Saturday, 27 December 2014

THE FEMALE GAZE

The papers are stashed with news of rapes and other means of assault on women everyday – acid attacks and shootings being a typical feature. Sometimes one or two of these become major news and the dining table becomes a pounding table over them. Have such antisocial occurrences increased in the recent past? Or is it just that the media chooses to focus on them more? There are innumerable assault cases that still go unnoticed every day! Who is to say there weren’t just as many, or perhaps, more, before it caught such widespread attention? Historically, for centuries past, world over, men have always looked at women’s bodies as areas of conquest, as something to be possessed by right. Will things ever change?

Feminism is ostensibly taking center stage. Advertisements advocating change in male mentality, seminars, media discussions, etc. are becoming common place. Feminism has even seeped into casual conversations! But at the heart of it all, people still believe women need to be restricted. And they do. Anybody can be dangerous if they take an eccentric interest in an ideology. Women are no exception. Left on their own, women, too, can be very bold; contrary to the popular stereotype. Things do need to change. Women do need to fight against this universal assumption that men seem to have. But how many of us can fight outright when our life is hanging on the balance?

Would fighting back with violence solve the problem? It is more likely to simply bring out the bestial side of both sexes triggering a destructive frenzy. Feminism is needed by all means. But it should perhaps dress itself up differently and speak a different language. Headlong attack cannot undo an age old assumption that women need to be controlled. True that women have broken shackles that bound previous generations. But the male gaze hasn’t changed. And it isn’t just sexual assaults that need to be looked at to notice this. On a daily basis, things that men say and do, at however a small level, have that time-beaten assumption at the root.

Every woman grows up literally going through a separate course of study, learning and trying to understand this thorn in the male psyche. Every girl, in our country at least, has this fear reinforced, as she grows up, by numerous attacks on her body, major or minor, and commonly in public places. A common girl cannot afford to display stubbornness and simply declare that she will not restrict herself in terms of time or company. Any news report of assaults would be nothing heard new to a common girl – most often she herself has or has had a close acquaintance go through similar experiences. A fear she cannot escape from must, thus, perpetually burn the inside of her. She can never unleash her complete self – never realize her full capability – while this apprehension dogs not only her but everyone who loves her and cares about her.


Though news reports and media discussions are a great step in creating awareness and handing out justice in certain cases, it is also going a long way in enhancing the anxiety and unease within common households. What then can help move towards a solution for the issue; the law? Well, that is another weather-beaten road altogether. The law, however, can only control men’s actions; it cannot alter male gaze. Can the male gaze be altered at all? 

Monday, 13 October 2014

Chaos -- An anthology of literary pieces

This is an anthology of literary pieces and photographs on Chaos. It is the second anthology published by Lituminati. Please do read and discover what Chaos means to you and so many others around. For a copy visit lituminati.com.
Happy reading! 

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

You For Me

You are the one fixed point of brightness
In the fluid pall of darkness around me;
But not the “romantic” full moon,
For you have neither the craters nor the blemishes,
And the light you give is borrowed not!

You are not the flame of a solitary candle in the distance,
For you dance when you please and
Pierce me with your constant glare only when you wish.
No breeze can sway you,
No storm can blow you out,
Neither do you need wax and wick to cling on to!

Who you are, I cannot define accurately.
But this I know surely:  You are
Who I need you to be
When I need you to be it
Giving me What I need at the moment
Exactly How I need it to be handed to me
Showing me precisely Why I needed it at all.


Friday, 5 September 2014

A GOODBYE

His warm being towered over me. I knew. But I couldn't accept it. It was untrue till it happened. Our world was all there was. Just the warmth of his overwhelming presence, the sweet breath that seemed to linger on his soft smile, the inexpressive eyes staring back at me. I didn't know, then, the depth of feeling behind that still black. He was a void on the outside, a reflection of me; both of us the blank cover of a heavy book. 

I rested my front on his chest, my cheeks pressed against the back of his neck.  I could hear our hearts timed to each other, slow, steady, strong as one. My eyes looked on beyond. Ghosts moved around us. It was the rhythmic heaving of my chest that mattered.

