I’ll die of the grief, guilt and regret that i carry in my heart…it weighs heavy on me and swallows me whole.. I try to lift it up to run from it to forget about it but it always finds me…it lurks around the corner in the dark waiting for me. It has become a ghost that’s haunting me forever and waiting for the day I give up and let it consume me.
Category: dreams
Darkness
Once upon a time, I had a lone star, the one that shines brightest even in an otherwise dark sky. The lone star symbolised hope, it meant that even on the darkest night of my life, there would always be hope. I could fall even from the sky because I knew that someone would catch me, but for the first time ever I am scared to fall.
The sky is empty, and all that remains is darkness, a dark cloud looms over my head, and the darkness is waiting for me with its mouth wide open, ready to swallow me whole.
I have been running away from it, fighting it, dreading it all because I saw the Lone Star but can you really change your destiny? I guess not! Because I tried everything but fate seems inevitable now.
Maybe I was destined to fall, maybe the flicker of Lone Star was just my imagination, maybe hope doesn’t exist, maybe….
एक दिन की भक्ति

आज सावन का पहला सोमवार है।
सुबह ही मंदिर के बाहर
लोगों की भीड़ एकत्र थी —
हर किसी के हाथ में कुछ अलग,
दूध, बेलपत्र, घी, फूल, सिंदूर।
जैसे हर वस्तु
भक्ति का प्रमाणपत्र हो,
श्रद्धा की गहराई नहीं,
उसकी मात्रा बोल रही हो।
मैंने पहली बार
भगवान शिव को सिंदूर से सना देखा।
आश्चर्य हुआ —
क्या यह भी किसी नई विधि का हिस्सा है?
या लोगों ने महादेव को
अपनी सुविधा का देवता बना लिया है?
कुछ चेहरों पर देखा
एक मौन प्रतिस्पर्धा —
जिनके पास अधिक सामग्री थी,
वे स्वयं को अधिक भक्त समझ बैठे।
घमंड था आँखों में —
जैसे भक्ति अब तुलना की चीज़ हो।
शाम को आँधी थी, वर्षा थी,
हवा में भी एक तरह की व्याकुलता थी।
फिर भी मंदिर में भीड़ थी —
लोग जल चढ़ा रहे थे,
मानो जल न चढ़े तो शिव न मिलें।
किसी ने न पूजा रोकी,
न एक पल को ठिठका —
शायद श्रद्धा थी,
या फिर वही डर,
कि कहीं कोई दूसरा न दिखा दे
अपने भक्ति का बेहतर असर।
पहली बार
शाम को जलाभिषेक देखा।
वह भी उस भीषण तूफ़ान में —
मन में यह प्रश्न गूंजा,
“यह भक्ति है, या कोई झूठा इम्तिहान?”
ऐसी भीड़ मैंने
केवल महाशिवरात्रि के दिन देखी थी —
लंबी कतारें,
हर हाथ में कैमरा,
हर आँख में एक इंस्टा-योजना,
हर कथा में एक ही पंक्ति —
#महादेव_के_दीवाने।
परंतु अगली सुबह —
मंदिर एकदम सूना था।
बस एक पुजारी,
कुछ बुझते दीप,
और मैं।
कल रात जहाँ आस्था उफन रही थी,
आज वहाँ मौन की सरिता बह रही थी।
कल जिनके हाथ भक्ति से कांपते थे,
आज वही कहीं और व्यस्त थे।
शायद कल वैसी ही
सुबह फिर देखने को मिलेगी।
तो क्या समझूँ?
क्या भगवान भी अब
हमारी ही तरह
भीड़ में कुछ क्षणों को चमकते हैं,
और फिर अकेले रह जाते हैं?
क्या वे भी
मनुष्य की क्षणिकता का भार उठाते हैं?
क्या वे भी प्रतीक्षा करते हैं —
किसी ऐसे आगंतुक की
जो बिना तामझाम,
बिना फ़ोटो,
केवल मौन लेकर आए?
एक दिन जल के लिए संघर्ष होता है,
और अगले दिन
नाम तक नहीं लिया जाता।
क्या ईश्वर भी अब
मानव के अभिनय का पात्र हो गए हैं?
जो सदा से मोहमुक्त थे,
क्या अब मोह के मापदंड से तौले जा रहे हैं?
मैं कोई बड़ा भक्त नहीं हूँ।
नहीं हूँ।
परंतु यह प्रश्न भीतर स्थिर नहीं रहता —
क्या उनकी निर्ममता में
पीड़ा की कोई रेखा नहीं खिंचती?
जब उत्सव समाप्त हो जाता है,
दीप बुझ जाते हैं,
मंदिर फिर से मौन में लिपट जाता है —
तो क्या वह शून्यता
केवल मेरे भीतर होती है,
या महादेव के भी हृदय में?
The Broken Blueprint
This week I found myself spiralling again. Not into panic but into memory, into thought. Into the parts of myself I often shut the door on.

There are places inside me I don’t visit often. Not because they are unfamiliar but because they are too known. They echo with memories that don’t need names only feelings. And when the world goes quiet, I hear the voices again.
There’s something about silence that opens the locked rooms. You think you’re alone, but suddenly you hear whispers from the past. Not voice – just echoes. Moments. Mistakes. Victories no one clapped for. Grief that came and stayed as an unwanted guest. That’s when I started thinking about the architecture of who we are.

