Thursday, April 30, 2020

Mirror

This poem is inspired from a poem I read by my friend Sarthak. He is starting out as a blogger and you can find his blog here

Mirror mirror on the wall
Who is the darkest of them all?
How many people have stood in front of you
Staring at an image they don't want to see
And swallowed a bitter pill about themselves?
Does it cause you pain to see 
All that fear, all that insecurity?
Is it not a fact that you are not as cold 
As people make you out to be?
Does it not hurt you when a fist is driven through you?
Do you not wonder if the blood will come out of your pristine surface?
Are you not abused like this on a regular basis?
Are you to accept this?
Mirror mirror on the wall
Who is the fairest of them all?
Is it the princess in the tower 
Or the prostitute applying rouge
To cover her latest bruise?
Is it the drunk on the street?
Begging to get another drink
And mirror, are you okay?
Are you weary?
Do you wish you could rest?

The Bilge Master

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

4 Chambers

My heart has four chambers 
One for food
One for books and poems 
One for music 
One for darkness 
And all four for you
Beware for I may break yours 
With untruth and deceit
Maybe I will change that
Maybe you can shine a light 
Into the darkness 
And guide the little lost child 
In my heart
Back to the reality he has been running from

The Bilge Master

Friday, April 24, 2020

Ode to the Ghost of You

We first met in a cafe 
In the pouring rain
With petrichor wafting in 
And misted windows 
You ordered an espresso
And I went with carrot cake 
And hated it 
That's one thing that hasn't changed 
My hatred for carrot cake
Being with you was weird 
And yet fulfilling as well
And then suddenly
As suddenly as it started 
It was gone
They told me a blade did it 
That you'd sliced an artery
And little by little
The beeping on the LCD 
Took you farther and farther away
Away from me
I wonder what I didn't see coming
I wish it was all a dream
But sometimes 
On certain moonlit nights 
I can see a silhouette
Twirling clockwise now
And anticlockwise too
Is it you I wonder 
As I sit by the window
Tell me you loved me
Are you back to haunt me?
Is this what it's like
Dancing with the ghost of you?

The Bilge Master

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Spiderweb

For a long, long time 
I knew I had stuff to give 
And I gave and I gave and I gave 
Then, exhausted 
I fell asleep
And along came Anansi
Owner of all the stories in the world 
And he whispered in my ear
Wrapping me up, snug and warm 
In a little spiderweb
Amidst which he taught me 
About all the stories in the world 
His to guard 
Mine to treasure 
Waltzing across the world wide web
My path intersected with another 
Who carried Anansi's blessing 
A girl across an ocean
That I cannot cross yet
But someday will
The two of us are friends 
United by stories, despite being divided by geography
Here I am, an Indian blogger
There she is, a Romanian student 
And Anansi has touched us both
With all the stories in the world 
You see, our first loves will always be books
And poetry
And the stories our grandparents told us 
Over cups of coffee 
We will always fall for someone 
Who understands this vital fact about us
And our faith in stories 
Will enable us to love them
But never 
Never as much
As we love stories

The Bilge Master

Sunday, April 19, 2020

A Story Over Breakfast

The following story was told to me over a charming breakfast by a man I met on the metro. His name is Dan and he is my neighbour. Being elder to me, I call him Dan da. It has been a long time since I heard a story told to me, and therefore I have decided to publish this almost verbatim. I hope you enjoy the tale!

The Bilge Master


I

The nightmares again. A spiky, blood red mark on my report card saying I failed my exam. I wake up each night filled with dread. Why, oh why did I get a star in my class X exam? If I hadn't, I would never have been told to take Science in class XI and I could have studied English and perhaps become a professor!

But no! I had to go and get a bloody star. And now, much like the pair of star crossed lovers in fair Verona, I am in the deep end of the pool, flailing around like a madman trying to breathe. My parents who had pinned so much hope on me and bought me expensive books to help me study...what must they be going through?

I'm worthless. I should set them free. I will  set them free. But how? Think Dan. Think!
I know. I'll run away somehow. Garia station is nearby. I'll grab a train and see where I land up. From there I can perhaps be a monk. Anything  but this tension. Anything but these nonsensical expectations that I will never be able to fulfill.

