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.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Look up, Elias

The sky, circling in blue and orange has
turned into an alchemist?




Elias has stopped trying to name it.

Orange into blue into something

that has no colour yet,


the colour of light that arrives

near the end of things


and seems to know it,

seems to be

watching back, in greys.


Elias keeps walking.

This is the whole discipline now —

to keep walking

under a sky of vapid judgment

and not turn away 

and not explain yourself

to anyone,

not even to yourself,

specially not to yourself

not anymore.


We are not

the rational creators

we tell ourselves we are.

We do not choose towards joy.


We choose away from the face

we are afraid to meet later —

the older self

standing at the back of every room

we ever entered,

arms folded,

already knowing how it ends.


Elias chose some things for that reason.

The safe harbor.

The door not opened.

The words not spoken


on an evening in another city

that he can still locate exactly

in his body

thirty years later.


He was trying to protect himself

from regret.

He did not know

that unlived life

accrues its own interest,


His fear was right —

to choose is to lose

what was not chosen,

but not to choose

is to lose everything,

including the self

that might have done the choosing.


The unchosen accumulate.

That is what no one tells you.

They do not disappear

when you decide against them.


They stand at the edges of the field

in weather like this,

patient,

unhurried,

waiting for the colours

to catch up.


The mistakes are not

the worst of it.

The mistakes had weight,

had consequence,

had the dignity of having

actually happened.

You can walk the perimeter of a mistake.

You can know its dimensions.


It is the unlived things

that have no edges —

the person you might have become

in a different city,

the love you almost let

be as large as it wanted to be,

the room you stood outside

and did not enter

because entering felt

too much like falling.


The sky deepens.

He does not look up.

He has made his peace

with most of it,

or made something

that resembles peace

from a sufficient distance,

which may be

all that is available now.


The field is wide.

Elias is small in it.

He knew this would happen —

not the field exactly,

but the feeling,

the late light,

the sense of being

a figure in a landscape

that was always larger

than his plans for it.


He keeps walking

because the body still insists,

because stopping

would require a reason

and Elias has outlasted

most of his reasons,

because somewhere ahead

the field ends

and he would like to see

where.


Not with urgency.

Not with fear.


Just with the quiet

faithful attention

of someone who has learned,

too late and exactly on time,

that the present moment

was always the point,

that the sky was always

doing something extraordinary

above whatever field he crossed,


and that he looked up

far less often

than he should have.

Hotel