it is usually a tribute to a feeling
that I am currently in
or one that just passed
leaving me on the shore of
a more peaceful place
sometimes you may find
yourself in it
and sometimes
you may wonder
who caused the pain
sometimes I write from
the lens of another
whose situation is
very inspiring
or thought-provoking
as when I wrote about
being released from
Arthur Road Jail
(never been there, magar yun-hi)
either way
let it be
as I am
letting you
live your life
by your rules
what else is there
but to observe
and walk by
especially when
you chose that option
long ago..
stay safe
know that you too
are special
who caused the pain
or you
who were the best friend
why wonder
did I even once
say your name?
The Little Brown Box is the alter-ego of my book by the same name. This collection of 70 poems written over 20 years is organised in three sections: Roots, Journeys and Heartstrings. The Little Brown Box is witness to my life. Whatever I could not say to another person, I have said to my journals and these thoughts smile back at me today, cheering me on as I learn some more, grow some more and move on.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Freedom Of Another Kind
The soul-mate ring I bought
for myself
at the Ex years ago adorns my
heart finger
and matches the silver
that shines in my hair
deeming me an Elder
And I smile
when I realise the freedom of that
the angst comes when we expect
people to do for us
what we want for ourselves
and I guess I can nurture myself well
if I recognise
that I know myself best.
oh the joy of that
the peace
All the love I have
is still in my heart
it is sent to you and you and you
and of this I am not ashamed
nor sad
'cause all the selves I ever was
who love you and you and you
are still there
inside me
to keep me warm
and with those soul-hugs
I feel your love and laughter
that was once lost
and is now found
for myself
at the Ex years ago adorns my
heart finger
and matches the silver
that shines in my hair
deeming me an Elder
And I smile
when I realise the freedom of that
the angst comes when we expect
people to do for us
what we want for ourselves
and I guess I can nurture myself well
if I recognise
that I know myself best.
oh the joy of that
the peace
All the love I have
is still in my heart
it is sent to you and you and you
and of this I am not ashamed
nor sad
'cause all the selves I ever was
who love you and you and you
are still there
inside me
to keep me warm
and with those soul-hugs
I feel your love and laughter
that was once lost
and is now found
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Coin purse
In from the softly falling snow
buying coffee
to keep me going through
the next few hours
the change in my purse
makes me smile
some rupees, some two
some dollars, some quarters
and dimes
just like me
all mixed up together
the Indian and Canadian bits of me
with a `small decaff, one milk please. To go` here
and a `kitna hua`there
and each part special
each part just right
just me
buying coffee
to keep me going through
the next few hours
the change in my purse
makes me smile
some rupees, some two
some dollars, some quarters
and dimes
just like me
all mixed up together
the Indian and Canadian bits of me
with a `small decaff, one milk please. To go` here
and a `kitna hua`there
and each part special
each part just right
just me
Sleepwalking
Milliken Mills Library
Tutoring on a snowy day
January 15th, a month
after I made
my last heart-bursting trip
I think back to
all your wisdom
your softly spoken words
and your reassurance
This too shall pass
You do not know how strong you are until
you are thrown into the deep end
I live for thee
and many more
I now whisper them
as I shush myself to sleep
pretending as if
it is really you
who talks me through
my dreams
and I oversleep somedays
meandering through the twisted trails
of oblivion
hoping I bump into you
we'd stop for a chat
sit on a park bench together
walk a while
and laugh as we did before
yet the incessant alarm bells
of technology
and my own clock
trapped inside
nudge me forward
to wakefulness and
to face another long day
with just
the whiff of you
Tutoring on a snowy day
January 15th, a month
after I made
my last heart-bursting trip
I think back to
all your wisdom
your softly spoken words
and your reassurance
This too shall pass
You do not know how strong you are until
you are thrown into the deep end
I live for thee
and many more
I now whisper them
as I shush myself to sleep
pretending as if
it is really you
who talks me through
my dreams
and I oversleep somedays
meandering through the twisted trails
of oblivion
hoping I bump into you
we'd stop for a chat
sit on a park bench together
walk a while
and laugh as we did before
yet the incessant alarm bells
of technology
and my own clock
trapped inside
nudge me forward
to wakefulness and
to face another long day
with just
the whiff of you
Look Amma, I am growing up
The disbelief comes and goes and that is okay. We fear the emotions because of how they make us feel. But it is the real thing to sit quietly and acknowledge them as they swirl through the fog and rise to the surface. We cannot neglect them or negate them or ignore them. As I take them to the front of our consciousness, I find that they change, they evolve from grief to sadness to acceptance and they move on to become a deeper connection with something special that Amma means to me, just me. As I take from that pain perhaps one smile, one memory, one tearful laugh, it is now some other feeling.
