that she can set down
the work of holding the world together
for one afternoon and the world
will hold.

Attar's birds flew ten thousand miles
to find the Simorgh —
the mythical king, the answer,
the destination of the long seeking —

and found a mirror.

Thirty birds. Si morgh in Persian:
thirty birds.

They looked and saw themselves
and understood that they had always been
what they were looking for, that the journey
was not an approach towards the answer
but a gradual shedding of the certainty
that the answer, was elsewhere.

The mosque stands as witness to this —
the architecture of inwardness made stone,
the dome that holds the space
the way the self holds awareness
without being its source, the unmoving axis
of the turning world,
the still point, not despite the motion
but within it, as it, the center that is everywhere
and nowhere, and here,
always here, always this afternoon,
always this rain on this river
in this city, that has been seeking something
for a thousand years, and finding it
and losing it, and finding it again
in different minarets, different reflections,
different travelers sitting on different walls
above the same unchanged water.

The argument ends like this:

not with a conclusion but with a question
that has stopped requiring an answer,

not with understanding but with the thing
understanding, points towards
and cannot enter —

the way a finger points at the moon
and the teaching is:
look at the moon, not the finger,
and even this instruction is a finger
pointing at the moon, and even the moon
is the finger's gesture towards something
that has no name in the language
we have been using,

and perhaps this is why she is sitting
in silence
above the river, instead of speaking —

because the silence is not the absence
of what she wants to say

but the presence of something
language
approaches

the way the river approaches the sea —

moving, always moving,
closer, always closer,

and the sea already here,
already this,

the rain touching the water's surface
in its own cadence,

the leaf doing what the leaf does
in the wind that does not know
it is the wind —

and she, breathing,
aware of breathing, aware of the awareness,

arriving,

not at the end of something,

but at the beginning of a mystery
thought can name, but not contain,

can point towards, but not possess,

can love from this side of the river

and that

is enough,

that is more than enough,

that is everything the argument
was always
reaching for

and never reaching,

and the reaching itself
was the river,
and the river
was always
home.

 

Sahir Ludhianvi: The Poet Who Refused Consolation

Among the great poets who entered Hindi cinema, Sahir Ludhianvi occupies a unique place. Majrooh Sultanpuri brought the refinement of the ghazal into popular culture. Kaifi Azmi carried progressive idealism into film lyrics. Sahir did something more unsettling. He brought doubt.

His poetry is filled with love, but rarely with romantic illusion. It speaks of hope, yet remains suspicious of easy optimism. It dreams of justice, while remaining painfully aware of human hypocrisy. Again and again, Sahir returned to a single question:

What remains when we strip away comforting illusions?

That question made him one of the most important Urdu poets of the twentieth century and one of the greatest lyricists in the history of Indian cinema.

Born Abdul Hayee in Ludhiana in 1921, Sahir’s early life was marked by conflict and insecurity. His parents separated, and he remained deeply attached to his mother, who raised him under difficult circumstances. The emotional wounds of childhood never entirely left him. Many readers have observed that beneath the confidence of his public persona lay a profound loneliness that would find expression throughout his poetry.

As a young man, he became associated with the Progressive Writers’ Movement, one of the most influential literary movements in modern South Asia. The progressives believed that literature should confront poverty, injustice, exploitation, communalism, and inequality rather than retreat into decorative romanticism. Sahir embraced these concerns, but he was never merely a political poet. His work always retained an intensely personal dimension. Social criticism and emotional vulnerability coexisted within the same voice.

In 1945 he published Talkhiyan (“Bitternesses”), the collection that established his literary reputation. The title itself reveals much about his temperament. Unlike poets who sought transcendence, Sahir was willing to dwell among disappointments. Yet his bitterness was not cynicism. It arose from a refusal to accept easy lies.

This quality distinguishes him from many romantic poets.

Sahir was fascinated by love, but he rarely trusted romantic myths.

One of his most celebrated poems, Taj Mahal, illustrates this perfectly. For generations, poets had treated the Taj Mahal as the supreme symbol of eternal love. Sahir looked at the monument and saw something different. He saw laborers, workers, and forgotten lives whose suffering made such grandeur possible.

The poem does not destroy beauty.

It complicates it.

That move is quintessentially Sahir.

He does not reject romance.

He insists that romance coexist with reality.

His literary career unfolded alongside enormous political upheaval. Partition transformed the cultural landscape of the subcontinent. Sahir spent time in Lahore after independence but eventually left for India when political pressures mounted. He settled in Bombay, where he began the phase of life that would make him a household name.

Most poets entering cinema are gradually absorbed by it.

Sahir changed cinema instead.

His breakthrough came with Guru Dutt’s masterpiece “Pyaasa”.

Few films in Indian history have integrated poetry so completely into their narrative. The film’s protagonist, Vijay, is himself a neglected poet struggling in a materialistic world. Many viewers have long felt that aspects of Vijay’s character reflect Sahir’s own sensibility.

The songs of Pyaasa remain among the greatest achievements of Hindi film music.

In “Jaane Woh Kaise Log The”, disappointment becomes lyrical meditation. The speaker wonders about those fortunate souls who found love while he remained haunted by loss.