II

I've packed a bag. It contains a Bhagvad Gita. Don't ask me why. I have one hundred rupees in my pocket. It's 2001. That money will get me where I want to go. Then it's upto God. I have no power over what is destined for me.

Here comes a train.


III

I'm sitting in a train, which just entered the first station. I bought a film magazine which costed me Rs 10. A few people are glancing at me, suspiciously. One of them asked me where I was going and I replied "I don't know". The weird looks are getting more and more frequent. I have a five rupee ticket in my pocket. I don't even know how far this train goes or how far a person can travel on a five rupee ticket. I don't want to be thrown out of the train. Let me get off at the next station before the ticket checker comes and tells me something harsh. What an adventure this is. I am dazed with delirium and shit scared, but at least I have set my parents free. They won't have to spend money behind me anymore. I'm 17 years old and I can take care of myself.

I took a train to Bardhaman, then another one to Bolpur. Bolpur seemed like a good place to get off. I spent the night at the station, awaiting the dawn. What was it they said? The night is darkest before dawn?


IV

It's morning. I slept on a bench on the platform. My body aches. My joints are stiff from lying in the same position for so long. I also need to restore blood circulation in my feet. I'm ravenous. I need food.

And thus I begin the second part of my quest. I have left my old life behind, and am starting a new one. But first, breakfast.

Breakfast was a simple affair of kachori and aludum from a sweet shop washed down with rasgullas. Now at least, I am no longer hungry. The challenges before me can now be faced with some degree of confidence. I went to the rickshaw stand and hired a rickshaw, requesting him to take me to the nearest ashram. It is the simple life for me. Two meals a day, even if the meal is gruel and a bed to sleep on after a hard day's work. After all, don't people become hermits? Don't people renounce the ways of the world, forsake meat and fish and live on fruits? I am a God fearing boy. I shall work and earn my sustenance.

I have arrived at the local Ramakrishna Mission ashram. The rickshaw cost me twenty rupees and the meal 60. I have five rupees in my pocket. A pauper in the true sense of the word.
It is here that I got my first reality check. I knocked on the gate of the ashram and a gruff looking man, smelling of coconut oil answered the door. When he heard what I wanted, he boxed my ears and told me to get lost.

I'm not ashamed to say I started to cry. Five rupees in my pocket and nowhere to go. For the life of me I couldn't figure out what to do. It was at this point that I met the good Samaritan.

V

I went to another ashram. I was sitting under the shade of a tree, playing with a stone and wondering what to do, when suddenly a shadow fell across me. I recognized a man I had seen at the nearby temple where he had been praying(It was a man in his mid thirties). This man asked my name of me and I gave a false one He then asked what I was doing. His impression was that I was a boy from a decent family and I was far from home. I told him I had come from Bangladesh and was looking for a job. He took me to his house. He then gave me ten rupees and told me to try and see if I could find work at the local tourist lodges that were in Bolpur. It was a hot day in the middle of summer, and I was sweating buckets. But to the lodges I went and everywhere I was turned away. Close to despair, I went limping back to his house. I was chased by a dog. I had to clamber over a small stile to get away and my shirt became stained with mud.

Thus disheveled I arrived at the good Samaritan's house again and told him I had had no luck in finding a job.

This is when I met the Oracle, in the form of this good Samaritan's father. It was like a scene from  a Greek hero's quest. This old man made an impact on me.


VI

This good Samaritan's elderly father  came out of his inner room and asked me point blank where I was from. I felt I could trust him and so I told him I had run away and my home was in proper Kolkata. He immediately told me to ring up my house and alleviate my parents' tension.

And so I called.

I learnt that the entire neighbourhood had assembled at my house and all hell had broken loose. Some people were wringing their hands with worry and some wanted to wring my neck in fury. In the midst of all this, my mother's blood pressure had shot up and she was confined to her bed in a semi conscious state.

An anxious cousin picked up the phone and he was breathing heavily. He then told me to stay where I was and that he would send an escort to pick me up from there and bring me home. Apparently, my entire clan was waiting for me.

I was given lunch and then I slept.

I woke up about three hours later and asked for some money to go to the station. But when I got there I found that my name was being announced in the station and I was told not to get onto any trains. For who could tell what I would do? I could have run again, isn't it?

