Skip to main content

Of what we have done to earth comes nothing close to



Of what we have done to earth
comes nothing close to what crows
have been doing to mango trees.
Waking up leaves, squatting on dish antennas
and gulping water off Delhi’s terraces!!!

Or squirrels plucking tail up 
every time they grunt
taking every grain of mango 
pulp home.
Just look at that rat, 
how it got underground?!

(to fold the roots of mango tree deeper)

At least we Are facing and meeting (making)
the crisis in its raw form.

Look, how much the domestic pigeon shits on AC.






(Inspired by Fatimah Asghar's I Don't Know What Will Kill Us First: The Race War or What We've Done to the Earth)

Popular Posts

Almost all my returns are well timed with how the sky back at home should look

A clear-dandruff like collection of cloud should mean, I am coming to the ruffle of leaves. A cue to the coral should mean it is 7 and I am to miss tea. A well stationed azure should mean the bus will have left by the time I reach. A wind is still learning to settle what it is going to leave behind. On the roads when people spill along with brown leaves, there is a reflection Of a chai spilled, a biscuit broken — A tip to summer and an earthworm. When I arrive early, I take a longer route. When I arrive late, I am already seeing the sky at home (but at some other place). Glad that the one thing that won’t move with me will be this scene. I am occupied in looking around because I do not need to carry the sky, or pack it, or remember it forever. Also, I can’t really do any of those things. Even knowing that my travels speak to me More about home, should have made me feel adjusted. Most days, I feel Well Traveled.

Didi tum maar khaogi?

When she says: Didi tum maar khaogi? My little neighbour states the very obvious. Her elder sister has just pushed her off the back seat of their red bicycle. There is another who is busy drawing herself in circles behind the cycle. She goes round and round and round… The youngest one of them hasn’t turned up today. She is busy creating an earth on the wall below this floor. When the neighbour repeats: Didi tum maar khaogi? The one behind the cycle, Circling, answers: “Haan. Abhi plate laati hun!”