In “Jinhe Naaz Hai Hind Par”, Sahir directs his attention toward exploitation and hypocrisy. The song asks uncomfortable questions about national pride in a society marked by suffering.

Most extraordinary of all is “Yeh Duniya Agar Mil Bhi Jaye To Kya Hai”.

The song culminates in a devastating rejection of worldly success. Fame, wealth, recognition—what value do they possess if the world itself is corrupted?

The power of the song lies not merely in its anger but in its moral seriousness.

Sahir is not performing rebellion.

He is interrogating the foundations of value itself.

Yet it would be a mistake to view him only as a poet of disappointment.

He was equally capable of tenderness.

One of the most revealing aspects of his life was his relationship with the celebrated Punjabi poet Amrita Pritam,Punjabi poet and novelist. Their connection has become part of literary legend. Whether fully consummated or not, it produced one of the most fascinating emotional stories in modern Indian literature.

Love remained central to Sahir’s imagination.

But unlike many romantic poets, he understood that love is often incomplete.

Perhaps this is why so many of his lyrics feel emotionally mature.

They do not promise eternal fulfillment.

They acknowledge longing.

This quality reached its fullest cinematic expression in the movie, Kabhi Kabhie, 1976.

The title song, “Kabhi Kabhie Mere Dil Mein”, is among the most beloved songs ever written for Hindi cinema. Yet beneath its romantic surface lies a characteristic Sahir theme: the persistence of memory. Love does not vanish simply because circumstances change. It survives in recollection, imagination, and regret. The film itself emerged from a poem written by Sahir, demonstrating how closely his literary and cinematic work remained connected.

Another important example appears in Phir Subah Hogi,1958 Hindi film.

The song “Woh Subah Kabhi To Aayegi”, has often been interpreted as a song of hope.

It is.

But it is not naive hope.

The song emerges from struggle, inequality, and disappointment. The future is imagined not because justice is inevitable, but because human beings continue to desire it. This tension between skepticism and aspiration runs throughout Sahir’s work.

What makes Sahir especially interesting today is that he resisted two temptations.

He resisted romantic escapism.

And he resisted ideological certainty.

Although deeply influenced by progressive politics, he rarely sounds like a propagandist. His poems are too psychologically complex for that. Human beings in his work remain contradictory creatures. They desire justice yet pursue self-interest. They seek love yet wound one another. They dream of a better world while perpetuating its flaws.

In this respect, Sahir feels remarkably contemporary.

He does not divide humanity into saints and villains.

He understands ambiguity.

His poetry repeatedly returns to ordinary people navigating imperfect circumstances.

This is why his work survives.

Political slogans age quickly.

Human contradictions do not.

When Sahir died in 1980, Indian literature lost one of its most distinctive voices. Yet his influence has only grown. His songs continue to be sung. His poems continue to be quoted. New generations discover him through cinema and then follow the trail back to the literary poet behind the lyricist.

In the end, Sahir’s greatness lies not in his mastery of language, though that mastery was considerable. Nor does it lie solely in his contribution to cinema.

His greatness lies in his honesty.

He looked at love without illusion.

He looked at society without sentimentality.

He looked at human beings without condemnation.

Few poets have managed all three.

For that reason, Sahir remains more than a lyricist or even a poet.

He remains a witness.

A witness to longing, disappointment, injustice, beauty, and the strange resilience of hope in a world that rarely offers certainty.

Raza-e-Dar, Acceptance of the Threshold

 
















She believes she is choosing—

the specific confidence of the hand
that reaches towards a spine
as though the hand decided,
as though the self that wanted, preceded the wanting,
as though she arrived here by intention
rather than by the long, patient work
of everything that has been, arranging her
for this moment, since before she knew
there was a moment
being arranged.

One foot inside. One still on the pavement.
The threshold does not rush her.
It has held this position, for years —
it knows how long these things take,
the moment before life divides
into before and after, the last breath
of the person you were
before you became the person
who picked up that book.

Meursault stood in the sun and felt nothing
he was supposed to feel —
or felt it, and could not find the word
that would make the feeling
legible
to a world that required legibility
as proof of humanity.

Camus gave him the sun
and the heat, and the gun, and the absurd
silence of the universe
answering back, with more silence,
and Meursault pushed back —
not with hope, not with faith,
but with the austere, exhausting dignity
of the person, who refuses to pretend
the machinery is something other
than machinery.

It is a noble posture. It costs everything.
The Western self has been holding it
for centuries —
spine straight, chin up, eyes open
to the indifferent universe,
fighting the absurd
on its own terms,
which are terrible terms,
which are the only terms
the absurd offers.

She has carried L'Étranger long enough
to know its weight in the arm —
the specific gravity of a book
that tells you the truth
without offering
anywhere to put it.

Her fingers find the Diwan without instruction.

The cloth binding. The particular texture
of a book, that has been held
by other hands, in other cities
in other decades —
the warmth that old books carry
that is not warmth, but is also not
not warmth,
the accumulated presence of everyone
who has read these words, and been changed by them
and sent the book back into the world
carrying that change invisibly
in the grain of the cover.

Ghalib wrote in Urdu, and Persian
and in the language, that has no alphabet —
the language of the one
who has understood
that the drop's joy
is to die in the river.

Not loss. Not defeat. Expansion.

