Rain

I look up at the sky

Dark and grim

Threatening to pour

Over the vast black brim

It makes me wonder

Decide between friend and foe

For during my vacation

Rain’s always at my tow

A shield on my back

More pain than protection

For no place can I enjoy

With my family, out of station

Yet during my exams

It leaves my back

Giving the hopeful me

A very hard smack.

What my feelings are

Yet not very clear

To this popular FRENEMY

So far away, yet so near.

Do not be the Captain Marvy during Vacation

The Right Day To Sail

Captain Marvy set sail
For a long journey ahead
Cargo to deliver
Crates of buns, jams and bread.
 
The sun was bright
Temperature warm
The currents just right
Crew in full form.
 
“All ready” he shouted
Got ahoys in return 
A hearty roar ensured
As the ship’s gears turned.
 
But “Wait” came a cry
From an embarrassed Captain Marvy himself
“My lucky jackets yet to dry
Let’s not start today.”
 
They came back the next day
Captain Marvy in his lucky blue
All set to sail
Right current, temperature and crew.
 
But “Wait!” cried Captain Marvy 
“The weather seems a bit off
The sky’s cloudy
Could be the warning of a storm.”
 
So, they stopped 
Called it a day
Set plans for the morrow 
To start, come what may.
 
Yet, the next morning 
The air was dusty 
The next, assistant cook missing 
Air too chilly day after.
 
A week passed by
All days unfavorable 
The buns and bread rotten
No longer edible
 
Captain Marvy got a call
“The order’s cancelled”
For he had waited
Waited 
And waited to set sail
For the right day
A day which would never come

 

 

The Gentleman Who Wrote To Me

The unpleasant looking postman

Used to bring me letters

From a friendly elderly gentleman

Far, far away

Used to cycle across the street

His big bag clung close

A keeper of many secrets

Who delivered them from door to door

He was too tall, too lean

With a face rough and shabby

Hands which were never clean

From the dust of the roads

Now, my dear gentleman

I knew he was pleasant and neat

A punctual person too

He wrote to me each week

I used to see the postman each day

During his early rounds

But never once I saw, I would say

The man near our post box

He would slip by like a shadow

Or perhaps, like the wind, blow

Back in those days,

He kept his profile low

Then, a sudden forenoon

He rapped at our doorstep

Had come a few hours too soon

To give my old friend’s letter

From then on, the unpleasant postman

Hand delivered my letters

I think the old gentleman was aging

For his handwriting faltered

We continued writing to each other

Two writers separated by land

I wrote my wish to see that grandfather

Who lived in a distant town

So, one day, I packed up

Went to see him

But when I pounded on the door,

I was told

“That house has been empty for two months

The old gentleman is gone”

Cold Sunday

“A lazy winter Sunday”

I relished that thought all week

Finished off work – on time no less

All for today – the awaited day

I had it all planned

Would just sleep through the morning

And watch TV when woken up

Binge eating delicacies

I might exercise for a few minutes

In the tiny episode breaks, may be

I must not exert myself too much

So will keep the break to 5 minutes!

Or so I thought I would do

On this exclusive cool Sunday

But others had different plans for me

None of which I knew before

First came school with its homework

With an invalid excuse “It’s a Sunday”

Then came the chores – washing and cooking

And I was assigned much more home-work

Ah! How I wished this Sunday to be

Cool and lazy

But fate turned its back on me

Making it cold and busy

Can I…………?

I thought I could never speak

To such a large crowd

Not even a single word, I thought

Would come out of my mouth.

I had not spoken much

Not even in class

To think of all the great people

The teacher would pick me for the task

I would have refused on the spot

Had I not seen the teacher’s look

A very stubborn expression, I read

Arguing would do no good

I didn’t know what made her pick me

Wouldn’t know in a hundred years

All I knew was I was anxious

My mind weighed heavily with fear

What if I mess up?

Blabber in front of everyone?

Or worse, trip on the way up

I knew for sure: I was done

Yet I decided

Might as well give it my all

After all, push had come to the shove

Sooner or later, I’d have to take up the call

I sat that night

Chewing my pencil out

And chanting each line hundred times

Till I knew it with no doubt

Up I marched to the stage

And stood in front of the crowd

Yet, that moment, I forgot

To panic

Words just flowed out of my mouth

And now that I look back

It wasn’t all that bad

In fact, it felt pretty good

I learnt, I could speak after all

Who Is It?