I’ve always believed that we’re built by what we endure. That the soul isn’t some abstract cloud of light but something real. Brick and breathe. Fire and fracture. A blueprint constantly redrawn by grief, loneliness and survival.
Somewhere beneath the surface, beneath skin, bone and breathe, there’s a map I carry. Not drawn by ink, but with experience. Etched by days I thought would break me and nights that almost did. It’s not a map anyone else could read. This one twists and spirals, it carries scorch marks and cracks. It doesn’t bend outward, but inward.

I’ve walked to this place many times. Some days by choice. Other days because there was nowhere to go.
The rooms are strange, some are filled with light. Others are lines with silence so thick it hums. In one, laughter still clings to the walls – faint but golden like old sunlight caught in a glass. In another, grief sits quietly, as it always has. Not dramatic, not loud – Just Present. A familiar weight against the ribs. It doesn’t ask for attention, it waits. And when I return, it welcomes me like I never left.

Loneliness has its own corner. Not a gaping emptiness, but something subtle. It drapes itself across furniture, leaning against the doorframes. I’ve met it in crowded rooms and in silent ones. I’ve felt it while laughing, while writing, while simply breathing. It’s not always sadness. Sometimes it’s just the absence of being seen.
I used to think that something was wrong with this place inside me. That I had to repair it, fix the cracks, paint over the walls. But the more time I spend it in, the more I realise that the imperfection is the soul of the place. That this isn’t a ruin, but a living structure – breathing, breaking, and rebuilding all at once.

Even the shadows here serve a purpose. They give shape to the light. They reach me where I’ve come from. I don’t chase them away anymore. I let them speak and I let them stay.

There’s a window in this place that looks out onto nothing, yet aches for everything. It’s where I leave pieces of longing I don’t know how to name. And just beneath that window, a small flame flickers. HOPE – Not loud,or heroic but insistent and stubborn. It’s burned through storms before. It still burns.
This blueprint isn’t static. It shifts. It grows. And I grow with it.
This house is still a work in progess. A living structure, shaped by ache and resilience. Every scar, a foundation; every dream, even the broken ones, part of its design.
I used to long for a simpler and cleaner path. But now, I see the beauty in this unfinished, fractured design. The way it holds space for sorrow and still makes room for joy. The way it bends without breaking. The way it carries I’ve known and everything I’m still learning.
Maybe that’s the whole point! Maybe we aren’t meant to be symmetrical or neat. Maybe we’re meant to hold contradictions – joy stitched into sorrow, love tangled with loss. Maybe we are not meant to be completed but inhabited. Fully. Fiercely. As we are.

And if that’s true, then I will keep walking these halls. I will open the doors I’ve sealed shut. I will sit with the ghosts and golden light alike.
Because even broken blueprints can still build something enduring.
Something whole in its own way.
Something that breathes.
Dreams Written in Ink
As kids, we have a million aspirations, often confused with ‘dream’. Some say they want to be astronauts, scientists, or maybe Miss Universe. Well, I wanted to be Miss Universe, not for the fame but because I wanted to wear a tiara and a gown. If I am being honest, I wanted to be a princess.

Most kids like me had unrealistic dreams or they idolised someone, they looked up to someone, whether it was a family member, a celebrity, or even a fancy name they came across in a book. For a phase in my life, I idolized my mother. She was the managing director of a hospital. When she walked in, people wished her good morning, brought her files to sign, and looked to her for decisions. I wanted to be that, the most important person in the room. I was in class 5 at the time.
But I saw my first true dream when I was ten years old, in class 6. I had just finished reading my first novel, Black Beauty and that’s when I decided I wanted to be a writer. That’s what I want to do for the rest of my life. Why a writer? Because I realised that writers are magicians. You don’t always need a wand, sometimes, you just need a pen to create a whole new world. A world full of possibilities, surprises, and magic. Be it the magical world of Hogwarts or the secret cupboard that led to Naria, all of it were created by writers with powerful imagination.
Growing up in the small town of Jharkhand, when I told I want to be a writer in a class full of 48 students, everyone laughed. But I didn’t care. I was inspired by the stories of Tolstoy, Dickens, and later, Shakespeare. The back pages of my school notebooks were filled with poems and stories.
My grandfather taught me how to write how writing needs to come from the deepest emotions. I wrote my first poem for fun when I was 13, and soon enough, I was exploring different topics in my writing. When I was 16, I won first prize in a poetry writing competition. The topic was shared on the spot by the judging panel, and I still remember how proud I felt when mt words won.
Even when my father wanted me to pursue an MBA, even when I was told that writing was something that I could do for “fun” or later in life when I get old and wrinkly or when my friends called it unrealistic or when my relatives and teachers were disappointed in me for choosing Humanities, I knew I wanted to be a writer. And I was certain that one day, would be.

In college, I majored in English Literature, and every passing day my fascination with writing and writers grew. I wrote my first major poem Good Old Days in 2018. I was inspired by Wordsworth’s simplicity and reflected on the bittersweet nature of childhood memories and passage of time. I was influenced by his words “Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling.” I still believe that poetry is just that, raw, powerful emotional expressed through words.
It was during my internship however, that I discovered how writing could truly be anything I wanted it to be. My mentor introduced me to the world of SEO-based blogs and professional content writing. That’s when it clicked, I don’t need to write a novel to be a writer, I can write anything, writing could evolve, expand, and take many forms. From poems, to blogs, to research articles, AD copies and beyond, writing is limitless.
As a child, I dreamt of living in the Mount and writing for a living. Last year, I got to live that dream. The 10 year old me would have been so proud and it made me realise one simple truth, Dreams Do Come True!
Some people have goals, some have aspirations, but there are also very few who dare to dream. Out of those daring few, only the rarest achieve it. I am not exactly where I want to be yet, but every word I write brings me one step closer to the dream my younger self believed in.