The drop that resists the river
remains a drop —
finite, bounded, spending its entire existence
maintaining the boundary
between itself, and everything else.

The drop that surrenders
becomes the river —
becomes the ocean —
becomes the rain, that will become
another drop, in another river, in another century,
the self not dissolved, but enlarged
beyond its own capacity to measure.

This is tasleem. This is raza.
Not the passivity of the one who gave up
but the active, chosen, intelligent
abandonment
of unnecessary resistance —

the recognition, that the river
was flowing before you arrived
at its bank, and will be flowing
after, and that wisdom
is not the dam but the learning
to inhabit the current, with steadiness,

to move, as the water moves —
which is Lao Tzu's instruction,
which is the deepest strength
disguised as yielding,
which is not weakness
but the understanding
that yielding, and moving
are the same act
in water,
which is the oldest
and most patient
substance
in the argument.

The missed flight that put you
in the terminal bar
where you met the person
who said the thing that changed
the direction
of the next decade —

the illness that slowed you
to the speed of your own life
for long enough, to see it —

the wrong turn, that delivered you
to the street, where the bookshop was,
the bookshop where the pile
was untidy enough for this particular spine
to be visible, visible enough
for this particular hand
to find it —

call these accidents, and the word
is technically accurate
and entirely
insufficient.
Call them fate, and you impose
a narrative, the universe
did not offer.

Perhaps the better word, is received —
not chosen, not imposed,
but received
the way the ground receives rain:
without deserving it, without not deserving it,
merely open, to what arrives
from directions we were not
watching.

The Buddhist word, is equanimity —
the spacious interior yes,
the willingness to meet
what has already arrived
without the exhausting work
of wishing
it had arrived differently.

Not indifference. The opposite —
the full presence of the one
who is no longer spending their attention
on resistance,
who has that attention free now
for the actual texture of the actual moment,
which is always richer
than the argument
about whether
it should be happening.

The two books under her arm
are in conversation
she cannot yet hear.

Meursault and Ghalib —
the absurd
and the devoted,
the defensive self, and the surrendered one,
the Western spine, and the Eastern dissolution,
the fight
and the river —

they are not opposites.
They are the same recognition,
arrived at from different directions:
that the universe is larger
than human preference,
that this largeness
is the central fact,
that everything else is the question
of what to do
with the central fact —

whether to stand against it
with austere, beautiful dignity
until the standing
costs everything,

or to learn the drop's wisdom,
the river's instruction, the ancient, patient
advice of water
to the thing that insists
on remaining solid:

yield,
and you will find
you have not lost your shape
but discovered a larger one.

She does not know yet.

That is the grace of it —
the not knowing, the book under the arm
that is already doing its work
on the self that does not yet know
the work has begun, the idea
that is even now finding the quiet rooms
of her interior, and beginning
to rearrange the furniture.

Every unopened book
contains a possible reader —
not the reader who opened it
but the reader who will close it,
who will be different in ways
she cannot predict
and would not choose
and will someday recognize
as necessary,
as the only path
from who she was, to who she needed
to become.

She believes she is choosing.

The evening light is shifting
on the pavement.
She takes both books.
She steps off the threshold
into the street, that looks the same
as the street
she stepped from —

same buildings, same light,
same pavement
under the same sky —

and is entirely different,
because she is different,
because the book has already begun
its patient work,
because tasleem has already
arrived in her, like the first
scent of rain
before the rain —

not passive, not defeated,

opened,

the way the ground
opens
before the rain arrives,

receiving
what the sky
has already
decided
to give.

 

 

Fakiri

 

The figure of the fakir occupies a cherished place in the mystical imagination of Sufism. Derived from the Arabic word faqīr, meaning "poor" or "one in need," the term refers not merely to material poverty but to a profound spiritual condition. The fakir is the one who has awakened to the realization that every human being is utterly dependent upon the Divine. This awareness of spiritual poverty, known as faqr, is regarded by many Sufis as one of the highest stations on the mystical path.

Unlike the conventional understanding of poverty, faqr is not a rejection of the material world for its own sake. A fakir may own nothing, or may possess considerable wealth; what distinguishes him is freedom from attachment. He no longer identifies himself through possessions, status, or worldly ambition. His heart has become empty of the illusion of self-sufficiency, allowing it to become receptive to divine love. In this sense, poverty becomes an inward richness rather than an outward deprivation.

The mystical journey of the fakir is inseparable from the dissolution of the ego. Sufis describe the ego as the great veil separating the seeker from God. Through humility, remembrance (dhikr), service, and love, the fakir gradually relinquishes the illusion of an independent self. This process culminates in fanā', the annihilation of the ego in the presence of the Divine, followed by baqā', the state of abiding in God while continuing to live in the world.

Sufi poetry transformed the fakir into one of its most enduring symbols. The fakir appears as the wandering lover who owns nothing but longing, the empty cup waiting to be filled with the wine of divine love, and the reed flute through which the breath of God becomes music. In the verses of Rumi, Rabia al-Adawiyya, Abu Madyan, Amir Khusro, Bulleh Shah, and Rahman Baba, poverty is celebrated not as suffering but as liberation. The fakir's tattered robe conceals an immeasurable inner wealth, while his apparent insignificance becomes the condition through which spiritual wisdom is revealed.

