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  • January 28, 2026

    first loves

    we don’t talk about them much
    the ones who taught our hearts
    how to mispronounce forever.

    they smelled like folded dresses,
    faintly of naphthalene
    and said things like always
    and promise
    and meant it
    until they didn’t.

    and now every song
    is a door we don’t open,
    every photograph
    a city we can’t go back to.

    but god
    for a moment
    didn’t it feel
    like we invented love?
  • January 12, 2026

    the math of us

    there used to be four
    that’s how most families begin
    four people
    sharing one roof
    one table
    one stubborn history

    and no one tells you
    that four
    is just a temporary number
    a season
    a brief agreement
    before the world
    starts doing its subtraction

    because time
    doesn’t ask
    who’s ready
    it just moves
    steadily
    like it’s got somewhere to be

    and one day
    four becomes three
    then two
    then one

    and the last person standing
    doesn’t get a medal
    or a speech
    or a soft shoulder
    just the responsibility
    of carrying everything
    nobody wrote down

    the laughter
    that had no reason
    the arguments
    that made no sense
    the days
    that weren’t special
    until they were gone

    you carry it
    because someone has to
    because that’s the job
    of whoever
    didn’t go first

    and if you’re lucky
    really lucky
    you get to start the math
    all over again

    you hold a child
    or a niece
    or someone the world
    has trusted to you
    and you realize
    you are quietly
    passing the weight forward

    not to hurt them
    not to burden them
    but because this
    is how love works

    love is a daisy-chain
    of remembering
    and being remembered
    of holding
    and letting go
    of breaking
    and still choosing
    to try again

    we think love
    is all sweetness
    but it isn’t
    it has edges
    it has cost
    it has the nerve
    to outlive us

    and when you leave
    someone will carry you
    the same way
    you carried the others
    not because they want to
    but because they belong to you
    and you belong to them

    that’s the circle
    that’s the deal
    that’s the truth
    nobody wants to say out loud

    love doesn’t save us
    love just refuses
    to let us disappear

    and maybe
    that’s enough

    maybe
    that’s everything.

    a note

    this free verse began with a half-memory something i’d read long ago, maybe in tamil, maybe in english, about a family and the last one left holding all the others. the details were gone, but the thought of that always stayed. it resurfaced now and then. 

    only after finishing the free verse did i ask chenthil if he recalled anything like it in tamil poetry. because I thought it was from a poem by athmanaam. he said it was a coincidence that he’d been talking to his daughter about the same idea that morning and then he sent me the source. it turned out to be vikram seth.

    so this isn’t drawn from vikram seth’s lines, but the spirit of the seed leads back to him. and in a way, that lineage mirrors this free verse itself. a memory passed forward, carried by whoever holds it next.

    families subtract, memories accumulate, and someone always someone ends up holding more than they meant to. if we’re lucky, someone after us will carry us too.


    How rarely all these few years, as work keeps us aloof,
    Or fares, or one thing or another,
    Have we had days to spend under our parents' roof:
    Myself my sister, and my brother.

    All five of us will die; to reckon from the past
    This flesh and blood is unforgiving.
    What's hard is that just one of us will be the last
    To bear it all and go on living.

    - Vikram Seth
  • December 14, 2025

    A Holiday Note from Agentland

    Book Cover

    Every December, as the world gently dissolves into a festive fog of peppermint and algorithmically selected holiday playlists, I can’t help but think that used books are an underrated gift.

    Used books are wonderful. They’re democratic, affordable, and pleasantly scented with the aroma of previous owners who apparently read while eating toast. They also contain ideas, which is more than can be said for most of the things that clutter our online shopping carts.

    This year, though, something unusual happened. I wrote a book.

    And now I find myself in the very funny position of saying, with as much humility as one can muster while holding a paperback with one’s own name on it: if you’re planning gifts for the holidays, consider giving people… brand-new ideas wrapped in a book that’s been deliberately priced like a used one.

    Welcome to Agentland is my small attempt to explain AI agents to everyday people. It isn’t written for futurists, but for anyone who wants to understand what on earth is happening inside their inboxes and apps. The book is warm, curious, and entirely free of diagrams. It even contains jokes. (The diagrams union refused to participate.)

    When I was 10 or so I first learnt about computers and its possibilities by stumbling into an essay by Sujatha in Dinamani kathir. That stayed with me for years. This book is my attempt to do something similar.

    Now, I should warn you, giving someone a book these days is a radical act. In a world where most things are designed to be swiped, binged, skipped, replayed, sped up, slowed down, or recommended “because you watched something vaguely similar in 2018,” offering someone a book is like handing them a small paper shield and saying:

    “Here hold this. Use this to defend your attention for a few minutes.”

