Saturday, 31 March 2012

‘w H o’




‘Who?’


Me!

I mean, me?

sometimes a sad me, a bad me
sometimes a happy me
sometimes a lazy me, a very crazy me
sometimes a blank, silent and lost me
sometimes, some good times a coffee me
sometimes its just me
sometimes a bright and happy me
sometimes a book and me
sometimes you can see
sometimes its just my prose and me


Yes me

I mean me!
Sunny


You?
Who you?
Are you a Persian blue?
You?
Who you?

eMONK 

Friday, 30 March 2012

iF oNlY wOrDs CoUlD eVeR tElL


M.T.                                                                                                    1: 19 am    29 March 12                  


  To walk, to dream, to smile, to sigh

To climb a Purple tree so high

To burn in the agony that on me befell

If only words could ever tell



To be touched somewhere, so deep inside

Beyond those mountains, within these tides

To die in your arms and to live by your spell

If only words could ever tell



To be insane, like a walk in the rain

To spend my evenings in your sweet pain 

In the aura of your being silently shall I dwell

If only words could ever tell



To sleep by your ears and to wake in your smell

Will be for me a life spent well

My pen deny me expressions, as I compel

If only these words, could ever ever tell



eMONK

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

B e A u T i F u L y O u

       
           10: 46 PM                                                                                                           M.T.



B e A u T i F u L y O u 


In the smile on your face

Is where beauty meets grace

 In the innocence of your eyes

 Someone’s silent mornings rise

 To your picture on my wall

Whispering I often call

To see if you know

 In my dreams, every day you show

Once traveling the world with you

 There's so much to say, so much to do

  A little cotton white sheep

To hold it in your arms so keenly you weep

 And on a cool summer night in June

  Singing your melody to the moon

In dreams of your reflections together we grow

 The more I dream the more I know

 But once I saw a tragic play

The lover to the beloved never had a say

Of a world where lovers never met

 The world as a stage was all set

He wrote to her of love so much

Without a word or a touch

She left him a love note

That never found a reader and never found a quote

 Unto this truth if I am to live

 The prose of my love I would still sometimes give


Thursday, 22 March 2012

a HoT sUmMeR iNdIaN dAy


SAKET                                                                                  4:10 pm        22/03/2012


On those random traveling days
Struck in between myriad destinations
When the room is damp
The bed is hard
The fan rocks my sleep apart
On a hot summer Indian day
Wondering if I should go out
Explore
What’s going on out there?
Delhi, the heart of India
I look out at it the window
Look at what I have to wear
Unpack pack unpack
Decide otherwise, walk, walk and walk,
The room is small for a thought to complete
Think through thoughts thought of
Find the longest stretch in the room?
Ends in the bathroom
A metal bucket a small sink
Smells damp and moist
A hot summer Indian day
Goa was good
Water is healing,
The beach
The food, the fish
How soon holiday’s finish
Back to work and my desk
The tap drips tip tup tudup
May be there’s water at last
To sit and compose
My writings of magical India
The power goes
War
A big generator blowing at my window
Rescue
No manager
Shout, shout
Small boy
Manager sleeping
Smile at boy
Go back to room
A hot summer Indian day
The door knocks; knock knock!
The ride is here
The night much bearable
Hungry but cant trust my stomach here
Water! Drink a lot of water
Time for the flight
A long drive he says
Start four hours in advance
Delhi is asleep
Lights flickering on boards
People sleeping on streets
Dogs chasing cars 
Silence
The streets so full of life before
Asleep are all asleep
Like a giant resting
I have to get out before it wakes up
Roll down the window
Small air cool air
Home and mom
At the airport
Eat eat eat
Good coffee
A good read for the ride
Good-bye India, you r colorful but strange,
I’ll take your stories and you
Keep the change

eMONK

Friday, 16 March 2012

t O e S


M. T.                                                                                          10:33 am  17th March
  t O e S  