And then I moved away. Colder air ran into my cheeks and gushed in through the round neck of my tee. My lips broadened in a smile as a practiced reflex to the tender pink of his. I followed his hand as he drove it through his longish black hair. He was in clear view now, but my sight began to blur. The smile was fixed on my face. His voice rung clear in my ears, “bye”. “Have a safe journey and call me when you reach home” I replied.

His broad, straight shoulders, that wore my favourite navy blue shirt, drifted away from me. He was the phantom now; a deafening multitude of voices suddenly raising hell and drowning mine. The figure still transfixed me to my spot, my senses working by their own bidding. It lingered for a while when the security personnel at the doors checked his air-ticket and passport. And then it disappeared.


I shut my eyes.  A silent stream of water flowed down my cheeks just as my voice tied itself up in a knot. My legs seemed to have lost their ability to move, my lungs to breathe, my heart to beat. I was back under his warmth, his lips pressed against mine, my fingers walking through his hair, his soft skin caressing mine, our heavy breaths and heart beats marching to time...

Thursday, 7 August 2014

A YEAR IN RETROSPECT

A year, never mind whether it drags on slowly at the time or rushes by with a few blinks of the eye, always seems just several hours long when we are past it. It is as though our mind has taken the liberty to dismember the sequence of moments past and make myriad collages out of them. I don't own my mind. It is my de facto authority. I make of myself what it makes of me. And with everything that I do in a year, it grows, dragging me along. It shows me the world as it sees and with every passing day it perceives more and comprehends more.

I am my heart. I know what I want. I can sense beauty. I can feel love. But I can't survive. That is for my mind to do. How much a friend my mind is to me lets me do what I want. I would choose almost always what my mind would refuse to accept as profitable. My mind is right and I am true.

It is most often that we chance upon the unexpected that gives us the happiness we seek at the moment. Little things of beauty we hold on to and joy puts the angelic smile on our lips, the childlike sparkle in our eyes. My mind suspects. It debates. But it is trapped. It has been shackled by the prejudices and vices of the world. It distrusts trust. It can tell right from wrong. It is logical. But I can tell good from bad. I am free. I believe in the impossible and listen to the silence of my loved one.

I built quite a relationship with the world, thus, in the year bygone. In simple words, I grew up a tad and spun a personality and identity around my demeanour. Or so I would like to believe at the moment and precisely this my mind would prove to you now. It was, actually, a cocktail of a quarter hardships, some new assignments, a gill of fun, a pint of depression, gallons of love and a pinch of misunderstandings.


Every year is the same. A sequence of memories that last to come back to us when they feel most noticed; slaves to our mind that worships mood. A year passed is another glossy magazine’s back cover folding in on the last page, the glue stick being kept back in the stand at the edge of the table, the quill being replaced in the ink bottle – the latest addition to the library in our “mind palace”. 

REVIEW: The House On the Strand by Daphne Du Maurier

This is a novel published in 1969 and set both then and in 14th century Tywardwreath, a Cornish village, which translates to “The House on the Strand” in English.

The story is a curious mix of science fiction, historical romance, psychological thriller and horror. A drug that transports the taker’s mind to the past as a witness to actual historical events, while physically remaining in the present, is confusing, addictive and uncanny. As with other Du Maurier novels, the narrative is brilliant. Experiencing the present very actively through the mind of the narrator, Dick, who agrees to test the drug and his effects for its discoverer and his friend, Magnus, a London University professor, and passively in the past through the same mind gives the reader the sense of addiction, similar sleepless nights, as the protagonist.

The perfect balance between the exciting romance in the past, with the narrator almost a voyeur, and the sharp, crude, overwhelming reality of the present kept me hooked to the story till the end, if only to contest the whole idea of the drug. This magnetism was the result of an uncontrollable desire to find out how the drug worked, and not merely a fascination with the idea of being able to wander off into a livelier and more melodramatic world six centuries past, so far only spelled out in tedious literature. To every trip Dick took, I tagged along, felt stimulated with passion and was covered with goosebumps when I returned; such was the power of the narrative, spooky and thrilling.

Though telling tales of people in the past, drawing from current scientific research and psychological theories, putting together Virgil, Dante, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Edgar Allan Poe, Chaucer and more, it has elements of the supernatural and an originality that grips you.