    And what better time than the holidays? That magical period when people are doing one of the following:

    • waiting for cookies to bake
    • waiting for relatives to arrive
    • waiting for relatives to leave
    • waiting for the New Year’s countdown while pretending not to be sleepy at 10:17 p.m.

    During these moments, a book, an actual book, is a marvelous thing. It sits there patiently, asking nothing of you except perhaps the occasional chuckle and a warm lap to rest upon. It does not autoplay. It does not suggest the next chapter based on your reading history.

    So if you’re looking for a small, thoughtful holiday gift, for a teenager wondering about the future, a spouse curious about AI, a friend who still remembers life before infinite scrolling, or even yourself, consider gifting this little field guide.

    Kindle works. Paperback is ideal. The audiobook is on the way, for the ones who prefer their ideas narrated while folding laundry.

    Welcome to Agentland. A book that wants nothing more than to distract you, briefly and delightfully, from the algorithms trying to do the same.

    Book link:

    Paperback and Kindle version in US – https://amzn.to/48SyHzY

    Only Kindle version in India – https://amzn.to/48SyHzY

  • November 11, 2025

    ordinary glory

    i wake up before the alarm
    ’cause the birds don’t believe in schedules.
    they just sing
    like rent’s paid
    and peace is permanent.

    i stretch my body
    like signing a treaty
    between my bones and the daylight.

    coffee first
    ’cause prayer without caffeine
    is too abstract.

    i check the inbox:
    yesterday’s emails look back at me
    like old regrets
    and i tell them, hush,
    we’re learning patience today.

    outside, the mail truck coughs up
    news, bills, and a coupon for
    twenty percent off miracles.
    i don’t need them
    i got faith in clean laundry
    and good neighbors.

    the kid upstairs is dribbling
    a basketball called hope
    the rhythm reminds me
    that meaning has a beat,
    not a footnote.

    they say the examined life
    takes time
    but look, i just found eternity
    between two slices of wheat toast.

    i butter it slow.
    i breathe.
    i let the light do its quiet sermon
    on the kitchen wall.

    no gurus needed
    i’ve got the gospel of groceries,
    the meditation of morning drives,
    the philosophy of ironed sleeves
    while rahman sighs on 98.3 fm.

    if i ever get famous,
    i want it to be
    for how i looked at a monday
    and smiled anyway.

    ’cause really,
    this simple life,
    this ordinary glory,
    is already a masterpiece
    if you’re awake enough
    to sign your name on it.

    a note

    this pretend poem reads like a cold day in november, and that’s how it came on a sunday morning after that strange borrowed hour we call daylight savings time. between the first filter coffee and the day’s first chores, somehow i was thinking about the examined life, that old socratic phrase that’s followed me for twenty-five years but never once got examined.

    it always sounded noble, but hard to live. to examine life, you have to stop it and if you stop it, you’re gone. so maybe the trick is not to stop it, just to stay awake inside it. to see it clearly for a moment, between inboxes and toast. that morning gave me one such moment. i thought if i didn’t catch it, it would slip away like most clarity does. also this time i tried to use the word [’cause] purposefully across the whole verse to create a poetic symmetry.

    somewhere, ms subbulakshmi was singing, and the light from the backyard was kind.

  • October 31, 2025

    the morning i watered the plant


    i didn’t think much of it
    just poured what was left in the glass
    onto that dusty stem
    that hadn’t bloomed in two years

    it leaned, tired
    like it had decided silence
    was easier than trying again

    i wiped the leaves with my shirt
    told it,
    “you still here, huh?”
    and went on making coffee

    by the time i came back
    one leaf had straightened itself
    like somebody remembered
    how to stand

    i don’t know what to call that
    miracle, mistake,
    or maybe just faith
    that refused to resign

    either way
    i left the window open that day,
    and the wind came in,
    smelling of unborn rain,
    saying everything i couldn’t
    anymore

    a note

    all i wanted to say was this is yet another poem, or maybe yet another paragraph pretending to be yet another poem. i don’t know. what i do know is poetry is the hardest thing that ever can be (until i learn how to play a violin). every word here feels like it costs a million bucks. if a picture is worth a thousand words, then in a poem, i think a single word has to be worth a thousand pictures.

    this one took me longer than i expected, and even now i don’t think it’s finished. maybe poems never are. maybe they just stop themselves somewhere.

    if you guessed it right, this isn’t about the plant, or the watering person, or even the coffee. i was trying to see if i could write something that carried a subtext while, on the surface, it stayed about a mundane, everyday thing.

    so yes, it’s a selfish act. one person, one plant. but maybe that’s how bigger things begin. i wanted to believe in something that still had a little green left in it.

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