Nine year old Drithi lived in a shack in the outskirts of Chennai, the bustling capital of Tamilnadu. Her father was employed in a chocolate factory in the nearby village to mix sugar and cocoa. Her mother worked as a home-maker and occasionally took up seasonal labour in difficult times. That being said, Drithi and her family were in the brink of poverty. Due to their weak finances, Drithi had to be content with a government school.

Drithi was bubbling with excitement at the thought of the next day. The next day was her birthday and although no fancy party would be hosted, she was looking forward to it. That night, she made sure to tuck into her bed early and enjoy it dreaming about the possible gifts she would receive. She seldom got gifts, save the dresses gifted by her parents every year. Once, on her fifth birthday, she had received a postcard from her grandmother. Sadly grandmother had passed away the next year.

Pushing the sad thoughts out of her head, the little girl went to sleep. She slept soundly, unaware of the surprise that waited for her. The next day, the very first rays of the sun roused Drithi from her sleep. She bounced up, rolled her sleeping mat and flung it to the corner. Rushing to the door in hopes of letters from her relatives, she opened it.

Things seemed normal at first. The milkman had left a mug of fresh creamy milk hanging at the gate. There was a newspaper- The Indian Express hanging on it, smelling slightly of chemicals. The road was empty on that lazy Sunday morning, save a few people jogging. The autowalas were just waking up from their cramped beds at the back of their autos. One of them, a person new to that way of life, struggled to wriggle out of his awkward position. He tried propelling himself up with the help of the yellow bars but fell down on one knee instead.

This extraordinary sight made young Drithi laugh. And it was when she bent down to clutch her tummy while laughing, that she saw the object at her feet. It was a tiny box, wrapped in a silver wrapper and tied with a red ribbon. It stood out among the clutter of fallen neem leaves and litter.

She sank to her knees and quickly began tearing open the glittering wrapper. Inside was a wooden box containing a bracelet. It was a tiny bracelet, enough to fit her bony hand. Though decorated with just a few colourful seashells, it appeared grand. It also struck her that it was the same bracelet which she had been admiring from the jeweller’s window the previous day.

She went about smiling the entire morning, unaware of the mysterious gifter. It did occur to her once or twice as to  how such an expensive gift could land at her door, but she dismissed the idea with the assumption that her parents had bought it. ‘Maybe they saw how much I loved it the other day and decided to buy it for me,’ she thought.

As the years passed, Drithi began to realise, much to her amusement, that the gifts were coming from a mysterious person- Mysterio she preferred to call him or her. On her eleventh birthday, in a similarly wrapped box, she received a necklace. The one she had wanted the most. A watch the next year …. Something that had topped her wish list that year and so on. Every year the gift was a great mystery…it was always something that she secretly yearned for. How did Mysterio know what she wanted!

It was only four whole years later- at the age of fifteen did it occur to her to catch Mysterio.

The birds were yet to start their council when fifteen year old Drithi woke up. It was her fifteenth birthday that day and her months of plans were ready to roll into action. The plan wasn’t too complicated- quite simple actually. It had only become a teeny bit difficult due to the some last minute changes. It was a Friday morning and her father was required to report extra early to work to help out a colleague. This meant that Drithi would have to wake up extra, extra early to catch Mysterio and hopefully run to bed before her father woke up. She desperately wanted to see the Mysterio this year.

The just-turned-fifteen year old opened the door softly and closed it equally softly behind her. Glancing down, she noted that the gift had not arrived yet. Good. She proceeded to wait behind a neem tree just to the right of their house. The vehicles came from the left, so this would provide her a good view of them as well as hide her.