Not Du Maurier’s best and most famous, but queer and intellectually stimulating enough to be definitely worth the sleepless hours. 



P.S: This review and other reviews and amazing articles also published in http://bluestockingsmh.wordpress.com/

Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Handpicked favourites among things said and written by people


  • "If you have the facts, pound the facts. If you have the law, pound the law. If you have neither, pound the table." -- an old legal aphorism.
  • "An archaeologist is a man who studies old things and finds they are new."  -- G.K.Chesterton in The Man Who Knew Too Much.
  • "It's not what enters men's mouths that's evil, it's what comes out of their mouths that is." -- Paulo Coelho in The Alchemist.
  • "It's not levi-OO-sa, not levio-SA!" -- J.K.Rowling via Hermione Granger in Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone.
  • "Eye of rabbit, harp string hum, turn this water into rum!" -- Seamus Finnigan in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.
  • "...the different branches of arithmetic -- ambition, distraction, uglification and derision." -- Lewis Carroll via The Mock Turtle in Alice in Wonderland.
  • "Words mean more than we mean to express when we use them." -- Lewis Carroll.
  • "If it was so, it might be; and if it were so, it would be; but as it isn't, it ain't. That's logic." -- Lewis Carroll via Tweedledee in Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There. 
  • "A play, like a cat, has several lives." -- Introduction to Twelfth Night in the Arden Edition. 
  • "It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live." -- J.K.Rowling via Albus Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone. 
  • "Did you miss me?" -- Moriarty in BBC's 2010 TV series, Sherlock. 
  • "I'm just gonna take a minute to let it ride. I'm just gonna take a minute and let it breeze." -- K'naan in Take a Minute.
  • "Words are, in my not so humble opinion, our most inexhaustible source of magic capable of both inflicting injury and remedying it." -- J.K.Rowling via Albus Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. 
  • "Her shadow it was that tremblers had feared through long generations after her poor frame was dust." -- Charlotte Bronte in Vilette.
  • "Poetry is indeed something divine... it is that which comprehends all science, and that to which all science must be referred." -- P.B. Shelley.
  • "If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?" -- P.B. Shelley.
  • "Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask and he will tell you the truth." -- Oscar Wilde.
  • "I will drink/ Life to the lees." -- Tennyson in Ulysses.
  • "I am the unified self-controlled center of the universe." -- White European Man of the Ruling Class. 
  • "It is our choices,... that show what we truly are..." -- J.K. Rowling via Albus Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
  • "One day God and Met somewhere and both exclaimed, 'My Creator!'" -- Ankana Bhattacharya, my sister.
  • "The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing." -- Stephen Covey.
  • "Somewhere, far down, there was an itch in his heart, but he made it a point not to scratch it. He was afraid of what might come leaking out." -- Markus Zusak in The Book Thief
  • "Time moves slowly, but passes quickly." -- Alice Walker in The Colour Purple.
  • "Everything was mud... everyone was mud. As the wheel (pottery) turns, as it is moulded, that which comes out is the shape of man." -- G. Kalyana Rao in Untouchable Spring
  • "We all write poems; it is simply that poets are the ones who write in words." -- John Fowles in The French Lieutenant's Woman.
  • "I feel like I've lived only one day with a thousand memories." -- Varening Konghay, my graduation classmate.
  • "Between what is said and not meant and what is meant and not said, most of love is lost." -- Kahlil Gibran. 








Tuesday, 1 July 2014

Voices

Voices in my head,

They just keep getting louder and louder,

And they’re all my enemies.

It’s like they have my brain hostage.

It makes me want to cry,

But I can’t.

The face must be firm.

No one must know.

These voices, they love to talk.

They go on and on and on...

They always have something new to say,

Something to make me feel bad

Or else vain.


But I know,

They are the children of loneliness,

Of emptiness,

Of having nothing to do

And no one to laugh with.

No one to want me and what I want.

No one to care. 

Only to sneer at me and smirk.

One day I’m too young to understand,

And the next, I’m being asked

Why I can’t understand

Something so simple.

Everybody is smarter.

Everybody knows more.

No one wants what I have.

I must have what everybody wants.