Sometimes two feelings exist side by side and I am surprised at them too. Relief that she is out of pain and grief that I can never hear her voice. Then relief that I remember how she sounds and joy that she enjoyed her birthday. This is meditation. We do not have to go sit under a tree to find salvation. The Buddha did it for us and His lessons are out there for us to learn from.So I sit and without judgement, observe my pain as I would observe clouds change shape in the sky, watch a fish glidethrough the water or a bird fly in front of me. I observe and let it move through me.
This seems to be working for now. I do have moments of gut wrenching grief and soundless sobs that wrack me and sometimes quiet tears that slide down my face. That too is okay.How unrealistic it is if we expect to feel nothing after so many years of being gifted this wonderful person in our lives. That would not be fair. So I must not expect ourselves to 'recover' from this ever. We will get better at the 'observe and move through' stages and also with the realigning of our frequency with her current wavelength.
What dreams may come, I must acknowledge them.
Look Amma, I am growing up.
We found her
We finally found her
both of us did
together
that girl
from 25 years ago
who is a silver haired Elder now
and she remembers one thing
after another
as do you
and you wait patiently
as she sifts some and
you pick something up
a trinket here, a sliver there
the trip to IIT on high heeled shoes
the fainting after
the blood donation at the gym
the Annamalai trip
sleeping on an icy bench at Pollachi
and how you looked after her
when she was in pain
as you travelled without reservations
on a shoestring budget
the whistling school boy
as we sat in sunshine
under the sprawling tree
on the hill
she does not remember
your eyes
when you decided to leave
she does not remember
the goodbyes
there were none
she doesn't remember asking why
or begging you to stay
she did not plead
because you did not say
you were on your way
unwillingly
your hands bound
by the aspirations
of others
and she believes that
the parting was bigger
than both of you
and sometimes, just sometimes
when the Universe
has unfinished business
it allows U turns
both of us did
together
that girl
from 25 years ago
who is a silver haired Elder now
and she remembers one thing
after another
as do you
and you wait patiently
as she sifts some and
you pick something up
a trinket here, a sliver there
the trip to IIT on high heeled shoes
the fainting after
the blood donation at the gym
the Annamalai trip
sleeping on an icy bench at Pollachi
and how you looked after her
when she was in pain
as you travelled without reservations
on a shoestring budget
the whistling school boy
as we sat in sunshine
under the sprawling tree
on the hill
she does not remember
your eyes
when you decided to leave
she does not remember
the goodbyes
there were none
she doesn't remember asking why
or begging you to stay
she did not plead
because you did not say
you were on your way
unwillingly
your hands bound
by the aspirations
of others
and she believes that
the parting was bigger
than both of you
and sometimes, just sometimes
when the Universe
has unfinished business
it allows U turns
Make Music
The floodgates have opened,
there is no going back now.
silently, without warning,
another thought drops
into my consciousness
making me smile
And I wait for more..
Music
and your voice
to find the tunes again
to receive a tiny airplane
fixed with tiny pins, (taachni I said and
you smiled)
until then we have my poetry
till your prose turns
into melodies
there is no going back now.
silently, without warning,
another thought drops
into my consciousness
making me smile
And I wait for more..