Surprisingly, for this early hour, there were quite a few cars on road. It was the end of May and many people were returning from their vacation. Big cars whizzed by as greedy cabbies made huge profits driving at odd hours. One particular car, a massive Rolls-Royce caught her eye. It was going comparatively slowly and was approaching her shack. The grey window rolled down and a tiny head peeped out of the window for a few seconds. Drithi bent forward, trying to catch a glimpse of the face, still a nit far away. She was stunned. It looked like she was looking into a mirror… only the face seemed older. A few grey hairs flashed at her…

This is when things started going wrong. Just as her eyes could finally see the face in the car, the person’s eyes fell on her. Then, things happened in fast forward motion. The person inside- a woman gave a gasp. She quickly rolled up the window. She hastily scribbled a note because as the car started to speed away, the back door opened slightly and the note dopped down. Without thinking, the teenager ran to pick up the note. She quickly unfurled it only to be disappointed and puzzled greatly. The note read-

“Happy Birthday! Hope you enjoyed your gift! A glimpse of me…..

Hopefully, we can meet again as friends in the future.

Yours lovingly

Your dearest Mysterio

Child’s Play

She’d thought about this moment, imagined it, for hours, but she’d never expected what happened. The tide of events turned a fresh Friday morning to a disastrous evening.

Pranavi, a fourteen-year old tomboy, had woken up to the morning rays of the summer heat. She had glanced up to the wall clock and had noted with dismay that it was barely six. She hated being woken up early. She liked a quiet and peaceful sleep- a luxury which was barely granted to her. Her house was on the tenth floor of a multi-storeyed apartment in the heart of Chennai. Being in one of the busiest streets, there was always some construction or project or rally that kept going on.

But that morning had been different. There had been no unpleasant sounds of the drills or the voices of politicians booming over the speaker. It had been almost a perfect morning had she not been woken up by a pillow on her face.

Pranavi groaned and jerked her hand to the side to hit the person who had woken her up.

“Ranveer, why did you wake me up!!”

“Because today is an important day,” the mischievous voice of her brother  answered.

Pranavi and Ranveer were siblings, separated by just a year. Pranavi, despite being a tomboy, was the more obedient child of the two. Ranveer on the other hand, loved playing pranks on people. He had been suspended from school several times and nearly expelled due to his classic ‘bucket on the door’ prank and the ‘broken teacher’s chair’ prank.

Ranveer had then proceeded in pouring out his plans for that evening. His sister had listened with a grumpy mood at first, which later went through several stages of transformation and had become an excited face. Without the slightest hint of the horrors that awaited, the siblings had gone ahead with the plan.

And now, they reaped the fruit of their thoughtless mischief. They saw their grandmother at the door with a few neighbours. She held a bag of bitter gourds, green chillies, salt and packeted chapattis. There was a visible confusion in her face. She clearly seemed to be having trouble with something.

Pranavi’s mother went to the entrance, equally puzzled. She took the bags from her mother’s hand and asked her, “Amma, what happened? Why did it take you so long to come home?” Pranavi’s grandmother craned her head   kept looking from side to side, “Ah! Nirmala, it is you. Where are you? I am not able to see properly. Something seems to be wrong with my spectacles today.”

It was indeed true. The lens of her spectacles had some white translucent coating in them. Mrs. Nirmala’s eyes fell on this. She strode ahead and took off her mother’s spectacles carefully and twirled them in her hand. She placed her thumb on the translucent white and began rubbing it. The substance seemed to be adamant to stay there at first. It took a bit of harder and longer rubbing to chip it off. It seemed like acrylic paint.

Pranavi heard Ranveer shift uncomfortably behind her. She felt uncomfortable as well but remained motionless. He murmured in a barely audible whisper, “Umm.. I have my homework to do. Shall I go now?” He hadn’t turned when the threatening tone of their mother sounded, “Ranveer, where are you going? You have a lot of explanation to do. Did you know that because of your mischief, your grandmother might have gotten lost, seriously hurt or even killed?”

“Lost she was sister,” a man’s voice sounded. He was their neighbour and family friend, “She nearly went off to the next street when there had been a truck approaching.”

After a quick word of apology and thanks to the neighbour, Mrs. Nirmala resumed addressing her son, “Why did you do it?” Her heart beat rising from the pressure of guilt, Pranavi stepped up to take the blame, “We meant it as a harmless prank really! We never thought it would go this far!”

Pranavi’s mother looked at her with horror and utter belief written on her face, “You took part in this too? But why?”

Pranavi would probably hate her brother a lot in the future for what was coming next. She was trying to shoulder the entire blame despite being half innocent, yet he spoiled that. With a feeble and scared smile, Ranveer said, “Happy April Fool’s Day Everyone.”

