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Tuesday, August 12, 2025

𝗗𝗿𝗲𝗮𝗺𝘀: 𝗵𝗲𝗹𝗱, 𝗹𝗼𝘀𝘁, 𝗼𝗿 𝘄𝗮𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴?



Sometimes I wonder how my art teacher’s brush seems to know stories that the world doesn’t.


This recent work of his made me stop.

Four girls. Eyes closed. Standing close. Not just in body, but in spirit.

One holds a boat. To me, she’s someone swimming against the tide, doing her best to stay afloat.

Another holds a plane. Maybe she’s the one who took the “safe” path. On the outside, she looks settled. But deep down, she still wants to fly.

The other two stand quietly. They hold nothing. And maybe, no one ever asked them what they really want. Maybe they don’t know what they want.

Interestingly, none of them have navels. That small detail stayed with me. It felt like they were free from the weight of the past. But is freedom enough if you don’t know where to go?

What struck me most is that three of them turn toward the one who has settled.

Do they admire her? Do they think she figured it all out? Or are they just looking for someone to follow?

To me, my teacher painted more than four figures.
He painted questions we rarely ask.
He painted choices. Compromises. And the quiet ache of unrealised dreams.
And that, I think, is what good art does.

Grateful to be learning from someone who teaches art and unveils life.
What do you see in it?

hashtagArt hashtagDreams hashtagChoices

Monday, August 11, 2025

Golden Storm


Draupathi had always loved the forest at the edge of Vaithara, a small, quiet town where days moved unhurried. The forest was her sanctuary, a place built of light, leaf, and silence. She came here most evenings after work, sketchbook under her arm, following the same worn path until the hum of traffic disappeared.

On the night everything changed, it felt different. You know how sometimes the air feels too still, and you cannot explain why it bothers you? The trees stood motionless, the usual chatter of birds oddly distant. Even the wind seemed to be holding its breath. Did you notice? We rarely do.

She sat on her favourite fallen log, pencil poised. The sun was painting the treetops in gold, each stroke soft and deliberate. She thought she had time.

Then the gold began to change. It thickened. It pulsed. And with it came a faint, acrid scent. Smoke?

“That’s not sunset,” she murmured.

The first flames appeared on the ridge, curling upward in the wind. Most people would have turned away immediately, but Draupathi… paused. There was something in the fire that felt familiar, almost like a memory she could not place. The way it moved – fierce yet graceful – made her think of hands shaping her from heat and ash long before she had ever set foot in this forest.

Was it music? Was it brushwork? The crackle became percussion, the arcs of flame strokes on a dark canvas.

Have you ever admired something you should have feared? That is where she stood, caught between awe and survival.

Then the wind shifted, sending a spray of embers across the clearing. She startled, and her sketchbook slipped from her fingers, fluttering to the ground, pages catching the glow of the fire. She turned to run – then hesitated.

The drawing lay face-up, a half-finished forest bathed in gold, mirroring the inferno beyond. She bent to snatch it, her palm slick with sweat. The paper gave under her touch, soft and damp, and she realised her thumb was smearing the faint graphite of her self-portrait in the corner.

Her graphite face blurred – almost gone. In another moment, so would she.

She ran until her lungs burned and her legs felt carved from stone. At the riverbank, she waded into the cool water, gasping, clutching the sodden paper. Across the current, the forest blazed – her forest – now a living sun collapsing into smoke.

For a long time, she just stood there, watching the gold fade into black. The air still carried the heat, and deep inside, something answered it – a spark that would never fully die. She looked at the smeared face in the corner of her sketch. It no longer belonged to her, not entirely. The forest had signed it now: in heat, in ash, in the truth that nothing stays as we leave it.

When she finally walked away, she did not look back. But in her mind, the storm still burned, and part of her still stood in that clearing, born of fire, trying to draw the moment before it all began.

#Fire #Passion #Art

 

Monday, July 7, 2014

Winter lights

On a winter eve, beside a frozen tree
I sat, waiting for absolution (that would never come)
A half-frozen rivulet lay before me
Calling me to shed the skin and freeze the heart

But I am not ready,
I am not ready yet

A short-lived light beam scattered at the touchdown
Feeding the silver of saintly fish
It fed me too with angst and fury
Calling me to burn my life and light the world

But I am not ready,
I am not ready yet.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

A hero next door

And came the unsung hero. Not much haste and not much noise, he was composed, as all heroes are. Clad in his three-wheeled chariot, with his one, his only, leg tapping for a song beat, he was here with an organic smile. He runs a tea shop, all in his vehicle. He works all day through to battle out his poverty, to quench the thirst of his younger sister, to feed his school-going brother, and to heal his mom's sore throat.  But how does it make him special? In fact it doesn't. It's all about his attitude. How do you define his character? How do you want to be if you're in his shoes, err shoe? I am sure i can't be him, but I wished to at least throw away my fake plastic smiles and accept life as it comes.