Music
and your voice
to find the tunes again
to receive a tiny airplane
fixed with tiny pins, (taachni I said and
you smiled)
until then we have my poetry
till your prose turns
into melodies
Lenses
A visual treat of
photographs
viewed by sensitive eyes
woke me up
to my reality
this early morning
as I inhabit
the time zone of my birth
once again, waiting for pieces of
myself to coalesce into who I am
I saw in those images
the wistful touch of gnarled hands
on cool marble floors
praying for something unseen
my own people
seen as the other
a sister, force fed
to prevent tainting
the conscience of
those who don't care as much
as they are supposed to
souls, soles and stories
told by an unseen brother
Sanjay
who lives up to his name
and helps me see
sights far away
from my physical self
photographs
viewed by sensitive eyes
woke me up
to my reality
this early morning
as I inhabit
the time zone of my birth
once again, waiting for pieces of
myself to coalesce into who I am
I saw in those images
the wistful touch of gnarled hands
on cool marble floors
praying for something unseen
my own people
seen as the other
a sister, force fed
to prevent tainting
the conscience of
those who don't care as much
as they are supposed to
souls, soles and stories
told by an unseen brother
Sanjay
who lives up to his name
and helps me see
sights far away
from my physical self
Monsoon Girl
I grew up on the west coast of India where the Monsoons herald a break from the stifling heat and bring cool breezes and green vistas. ( and food in bellies too) Now in Canada, I hear so many complaints about the weather ( sure it snows, did we not hear about that in that latitudes lesson in geography class?) Clearly the himmat of Mumbai has spoilt me.
I continue to revel in the rain and this sometimes irritates people around me. Someone once grumpily said to me: Stop smiling, you are not in Mumbai anymore. Stop enjoying the rain"
And I quipped, still smiling: "The trees and plants in Canada need water too, don't they"
I am glad we have not yet messed up up this beautiful pattern and pray that we never do. The turning cycles of the weather teach me hope.
Monsoon girl is still smiling.
I continue to revel in the rain and this sometimes irritates people around me. Someone once grumpily said to me: Stop smiling, you are not in Mumbai anymore. Stop enjoying the rain"
And I quipped, still smiling: "The trees and plants in Canada need water too, don't they"
I am glad we have not yet messed up up this beautiful pattern and pray that we never do. The turning cycles of the weather teach me hope.
Monsoon girl is still smiling.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
Sleepwalking
Milliken Mills Library
Tutoring on a snowy day
January 15th, a month
after I made
my last heart-bursting trip
I think back to
all your wisdom
your softly spoken words
and your reassurance
This too shall pass
You do not know how strong you are until
you are thrown into the deep end
I live for thee
and many more
I now whisper them
as I shush myself to sleep
pretending as if
it is really you
who talks me through
my dreams
And I oversleep somedays
meandering through the twisted trails
of oblivion
hoping I bump into you
we'd stop for a chat
sit on a park bench together
walk a while
and laugh as we did before
yet the incessant alarm bells of technology
and my own clock trapped inside
nudge me forward
to wakefulness and
to face another long day with
just the whiff of you
Tutoring on a snowy day
January 15th, a month
after I made
my last heart-bursting trip
I think back to
all your wisdom
your softly spoken words
and your reassurance
This too shall pass
You do not know how strong you are until
you are thrown into the deep end
I live for thee
and many more
I now whisper them
as I shush myself to sleep
pretending as if
it is really you
who talks me through
my dreams
And I oversleep somedays
meandering through the twisted trails
of oblivion
hoping I bump into you
we'd stop for a chat
sit on a park bench together
walk a while
and laugh as we did before
yet the incessant alarm bells of technology
and my own clock trapped inside
nudge me forward
to wakefulness and
to face another long day with
just the whiff of you
Coin Purse
In from the softly falling snow
buying coffee to keep me going through
the next few hours
the change in my purse
makes me smile
some rupees, some two
some dollars, some quarters
and dimes
just like me
all mixed up together
the Indian and Canadian bits of me
with a `small decaff, one milk please. To go` here
and a `kitna hua`there
each part special
each part just right
just me
buying coffee to keep me going through
the next few hours
the change in my purse
makes me smile
some rupees, some two
some dollars, some quarters
and dimes
just like me
all mixed up together
the Indian and Canadian bits of me
with a `small decaff, one milk please. To go` here
and a `kitna hua`there
each part special
each part just right
just me
Friday, January 7, 2011
A new year, a new me?