I could see her toes
From under my nose
 When I bend to kiss her hand

Its looks so small
Like a fairy ball
Pointing to the sea and the sand

She smiles at me
In her eyes I see
Her beauty so bright and grand

I tried again
When the music began
When I asked her a dance to stand

Her steps so tender
She floats I wonder
Like she moves a magic wand

She smells of rose
Like a poet’s prose
That I'll never understand

I love her, I say
And I hope and pray
 Her dreams may always expand

Her eyes so deep
 I always peep
Searching for a place to land

But this is poetry
Only symmetry
A romance of a pen and a hand

And so it goes
As I see her toes
Pointing to the sea and the sand



eMONK

Thursday, 15 March 2012

t H e M e L o D y O f m A d N e S s


M.T.                                                                                          4:24 am     16th March 2012



A madman laughing at the moon
Wonders why, we’re running too soon
 Nowhere to go, nothing to loose
To find his answers, he had to choose

 Wasn’t a madman, once in time
 Was worth a Penney, was worth a dime
Lived the suite, worked the cube
Ate the silver and smoked the tube

Days were lengthy, dull and long
Missing a melody, missing a song
Wished he could fly and fly so high
Walk the streets and cry his cry

Felt like an alien, in his own skin
With nether a kith, nor a kin
Thought for a while and he hit the road
To find his silence, his true abode

  He walked he smiled, he sang he wrote
Traveled till, he could stay afloat
Thrown around he was, abused
 Could find no help, he could have used

 Starved for days, has fallen weak
  Eyes are shallow, his expressions meek
Far away he thought there be
 A place for people as lonely as he

  In a village somewhere, under a big Mango tree
For years now, one could see
 There's a madman laughing at the moon
Wonders why are we'r running so soon



eMONK

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

a G o N y

North campus                                                                                            3:30 am 14/03/2012

Of preaching

Of not reaching

Of a torn page drifting on the street

Of stains on a white sheet

Of a call on hold

Of a story half told

Of frozen desires

Of flat tyres

Of settling down

Of a highway town

Of coffee gone cold

Of growing old

Of a badly colored wall

Of an empty stall

Of a word spelled wrong

Of a badly written song

Of a climax foretold

And a lie so bold

‘For the ones who brought me closer to the impossibility and integrity of love.’

eMONK

w O r D s




Three words attempting a simple expression

Two expressions in a solitary phrase

A phrase in a cold story

Same story of a heartless princess

The princess of a Purple dream

A dream of being and becoming

On becoming the veil of tragedy

The tragedy of a common desire

A desire of a prolonged agony

An agony of an overwritten romance

A romance of three short words

These words attempting a simple expression

eMONK

Saturday, 10 March 2012

ThE gIrL aT tHe CrAfT sToRe


             Saket                                                                          11/03/2012   5:25 am


      Only recently I read somewhere that blue is the color of productivity and red is the color for money, yellow is to calm and pink is for health. On my way to the Trade Street, I was thinking if Purple would be for expressions then what would be the color of love or pain. Were there enough colors to paint all human emotions? And how would it all be if we could feel in colors?

    It was a calm and study morning and spring had just set in. The Trade Street or Money Lane as they called it and as dad always said, ‘that’s where the money is son’, was the busiest Street up here. My dad always thought that I was a business guy, ‘because you know the numbers son’, he would say when I asked why he thought so.     

    Trade Street was everything I was not. It was a place where life ran in numbers and figures in big logs and ledgers and a place where everything ended up in a deal. A dry and hard space beyond the repair of design that could never manage a soul for itself. I loved to see the street. It gave me a feeling of an outsider, a rebel, of someone who chose otherwise. I loved the feeling of solitude right in the middle of this chaos. I could always relate to it, write about it but could never imagine to be a part of it.

     So on that early spring morning, I was thinking of colors and what they really mean in life. I had been here for the last three months now.  Living in a rented studio and was thinking of moving down South to be on a beach and finish the rest of my book. The thought of being on the beach somewhere close to the sea made me smile.

     On the third block from my studio, there is an old couple that run a craft shop in the front of their house. In their mid fifties, old Joe and aunt Jenney had both retired early and spent most of their time molding clay and wood into beautiful things.