Wednesday, May 2, 2012

A Song on a Blotting Paper

In the land of crib and grave,
I wandered…
I wondered if I am sane
Or haunted…

I opened up my heart box
And found it to be a hoax
I started penning my life
It became a book of jokes

Once in my dream 
I was a moth
I learnt to flap and learnt to fly
I got what I sought
Then came a freezing night
My wings drenched in dews
I cursed the frost and cursed myself
And bid my dream adieu

What I want is what I know
I know not what I don’t
I found what’s worth and found what’s right
It's a thing I wish I could write

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Goodbye, my best friend…

In this land of make-believe, I was roaming east and west only to find that people are no more than hypocrites. The more I made opinions, the more I fell—lost, injured, and crippled. I sometimes forget I am part of this community and I am no less in terms of hypocrisy. Maybe, that’s the way our creator made us. Or is that some genetic mistake? What so ever, this never-ending story of insincerity is actually never going to end.

In every second of my life, frustration kept building up in my mind. I tried so hard to control my stupid thoughts. They didn’t oblige. I looked around and found no one. My shadow refused to give shade to me. I turned to God only to find that he enjoys me being frustrated—like a little boy dropping an ant on a bucket full of water. Then, one fine day, I started creating a person inside me who understands me— the only person who understands me. How do I know him? Well, my tears introduced him to me, or rather me to him. We grew all along hand in hand. He taught me how to hate, love, and love hate. No other people stayed in my life as long as he did. Gradually, I started believing him more than anybody else. I needed no other company.

Years passed. I am 27 now. Now, I long for solitude as much as I wished for a company before. The man whom I travelled with all these years, the man who was my best friend, is taking me to the grave. It was too late when I recognized that I had been travelling with him all these years to the destination called ‘shame’. My present has become the parody of my past. At one point, when I saw my destination, I decided to return. I no longer trusted my friend. He grasped my hand and pleaded to stay with him. I smiled. Tears rolled down my cheeks. He knew he had to leave me. Our eyes met and I turned back and started walking. It was a silent farewell. We knew we won’t meet up any time in the future. I was leaking my memories all the way on my forlorn journey—a journey towards my destiny.

Monday, July 18, 2011

I loved this article…..

Germany's Green City of the Future

As a city, Vauban, Germany, has everything -- tree-lined streets, perfect houses -- but it's missing one urban fixture of the last 100 years or so: the car.

And Vauban residents don't mind one bit.

"We lived with a car -- I had a car, my wife had a car -- for 40 years, I think, and I don't like it, I don't miss it at all," said Hartmut Wagner, a Vauban resident.

Vauban doesn't ban cars entirely. Rather, it just tries to reduce the use of cars by creating "parking-free" and "car-free" living.

In Vauban, just outside the city of Freiburg, near the French and Swiss borders, parking spaces are prohibited on private property. Cars can only be parked in public parking lots, so living without a car saves residents the cost of parking in the public lot.

Cars also are prevented from using certain roads and must stick to strict speed limits. With these limitations, fewer than 20 percent of residents own cars.

ABC News

ABC News correspondent Jim Sciutto bikes... View Full Caption

Without cars, bikes are almost religion in this small town. Kids pick them up even before they can ride one.

"I go to work with my bike, kids go to school with the bike," said resident Gerlinde Schuwald. "It's a good feeling here in these areas. It's peaceful."

Vauban is about much more than just using two wheels instead of four. It's an environmentally-friendly city of the future, with organically grown food, renewable energy, and carbon-neutral homes.

"People make more money by selling electricity to the grid than they pay for heat," said Andreas Delleske, a Vauban resident.

Completed in 2006, Vauban was 20 years in the making, built on the site of a former military barracks that residents and the local government bought and redesigned. And now, with a population of 5,500, it's attracting attention from around the world.

A class of students taking a sustainability course at the University of California, Davis, recently visited Vauban to see if the technologies could be applied in the United States.

"The technologies are all transferable. Solar power. California has a lot of sun," said UC Davis professor Jeff Loux. "What's difficult for us to get a grasp on is the density they can achieve here, the fact that people live in smaller units."

Of course, no one loves cars as much as Americans do. But if this can happen in Germany, home of Mercedes and the high-speed Autobahn, then maybe Americans can do it, too. (And so can Indians; Hey, I meant it as a joke....)

By JIM SCIUTTO (@jimsciuttoABC) , TIM WATSON and MICHAEL MILBERGER

Aug. 29, 2009