I did not expect to feel so settled therefore pleasantly surprised. The first few days back were brutal and then it sinks in that this is it. And I have to move forward. Small routines, like waking up at 5 and sitting with a candle lighting up the serene face in the photograph. The candle flickers on and I brace myself to get through the next step: just get ready and get through that door....
The siblings sounds so grown up now when they call. They want to see how I am doing as I am here by myself. They apologise for asking questions about this and that related to our loss. "Do you feel as if you grew up twice, Didi? Once when Pappa died and again now" Oh, they were so little. And to think now they stand taller than I do.
The void is what got to me at first until I look inward and in doing so fill in the gaps.
And the circle of love that held me this week: the children with their unconditional love, Deval with his no-nonsense management of day to day matters, the students who scan my face for signs of grief and even when I am not teaching them, pass my door asking " Are you okay, Ms. Karnad-Jani" They sometimes just stand there and watch me go about my filing and marking and then they say bye and off they go, reassured that I will make it through until I see them again.
My sisters at school, with an early morning hug, a passing smile, a kind word. And the stoic presence of the brothers who stand beside me; the banter, the silent glance, the wave across the hallway.
I am thankful for so much love, so many blessings. A new year, a new me. Amma has left me with enough to get me through the rest of my life. She has left me the resilience to face each day, the grace to give thanks, the courage to keep standing. And above all to believe in her oft repeated reminder: This too shall pass.
Three weeks ago, I remember sitting and observing myself beside her still form. Today, I marvel at the innate strength she left in each of us.
This too is immortality.
Monday, January 3, 2011
Mee Mumbaikar
Mornings meant tending to the ceremonial lamp for 13 days in my parents' home surrounded by memories. And in the early hours before my daily puja, I walked the streets of my beloved neighbourhood.
A former hub of the textile industry, Naig...aum-Parel is now the elite mid-town for those who have the land. For those who did not have anything, tuberculosis was the gift.
Slum Dog indeed. What do you know?
It takes a certain grit and determination to live through the squalor. And to live with dignity, to wear crisply ironed clothes to work and to school, to line up for crowded trains where at anytime the random bullets of a glassy eyed gunman can make one a mere statistic. I return to the street of my Mumbai, as a Mumbaikar. Never as an expat, never as a First World Citizen. I return as a daughter and I am welcomed with open arms.
Mee, Mumbaikar.
A former hub of the textile industry, Naig...aum-Parel is now the elite mid-town for those who have the land. For those who did not have anything, tuberculosis was the gift.
Slum Dog indeed. What do you know?
It takes a certain grit and determination to live through the squalor. And to live with dignity, to wear crisply ironed clothes to work and to school, to line up for crowded trains where at anytime the random bullets of a glassy eyed gunman can make one a mere statistic. I return to the street of my Mumbai, as a Mumbaikar. Never as an expat, never as a First World Citizen. I return as a daughter and I am welcomed with open arms.
Mee, Mumbaikar.
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Just sitting
this is not even grief: no stages here
it is a deep despair
like oil slick
that threatens to cut off my breath
like falling down the rabbit hole that never ends
and when people
however well meaning
console and counsell,
I wish they had learned to just sit
and be there
instead of wanting to
make themselves useful
and get inside my thoughts
and not seek to tell me
how their grief was worse
and mine is better
as I had three hours before the end
why is it about you I want to ask
and risk the outraged looks: after all the trouble
they went through to support me
I have one title less than before
I have one question now:
Do I cease to be a daughter,
now that
I am an orphan?
it is a deep despair
like oil slick
that threatens to cut off my breath
like falling down the rabbit hole that never ends
and when people
however well meaning
console and counsell,
I wish they had learned to just sit
and be there
instead of wanting to
make themselves useful
and get inside my thoughts
and not seek to tell me
how their grief was worse
and mine is better
as I had three hours before the end
why is it about you I want to ask
and risk the outraged looks: after all the trouble
they went through to support me
I have one title less than before
I have one question now:
Do I cease to be a daughter,
now that
I am an orphan?
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