     On my last visit they told me that there was a student artist who had written to them and wanted to work with them for a month as a part of some school program and that they were expecting her the day before. While crossing their house old Joe invited me inside to meet our new friend. I went in and saw her sitting and sharing some pictures with aunt Jenney and it looked like to me as if they knew each other for ages. She had deep brown eyes and short black hair and was dressed like she was here for a long refreshing holiday.

     When we were being introduced, I was thinking, how could she be so effortlessly beautiful as if she didn’t even care. ‘Hi I am Ron’. God her smile! ‘Hi! I am Kavya’. After that I asked her a little abut her, but couldn’t speak to her much and just piled on Joe’s remarks. As I finished my coffee and started for my walk, she said, ‘we are planning to paint the walls of the store tomorrow.
‘Do you think Green will put a fresh sole in the store?’
I was trying to say something that won’t make me look like a fool when she asked; ’ You do believe that colors have a soul, right?’

    I said, ‘I think there is definitely life in colors, but you would know better if its Green or Red on the walls. I am sure whatever you choose will brighten up the place.’

For the whole walk I was evaluating if this was the best thing to say or was I sounded like a complete dork. On my way back, I offered to help with the change over from across the wall. She said ‘we are only interested either in skilled help or good company, where do you fit?’ They all laughed. I was not skilled to paint a wall and what she meant by good company so I kept silent, gave a shy smile and left saying,

‘So see you tomorrow then.’ She smiled.

     On reaching home, I got fresh, spoke to a few people, arranged my stuff, checked mails and sat down on my desk to continue writing about Dog and his post war life in Ladakh, when to my amazement there were no more words I could put down on the page. I was facing a blank page and just couldn’t write. Last time such a thing had happened to me was in the barrack when I was covering a war story and for 8 days on the line of control, I wrote about everything but could not write a sentence on war. This was the time I composed, ‘The bleeding virgin’ and ‘The unintended Chaiwala’.

    The next morning, I woke up remembering her smile. It had a freshness that is hard to express in words. I realized it was not just words; I was also getting out of expressions. On reaching Old Joe’s I saw the crafts were already out, packed in small paper bags and as I entered I saw Kavya trying different shades she had mixed in small mugs. ‘Hey! Morning’, you slept well last night’?

She shot a quick glance at me and pointing at the shades on the wall she said,
 ‘Hey morning. Tell me, the Green or the Red.’

I looked blankly at the colors still not comfortable of her close presence and almost heard myself say, ‘Green I think will go well as a background of the colorful display’. She gave me a short, keen stare and said,
‘Green it is then’.

‘ So did you find out the color of your sole?’

    By the time old Joe and aunt Jenney came back from church, we had started with a small corner of the wall. ‘Already. Kavya, my child, you should have rested for a couple of hours more.’ ‘Aren’t you tired from your journey’?

She refused to rest and told her how she had been longing for this experience and how well she slept and she was so excited to start. To which old Joe replied,’ Oh! If you love us like this, we will never let you go.’ We all laughed and got to the little painted Green spot on the corner wall. May be it will have a sole then I thought.   

   For some time we painted silently, She with flat, bold strokes like someone who knew what she wanted and I trying as much not to color my hands with the paint. It was fine to a point but after sometime it started to be an awkward silence,

‘So what do you think is the color of your sole?’

She was startled and with a glance that was half mocking and half pity said,
‘Usually its pink, but right now I think it had gone to a deeper shade of Red’

  I did not dig more into this, as I was not sure what she really meant. Or I was just keeping my check not to say something really stupid. I was just trying to be good company and if possible a skilled help.
‘Old Joe tells me you are writing a book! Interesting! What is it about?’

Well, I knew this was coming and was my mark to get into the colors and poetry of words. I was looking forward to discuss things that interest me and was wondering what would she think of them. I wanted to know her, her views and especially the person she was hiding behind her casualness and her infatuating smile. I explained to her,

‘ It’s a story revolving around a character in post war Ladakh. You know, like about the constant struggle in him, that is the only thing that keeps him going.’

‘Will you get me that clean brush please’? ‘ What is his struggle about’?