After some time, when the evening was almost upon us, two of my cousins arrived and together we returned home.

I expected a hiding, but my mother saved me. The entire neighbourhood would stare at me wherever I went.

The problem I had run away from was back.

VII

I told my parents rather vehemently that I would not give the higher secondary exam. I was adamant and no tears or wringing of hands would change my mind.
t was then that I was taken to a psychologist and I had my second epiphany. This man had a powerful, deep voice. He told me that I would have to appear for the exam, even if I failed it or got exactly zero in exactly one subject.

I had three months. I just went and bought as many ten years question banks as I could and started to solve them. By the end of six weeks, I found that I could join dots connecting what I had studied in my books to what was given in the questions.Each day was a battle. Escaping is so easy. Staying is such an adventure.

And so, the boy who ran away, faced his fear and gave the exam.

VIII

It was the day of the result. I was asleep. My mother had gone to school to check the notice board. She came back and told me that I had secured a first division. For the first time in three and a half months, I smiled. we both heaved a sigh of relief.

This is where I make a mistake again. Having secured a first division, I decided to get myself admitted in Ramkrishna Mission with Economics Honors. I hated every second of it . It was a bad phase in my life. I used to sit in my room, in pitch blackness, without peace.  Once again, I felt worthless. I wondered when, (if ever) I would find my true calling.

I somehow completed the Economics course and then did an MBA. For my first job, I got settled in a plantation in Kerela.

This is where everything changed.

IX

It had been a few months in Kerela. It was a beautiful place. Lush greenery all around and the smell of petrichor when it rained. I was happy. I had servants, a bungalow to myself, good food and I had stopped worrying. My brother-in-law had gifted me a camera and I started to dabble in photography. 

Little did I know, it would change my life soon.

This change I speak of came when two of my friends arrived to spend some time with me in Kerela. They brought with them one of the latest DSLR cameras in the market. I had never seen such clear pictures, with so much detail before. I started to dabble further in photography. I took the DSLR for a spin and started to click photos of nature, learning about the camera and teaching myself photography. It was a match made in heaven.

I had found my calling. I was elated beyond measure.

X

And so, after a tough high school life, a worse college life and a lot of struggle, I had decided what I wanted to do with my life. I now have two cameras (the camera of my dreams…and most importantly the right perspective), and I travel here and there on photography assignments. Over time, my eye has developed and I have been able to teach myself more and more about photography.

It has been a long journey, with its ups and downs, but it has ended. Subhadip Dan, photographer! Has a nice ring to it, doesn't it?

And now my friend, do what you will with this story. Maybe you can learn from it. You see, sometimes even a good student can fail. Sometimes a mediocre one can shine. Sometimes, your destiny awaits you outside the confines of organic chemistry textbooks or electrical engineering lectures.


As a wise person once said, "Let everything happen to you. Beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final.”

Friday, April 17, 2020

On Books and Doors- A Guest Post by Mary Katerine

Mary Katerine is a friend on Facebook. She is also a girl who understands my love for books. I've known her for quite some time and she's quite a special individual in my life. This post is Mary talking about books. I hope you enjoy reading it, and enjoy reading books as much as Mary and I do!

The Bilge Master

I've just had this beautiful image in my head. About books, because what else can I let myself think of during these times.

So I imagined reading as walking into this long corridor. You can't see where it ends, but you can see where it started, because that's where you started. And on every side of this corridor, there are doors. Many many doors.
 
Those are the books you learn about through one person or another. As soon as you learn about one, its door appears. But all the doors are closed, because you have yet to read those books. And every time you get one book (buy it, borrow it, get it gifted to you), a key appears. And that key fits only in one door, that door corresponding to the book. And you can choose to use it, or leave it in your pocket.

There are doors you open only once. Sometimes you take a little peek decide it's not for you, and close it back. Other times you keep it open enough to take a walk, learn what's in there, but never come back.

But there are other doors. The ones whose location you know even with your eyes closed. The ones whose keys are so used, their colour has changed, but they are still usable. The doors you open the as wide as can be and wander inside for as long as you want, not because you want to discover what's behind the door (even though sometimes you find something you missed last time), but because you missed it so much you decided to wander once more. Sometimes you even misplace the key so you just leave the door open, because you know there is no use in locking it anyway. You just waste time you could be spending inside. So you keep the door open, sometimes so wide it calls you back so often it becomes more of a home than your actual home ever was. 


