Novels

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Center of Gravity

 

The physics of the soul is dictated by a singular, invisible point: the center of gravity. In the physical realm, it is the balance point where weight is evenly distributed, the anchor that prevents a structure from toppling when the wind howls. In the metaphysical realm, however, our center of gravity is a choice rather than a fixed coordinate—a directional instinct triggered the moment the world decides to strike.

Life, in its indifferent brilliance, is a relentless pitcher of curveballs. It renders us blows that fracture our carefully curated narratives, leaving us breathless and unmoored. In that split second of impact, before the conscious mind can craft a defense, a reflex takes hold. We fall. The question that defines the trajectory of a life is not if we fall, but where. Do we fall into ourselves, or do we fall into the world?

To fall into oneself is an act of radical, quiet bravery. It is the decision to absorb the blow rather than deflect it into the ether. When we collapse inward, we are choosing the heavy, humid atmosphere of our own interiority. We sit in the dark with the pain, tracing its jagged edges with the fingers of our consciousness. This is the labor of the "archive"—the slow, agonizing process of feeling what must be felt and processing what must be integrated. It is a metabolic healing, a nourishment that occurs in the blood. It the damp, silent work of roots in the earth, inching through the soil day after day, refusing to look away from the source of the ache until the ache itself becomes part of our architecture.

Conversely, there is the siren call of the world. To fall into the world is to seek a horizontal escape from a vertical reality. It is the reflex of the fugitive. When the pain becomes a sun we cannot look at, we turn toward the neon flicker of external solace. We chase the dopamine of the temporary; we hunt for pleasure, for noise, for the frantic company of others, for anything that promises to act as a local anesthetic.

Falling into the world is an attempt to tear ourselves away from the source of the pain, forgetting that the source is carried within us. We become ghosts haunting our own lives, seeking a "forgetting" that is actually a fragmentation. We scatter our focus across the landscape of distractions, hoping that if we move fast enough, the blow will never land. But energy is only displaced. The blow we refuse to absorb into our center of gravity merely vibrates through our periphery, shaking the foundations of everything we build until the structure inevitably fails.

The world offers a million ways to go numb, but the soul only has one way to go whole.

Finding one’s center of gravity requires an understanding that the only way out is through the center. If we fall into the world, we are at the mercy of the world's tides—perpetually drifting, forever reacting, always a little bit further from the shore of our own truth. If we fall into ourselves, we discover that the center is a foundation rather than the void.

It is in the quiet nourishment of the interior—the slow, rhythmic breathing into the wound—that we find the weight necessary to stand again. We heal the pain by becoming large enough to house it. We refine the model of our existence until the blow becomes a catalyst. We learn that to fall inward is to anchor. We become our own gravity, heavy with the wisdom of the struggle, immovable even as the world continues its chaotic, spinning dance.


Saturday, April 4, 2026

Clarity What?

The siren song of "clarity" is perhaps the most sophisticated deception we perform upon ourselves. We treat it as a terminal station—a sun-drenched plateau where the jagged edges of existence finally align, and the static of the soul yields to a crisp, high-definition signal. We tell ourselves that once the fog lifts, once the "model" is perfected, we will finally possess the map to the labyrinth.

But clarity is a flickering phosphorescence on the surface of an endlessly churning sea. It is the temporary, often desperate, engagement with a perceived understanding of a world that remains, at its core, indifferent to our need for symmetry. We craft mental models to maintain a functional sanity—to prevent the sheer, unadulterated chaos of being from collapsing our internal architecture.

As George Box famously noted, all models are wrong, though some are useful. We navigate by these ghosts of logic, these skeletal frameworks of how things ought to be. We build a cathedral of "who we are" and "how the world works," only to find that the ground beneath it is shifting. Our constructs are organic, breathing, and inherently flawed. They evolve in response to the trauma of reality.