To The Children Of The Soil

Decades of effort need to be put

By the heat, rain and worms

To bite and gnash hard rocks

And make the soil on which we set foot.

Yet, it requires very little power

And some bulldozers and cranes

Within a simple hour’s slogging

The earth is denuded of its fertile cover.

How greedy and ungrateful and cruel

It is to hurt the ones who help us

Yet we destroy the ever-generous soil

All in the name of obtaining more land and fuel.

This fact better it home fast

That are delicious meals find roots from the soil

And if we want to destroy more and more fertile land

Eating food will become a fairytale from the past.

Two Sides of a Fence

I saw her yet again today
In the golden fields, cutting hay
I smiled, the gesture returned back to me
Yet courage failed me; I could not speak.

We stood on the same brown sands
Yet unable to greet and shake hands
Separated not by mighty brick walls
But by a treaty which separated our countries. 

Fear burned inside like an ignited stove That tomorrow when the push comes to shove 
We would face off, guns in hand 
And kill in the name of defending our lands.

Painful, heart-breaking it is to watch people fight 
Sometimes I wonder whether it is even right
To fight for the trees and fuel and land
For that land which is neither ours nor theirs.

The Glue Won’t Fix It

It’s extremely intricate to make

Small things like toys and doll houses

Yet how menial to break

Just a kick, a punch or a tap from a hammer.

If you consider constructing difficult

The time and energy spent on it

You may as well as give up fixing

For it is yet more grueling.

You can, at no costs, use the glue

The edges will stay apart with a deep crack between

You’ll be back to square one with no clue

As to how to bridge the gap.

It takes undivided concentration

To scrutinize each and every jagged edge

It demands even more effort

For tinkering and joining them back.

Next time, before breaking your toy

Out of anger, spite or sorrow

Think, think and think again

Your toy will never be the same as before

Golden Promises

As the exam season closes in

Golden promises fly out

“I’ll study this evening,

Shall manage my time- no doubt.”

Cautious minds warn themselves

‘Only for half an hour, not any longer’

Unconscious fingers reach the TV remote

Unable to resist any further.

At first restrained, they switch on

Their rabbit- like ears noting each tick and chime

One by one, the muscles soothe down

Until their stomachs sound dinner time.

It then dawns upon them

Several hours have gone by

They scurry up and grab their books

Chanting, “Fifteen plus x equals y.”

Not one day, nor two

This is the drama everyday

For the sake of tempting entertainment

Precious time trickles away

With lofty goals left unaccomplished

Mr. Wise Fool

Once, in a remote village

Lived Mr. Wise Fool in his hut

How very odd, he was for his age

For fire, once, his door he cut

Yesterday, he strolled by the marketplace

Carefully balancing a tray of eggs

In haste, tripping on his undone shoe lace

An egg fell, breaking right beside his legs

So, he bent with the tray in hand

The eggs in it quite forgotten

Down rained all the eggs on the sand

Making the sand smell quite rotten

Now, for the loss of one of the eggs

Foolishly, he lost a whole tray of eggs

Are we becoming wise fools?

Pennywise and Pound-foolish! Aren’t we all?

Four Blank Walls

Lost under the layers of paint
Are minuscule scratches, now so faint
Patches reduced to tiny spots
The dark blotches of dirt fear being caught

Pause and re-collect – 10 years back
The canvas on the wall– an eclectic art
With squiggles and letters by avid learners
Or would-be authors, poets and teachers

Once a while, you might spot something brown
From remains of yesteryears’ tea splayed across

If you knock on the wall and say hello
You may find a place dangerously hollow
From rigorous practice by wannabe Bumhrahs
Or dancing artistes with the wall as the partner

Standing before me are four walls blank
more beautiful than any Da Vinci Art
A sight to behold, an experience to treasure
If only you would listen to the voice of the wall

After the Rains

People huddled under colorful umbrellas

To save themselves from the pitter-patter

The fragrance of fresh earth

Exhilaration; wafting through the air

Angry skies took a break

Mighty showers shrank to sparse drizzles

As I strolled along the wet park

Tiny rays of light peeking out from the dark

A shrill call from an anxious mother

Warning her naughty child of the weather

Muddy water came flying at my face

As the child capered joyously in the puddle

Looking beside me, a toddler I saw

Staring, examining the tiny ripples in awe

Paper boats twirled left and right, and slowly capsized

Receiving boos and groans from dismayed school boys

A cheery rainbow adorned the skies

Hands flung to the sides, eyes lifted to the skies

I smell, I hear, I see, I feel!