So I keep myself busy.

Busy with whatever I can.

For all the world’s a stage

And I’m just one

Of the common actors

Playing one among the crowd.

I just play my part faithfully.

I never get the lead.

That is for the smart people,

The ones who know everything.

I don’t know how to make

My way in this world,

Or in the world where

The voices come from.

I’m just me and I’m alone.

And that’s all I’ll ever be. 

Sunday, 22 June 2014

A PAGE OUT OF THE SNIFF MEMOIRS: A WAR TALE OF THE MOTHER AND THE MOUSE (Based on a true incident)

In remembrance of the simple but fun things that color our daily lives at home and the little events that make a mark on us and define who we are. 


I sometimes feel my mother would have better fitted the role of Spike, the bulldog that Tom and Jerry made so familiar to us (Wink).  She wakes up early in the morning with a typical sleepy yawn and walks, still zombie-like in the semi-wakeful state, to the bedroom window. There, on the meshed portion of the window, she flattens a few unlucky mosquitoes who are either too drowsy from the effect of the mosquito repellent or too content with blood to move. This is a sort of morning house-wide mosquito hunting spree that has, somehow, become part of her routine – something to energize her and freshen her up. Her final stop is the kitchen (Sniff, sniff). Now she’s awake; her small eyes as wide as they could be, scanning the area after her perimeter patrol.

What she does next is why I liken her to the bulldog -- her talent to sniff up an anomaly in the environment coupled with her subsequent exercising of authority over the rest of us, topped with the accuracy of her judgement and guesswork. I admire this ability of hers, but it doesn't suit me. It doesn't favor me or my poor teenage soul’s destructive wants and needs. I can never get away with anything! If the army knew about her, they might just give up their sniffer dogs and train her! Her sense of smell isn't just one of the five senses. It is THE SENSE. Beware.  It doesn't take a whiff of ammonia to sharpen her mind, it takes mischief.

Recently for about a month, she would regularly sniff up missing or tampered artifacts, some of them being a few cloth pieces from a stack in the kitchen storeroom, and cereal and gram packets scratched or gnawed at with evidently expert teeth in the cupboards. Predictably, she would yap and bark me into searching for their whereabouts. I would, in these rare times when I wasn't intimidated by her presence, imagine that she was an adorable white Pomeranian. Persistent dogs, those! Kept up their high-pitched bark till they got their way!
The quest was not so much for the affected things as it was for the prime suspect of the case, a mouse. The imp had successfully evaded her for weeks now. It was a talented, well-trained enemy!

However, one afternoon, as my mother headed towards the refrigerator, who should confront her but a mouse! It ran out from under the fridge and stood there staring at her, unfazed, perhaps even smirking or giggling. Well, after glaring back at it for a while, my mother decided to proceed with a peace pact. She simply opened the front door, which was a few feet from the site of confrontation, and walked away. But the mouse made a deliberate dash for it in the other direction; inevitable destination – kitchen storeroom.  This first act of defiance on its part that became the official war cry. A new routine of events commenced henceforth, both mouse and mother too stubborn to give in (sigh!). Both were ready to take the other on with sweat and dust. A tiny creature, the mouse, but it had the fiery combat spirit of the bulldog.

Such was the frame of events in our home when one evening, on the sofa opposite a very exciting Indian Premiere League (IPL) cricket match, sat my petite parents and a bowl of popcorn.  My five foot five father, an otherwise serious man who generally sits, facing the TV, at his “there-is-absolutely-nothing-in-my-head” relaxation mode in the evening, was rather animated that day; his commentary overshadowing the one from the field.  His almost round cheeks and humble moustache would give him an additional advantage while throwing his unfailingly hilarious one liners that he let loose from time-to-time, even during some of his most serious moods. Beside him sat my mother.  The popcorn was one that wasn't enjoying the show. It was being gobbled up just because it was there and the hands were working in reflex to the excited brains. It liked to be the center of attraction. It preferred movies to cricket matches, where it would be shown a bit more interest in! However, there was another present, squatting, unnoticed, on the sofa back. Well, our uninvited guest was definitely not honing his cricket skills. I am, thus, deducing that he had his eyes on the dejected popcorn – or, wait a minute, was he admiring my mother again?