What we claim to see "clearly" today is merely the byproduct of a specific lighting. Under the harsh, noon-day sun of a conviction, the path seems obvious. But time is a relentless solvent. Tomorrow, that same certainty becomes a haze of lived confusion. The "clear" decision of our youth becomes the baffling enigma of our middle age. The "obvious" truth of a relationship dissolves into a mist of "how did I not see?"

The pursuit of clarity, then, reveals itself as a frantic, circular kineticism—a dog chasing its own tail in a closed room. It is a recursive loop where the act of seeking actually creates the distortion we are trying to escape. We reach for the horizon, forgetting that the horizon is a mathematical trick of perspective; it exists only because we are standing here, and it moves precisely because we move towards it. It is a receding landscape, forever shifting its contours, always just a few inches beyond the grasp of our trembling fingers.

To demand clarity is to demand that the universe stop breathing. It is a wish for the static, for the dead, for the finished. True engagement with the world requires an admission of the fundamental blur. We must learn to navigate by the "useful" while acknowledging the "wrong." If we wait for the haze to lift entirely before we take a step, we will remain petrified in the amber of our own indecision.

The "What?" in "Clarity What?" is the sound of a sudden, sharp realization: that the haze is the medium. We do not live in the light but the refraction. The beauty of the human cognitive experience lies less in the arrival at a pristine, sterilized understanding, rather in the messy, agonizing, and sublime process of refining the model while the world burns it down. We are architects of sandcastles, building increasingly intricate towers against an incoming tide, finding our sanity in the rhythmic, salt-stung labor of the hands.



Automatism

 

To paint the anatomy of terror is, an act of surrender. We are taught from the first tremor of ambition that art is a mountain to be scaled, a discipline of the iron will, a relentless sharpening of the blade. We believe that if we only try harder—if we refine the stroke, master the pigment, or sweat over the syntax—we might finally pin the ghost of our anxiety to the canvas. But the ghost does not respond to effort, rather to silence.

The fundamental challenge of the artist is  the systematic dismantling of the self rather than aquisition of skill. To reach the jagged edges of fear and the suffocating depths of anxiety, one must achieve a state of radical porousness. It is a terrifying vulnerability, a deliberate thinning of the skin until the barrier between the internal abyss and the external world becomes a membrane of light. We must become vessels rather than architects.

This is the essence of Automatism: the courage to let the hand move before the mind can censor it.

When we sit before the void of a blank page or a white canvas, our internal editor stands over us like a Victorian schoolmaster. This editor is the guardian of our dignity, the curator of our public face. It whispers of "relevance," "composition," and "taste." It is, in truth, the architect of our mediocrity. This editor is the only thing standing between the artist and the profound truth of their own darkness.

To channel the parts of the self that scream in the night, we must learn to bypass this sentry. We must enter a state where the "I" is the passenger rather than the driver. This is not a lack of control but a higher form of sovereignty. It is the recognition that the subconscious possesses a visual and emotional vocabulary far more potent than any logic we can consciously devise.

Porousness: The ability to let the world, and our own inner weather, leak through us without filtration.

Vulnerability: The willingness to be seen in our unpolished, raw, and perhaps even "ugly" states.

Openness: The refusal to shut the door on the more harrowing aspects of our psyche.

There is a specific, cold dread in putting the excavated parts of the self out for the world to see. To be an artist is to invite judgment, but to be an automatic artist is to invite judgment of the soul’s nakedness. When we edit ourselves, we create a shield. If the critic hates the work, they hate our technique, our choices, our artifice. But when we let go—when we channel the unedited truth of our terror—any rejection feels like a rejection of our very existence.

Yet, this is the price of the great art we are each capable of. The masterpiece is hidden beneath the layers of our socialized safety. It is buried under the "shoulds" and the "musts." To find it, we must be willing to be "mad" in the eyes of the structured world. We must be willing to let the brush-stroke be frantic, the color be jarring, and the narrative be fractured.