‘Its more of his decision never to part with a Ranch his father had made back in the day in his village, while all his family members have left for the cities before the war. He is somehow fixated to some close moments of his life at the Ranch which he is not able to let go and so the story unfolds’.

‘I would like to read it’.

I did not know what to say. No one had ever read my piece before it was finished. I was suddenly not sure if my words were really expressive. It’s a writer’s thing, which has more to do with his poor social skills and nothing at all with his expressions.

‘Its not finished yet’ I managed sounding convincing.

‘Well! You can narrate the end to me’, she demanded.

‘If you like it sure and as such, I would not like to miss a chance to do a narration.’ I smiled to her and we both were back to the wall.

     It’s a nice feeling when you are painting a wall. There is the calmness of colors, the will to get a work done well and the wait for the end result. By now the one of the walls was almost done and the room smelled of paint and turpentine. Kavya was fully absorbed in the strokes of her brush and her ears turned to Pink Floyd, playing in her earphones. It was a portrait of a girl with glimpses of a defining woman who was constantly evolving in her thoughts and expressions.

  I could never actually come out of the colors and the new identity Kavya had given to it. To think of her soul in Pink was difficult to visualize. Yet it gave a new meaning for colors to my paperback life of Black and White writing.

‘I wonder what is the color of my soul’?
     I asked, trying to make it casual and not looking at her. I have lately realized that the thought process that goes into a statement we make is most of the times, ugly or at least not as interesting, to be rimed in an innocent love story.   

‘Well, I feel its Blue, Persian Blue.’
     ‘And what is the story of Persian Blue’? I asked in a similar but more effort fully attained manner.

   She turned to me, looked keenly at me for a while and as if thinking of it from the movements of her hand holding a brush she said,
’ It’s a calm color, thinks a lot and expresses in very unusual ways’.

‘Wow’, I asked, ‘What do you mean by unusual ways of expressions?’

She was working on the wall again and without looking around, she said,

    ‘Its like Persian Blue is not a very social color, it keeps more to itself and is most of the time observing an environment, rather then being a part of it’. ‘ It will not be seen much and carefully choses where to express the radiance it beholds’. 

    The character frame of Kavya that was so far shaping in my mind was distorting and she was not the art inspired student on a vacation any more, she was much deeper. I was very interested in what she had just said. It was like a strong vibration putting me close to discovering something.

   She continued, ‘Like when old Joe told me you were a writer I thought you will have a lot to express, but I forgot altogether that you have a different medium of expression and you keenly choose your audience’. ‘ So, do you think you are this Blue’?

   ‘Yes, its close’. I said as a submission to her empowering presence that had evolved in the brief time we had known each other. It has been 2 years since I have been in a relationship, more then a year since I have been staying alone at places where no one knew me and here I was at the brink of willingly loosing the solitude I cherished so much.

  Aunt Jenney was calling from the kitchen for Kavya,
 ‘Baby do you want to help me set the lunch for everyone’?

She had made a space in this house and aunt Jenney’s kitchen where old Joe and me were strictly not welcome. When we were washing our paint stained hands with oil, Kavya told me how lucky she felt to have met this family and I shared a similar view. While going inside she peeped at the finished corner of the wall, it was Green and drying in patches. She asked me, ‘should we have done it Blue, your Blue’.

    ‘Its just fine’, I said smiling. On the table, we all had the delicious ravioli in white sauce with wine that had all the love of aunt Jenney’s heart blended with old Joe’s remarks that still made her blush.  Old Joe recounted the days when all their children would live together and told us how this lunch was so nostalgic to them as a family. Old Joe also brought an old record of John Denver from his room and dedicated a number to aunt Jenney from their college days that old Joe had played while expressing his love to her for the first time. The lyrics of the dedication went something like this:

“You fill up me senses like a night in a forest,


Like the mountains in springtime, like a walk in the rain
 

Like a storm in the desert, like a sleepy blue ocean
You fill up my senses come fill me again. 




Come let me love you, let me give my life to you
Let me drown in your laughter, let me die in your arms


Let me lay down beside you let me always be with you
Come let me love you, come love me again.”