This is the precise scene which greeted me and my opened bottle of water into the room. A split second later it also boasted spilled water on the floor, a bottle enthusiastically rolling about and a stupefied, gaping teen. There was a slight technical problem, though. I was directly facing my mother, two inches from whose ear sat the mouse. Two seconds later, I realized I was in the same boat as Tom up against Spike with Jerry smirking beside him. (Uh, oh!) Except now, it was Jerry who was going to be in trouble.  It was my turn to smirk – or not.
Cricket, popcorn, excitement forgotten, “Close all doors! Trap the mouse!” mom shrieked. “Pomeranian” didn't fail to cross my mind even as, in the brain-freeze state, I hurried towards the farthest bedroom which “Jerry the Grey” had made a dash for. Mother followed us and on the way slipped on the wet floor, poor thing. This, however, didn't interrupt her momentum, fueled by her determination to teach the little devil a lesson. She probably didn't even register the fall, with all the adrenaline, because she was behind me in a jiffy! And a moment later, at least it seemed like a moment to my mind-in-a-trance, she and the mouse were almost playing dog and the bone across a small corner table opposite the door.

“Hang in there, Ma!” I said as I hurried to the back exit and fetched a broom that was kept adjacent to that door. Before I knew it mum snatched the broom from me and began to thrash at the mouse with all the energy she could muster and missed her mark every time. He was a well-trained burglar, this one! She had followed Grey Jerry through the passage leading to the back door. Dad, having closed all doors on the way, had forced the imp along the passage and right out of the house. She slammed the door shut and stamped her foot on the ground as she let out a huge puff of air. That was that. Or so we thought.

With deep sighs of relief, the neglected popcorn was once again brought into focus. Dad went back to his cricket commentary and mom to being Spike asleep on the sofa, content at having been reinstated the upper hand. The mouse was out. Peace and tranquility was restored to the ambience of the household. I dutifully mopped the living room floor and returned to my room wearing my usual mopey face and resumed wasting time on YouTube and Facebook. There was, in addition to this renewal of the mundane, a certain sense of lightness in the air, a cheer in our demeanor. At the dinner table, even mum was being all bubbly and sweet.
Happiness was sprinkled in the air and food was all the tastier when, suddenly, “What’s that under the center-table?” exclaimed mum with a frown. It was our Jerry who had by then begun darting across the room. Mother was up and about to take a leap at him when he made straight for the back door and disappeared. That stopped her in her tracks. “Where did he go?” she wondered aloud. And as though to answer her query, Mouse popped right back in, perhaps gave a two-second giggle and vanished again. That was when mum went down on her knees and squinted through a point in the bottom right corner of the door where it didn't fit perfectly into the wall and left a paltry opening. She immediately retracted; her nose scrunched, and said, “It’s hopeless. We've lost.” The mouse wouldn't leave through a wide open door no matter what but, enjoyed free and unrestricted passage via a secret pathway of its own discovery. Oh, the irony!

That doesn't mean the war is over. It only implies that she would take care of the rest in the morning. She had decided to give the issue a pass for the night. She had hurt herself a bit by the fall. Besides, we were all heavily tired after the action packed evening; not to mention I had a permanent thumbs up for sleep time anyway.

Now, if this were a kids action movie, which it surely seemed to be, next morning would come and there would be a series of events where every time mother would seal the opening or thrash about the house or devise any other setup to keep Grey Mouse at bay, he would find another way to thwart her efforts. But as it happens, this was real life.

It was 11p.m. and everybody went to bed. I was out like a fused tungsten bulb the moment my head squeezed onto the pillow and I had plummeted into deep, sweet sleep before I knew it.

Loud shouts and shrieks and crashing noises woke me up. I switched on the light and looked at the clock, letting out a continuous murmur of curses. It was 3a.m. I figured the racket was in my parents’ bedroom. Couldn't whatever this was wait till the sun was up and I’d have to leave the bed anyway? Wait a minute. Why was there a commotion in my parents’ bedroom at this time of the night? That had never happened before! I made my way there, drunk with drowsiness, and froze in the doorway. This time Dad was thrashing about with a mini-broom while my mother was on her knees shouting out instructions! All this was happening, astonishingly, within the confines of the mosquito net that covered their bed. Jerry the Grey was frantically scuttling around the bed trying to escape the fatal blows from the broom. He was, however, trapped. He took blow after blow until, finally, he was forced to surrender by death. Grey Jerry was martyred in this war between the two sniffers. I must say he put up a brave and witty fight.