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Infinities

There is something oddly fascinating
About the night sky
Just as twilight fades into darkness 
And the sky begins to change 
From pale orange to royal blue
Before trying on a shade of black
And adorning it with a smattering of stars 
Like pearls on a beautiful woman
Little dots and points of light 
Tell us the stories of the Cosmos 
Orion the hunter becomes visible
So does the Great Bear 
Lying on a roof 
Looking up at the infinities 
And being reminded 
That we are but a small cog 
In some giant machine 
It can be awe inspiring
Every night when the sun goes down
I walk up to the roof 
And lie down, staring
Some days the stars show me their true faces 
They remind me of how much I have to live for 
Some days, the evening star appears
Guiding my wandering soul back
Home
And some days, I just want 
To lie here on my roof 
Until the sky falls down on me

The Bilge Master

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

My Self Righteous Suicide

You were hot where it mattered 
And cold as ice too
Touching your lips to mine 
Was a 440 volt electric shock
A herald of the apocalypse that was inbound 
A sign that I would break
And lie on the ground bleeding 
We were never just friends
There is no justice involved in mating rituals
Your last text was my note 
As I stand here tonight
My lungs burning 
My ribcage pounding
I want to explode
Allow me to write this epilogue 
Which will find its way to you
Cold rain falls on the ground 
Petrichor wafts into the air 
The bassist of my favorite band
Caresses my ears 
The night swallows me up in it's arms 
Gravity doesn't matter anymore
Nothing matters anymore 

The Bilge Master

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Rache

The sky has turned blood red 
A new day will dawn
On a town once bustling 
But now inhabited by ghosts
And stray dogs that are hungry
Looking for scraps to survive 
The human race is locked in battle 
Trying to survive a disease 
We have been driven back to our hovels
We, the oh so mighty survivors 
Of dinosaurs and global warming 
Now we cower behind cowls 
And the alcohol doesn't remove the bloodstains from our hands
Mother Nature has decided we must suffer 
Such is her wrath
A wrath we brought upon us 
By killing her children
The trees and animals 
And by choking her skies and waters
With refuse from factories 
Tell me, what do we do now?
Germ warfare was the future 
And now the future is uncertain for us all
Be we common folk or prime ministers 
Young or old 
We have come face to face with our own mortality
And it is a fearsome sight 
We are terrified 
Some of us too young to die 
Some of us leading a desperate charge
Attired in white coats and face masks 
Even if she does forgive us our sins
I wonder if we will learn 
Not to meddle in affairs that don't concern us
Not to take things for granted 
Not to say, "Tomorrow is another day"
For that very tomorrow 
Is now a part of yesterday
And what lies ahead has never been more in question
Than today
The presence of 24 hours 
Is torture 
And our prayers mostly go unanswered 
As outside our shelters, an invisible hunter stalks us 
More efficient and deadly 
Than all identified predators 
We joke that we won't be taken out 
By a virus that is named after a light beer 
But that light beer's namesake had killed more of us in 15 days 
Than genocidal maniacs could in years
I am afraid, oh so afraid 
For this is but a fraction 
Of what a wronged mother can do
To protect her children

The Bilge Master

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Phantasmagoria

I wake from yet another nightmare 
They've been coming hard and fast
I'm trapped indoors and can't go out
The world is following my example
The air around me is stale with cigarette smoke
The water tastes metallic
I haven't shaved for two weeks
Coz there's no point 
Nobody out there you see 
But even in the midst of this early apocalypse
As Nature, the mother we wronged
Has her revenge
Human beings are surviving 
We are telling each other stories
In my dreams, I see a cat come 
Down from an unknown mountain
He sits before me
And speaks of Anansi
He weaves a web of suspense and romance 
Sometimes his tales are funny 
Sometimes they are sad
But he is nothing short of a Messiah
Come to us from an unknown origin
He speaks of better times
And we believe again
Every night he speaks
Every night we listen
And that, my son is what tells me
We will survive this 

The Bilge Master