Tag: English

  • Best Thing in My Life

    Undoubtedly, you are the best thing that has happened to me.

    I know it is very hard to live life with me, but I promise: I will keep trying to understand you, more and more — and not to be so serious.

    I really want everything to work out well. I know it will — but somewhere, somebody has to take the pain of it, and I don’t want it to be you. So I will.

    And no doubt, because of that, I am no longer the very cool person I once was; but my love for you hasn’t changed, not a little — it is the same as it always was, and as it ever will be.

    I love you. And I am sorry for upsetting you.

  • My Purpose, Her Smile

    Just like another day, I was wondering about my purpose in life, and I lost myself into sleep with a deep thought — and woke to find my arms wrapped by another’s: though invisible, yet so invincible; though bitter sometimes, yet sweeter than any sweet. And I found myself in another complex — yet I found my purpose: her smile.

  • Myself in Your Poem

    I feel joy, I feel high, I feel zeal —
    but I cannot find one word to express my feelings.
    It may seem a quiet moment,
    but surely it is full of love, and of happiness.
    I am here, reading it all over again —
    some words written for me.
    I don’t want to hide, but I don’t know how to express it;
    I am short of words to make my feeling pure.
    I may write a book — or maybe not even a word;
    but my eyes are looking for only one thing:
    myself, in your eyes — and now, in your poem.

  • An Outage of Sight

    An outage of sight leaves me blind — but it opens me up:
    to see, to witness; to feel, to know
    what it is like, being loved and hated,
    alone in a room of darkness,
    counting my own possessions, and wondering at my life.

    How far the outcry; how seldom I try —
    but on the closest side, I realize there is a hope, a light.
    But where is it leading? How soon will it be another day,
    with a new mystery, a self of a new realm?

    Still, on the corner of that street,
    I am walking down, in the hope of catching her glimpse,
    and whispering a few words;
    and with the rain, I hide my tears —
    seen, to unseen, I figure it out, another time;
    but, overlapped and collapsed, here and there,
    I am everywhere — but with the confusion, and despair, of a call.

  • Life in If and Else

    One peaceful Monday morning, having ravishing food and enjoying a big brand name, I drifted slightly from my sober sight, and tried to explore the real-life meaning of adaptability and acceptability.

    And I drooled myself to sleep — only to be woken by office colleagues whispering that some senior was coming near. I woke with such a pace that I could have won a medal for it; I found my keyboard and mouse, and started staring blankly at my screen — at some import statements, instances, static members, and condition statements declared.

    If, and else? I was astonished — our life is also like this.

    Multiple ifs and elses: we call them planning, or restrictions. Instance variables are your relatives; static members are your family; and import statements are like education, degrees, friends, and so on. So our life is actually the execution of some code — in terms of if and else, deciding what will happen next — and problems arise with multiple executions, if multithreading is supported, and with all the advice, like annotations, directing our path.

    Multiple ifs and elses: if money, then switch — buy item one; and if money is greater than some amount, then buy this. If money is… and so the code of life keeps running.

  • Adaptability

    It’s weird, but I find it logical to think about how we learned to work five or six days a week, waiting for the one day off that relieves us — and then, the same trained, programmed routine again. It sounds to me like a circle of things: back to where I started, screaming for the day off, living in hell under pressure — and soon, we adapt to it so well.

    We cry about the boredom of routine and want change in life; yet the slightest chance of change tremors our so-called peace, and we want things just as they were.

    So this is how I define adaptability — and acceptability.

  • I Am Here to Stay

    You are the shore; I have anchored my ship —
    though I shall keep moving, I will not move alone:
    I shall keep her, and sail my way.

    I am here to stay, but in love with one —
    in the dreams of one, in her every moment, and in her life.

    I am here to love —
    till the end of the sea,
    till the end of time,
    till the end of love.

    I am here to stay —
    to the end of the circle,
    to the end of memories,
    to the end of human desires,
    to the start of a new life.