    I could feel the fulfillment in old Joe’s eyes as he asked aunt Jenney for a dance. She couldn’t hide her tears and looking at the man who has given her a lifetime of happiness, she gave him her hand and smiled in submission.  This was a couple who had fallen in love in their youth, travelled across the world together for about twenty years and had retired to the basic existence of craftsmanship that they discovered together. These were two people in their mid fifties searching for happiness in small things and living on a togetherness that was still so young and fresh. I envied old Joe that day so much.

   Back home standing at my window, I was wondering if there was more to life then what old Joe and aunt Jenney had discovered and if all the things I was running behind like publishing my books, writing and directing a film, starting a retreat in my village were really worth it? I was picturing myself in mid fifties and wondered if it was true that there is someone made for everyone and will I someday, somewhere discover a blissful togetherness to grow old with?

That night I dreamt of Kavya.


eMONK

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

i W o N d e R




I wonder

If you have, somewhere a heart
Does it hold, your many dreams
If it knows of your love, for the sound of rain
And does it seldom beat, in the silence of your love

I wonder

If there is, somewhere a day
When with the first, of the morning ray
Somewhere, along the way
Unto you, I will my say

I wonder

If it will, take you a little while
To know what I think of your smile
And if I will ever be worth while
To make you often smile

I wonder

If there is a day, of my standing glory,
When lying in your arms, I will tell you my story
In my dreams I see you dancing
And on cold early mornings, with my pillow I am romancing

I wonder

If someday, when I have old
When my popping puppies are all long sold
And if unto you have I, my little story told
And is your voice calling my name as on the table my supper gets cold.

I wonder,
I wonder,
I wonder,
eMONK

H i M a L a Y a N H i G h S - oNe


      Dog had a slight headache that morning. Lucas and David were lying roughly in the sun after a cold and clear starry night of howling or yelling or whatever dogs at the Ranch do all night. Looking in their eyes he could see, how they awaited this moment. Lucas acknowledged him with a halfhearted wrinkled brow and David altogether ignored him.

    Dog met them for the first time at the Pigeon market. Scared, in a sea of legs. Dog made two trades that day that he would later talk about to what he referred to as "the people from a different world". For Dog had never been able to understand their basic purpose and pleasures. The two things he was sure about them were that, they were always looking for something and they always came with an air of "something is happening".

    Dog wondered how lives can be so different in itself, yet strung to a common beat of thread. He had now spent 45 years on the Ranch and was thinking to himself, ‘what was it all for? Love? Money?’ He suddenly had a feeling of everything coming in a circle and wondered could that be? Lucas and David were up now and ready for their morning run to the Ranch. Since that Pigeon market Sunday, 21 years ago, the three of them had found themselves in complete harmony with each other in presence and in needs. They were the three uniformly rotating objects around the stories that them people from the west, came looking for. 

..........

eMONK

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

ThE wRiTiNgS oN tHe WaLlS





       In a far away village in Ladakh a father is determined to give his son the abundance in words. He had always wanted but could never get a chance to read a complete book. Being in a family courting the royal family, he would get some chances in his youth to read and he could never read enough. His father was a loyal servant of the king and worked at his personal quarters and so he wanted his son to be. Then he would hardly have time to read and his father would not listen of his interest that made no sense to him.

       So he wanted to give his son everything he had missed in his youth and books was one thing he saw grace in.  He would get books from where ever he could lay his hands on and give it to his son.  His son would learn from travelers how to write and would share words and phrases from books he read and mock at the villagers for not understanding the words. 

      A traveler who wonders and stays there for a month tells him that he is writing a book and from that moment onwards the traveler becomes his hero. When the traveler is ready he gives him his pencil and a small notebook and asks him to tell his story. That one day he has to write a book.

      Taking up that inspiration he dwells into the agony of expressions. Locks himself up in a tank and for days is writing and scribbling words. The tank walls are full of things he wrote and thought about in his ecstasy of expression.  He writes poetry that expresses his emptiness in life. He wrote about his crush on the princess as he had seldom seen her. He writes poetry about how one day his village will be reading and reading some day and every corner has sessions and debates lined up as they walked closer to the realization of an emancipated society.