We need to stop trying. We need to step out of the way and allow the shadow to speak its name. Only in that state of total, unedited release can we hope to capture the true frequency of human suffering—and, in doing so, find the only beauty that actually matters.


Friday, April 3, 2026

Not So Mysterious

 

Humans are architects of the ethereal, constantly drafting blueprints for ghosts because we cannot endure the cold, hard geometry of the void. There is a peculiar arrogance in our humility when we look at the stars and sigh of "mysteries." We dress the cosmos in the velvet robes of the occult because our eyes are too small to hold the light. The "mystery" is a cataract on the human lens.

The immensity of the cosmos is a mathematical brutality that the human psyche is simply not wired to digest. To look into the throat of a vacuum that stretches across billions of light-years is to feel the ferrous plates of the ego begin to fracture. So, we reach for the sedative of the mystical. We take the terrifying, silent indifference of physics and name it "wonder." We take the complex, unyielding laws of entropy and call them "fate." It is a coping mechanism of the highest order—a psychic insulation against the biting chill of our own insignificance.

Mystery is the fiction the mind creates when it lacks the metabolic strength to process non-fiction. It is the literary skin we graft over the raw nerves of the unknown. When the data is missing, and we cannot digest a vacuum; we fill it with a story. We are a species that cannot breathe without narrative oxygen. We live inside stories like hermit crabs in found shells, clutching to the walls of a myth until the reality of a new discovery forces us to crawl, naked and shivering, into the next.

The "mysteries" of the universe are no more or less objective than the folklore we used to bind the trees and the forest. Once, the forest was a cathedral of spirits because we did not understand the quiet chemistry of photosynthesis or the fungal networks beneath the loam. Now, the forest is biology. Once, the lightning was the temper of a god whereas now, it is a discharge of electrostatic energy. We have stripped the forest and the sky of their divinity, yet we cling to the "mystery" of the deep cosmos as our final redoubt. We create our own myths daily, spinning them out of the gaps in our current archives, ensuring there is always a dark corner left for the imagination to inhabit.

In truth, what we call mystery is merely an objective fact that has not yet been introduced to a name. It is a simple truth waiting for its baptism in the waters of human nomenclature. The universe is a statement written in a language we are still learning to alphabetize. There is no poetry in a pulsar, only rotation and radiation, the poetry is the spillover of our own desperate need for meaning.

Until the day we can map the final coordinate and weigh the last atom, we will continue to tell these dreamy stories. We will point at the dark matter and the expansion of the void and call it a "mystery," treating our ignorance as if it were a sacred quality of the object itself rather than a limitation of the observer. But let us be honest: mystery is just the guest lobby for the mundane. It is the ornate, heavy curtain we hang before the window because we are not yet ready to look at the plain, unadorned light of what actually is. We prefer the shadow-play of the myth over the sterile clarity of the fact, living comfortably in the fiction until the non-fiction inevitably breaks the door down.


Thursday, April 2, 2026

Sea of Red

 

The light in Dehradun retreated like a weary army, leaving behind the spoils of a day well-spent. For the old man, the ritual was sacred, a ceremonial rhythm of deprivation and excess. Sixteen hours of an empty stomach—a hollow, echoing cavern of discipline—finally silenced by a lunch that sat heavy and defiant in his belly. It was the weight of indulgence, a deliberate gravity that tethered him to his wicker chair on the terrace.

From this vantage, the world was a map of his own quiet conquests. He cataloged the landmarks with the precision of a jeweler appraising stones: the undulating spine of the Mussoorie hills, the silver vein of the river, the dark, brooding lungs of the Rajaji forest, and the raw, grey scar of the upcoming highway—a concrete promise of a future he wasn’t looking forward to inhabiting. He counted these sights as blessings, a mental archive of survival and presence.

Then came the slumber, thick and amber-hued, pulling him under the surface of the conscious world.