Across centuries of Persian, Arabic, Turkish, Punjabi, and Urdu literature, the fakir came to symbolize a life lived beyond the demands of power, prestige, and possession. He walks lightly through the world because he claims ownership over nothing, not even himself. His poetry invites the reader to discover that the deepest freedom arises not from acquiring more, but from surrendering the illusion that anything can truly be possessed. In this way, the fakir remains one of the most powerful and enduring images of mystical humility in the entire Sufi tradition.

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

City of Astonishments

 









He checked-in and came out for dinner.

A modest, navigable plan
of a man who has just arrived
and knows that arriving requires eating
and eating requires a door
and behind the door, a table
and on the table
something that can be pointed at, and received
without language.

Simple. Manageable. Already failing.

The street does not explain itself. The characters shimmer
across the storefronts in their neon strokes —
not illegible, not to the street, not to the birds
moving above the transformers in the red-stained dark —
addressed to someone else,
written in the grammar of a world
that preceded his arrival
by several thousand years
and did not pause to prepare a translation.

He stands in the middle of it
the way you stand in a river
you did not mean to enter —
already in, already wet,
the current already making its opinion
known through his feet.

The lanterns hang overhead
like low burning moons, bleeding their crimson
into the damp asphalt, and the voices rise and fall
in the dialect of the mountains —
ancient, heavy, slicked with the grease
of modern commerce —
and he cannot parse a single syllable
and this is, he is beginning to understand,
not the problem.

Once, in China, the sparrows were the problem.

The sky was organized against them —
every drum beaten, every pot struck,
every child's arm raised to keep the birds
from landing, until they fell from exhaustion,
ten thousand at a time, out of a sky
that had decided they were the enemy
of the harvest, the thief of the grain,
the small feathered obstacle between the people
and the future that had been
planned for them.

The sky was emptied. The plan proceeded.
The insects came in the absence of the birds
and the harvest failed in ways
the plan had not planned for, because plans
that empty the sky, of sparrows
are not really plans
about sparrows.

Now the birds are back —
wild and unbothered by the intervening century,
navigating the neon streets with a precision
that requires no signage,
no translation, no invoice of certainty —

the ultimate practitioners of wu wei,
the effortless action of the creature
that does not need to understand the city
in order to live perfectly
within it.

He looks up. He cannot see them
but he can hear the small adjustments
of wings
above the transformers —
the sound of something that has never required
the city's permission
to be at home in it.

The Buddha discouraged speculation about origins.

Not because origins don't matter
but because the man, with the arrow in his chest
should not spend his remaining time
inquiring about the species of wood
the shaft was carved from.

There is the arrow. There is the chest.
There is the present moment
in which these are facts.

What the young man cannot name —
the character above the door, the dialect rising
from the table beside the window,
the specific red of the lantern light
on the damp street —

cannot be filed into neat folders
of the tourist's itinerary,
cannot be made comfortable
by knowing its name
in another language —

and this is not a deficit of intelligence.

This is intelligence in its highest posture —
of the Tathāgata, the Buddha-nature
found when the labels are finally stripped away
and the world arrives unmediated,
as it actually is, which is always
more than the name we have been given
for it.

He does not know the word for lantern
in this language.
The lantern does not care.
The lantern is entirely itself
regardless.

Lao Tzu knew the street before the street was paved.

He knew it as ziran —
the self-so-ness, the thing that is
simply what it is without requiring
your approval, or your comprehension
or your confident stride towards a door
you have pre-selected for its legibility.

The compulsion to master,
to name, to categorize —
this is the beginning of the ten thousand things
that separate the traveler from the road.

And then the compulsion softens.
Maybe because you are hungry, and hunger
is a great simplifier,
maybe because the street is so beautiful
in its indifference, that beauty finally
wins the argument
with anxiety —

and the folders close, and the itinerary
releases its grip,
and you are just here, in Yunnan,
in the evening, in the smell
of Sichuan peppercorns and damp concrete
and something frying in oil so hot
it is singing —

and the city is not comprehensible
and is not required to be.

PROFIT.

He stops. He reads this. He reads it again.

The sign is bright, definitive, committed to its declaration
with a confidence the evening
does not quite support.

Is it absurd? Is it profound?
Is it the most honest name a restaurant
has ever chosen —
the bare transaction named without apology,
the commercial fact
stripped of its decorative language?

Or is it merely what happens
when a word crosses between
two ways of understanding the world
and arrives slightly altered,
carrying on its back the ghost of a meaning
that does not travel well?

He smiles. He does not know why.

That is the correct response.

The Buddha's arrow is in the chest.
The sparrows are back in the sky.
Lao Tzu's river is finding the valley
it was always going to find.

And somewhere above the transformers,
in the space between one breath
and the next,

a night bird cries —

sharp, sudden, addressed to no one
and therefore to everyone,

the sound of a creature that has never needed
to read the signs, to know which direction
is home —

and he chooses a door.

Not this door for a reason.
Not that door for a reason.
This door because the bird cried, and his hand moved
and the distance between the cry
and the movement contained nothing —
no deliberation, no invoice of certainty,
no demand that the world justify itself
before he agrees to enter it.

Inside:
a table by the window. A woman who gestures
at the menu and then at him
and then at the kitchen in a way that needs
no translation, because hospitality
is the oldest grammar, and he is
suddenly fluent.

