The Pause I didn’t Choose
It took only a moment for everything to change. A small misstep, and the rhythm I had just started to find broke. Things had finally begun to settle. I was building a life across roles, partner, mother, professional, and simply a person, having moved countries not long ago, stretching myself a little further each day. Some people believed I wouldn't manage it all. When everything stopped so suddenly, it was hard not to wonder if they had been right. What followed was not just physical stillness, but an emotional one, a pause I had never allowed myself before. Sometimes life creates these pauses for us, when we don't know how to stop on our own. And in that unexpected quiet, something shifted. Not outside, but within.
Joburg, Five Days, Zero Regrets
Johannesburg had always been a warning in other people’s stories: crime s
The Centrifugal Soul: Finding Your “Centre” in a Simulated World
In a world of endless scrolling and algorithm-driven identities, we risk lo
Of Flights, Familiarity and Fusion
A tender, witty memoir of travel and exile, this essay follows Mridula Kaul
My EV Journey: From Curiosity to Clarity
Real-world driving, not spec sheets, is what finally made electric vehicles
An EPIPHANY… in the Arctic Silence !
Bundled in layers against a brutal Arctic winter, a routine snow vacation i
Where Threads Held More Than Just Dried Vegetables
Where Threads Held More Than Just Dried Vegetables is a quiet, moving refle
In Focus
A Thousand Words in None
In what feels like a gut-punch, Aria Raina Kumar displays a maturity beyond her years as she talks about inheriting stories and loneliness, where light replaces words because the truth can only be felt and never told, in A Thousand Words in None.
Editor's Desk
Vyeth, Jhelum, Vitasta
Some rivers just flow. The Vitasta is not one of those rivers. Known to the world as the Jhelum, and to Kashmiris simply as Vyeth, she doesn't merely flow. She presides. Born, according to the Nilamata Purana, from a strike of Shiva's trident and the form of Goddess Parvati herself, she rises at the spring of Verinag, passes through the old kadals of Srinagar, through Wular Lake, and on to Baramulla, where the valley ends and the mountains close in like a gate. She has carried Alexander's armies, Lal Ded's prayers, and the quiet weight of every ordinary life lived along her banks. This is a personal essay about the things that outlast us: a river, a ladle, a memory that keeps moving long after its source is gone.