  The film will start with the father and son playing their game of conversing through the books they have read. There are few books they get their hands on and they know every word of these books. The father walking and the son catching up they enjoy their walk with words.

      The background threads that will run throughout the film are the poems that the son has written. This poetry as and when written it will the run through the storyline of the film. Each poem telling to the audience about the agony that is going through the boy as he sees the princess toes while bowing to her. Or it will express his emptiness when he is just walking miles, with nowhere to reach. It is very important to have this poetry as the backbone of the film and its depth will compose the other elements in the film.

     The princess also knows of his existence and has three poems he has written and is quires to meet him. The king sends for him and while on the steps of the royal palace, the queen looks at him from far and refuses for the audience. When asked why by her maid she says looking into space. “There are some lines in these pages that may make me loose myself.”  She never touched his poetry again. The princess is taken away by the power of his words and witnessing the boy is sent off by the guards and is thrown off a few coins, through her window throws the pages into the fireplace and sobs relentlessly succumbing to the floor. The maid understanding her situation weeps and slowly walking towards her sits her down on her lap and says, “cry baby cry, it’s a women’s cry, let it out.” The camera closes into her staring eyes as we can still hear the violent sobs of the princess.

     The boy picks up a coin and walks and walks, until at a pass he is almost unconscious. He regains consciousness in a small tent of two travelers who take care of him. It is from them he knows more of writings and books and on seeing that he could speak English and knowing his interest in reading the couple asks of shat he has read and he says, “little here little there. I don’t remember but I can tell you a poem I composed when I was walking,

      Listening to his poetry the sat through the evening and the next morning before they were up he had left. Looking for him the lady looks over the small hill, he is sitting on the ground and beating something. There is a thread oiled kept by his side. He goes forward to see what he is doing and call him. Not looking back he continues to beat and as she can see his hands, she sees what he was doing. He was trying to make a hole in the coin he was holding to strongly. He uses a nail and tries it. The coin has almost lost shape and is battered badly. Finally he succeeds in making a hole in the coin. He then wipes the coin and carefully puts the thread through he coin and wears it around his neck.  He then looks up to her and says, “….”

      He stays with them for the next two days walking and talking in the language he loved so much. They are highly impressed by his work and suggests him if he is considering to publish his work. “So that the whole world can read your story.” There is a deceit in the husband’s view. He looks at it as a business investment. On reaching his village he takes them to his retreat and his house. He takes out the notebooks and scraps he had filled from a trunk and hands them over to the lady and says, “ may you find your answers.”

        They leave over the horizon and the boy overlooks their frames as it slowly disappears into the far horizon. He walks back to his life again and stays most of his times in his retreat.

9 months later, a usual day is going on in the village and there is a woman who comes to village looking for the boy. The girl is fascinated to be in this village and among these people. She greets everyone and hugs the grand mamas and exclaims to her cameramen “what an amazing world”.

        She is a recent grad and is on her first assignment in India and is in a trance. She is introduced to our audience in the beginning flashes of the film with lights and paparazzi shots. She is trying to make way for the man they are trying to shoot. Who is not in the frame? She tries to find him in the village but fails to do so. Looking around she is directed to the palace, as the princess also knows the language she is speaking. She asks for an audience and is brought to the princess quarters. The princess asks her why she was there and she explains that she was here to cover the author of a book that is doing well in the market and that no one knows him. She is startled by this news and as the lady hands over a copy of the book to her she stands up and slowly walks to her quarters. The princess sends a word with her maid for the travelers that they be her guest and wait till morning when she will send for the boy.

   The next morning the princess brings the book to the table and returns it to the traveler, thanking her for sharing it. Then she joined them on the table but she was silent for the whole time. She didn’t speak much the whole day and stays in her own quarters. The travelers reach the retreat of the boy and finds there and are struck by the scribbling on the walls and then realize that the cover of the book is the picture of the wall they were standing by. She is covering the walls and reading out the poetry on it as he enters the retreat and is standing just behind them. Reading a sentence on the wall she can’t make out what’s written and stops. At the sme time the boy reads out the remaining of the poetry out looking down to the floor in submission of being the author of the pain on the walls. 