Something arrives. He does not know its name.
He eats it. It is extraordinary.

Outside the window the neon characters
go on shimmering their untranslated declarations
into the wet street —

and the birds, move above the transformers
in the dark, that is not dark
but crimson, lantern-washed,
the color of a sky that has remembered
how to hold everything
that was taken from it

and held it without explanation, without apology,

the way the world holds everything —

not because we have finally
understood it

but because astonishment

is the only accurate
response

to a city
this vast,

and we are,

when we remember to be,

equal to it.

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, June 15, 2026

Merak

She is with the chickens.


So the tourist misses —
the difference between
attention directed outwards, and attention
that has dissolved its own boundary,
and no longer knows which side of the watching
it is on.














She has been doing this, for fifty years.
The self that began is not the self
that continues.
Something has happened in the repetition —
the same slow alchemy. that happens
to the stone the river touches
every day, for a century.

We have no essence, wrote Sartre —
the human creature, arrives empty
and must make itself, from the outside in, he said
from the choices outwards, from the accumulated weight
of what it does repeatedly.

She did not read Sartre. She did not need to.
She has been living his argument
since before he made it —

choosing, each morning, the same threshold,
the same scattered grain, the same unhurried circuit
of the yard,

becoming, through that choosing,
something that no longer requires the choosing
because it has become the thing itself.

Sartre called this the project.
He did not foresee that the project
could be this quiet.

Aristotle would agree

Not the philosopher's version of eudaimonia —
not the contemplative life, not the polis,
not the sustained practice of civic virtue —
but the deeper thing beneath the argument:

that flourishing is not a condition
that arrives
but an activity that is practiced, that the good life
is not a destination but a texture,
a quality of movement through the hours that accrues
its meaning
from the doing and not from what the doing
achieves.

She achieves nothing the world would measure.
She has been achieving it since before you arrived
and will continue after you leave.

That is the whole Aristotelian point.

In the Balkans there is a word —
merak —
for the quality of absorption in a small moment
that gives existence its flavor,

the specific pleasure of the thing
done for itself, and not for what
it produces,
the quiet intensity of total presence in the ordinary.

She is merak made human.
She is the concept with a face,
with a headscarf, with hands
that know the weight of each bird
by the way it moves through her peripheral vision.

Tagore believed the boundary between
the artistic act, and the daily act
was fiction —
that the woman who sweeps her courtyard
with full attention, is making something
as real as any poem, that the canvas
does not require galleries. or witnesses
or even the knowledge
of the artist, that art
is being made.

She does not know she is making anything.

That may be the condition
of the highest making.

Woolf believed the other side —
of the consciousness that turns
the ordinary day into an enduring form
by the quality of attention,
that Mrs. Dalloway buying flowers
is not a lesser act than the general
planning campaigns —
that the texture of a single mind
moving through a single morning
is the whole of it, the complete work,
requiring nothing added.

She has had ten thousand mornings.
Each one complete. Each one the whole work.
The sum incalculable.

In India they call it sadhana —

the daily practice that is not
a means to an end, but a discipline
in itself, the sacred labor
that sanctifies not through
what it produces, but through
the quality of its repetition,

the sweeping that becomes a form of prayer
not that anyone declared it so
because the attention brought to it
has made it so, slowly,
the way slow things always become
what they are —

through the simple, unwitnessed accumulation
of days.

She is a practitioner. Her practice
has no name in the curriculum.
It has been going on longer than most curricula.

The autumn rain comes in the Balkans
without asking.

The slate darkens. The stone pavement
deepens its color. The smell of wet plums
rises from fallen ones, in the grass —
that specific scent that means
the season is changing its mind
about something.

The chickens move under the eaves
of the old timber house and she moves
with them,
or they move with her —
the distinction has long since been resolved
in favor of merely moving together.

She does not mind the rain. She has known
the rain for fifty years.
It comes when it comes. The chickens go under.
She follows. The yard is empty
and the eaves are full and this is
what October means in this valley
and has always meant. and will mean
after she is gone,
that continuity is not sorrow
but something else —
something the modern world, has largely lost
the word for.

In the Indian hamlet, the monsoon
is not an event. It is structure.

It structures the year the way a cathedral
structures light —
everything arranged around its coming,
everything reorganized by its presence,
the kitchen garden deciding what it is
in relation to rain,
the ditches finding purpose,
the soil changing temper,
the woman, adjusting her sadhana
to the season's demands the way a musician
adjusts the raga to the hour.

She does not fight the monsoon.
She never has
She learned early what the monsoon knows
and the modern city keeps forgetting —

that the correct relationship to the uncontrollable
is not resistance but recalibration,
that rain is not interruption
of life but a condition of it,
that you build around what will come
and you go inside
when the sky says go inside

and you come out when it says come out
and this is not submission
but intelligence,

of the oldest kind.

Has the narrow sphere diminished her?

The question assumes that breadth
is where meaning lives —
that life which covers more ground
contains more life.

But ground and depth are different things,
and she has gone very deep
into a very small place,

and what she has found there is not less
than what the wide life finds —
it is different in kind, available only
through the method she has used,
the slow descent into the ordinary
until the ordinary
opens.