In the theater of his mind, the years stripped away. He was the horizon’s master of ceremonies. He stood tall, his voice projecting with a vigor that tasted of woodsmoke and mountain air. He was a guide, draped in the invisible mantle of authority, leading a flock of wide-eyed pilgrims through the geography of his heart.

“Look to your left, my dear friends,” he heard himself say, his hand sweeping toward a shimmering mirage. “This is the famous Sahastradhara. A thousand-fold spring, where the water carries the salt of the earth to heal what ails you.”

The tourists—faceless, shimmering entities of pure attention—murmured in collective awe. He moved them like a conductor. He felt the vibration of the earth beneath his feet, the phantom trumpeting of giants.

“Quiet now,” he whispered in the dream, pointing toward the emerald depths of the Rajaji National Park. “The matriarch leads. See the elephants? They carry the memory of the forest in their stride. They do not hurry, for they know the land belongs to those who wait.”

The dream was a tapestry of vivid clarity. Every leaf was etched in sharp relief; every cool spray of water from the falls felt like a baptism. He was useful, he was vibrant, and he was the bridge between the wild earth and the human soul.

The transition was a slow, drowning realization. The sounds of the dream—the rushing water, the heavy footfalls of pachyderms—began to dissolve into the mundane hum of a settling city. The warmth on his face, once the imagined sun of a midday tour, grew heavy and visceral.

He opened his eyes.

The world he had just cataloged was gone. The hills had been swallowed by a bruise-colored haze. The river was a ghost. The forest had retreated into a wall of impenetrable shadow. Dehradun was vanishing, slipping through the fingers of the clock into the cool, indifferent twilight.

But it was the color that held him captive.

The sky had hemorrhaged. A violent, spectacular crimson had spilled across the horizon, saturating the air until it felt thick enough to touch. It was not the gentle pink of a postcard but a deep, thrumming arterial red that stained the white lime of the terrace walls and turned his gnarled hands into the hands of a stranger.

He sat motionless, a stone figure in a rising tide. The "Sea of Red" was pressed against his chest, filling the silence left by his departed dream. He realized then that the "blessings" he had counted earlier—the hills, the trees, the roads—were merely the stage dressing for this final, solitary act.

He was bathed in it. The red light filled the furrows of his brow and the hollows of his eyes. In this light, the distinction between the man and the mountain blurred. He was a part of the fading geography, a landmark of a different sort, waiting for the red to deepen into the final, velvet black of the Himalayan night. He delayed turning on the lamps. To do so now would be to break the spell, to deny the magnificent, terrifying beauty of being consumed by the sun’s last, desperate breath.

He became a passenger in the crimson tide, watching his world go dark.


Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Slavery


The architecture of human suffering is built of a frantic, stuttering temporal displacement. We are a species of ghosts, haunting our own lives. We reside in the sepulchers of yesterday or the shimmering, unreachable mirages of tomorrow, rarely occupying the skin we are currently wearing. This is the fundamental indenture: the refusal of the Now.

Most people exist in a state of perpetual oscillation. They are caught in the centrifugal force of a mind that abhors a vacuum, spinning between the cold iron of regret and the frantic, feverish silk of hope. We look back and see an archive of debts—shame, "what ifs," and the phantom limbs of lost opportunities. We look forward and see a horizon of anxiety dressed as ambition. In this constant flitting, the present moment becomes a mere transit lounge, a sterile corridor we hurry through to get to a "somewhere" that does not exist.

This is a cultural mandate. From the moment we enter the collective machinery, we are "taught" to be human by learning how to be absent. Our systems of education, commerce, and social standing are predicated on the deferral of being. We are told that our value is a cumulative score to be tallied at the end of a career, or a redemption to be found in a future state of grace.

We have inherited a learned indebtedness. We owe the past our penance and the future our toil. This is the psychological slavery of the modern soul—a sophisticated, invisible bondage where the chains are forged from the concepts of time and identity. We carry the weight of a "self" that is defined by what it has been and what it must become, leaving no room for the self that simply is.