      As the girl tries to say something he politely he asks them to leave him alone. A long silence prevails and she slowly walks towards the entrance and in a short glance at him, leaves the book on the floor of the room and leaves.

  Outside she asks the cameramen, “So what do you think? What’s his story?”

  He relentlessly sits at the place where he is and broods at the book lying on the floor. After a long time of brooding, he walks to the book and slowly bends to pick it up. He takes a long look at the cover and sees how his walls continue to the back page. On the back page he reads the reviews of what people had written of him.

The flashes of cameras, shots and paparazzi

     He reads through the night and as the girl in her quarters is yet not asleep, she looks over the retreat and can still see the oil lamp burning at the window. She has seen that here is a character that she is going to cover and that story has strength. A man who the public already likes and hasn’t been written about yet is a man with golden words. His character was strong and she somehow knows that it will catch attention.

     The next morning they went to the retreat. He was sitting in the armchair and writing. They sat silently in a corner and she could see she was right about the person. He slowly looked up at them and asked why they were here? She explains that she was a journalist and was here to cover him for an article and how everyone loved him. Then he asked her if she had read the book? She had and she had never seen so much love for a language before.

      The flashes of paparazzi again and now with the man she is trying to make way for is in the frame too and he is our own boy. Reaching for a dinner somewhere. The film then takes a black frame and the last fame is of the retreat where the boy has made a small workspace and has a lot of books. His clothes are lazily lying everywhere around and there are dress articles of a women as well.

    The final frame of the film is a scene from a small village room where students in unison are reciting the alphabets and the girl now wearing the local dress is teaching the English language, prose and poetry. A man standing on a corner of a window overlooking the school has a coin sling around his neck.


eMONK

Monday, 5 March 2012

Of CoLoRs aNd cHeMiStRy iN cReAtIoN




     White is the essence that reflects beauty and grace of life and black is the essence that absorbs all the pain and suffering from the world. They always wanted to be physical colors like the red, the blue or the green and have more melody and openness around them. They always wanted to have an identity that was more than the presence or absence of all the colors in Nature. So in their own isolated lives with eternal identity crises the White always despised brightness and the Black complained of the dark. 

    It was on one such morning; the morning for the prophecy to unfold itself as The Voice foretold, that without any argument or explanation, there bloomed a flower amidst a beautiful garden in the valley in the mountains

    Blooming in the melody of a life in its prime of explorations and experiences, the flower emphasized the possibility in the beauty of creation and hinted silently in its very serene expressions the chaos of destruction. It was like a paradox was put forth to existence depicting, at the same time both creation and destruction. Like all the battles fought in history, were so fought either for the insecurity of greed or for the glory of love. The ones fought for insecurity and greed are lost in the gloomy archives of history, with nothing but a date in the memory of its sadness; but the ones that are fought for the glory of love become timeless legends of inspiration and everything we know as good in life.    

     For the first time to existence a flower was introduced and until the next forty eight days from then all the Elements rejoiced the wonder that has blossomed amongst them. The morning breeze would blow eastwards to the valley of the blossoming surprises. The landscape around evolved itself as per the beauty and impossibility of the flower; as if a contemporary painting where the flower was the subject on the canvas in a maze of colors and patterns of these holy mountains. It would tenderly rain in the wee hours of the day, not too much, not too little; just enough. In the night the moon would shine overlooking the flower to a peaceful sleep that comes to those who are resting after performing a life changing act of wonder and grace and early morning the Sun would shine upon it to dry its due drenched leaves. 


And so all the Elements that brought existence together rejoiced in awe the wonder that had bloomed amongst them, not knowing what they were supposed to do with it. It started as an act of curiosity and gradually overtaking the awe of existence became insanity. Like sweet teenage love, with the promise of a tomorrow yet to come and passion, enough to destroy the whole world.    






eMONK