The chickens are a door. She found this out
a long time ago. She keeps going through it.
On the other side
is not chickens.

She does not need to know this
for it to be true.

The self that watches and the thing watched
have become the same woman —

bounded, particular, complete,

the way a good life is complete —

not that it contains everything,

but because it has gone
all the way into what it contains,

and found there, at the bottom
of the ordinary, where the rain
also goes, where the chickens
also go,
where everything that persists
eventually goes —

not diminishment, not transcendence,

but the thing between them
that has no name except the name
of the person who found it,

worn smooth by the river
of her days,

still here, entirely herself,
entirely gone into the work,

indistinguishable,

complete.

 

 

Thursday, June 11, 2026

The Solitary Chasse

We began with fire.


Before courts, or temples,
before anyone thought to write down
what the body was doing,
we were already doing —
turning in smoke,
answering something
nameless yet
but lived in the chest
like a second heartbeat,
insisting.













The room was dark, and harder
The audience, indifferent.
The stars did not lean in.

We danced anyway.
We always danced anyway.
That is tragic?
or the whole point.
The poem is not yet sure

Louis XIV understood the body
a political instrument —
the spine a declaration,
the hand's arc a loyalty oath,
the missed step in a courante
a confession of treason
the court would not forget.

In the mirrored halls of Versailles
every gesture was surveilled,
every posture petitioned,
the self reduced
to its most legible surface,
approved or destroyed
by the King's passing gaze.

The silk slipper fit
That was cruel —
the cage bespoke,
measured to the foot,
comfortable enough
to forget it was a cage,
until you tried
to walk somewhere
the choreography
had not approved.

In the temple courtyard
the logic reversed.

The anklets spoke to the floor
and the floor answered —
not the king,
not the court,
not the cold consensus
of the watching faces —
the floor,
the breath,
the blood
through the body
like weather,
like grief,
like the specific joy
that has no object
because its object
is everything.

Shiva dances
not for an audience
but as the universe
practicing its own
creation and destruction,
the Tandava neither
performance nor meditation
but both,
the distinction
dissolved in movement
itself.

The dancer learns this slowly:
the ultimate achievement
is not the room's approval
but the moment the room
ceases to exist —
when ego thins
to transparency
and what moves
is no longer
the careful self
but something inwards,
larger,
briefly borrowed.

The anklet fits differently
than the silk slipper.
But it is still
an instrument of transformation.
The question is
what you are transforming
towards

Nietzsche said
he would believe only
in a god who could dance,
which is another way of saying
he would believe only
in a god who understood
that existence is not
a problem to be solved
but a rhythm
to be entered,

that the philosopher
on his mountain
and the woman
on the dance floor
are doing the same thing —
moving through the unbearable
with as much style
as the body can manage,

which is sometimes considerable,
which is sometimes
barely enough,
which is always,
always
more than the universe
required of us
and less than we
required of ourselves.

You see Sisyphus
and see a dancer.

Not the rock.
Not the hill.
The style of the pushing —
the particular angle of the shoulder,
the specific rhythm
the feet found
on the long way down,
the face
that decided
somewhere on the slope
that the absurd
did not get
the last word.

One must imagine Sisyphus
in anklets
in silk slippers,
in sweat-slicked trainers
on the floor of a Paris club
at four in the morning,
the DJ indifferent,
the strobe light
making everyone
a series of still frames,
everyone briefly
a painting,
briefly
a prayer.

The woman on the floor
is not waiting for the room.

She has stopped waiting
some time ago —
you can see it
in the spine,
in the arm's extension,
in the expression
that crossed over
from performance
into something
the French court
never authorized
and the temple
always knew:

the face of someone
who has found
the interior tempo,
the one that runs
beneath the DJ's beat,
beneath the algorithm's
recommendation,
beneath the room's
restless hunger
for the next louder thing —

the oldest rhythm,
the one the fire knew,
the one the temple floor
knew,
the one the body
has always known
and keeps forgetting
and keeps
remembering.

The phones glow.
The room moves on.
Somewhere a louder song
begins its campaign
for the available attention.

She completes the phrase.

Not for them.
Not despite them.
Only because
the movement
asked to be finished
and she was
the one who knew
how.

This is not transcendence.
This is not tragedy.

This is the human
in its most characteristic
posture —

upright,
in motion,
neither fully seen
nor alone,

dancing in the gap
between the court's demand
and the temple's silence,

between Louis's appraising eye
and Shiva's closed one,

between the need
to be witnessed
and the deeper need
to move truly
regardless —

mastering, step by difficult step,
the choreography of existing
in a room
that has mostly
looked away, or turned

a whiter shade of pale

and finding there,
in that unlooked-at
corner of the floor,

not defeat,

but the only freedom
the dance
was ever offering.

 

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Hotel

A name. A payment. A signature.

In return: a room.

In return: the brief, clean permission

to be someone else













Augé called these places non-places —

spaces that exist outside belonging,

that ask nothing of your history,

that do not accumulate

the slow sediment of lived life,

the photographs, the arguments,

the drawer that sticks,

the particular creak

on the third stair

that everyone in the house

has learned to step around.


The hotel has no third stair.

The hotel has no drawer that sticks.