Society masquerades as a mentor, claiming to civilize our wilder instincts into something "human." Yet, this socialization is often a process of domesticating the present. To be "human" in the modern lexicon is to be a creature of narrative—a storyteller who is so lost in the plot that they have forgotten the paper they are written on. We are taught to fear the stillness of the present because, in that stillness, the narrative dissolves. Without the noise of our desires and the anchors of our history, who are we?

That question is the ultimate terror to the enslaved mind. We cling to our shackles because they provide a shape to our existence. The regret gives us a history; the anxiety gives us a purpose. Without them, we are faced with the vast, terrifyingly beautiful emptiness of the immediate.

The irony of our captivity is its transparency. The lock is not turned; the door is not even there. The answer to this slavery is not a complex philosophical deconstruction or a decade of asceticism but a surrender so simple it feels like a defeat to the ego.

It is the recognition that the past is a graveyard of memories and the future is a playground for shadows. Neither has any biological reality. The only point of contact between your consciousness and existence is the precise, vibrating center of this heartbeat.

Listen. Beyond the internal monologue, beneath the frantic planning and the weary remembering, there is a pulse. It is the sound of the universe breathing through you. It is whispering in your ears right now, not in words, but in the profound, silent authority of presence. To be free is to stop reaching for the keys and realize that the hands holding them were never yours to begin with. The shackles are yours to wear or throw away, but the freedom has always been the only thing that was ever truly yours.


Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Life is a Verb

 

The monsoon arrives as a terrestrial reset, a violent grace that refuses the permanence of any human claim. In the lowlands, the wasteland is not a static geography but a recurring event. Each year, the sky bruises to a deep, heavy indigo, and the rains descend to dismantle the shanties, dissolving the mud-packed floors and stripping the corrugated sheets until the earth reclaimed by the water is indistinguishable from the chaos of the flood.

And yet, as the silt settles and the humidity begins its long, slow simmer, the inhabitants return. There is no mourning the lost structure with the static grief of those who own stone. 

Once the land is dry, they begin the labor of becoming again. They haul, they tether, they patch. To look at these settlements and see "poverty" is to see a noun—cold, fixed, and pitiable. To look at them and see the rebuilding is to recognize the verb. The shanty is not a thing but a persistent act of defiance against the inevitable.

This is the great, shimmering truth we spend our lives attempting to ignore: nothing is ever finished. We treat our identities, our griefs, and our triumphs as monuments—granite slabs we can polish and protect. But the universe has no interest in monuments. It deals only in currents. To cling to a "self" as a finished product is to attempt to dam a river with a handful of sand. It is the wise who understand that the eye must be wiped clean every morning, that to truly see is to witness the world again and again for the first time. The moment we name a thing, we stop seeing it and start seeing our definition of it.

To see the flow is to understand that stability is a hallucination of the slow-moving. If we zoom out far enough, even the mountains are a slow, subsurface wave. If we zoom in, our very cells are a frenetic exchange of energy, a constant dying and birthing that maintains the illusion of a solid "me." When we stop resisting this motion—when we stop trying to freeze the frame—we move from being the observer of the storm to being the wind itself. There is an exquisite, ungraspable beauty in this lack of tether. It is the freedom of the unfinished.

Even the finality of the grave is a linguistic lie. Death is not the end of the sentence but a shift in syntax. Life continues its conjugation in the memory that stings the eyes of a survivor, in the sharp, sudden cadence of words left behind in a dusty notebook, or in the haunting stillness of a photograph where a gaze still reaches out to touch the living. We are exhaled into the air, an essence that lingers in the lungs of those who follow, a quiet ripple in the collective ambient pressure.

We are not the house but the building of it. We are not the wound but the healing of it. In this wasteland of shifting tides and seasonal wreckage, there is no arrival, only the exquisite, terrifying, and holy momentum of the journey. Life is not a state of being we inhabit rather an action we perform until the very last breath—and then, it is an action that the world performs in our absence.