Sunday, May 31, 2020

How Fortunate Am I

How fortunate am I
To have a family
How fortunate am I
To have friends 
Who take my loneliness away
And love me 
How fortunate am I 
To be literate
Unlike many in this world 
How fortunate am I
To not have to beg, borrow or steal
To make my daily bread 
Let this poem be a gentle reminder
That despite problems 
We are fortunate
We are the world within a world 
Cocooned in our security
With roofs o'er our heads
While somewhere in the wide world 
A ten year old is hungry
How fortunate are we
That when we were ten
All we had to worry about was when
We could buy the next computer game

The Bilge Master

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Wilderness

I'm a nomad wandering the sands 
I have seen pain
And felt the harsh sun on my bare back
Without a shirt on it
How can I return home
You were far from me 
A wild thing 
With untamed tresses 
And fire in your eyes 
The eternal gypsy with an opium pipe 
And bewitchment coursing through your veins
You were not scared of the stranger banging on your doors
Seeking shelter from the storm in his breast
You kept him safe 
And he kept you wild 
And maybe one day
You will go your seperate ways 
And this friendship will be kept alive 
Through the alphabet used to express sentiment 
Maybe I will remember you 
As the violence in the rain
And maybe you will remember me as the tranquility in a lake 
Maybe your favorite time of day
Is a time when it is dark
When weary with smiling 
You rest at last
Maybe you will still know me 
As the stranger who drank water at your door 
And maybe I will remember your eyes 
In which there is an inferno

The Bilge Master 

Poster credit Sudeshna Roy

Friday, May 15, 2020

Strangers We Know Very Well, Despite Never Having Met Them

An evening of music, proclaims the banner. It's got a picture of rock stars with big guitars and bigger names. Some names you know, others are unknown. They let you in. It's a darkened stage, with a Fender Stratocaster on it. Suddenly all the lights go out and you see a shape running at something. A few seconds later, the Voice growls "YEEEEAHHHH!!!" into a microphone. Just like that, you're on your feet, on your chair, screaming back.

It's amazing what a stranger can do to you with his or her voice or instrument. Think about it. Do you really know the lead singer of the band that's become your favorite go to when you're sad and in need of some love? No.

But...

In a way you do. You've heard them sing. You've heard them play. And you've become friends with them, even though you have never met, and probably never will. You have memorabilia. You have signed photos and perhaps a really old, dog eared photo. Memories of times spent with total strangers, who gave you the power to hang on, the power to wake up and get out of bed.

How many times have you heard them? The same voices, the same chords? How many times have you gone over to a friend's place to hear him play your songs on his electric guitar? You don't remember do you? 

I don't either.

I just know that when that song comes on, I'm gonna dance! And the world will join me.

That's what music does to you. It unifies better than world leaders and political figures. It expresses emotions. It fills up the empty pockets in your soul. 

What would we do without these musicians in our lives? 

The Bilge Master


Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Somewhere in Between

This poem is inspired from the Lifehouse song Somewhere in Between

Somewhere in between school and work
Somewhere in between the book and the movie
Somewhere in between soda and alcohol
Somewhere in between virginity and having children
Somewhere in between bedtime stories and biographies
Somewhere in between rock music and the Hemen raaga
Somewhere in between being driven around the city and driving at 90
Somewhere in between yesterday and tomorrow 
We all grew up

The Bilge Master

Tuesday, May 12, 2020

If the World Was Ending...

Spotify wants me to go Premium. I tolerate the ads. Tonight however, a song is stuck in my head. This song is so apt given the fact that perhaps the world as we know it has changed.

They say change is the only constant and also that some things never change. They say that people do stupid things for people they love. They say conversation happens over coffee or maybe tea or just hanging one handed on a metro train headed back from work.

Tonight it happened over soda and Bollywood. It got me thinking. What if this was the last one I ever had? Would I have said more? Would I have said less? Would we have covered Country Roads by Denver together in our out of tune voices, desperate to nail the high key?

Lacuna Coil said we should realize that sometimes words are very unnecessary. I disagree. Words are necessary. Sometimes words make more sense than staying silent. They lodge a protest. They remind our enemies that we are alive and kicking. 

Bit by bit, the evening went from musical discussions to the birth of a soundtrack which will remind me of this moment forever. It was just us, with a couple of old songs and soda. Cigarette smoke hung in the air and age faded away as the generation gap melted. Sometime during the evening, one of us started singing. 

Nobody stopped her. And a soundtrack was born. A wheel whirred. A memory got saved.

If the world ended tomorrow, I would be happy knowing this evening happened. I would not change a thing. 

The Bilge Master

Saturday, May 9, 2020

Free

I know a girl
I love her 
Shortest love story ever 
The thing is 
She sets me free 
Makes me think 
Takes my rudeness 
And forgives me 
Even when I screw up
She's special 
A tad unique 
This poem is for her 
Pray she likes it 
Hope she won't get mad
That it took me so long to
Get around to putting
Pen on paper 
She's electric 
Somewhat eccentric
A good chef 
Trying baking 
Wants a tin which she needs 
So she drives at 80
Down deserted streets 
Smoking like a chimney
Loving like a gypsy
I know her family
They're swell
I hope they like me 
Of late I'm a tough guy to like 
And Chris Martin tells me 
I shouldn't lose her 
I hope I don't 
Thank you for reading about us 
There really is a lot more to say
But I don't have words to say it yet
Watch this space

The Bilge Master

Friday, May 1, 2020

The Lake

My summer holidays had just begun. It was the last summer holiday before the HS exam and college. I'd gone for a walk to Dhakuria lake. After having exerted myself, I purchased a small glass of chai and headed off to sit on  a bench beside the lake. It had rained. I sidestepped a few puddles, careful to not spill any tea on myself and sat down.

The sky was overcast, with smatters of light gray, black and patches of blue peeking through, somewhat defiantly. The mosaic of colour in the sky was reflected on the surface of the lake. I could smell the wet grass and the slightly pungent smell of wet earth. I'd finished my chai. As if on cue, it started to rain again. This time I was drenched. But the rain stopped after a little while and I tried to use my handkerchief to dry my thick hair off.

The sun had started to shine and the lake's surface had turned to liquid gold. I watched, mesmerized as there were ripples forming on the lake surface and I could hear birds call out to each other- a cry seeking an answer..all in the wake of a little rain. The surface of the lake was on fire- little spots of red and violet amidst an epicentre of pure gold. The colours changed with every turn of my head, refracting off my spectacles, adding to their mystery. I wondered if the lake was trying to tell me something. It seemed almost ritualistic- birds in the trees singing, smells of various kinds and a kind of kaleidoscope of colours in front of my eyes.

My reverie was interrupted by a voice. I turned around and I saw a beautiful girl, with an oval face, raven hair and ruby lips. I was thrown off for a second and stammered

"Who are you?"

"You don't recognize me? I live in your locality! I'm three houses down from you.", she replied.

"I'm sorry, I can't seem to place you just now.", I replied.

"Anyway, I was saying that you're all drenched. You'll catch your death."

"I will be okay. Would you like some tea? Let's have a cup."

"Okay, go get some."

That is how it all started my dears. To this day, your mother reminds me of John Denver's Country Roads and to this day, I love having chai on a bench with her at Dhakuria lake. It's been almost 30 years. She drives me mad sometimes. Her sense of direction is appalling and she always misreads the directions and cannot drive to save her life.


But every day, I am taken back to that moment we met. It had just stopped raining and the clouds had parted. The sun was shining and your mother was smiling at me. I could ask for no sweeter memory.

The Bilge Master