This time, a sense of triumph didn't come over mother. Her intention never had been for the feud to end in death of a party. It was simply desired that each stay out of the other’s territory. Mouse deserves respect and admiration for having successfully evaded my mother’s nose and taking position on the bed unnoticed.

The mystery of the course of events triggered by Mouse’s behavior still lies unsolved. The mosquito net was a new one and remains new. No signs of breach were discovered on its investigation. Cause of death was boiled down to fatal impact from the mini-broom due to his failure to escape through the opening in the mosquito-net-house that presented itself when Dad left the bed to get the broom; the failure was attributed to anxiety and confusion. It’s no fresh knowledge; confusion can take down the toughest of them all.

Thursday, 15 May 2014

When I Think Of "X"

When I think of “X”, I always think of that envelope, the hand breaking open the seal, the negligible crackle that accompanies the insignificant process of detachment of the little adhesive at the joint, the sound of silence that resonates in the moment of waiting for the revelation of the mystery . . .

People call the “X” mysterious. But it isn't mystery shrouding “X”, it is “X” encasing mysteriousness. “X” is the emblem of the “unknown”, the “uncovered”, the “occult”, the “special”. The boggart (Harry Potter and the prisoner of Azkaban), the math equations, closing your eyes and losing yourself to music and dance (The witch of Portobello), finding the long separated other half of you (Plato), self-contemplation, scrounging through all the world has to offer to locate your talent, motivation – in short, the search for the X-factor is what intrigues us. We try to discover and form intimate relations with that which baffles us. We liken it to the beauty that we say each thing possesses.


Sometimes the X-factor is a tiny quality within us or a tiny attribute of a thing – a wallflower of its own achieving. We may need to squint to see it. But it is precisely what makes us grand. It is this little thing that ends up putting the laughter of genuine happiness to our lips – the worth of all the effort and ennui that went into growing our humble wallflower into a perfectly pruned bush.

Everything in nature seems random, but follows a rhythm and routine, a discipline. Everything around us is telling us something or showing us something. And we are trying to figure out what that is; we try to look for the answer that seems to elude us but is right there.


We search the world in our attempt to find a meaning for life, for our existence. Some are awed and moved by the spatters of colours all around and others simply revel in the pleasurable brightness it displays. The world however is what we make it to be. And we paint it to be who we are.


A painting is a projection of our thoughts, so are the words that leave our pen; the ink and color are the tools. Our thoughts are the ambassadors of our being. We might want to look inside. Maybe we’ll see a glimpse of the world there.


Color fascinates us, a rainbow hypnotizes us. So does the absence of colorfulness. Falling snowflakes, autumn leaves floating down and turning the whole place around us orange-brown; all of this stupefies us, leaves us breathless. We look for patterns. Colors are what show us the patterns. We create patterns inside us, in our lives; we scan the world to locate pattern. The world in our mind is like a picture of patterns made by color spattered with brush strokes, as in a painting. Different people set themselves to different patterns. I am programmed for criss-cross. As a kid, I always filled my bar graphs with criss-crosses. They are chaos in systematicness and systematicness in chaos. Strokes strike each other, cancel, mingle, interlock and interfere with each other all at once; but don’t overlap. They are a reflection of my world as I see it, of things that happen to me – confusing, but clear and beautiful; hypnotizing, but clarifying and peace giving. Most people are like spiders, crafting their intricate and strong web, waiting and watching and spinning; cunning, but patient. The other kind are ants; patient, honest and hardworking. The spider wins.


The good versus evil championship in the world is a manifestation of the tussle within us. Each of us has a light inside, a vertex that glows with blinding intensity. It is the youth in us – the zeal to DO. It is what brings the smile to our faces and helps us spread a smile. It is the core of our soul, the part of us that makes us who we are, our X-factor. Together with all our geniuses we mobilize the cogs in the clockwork of the world; as a team – each of us with an important perspective to share.