The wholesome beauty after the rains.

Anything under the Sun

Aching to write a poem

Unsettled on the topic,

Sought help from my mother, did I

Her eyes twinkling, she said,

“Write about anything under the sun”

Anything under the sun?

What does that mean?

Can I write about space,

The astronauts, aliens and asteroids?

Not below or under, but above the sun they are

Is the sun itself solution to the problem

Would my poem be accepted?

If the sun itself is my poem’s topic

The stint so short, topic cryptic

Ah! My head is pounding with pain

I am a trifle too certain

Not writing about plants or animals

If it would be a safe play

They definitely aren’t under the sun

If so what exactly are?

I pass the baton to you

Shall let you ponder and plunder your brains

I pass on my good wishes and thanks in advance

To answer this riddle

What is under the sun?

I am waiting…………….

A Revolutionary Letter

‘26 July 2021

Monday

Dear Diary,

Today, I participated in my first inter-school competition this year. It was a writing competition. We were required to write a formal letter. The letter with the most creativity, best vocabulary, etc… etc. would win the prize. I thought that I would ace it and win the first prize. Usually, the topics are pretty easy, but this time, I was stunned. We were required to write to no one in particular and with no topic. That meant that we could choose our own topic and a receiver.’

I stopped writing. It was almost midnight- way past the time I was supposed to be in bed. That didn’t bother me. Today’s incident was something that I had to record. It didn’t bother me that I had to strain my eyes under the single, narrow beam of light from my torch. I always made it a point to make an entry in my diary every day and today was no exception.

I looked at the grey graphite diffusing with the paper as I reflected on the events of the writing competition. I wrote down, ‘To be honest, it was really queer. I eyed the question, reading it about twice or thrice. My head started going in circles and my vision blurred as I kept staring at the paper for a long time. Maybe it was for too long. At least, I was finally able to come up with a pretty decent idea. I just hope that it gets considered.’

Too tired to even stay awake a wink longer, I shut close my diary, switched off the light and flung myself on to my soft, furry bed. Scrambling under my warm bedsheets in the cold night, I closed my eyes. I must have slept like a bear because when I woke up, I only had time to take a quick shower, jam the bread into my mouth and run off to school.

One week later, my parents received a call from the Principal. I was playing hide and seek, hiding under the bed when I heard mother’s phone buzzing. I stayed in my hiding position. Mother’s footsteps sounded as the door to the bedroom creaked open. Mother picked up the phone and was surprised when she found out that the person on the other end of the line was my Principal.

I heard her gasping as I held myself from sneezing. The ancient dust under the bed was staring to move about and trying to invade my nostrils. I clasped one hand over my nose and balanced myself on the other. I heard my mother stay quiet for quite some time and then she slowly replied in a polite tone, “Yes ma’am. We will be there… yes ma’am, we’ll definitely come.

Placing the phone on the bed, she called out, “Ammu! Where are you? Come here this instant!” I knew where that would lead to. The Principal must have called mother to complain about one of my misbehaviours or one of my pranks. Not sure of which, I slowly crawled out from under the bed, only to be greeted by mother’s stern face. “What have you done this time?” she asked.

One hour later, my parents and I entered the principal’s office. This wasn’t something new for me. In fact, I had a history of visiting the place. I had gone there so frequently that I was familiar with every nook and corner of the room. I knew that the Principal kept her lunch under the table, near her chair. The old, worn-out windows, the dusty walls, the tile in the centre smelling of sour milk, the half-broken chairs in the far corner- anything you name, I knew it.

 “Please take a seat,” the Principal offered politely. We sat down, mother in the left, father to my right and me in the centre. Grimly and secretly, I noted that the chairs needed replacement. We were sitting on good-looking leather arm-chairs. They looked good on the outside, but when I sat, I realised that the cushion felt clumpy and one leg’s bush had come off.