The hotel is remade each morning

by hands that don’t remember you,

the sheets pulled tight

over whatever the night contained,

the surface restored

to its original blankness,

ready for the next inscription,

indifferent to the last.


Hopper knew this light —

the way it falls in rooms

at a specific hour,

too honest,

illuminating nothing

but the fact of being here,

alone,

in a space that was designed

for everyone

and therefore

for no one.


The window is always slightly wrong.

The mirror is always slightly

in the wrong place.

You are always slightly

a stranger to yourself

in a hotel room,

which is either horror

or gift,

depending on what you brought

with you

through the revolving door.


In Varanasi the hotel

breathes differently.

The arched windows

hold the river

like a painting

that refuses

to stay still —

the ghats below

move with the ancient traffic

of the living and the dead,

the smoke rising

from burning grounds

in the particular way

that smoke rises

when it carries

more than combustion.


Here the guest is not

a temporary occupant.

but the latest phantom

in a procession

that began before

the hotel existed,

before the city 

before the concept of guest

had been separated

from the concept

of pilgrim.


The Ganges does not care

about your booking confirmation.

The river was here

before check-in

was invented.

It will be here

after the last

revolving door

stops turning.


The hotel on the ghats

is not a non-place.

It is an altar of witness —

for the temporal world

pressed against the timeless,

the clean linen

brushing ancient stone,

the minibar

casting its small cold light

in a room

where windows

open to eternity.

The guest stands at that window

in early morning

and smoke drifts in

and for a moment

categories dissolve —

tourist and mourner,

seeker and the merely lost,

the one who came to see

and the one who came

to be changed —

all briefly

the same figure,

standing at the same window,

watching the river

conduct its uninterruptible

business with time.


In Agra the hotel

performs a different cruelty.


Through the window,

at the right hour,

in a particular light

of early morning

or long dusk,

the Taj Mahal

hangs in the distance

like an argument

the air is making

about permanence —


a tomb built

to outlast time,

to say that love

is the one human project

worth building in marble,

worth orienting

an entire geometry towards,

worth the lives

of twenty thousand hands.


And here, inside,

the guest rehearses opulence

in rooms designed to suggest

that luxury is natural,

that the chandelier

is always yours,

that the marble floor

beneath your feet

is merely the floor

you were meant to walk on —


all of it temporary,

all of it borrowed,

all of it returnable

at checkout,


while through the window

the white dome

holds its position

against morning sky

with the absolute composure

of something

that has already won

its argument

with disappearance.


The hotel says:

for tonight, this is yours.

The Taj says:

nothing is yours.

The guest stands between them

in their complimentary robe

and tries to hold

both truths at once.


The corridor at three in the morning

is a different country.


The numbered doors

recede in both directions

into a perspective

that feels less architectural

than philosophical —

all these rooms,

all these briefly occupied

rectangles of privacy,

all these lives

that touched this space

and left no mark

the cleaning staff

couldn't resolve

by morning.


Somewhere a door closes.

Someone has arrived

or is leaving

or could not sleep

and has decided

the corridor

is preferable

to their thoughts.


The jasmine, the old wood,

the industrial linen —

the hotel's true smell,

the one beneath

the room spray,

the one that accumulates

across seasons and decades

in the curtains,

in the walls,

in the particular quality

of the silence

at this hour —


it is the smell

of all the lives

that passed through

and were briefly

held here,

then released,

and continued,

somewhere,

as lives do,

carrying whatever

the room gave them

or failed to give them

or took away

in the night

when they were finally

still enough

to notice.


The home preserves.

The hotel suspends.


That is the whole

strange bargain —

you cross the threshold

and the weight

of who you have been

does not follow you in,

not entirely,

not all at once.


You are allowed,

for a few nights,

to exist

in the gap

between the person

who signed the register

and the person

you might,

in a different life,

in a different city,

under a different name,

have become.


Most guests

do not become

that other person.

Most guests

sleep, and eat,

and attend meetings,

and pack their bags

in the particular

efficient sadness

of departure,

and pass back through

the revolving door

into the life

that was waiting.


But the room

held the possibility.

The room always holds

the possibility.


That is what

we are paying for,

finally —

not the bed,

not the view,

not the chandelier,

not even the window

with its improbable

cargo of river

or dome or darkness —


but the temporary,

beautiful,

entirely convincing

fiction


that we have not

yet become

everything

we are going to be.


Sunday, May 24, 2026

Shabby Divine

 (1)

 Drinking river rot until it tastes like ink,

watching cobalt sparks strike against twilight.

rags in weeds, behind the cataract-clouded eye,

he is molting—

shedding the skin of poet, son, failure,

to become a blue-throated god; ruling kingdoms of mud and stars.

The river an open vein across land’s gray wrist,

clotted with plastic prayers of the city upstream.

 


where the earth is most wounded, knees pressed into the fertile loam

he is rooted—a gnarled extension of the bank.

a heavy glass sun in his palm, pulsing with a cheap, amber mercy

thins the blood until it can flow uphill,

back to the headwaters of youth.

 

Then, the first rupture. A kingfisher arrives—a blue stitch

sewing the sky to the scum-slicked water.

Then another. A water family gathering, in the hushed reeds.

 

They see a stone that breathes, a silent sentinel in the theater

 

a ride on a sudden down-stroke

a hitchhiker on a sapphire wing.

