Sachin 的个人资料wordswordswords日志列表 工具 帮助

日志


10月27日

Love Songs for Amogh

Love Songs for Amogh

 

Sachin Ketkar

 

I

 

 

Torment of thirty five worlds

Falls away

With your smile

 

A resplendent star

In the evening

Of my hazel eyes

 

You have fathered me, Amogh

Before I die

 

II

 

 

I haven’t come across yet

Love poems from fathers to their sons

Probably

It is not manly enough

To write a one

But here I am

Looking at the blank paper

In front of me

 

Remembering

The paper white purity

Of your skin

When the nurse placed you

In my hands for the first time

 

Your first dark faeces

When I changed your diapers the first time

Injecting  cow’s milk

From a needless syringe

Into your mouth

I remember your ceaseless howling

On the second night

When your mother had not started lactating

 

Do father lactate?

They may

For they are females too

 

This poem for instance

Oozes out of the nib

Instead of my nipple.

 

III

 

 

I absolutely had no idea

My elf

That all along

You were hiding

In some obscure corner of my mind

Playing your usual peek a boo

 

Though I could feel

That you probably reached out

With your palm

When I tried to hear

Your somersaults

And flying kicks

Inside your mom

 

I remember

How you wetted

My umpteenth pajama

When I used to rock you on my laps

Sitting cross legged

(Yes, you could fit into the frame then)

During midnight hours

 

I also remember trying to put you asleep

On my shoulders

When you were bent on staying awake

With your mischief

 

Yes, fathering a father

Can be a tough job

But you did it pretty well.

 

 

IV

 

I don’t know exactly why

We decided to name you `Amogh’

 

Your name means the infallible one

An unfailing weapon

 

But I know now

That I aimed my arrow

At my aging agony

 

It hasn’t really missed its mark.

 

V

 

I have hardly anything on me

To pass on to you

With joy

 

The books I read

Are as dark as the ones I write

 

My genetic records

Are not commendable either

 

They haven’t isolated

The Asthma gene yet

 

Probably

It has latched itself on to you

 

Neither do I think that they can ever identify

 

The gene for poetry

Which is probably as bad

Or even worse

 

For it means

To be condemned forever

 

To live alone

Like a man with an extra pair

Of testicles

Hiding his shame

In the shadows of the world

 

VI

 

 

In these hands

I have held the ovaries

Of my aged mother

Floating in a flask

Where seeds of suffering were first sown

 

I have seen my wife

Writhing and bleeding in her labors

 

I have seen eyeballs

Of my friends father

Who was quite fond of me

Extracted and bottled

For posterity

 

I have been overrun

By asthma

In the Oxford Botanical Gardens

Where I thoughtlessly went

And spent rest of the evening

Floating in warm water of the bath tub

As if in amniotic fluid

Thousands of kilometers away from home

 

I have sat up wheezing

Any number of nights

From past two and half decades

Clutching the stubborn old darkness

Under my belly

For support

 

I have seen family friends

Swindle my father of his hard earned money

 

I have cremated dozens of old skulls

And heard them crack in their pyres

 

I have seen madness of love

In the woman’s eyes

I know the feeling of oneness

When I make love to her

 

 

But it is so different

From the feeling of love I have

When you sleep in my arms

Dreaming of innocence

I kiss your small white shoulders

Feel the fragrance of your fingers

Playing with my ear lobes

 

Agreed

I haven’t seen much of life

But I haven’t been entirely ignorant of death

But to catch a glimpse of love

And to be touched

By the beauty of the whole world

Is sufficient

To make a prematurely graying man

Without youth or childhood

Smile

 

VII

 

 

Amogh, for you

I have attempted the impossible

-writing a poem on happiness

 

But who cares if I fail

As long as your paradisal beauty

Lights up

The fading lamps of my eyes

 

24 Oct 2007

11 15 pm

 

 


10月14日

Intimations of Digital (Im)Mortality

Some days ago, during an academic meet, a senior professor professed that blogs confer immortality of sorts upon people. What shall I do with this immortality of my Digital Soul, when my second-wave Ist Generation Soul experiences mortality every moment?

But it is true that this world wide web phenomenon is a very liberating one as Chitre once rightly observed. The World Wide Web is a small place too, and you bump into the same people- as on Orkut or Facebook-often!

The Net will change the way people relate to each other and to things. It will also change the way writing relates to society and the way society relates to writing. But how and in what way? Who knows? time alone will tell. It will change the way people `publish' things and the way people `read' stuff probably. No,the old fashion first generation `book' wont give way to ebook, but probably in some other way. How? Well who can tell?