X marks the spot. X doesn't single out the loner. It marks the presence of a team. X is on the last coach of a train. X stops us in our tracks. It is a warning. It makes us rethink – positive or negative, focus or sideline, void or full. It is the center from which four directions emanate; the point of significance. 

X is the mysterious, the unknown, and the variable. It is the inherent quest motive that humanity pursues. Why X? What is X? X is the core of a person’s existence; the fire that drives the soul. We are oblivious to it. But it is an infallible presence. It follows us around in disguise.


Photographs by Ghosh, Ranajay. 2014. 

Saturday, 3 May 2014

"Hope" -- an anthology of literary pieces by Lituminati


This is an anthology of literary pieces on Hope .  It is an amazing collection -- one that everybody should read .  If you do choose to read it , you will have changed at least one thing about the way you think by the time you get to the end .  So , please pick up a free online copy .  It is available on Google Books and Google Play ( follow this link : http://lituminati.com/) .

P .S . : I am one of the authors .  My piece is titled "Hope" .

Saturday, 25 January 2014

Singular thoughts that I've had...


  • Life makes you want things you can't have; and then it makes you want them even more...
  • I don't want to be the one who can be, anymore. I want to be the one who is.
  • The tiniest things have the greatest consequences.
  • Love is so many layers removed from reality that reality seems not to exist anymore.
  • There's that weird moment when a lot of work is waiting for you to pounce on, but you're too lazy to move and too bored of doing nothing!
  • It's either the best or the worst; you can't swim in between.
  • It doesn't matter whether you like vampires or not; they inevitably suck!
  • A strange face today may be the most familiar face tomorrow.
  • The world is a lonely crowded party; thank God the home isn't the world.
  • Laziness is the mother of a lot of innovations!
  • It's all in the mind; mind it!
  • In life, a mix of all the spices makes for sweet.
  • At school everybody is a superstar.
  • Status speaks.
  • Life is all about takin' the chances and breakin' the rules!!
  • Life forces you to make choices and become happy, only to deny you that happiness and tell you that your choices didn't make a difference after all!
  • Don't let your emotions run wild; they will smother you.
  • The faster you work, the slower time moves.
  • All the world's a masquerade!
  • The past is the beginning of the future.
  • Time makes bitter memories sweet.
  • Change in the ways of the world is outrunning time.
  • Even if the colours of the world grey out, the world remains a beautiful place. 
  • If you want to see the wonders of the world, you have to go out there.
  • Vacation is often a time to remind oneself that one doesn't choose family.

Friday, 17 January 2014

The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde -- A Review

This is the only novel published by Oscar Wilde and he did suffer quite a bit for the consequent controversies and outrages it sparked; for it was written in 1895.

It has a prologue justifying the work of art as a beautiful thing. As much as the fact that the book is worth picking up only to read the prologue, the wisdom in reading the eerie story that follows also stands. Dorian Gray is a young man who wishes to give his soul to a portrait of himself in order to keep his own beauty eternally. Unfortunately for him, this wish of his comes true. The storyline is simple. It is about Dorian’s obsession with beauty and his subsequent unethical and evil deeds that cause his portrait to age and ultimately culminates in his stabbing the picture and dying as a consequence. Oscar Wilde uses three characters through whose dialogues he puts to the reader a lot many ideas of age, beauty, art, youth, wealth, pleasure, morality, happiness, truth and the soul. There is also a subtle hint towards homosexuality. Through not only witty dialogues, but even by descriptions Wilde talks of things and beliefs that contradicted those existing in that society.

Of the many wonderful things that one discovers about this novel, the one thing that struck me most was placing of Dorian Gray in the contrasting company of the nobility as well as the filthy back-street brothels and dingy alleyways; a contrast that so exactly depicted his character and lifestyle.

The dual identity issue of Dorian Gray is used in many contexts and is most probably one that we are all familiar with in some way or another. This is the novel that original put forward the idea. It is one of those masterpieces that one enjoys ever so much more every next time one reads it.


GENRE: Gothic, philosophical and speculative fiction