 

The wasteland dissolves; The smell of burning rubber and stagnant silt

replaced by the scent of parchment.

 

the blue throat of the bird—the only temple left to pray in

 

the sea of red—the sunset, the wine, the blood—

spills into the ecstasy of flight.

Rispana no longer a ditch—it is a silver script,

and he, an ex-poet; drunk in the weeds.

 

(2)

 

The light now bruised purple, blooming over River’s spine.

He names them as they land—feathered saints,

blue-throated keepers

shiver of a wing—gestures of kin

 

There is the Elder—on a rusted rebar spike

as if it were a throne of ivory.

a poem he never finished in the spring of ’94,

a heavy, dactylic creature, smells of cedar and regret.

watches him with eyes—like black beads of oil,

demanding the rhyme he still owes it, the resolution that never came.

 

the small one, a kinetic spark of turquoise,

darts in the periphery—of the sea of red.

the daughter’s laughter he traded for the burn of the grain, a fleeting, high-frequency joy

that refuses to land long enough to be mourned.

 

She skips across the surface of the silt,

writing circles in the scum that look, to a drunkard’s eye,

like the loops of a boy’s first cursive.

 

He raises the bottle—a translucent chalice—

to the matriarch who nests

in the shadow of the bridge—she of the silence that followed his best work,

the quiet that remains

after the applause turned to rust.

 

She does not sing; she only exists,

a blue-black anchor in the shifting current.

 

“My water families,” he whispers, his voice a dry rattle,

a sound of river-stones; grinding in the dark.

 

“Forgive the ghost who comes to your table

with nothing but a heart of vinegar and a pocket of dust.”

 

But the birds do not fly away—They of the honest dark

gathering in the hollows of his chest.

As he drinks, their blue throats pulse in time, with the slow, thrumming ache of his blood—

a bioluminescent rhythm that suggests even a wasteland can host a choir.

 

His mind begins to fray at the edges,

the "luminous prison" unravels thread by golden thread.

He is no longer watching the birds; he is feeling the wind

resist their hollow bones.

 

He is the rupture. He is the taste of the divine—hidden in the copper tang of the river’s breath.

 

(3)

 

The sea of red deepens to crimson.

The bottle a hollow shell, a glass lung—

has exhaled its spirit into his own.

 

Now comes the rupture—the point where wasteland

cannot hold the weight

of his dreaming.

 

He watches the fifth bird,

a jagged streak of cobalt, as it dives, his consciousness

unmoors from the mud.

There is a sound like parchment tearing in a silent room—

the sound of a man’s spirit splitting down the seam.

 

His mind breaches the surface of the Rispana,

as a kingfisher’s beak,

shattering the reflection of the moon into a thousand silver coins—

he will never have to spend.

The water is cold, an honest, stinging grace,

stripping the grime from his phantom skin.

He rises.

 

From forty feet above the reeds,

the wasteland is beautiful. The rusted car frames are oxidized jewels;

the plastic heaps are drifts of fallen blossoms;

the Rispana is a dark, winding vein of liquid onyx.

 

He sees his own body below—a small, crumpled shadow

propped against a willow tree—

and he feels a profound, distant pity

for that ghost.

 

“Stay there,” he thinks, his thoughts vibrate in the blue.

“Stay in the heavy world. I have found the rupture. I have found the taste of the divine in the honest dark.”

 

He dances in the updraft of his own imagination,

a poem written in the calligraphy of flight.

This is the ecstasy: the moment the poet realized he does not need a pen to write—

he only needs to be the bird.

 

The flight is a fever that eventually breaks.

returns to the luminous prison of his bones, the air in his lungs is different now—it tastes of sky.

His fingers, stained with nicotine and river-silt,

begin to trace the bank,

reading the mud like the first page of a holy text.

 

He finds a shard of blue eggshell—a tiny, hollow cup.

He holds it with the reverence of a priest handling a fragment of the true shrine.

This is the shabby divine:

a miracle discarded in the weeds, waiting for a drunk poet

to find its rhythm.

 

(4)

 

The mist rises from the Rispana—a gray breath of memory.

clings to the reeds like wet wool, blurring edges of trash heaps until wasteland looks,

much like the city of his youth.

 

Peers into the water, his eyes tracking submerged ribs—

of a rusted bicycle.

A chemical shimmer of the surface,

those spare arcs become the grand bridges of forgotten Dehradun—light and silver,

gone the poet's arrogance and a clean shirt.

 

the phantom of tea gardens—their green ghosts flickering

beneath the scum-slicked current.

 

"Every river is a graveyard of intentions,"

he mutters to the Sixth Bird,

a motionless kingfisher—a sapphire gargoyle on a jagged masonry.

 

He remembers the woman of the name that tastes like copper

a point on a map folded too many times.

He looks for her face in the eddying silt

and the Rispana offers his own reflection—the humble ghost,

the stumble of rags.

 

The bitterness a jagged stone—he washes it down, with a long pull from the glass sun.

The solvent, melting the grief

of a man the curator of a sunken kingdom.

The birds shift. The air grows colder; the blue-throated family

begins a low, rhythmic chattered prayer,

as he feels the first tremors—of the next rupture.

The Rarest Gift of All