    I am here to stay here —
    as her friend, her beloved, her husband,
    her mentor — her life, and hers.

  • How It Feels to Love, and Be Loved

    How does it feel to love, and to be loved?

    Today I woke up early — unusual, for someone who sleeps late — and went for a short, brisk walk. People were still half asleep, dreaming dazzlingly of the past and the future; others walked beside me, for various reasons — health, schedule, office, and a few more. I took some steady steps toward a secluded road, to find my solace. I am not very friendly with the crowd around me, but the horses of my mind gallop like nothing else when I am in my comfort zone.

    The day was beautiful, before dawn. It took me a few seconds to realize what I was doing here, and in which direction I was leading myself. I checked my cell — the devil — and there was her last message, with smileys and a few words of love. And I drifted into a sea of thought: how far I have come, from a single word in life — love.

    The earliest love I remember is all about mother. Then, in the mid-90s, television played an important role in the upbringing of all of us 90s-born kids — the love of Aladdin, Popeye, Mickey and Minnie Mouse, a few films I can recall, and a few discussions in school. All these years, I have been trying to decipher love in my own words, in the world of my own thoughts; and crossing every individual’s perception, I developed my own: love is selfless, love is responsible, love is not flawless — and all that other talk.

    I have personally had two encounters with failed relationships, and every ending brought me more complex thoughts, and a fear of falling in love again. The fear of falling, and failing, again — sounds like a loser, doesn’t it? Yes, I sound like a loosely built architecture of the philosophy of failure and the fear of the future.

    But have I done justice by saying only this? I certainly say no. I found myself in the grip of love once again — and far happier than ever before; but this time, practical, and sensible. Still, the mind plays games. I thought, for a second: do we love by thinking of its security? Its future? Its feasibility? A big no.

    I checked my cell — it was nearing 6:30. I couldn’t quite understand what I had been wondering about love for the last hour. I closed my eyes and walked blindly on the road for a minute, only to find myself so insecure in my steps that I reopened my eyes in fear — to find myself alive. But it was thrilling, and fascinating. And then my mind shot out this analogy with life: some days are risky, and you take the risk of doing something you never thought you would; you were afraid of it, unknowing of its future. But things change when there are two people now, both in the same state — eyes closed, walking blindly, but holding each other’s hands this time. And this time, it wasn’t so scary — because we trust the other person.

    Love is all about this. The time will come when you will fear, when you will be scared, when you will regret your decision — but have you ever noticed how far you have come with that love alone? You may call it walking blindly, but together — and trust is the key.

    But how did I come to write this down? A few months ago, I was scared of love — or rather, scared of walking blindly, alone. But one day, I was so close to love that I put my faith and trust in it, and committed my love. And then I realized: it is not about walking alone, but walking together, with trust in each other. We may fight, we may lose hope — but remember how far we have come together, with that trust. That is how love comes into life, and flowers into happiness. It is all about trust — and a morning walk, to write this down.

  • More Than Words

    I need more than a word to define your importance in my life,
    your love in my life,
    your beautiful eyes when they look at me in love —
    not in the finding of chocolates, nor of roses,
    just me, and my smile.

    I need a word more than “myself” to define you in my life;
    I need words more than “wife” to define our bond;
    I need words more than “together” to explain what we are to each other;
    I need words more than “one” to define you in me, and me in you;
    I need a life more than this one, to tell you how happy I am with you;
    and words, to define my love for you.

  • Some Day

    Some day I try to understand life;
    some day I try to forget my mistakes;
    some day I try to keep myself low;
    some day I try to hide my happiness;
    some day I just like to watch time go;
    some day I stay back, and watch people go;
    some day I look into my own eyes, and call myself a winner;
    some day I forget what I am, and what I want to be;
    some day I just destroy my every thought;
    some day I want to hold my breath, and feel myself fading;
    some day I want to fill myself with endless food;
    some day, I just write for her.