After we were comfortably seated, an uncomfortable silence hanging about in the air, the principal started speaking. Placing her elbows on the table, she informed, “I haven’t called you today for any complaining. In fact, I called you here to congratulate Meena.” With that, her permanent frown split into a surprisingly wide grin. Her teeth shone pearly white in the light.

Turning to my right, I saw father looking at me, silently demanding an explanation. Mother wore the same questioning look as well. Shrugging my shoulders, I let them know that I had no idea of what was going on.

Slowly, father asked, “What for?” At that, she opened the drawers in her desk, shuffled through some files and brought out an A4 sheet with paragraphs written on it. As she kept it on the table, I realised what the paper was. Of course, who doesn’t recognize her own handwriting? It was my submission for the letter writing competition!

The Principal handed the paper to my father and requested him to read it aloud. He adjusted his spectacles and read:

“From: Meena

Block 6, 134A

Green Peas Road

Saligramam

Chennai 600093

 To: All the Mathematicians of the 21st century

Indian Mathematical Society

Pune, Maharashtra

India

Respected Sirs/ Madams

                       Subject: Request to end all further studies in Mathematics

This letter is to bring to your notice, the importance of stopping discoveries of new concepts and theorems in Mathematics. I have been observing that students are struggling with Mathematics.

All the hypotenuse, imaginary numbers, functions, alpha, beta, gamma is confusing the students. There are two reasons why you are requested to stop further discoveries:

Firstly, many of the concepts are impractical. Their only usage is in the examinations. Especially, chapters dealing with lines and angles and imaginary numbers. I believe that such chapters are deviating from real life.

Secondly, the extra concepts are falling as a burden on the students’ shoulders. Languages such as English, Hindi, Tamil, etc. help the students to communicate better. Subjects such as Social and Science promote general awareness. But in the case of Mathematics, it is found that apart from eight to ten chapters in all, the rest are unnecessary.

Thirdly if students are taught only the necessary chapter, they can go at a slower pace, taking more time to understand each concept thoroughly. This can be of extremely helpful to them. A recent study has found out that ninety percent of the students are unable to do simple calculations such as adding the cost of items without the use of a pencil and paper or the calculator. If everyday Mathematics is impressed upon, this situation need not occur.

I have brought out some of the demerits of further discoveries in this subject with the hope that you would consider it. Please take your time and decide on the necessary actions to be taken.

Thank you

Yours Sincerely

Meena”

By the time father finished reading, three pairs of eyes were on me. There was another awkward silence which was again broken by the Principal. She addressed my parents, “This unique entry by Meena has won the first prize and the recognition from a magazine editor who wanted to publish this piece of art.”

Beaming with immense pride and joy, mother patted my shoulders. The drive back home was lit with smiling faces.

‘4 August 2021

Wednesday

Dear Diary,

Today, the most astonishing incident took place. We were informed that the portion in Mathematics for us had been reduced from twelve chapters to three chapters. The printing of new books is in progress. I am really amazed that my one moderate idea of a formal letter writing has impacted our Mathematics syllabus. In class, I even received a lot of compliments from my friends, thanking me for successfully reducing the portions. Who knew the places my simple idea could lead to?’   

I penned down.

Again, under the flickering light of the torch I looked at the paper, admiring what I had achieved. I had become famous in just a week’s time; from a naughty little girl in school to someone who is liked and respected by everyone.

It doesn’t matter if your ideas are small or big, whether someone feels its silly or great. What matters is that you are willing to take it forward.

Division of Power

On a stormy December evening

Looking out through my bedroom window

My eye beheld an unusual sight

Something simple but so bright!

Two Mango trees holding roots

Supporting each other through the storm

Not an inch did they budge

Holding on! In the grove, so steadfast!

The Creepers bowed to the Great Wind

Accepting his power they did

Profound thoughts swirled in me

How different they coped but still they stood

In stark contrast, A fir tree stood with a haughty look

 Neither bending nor seeking support,

The Great wind blew harder still !

Testing, and winning as the fir tree fell

Power of Mind

I was playing in my house when I saw a man cutting a tree outside the street. I could clearly see that the tree was shedding tears and the crows sitting on the tree were cawing very loudly. He took no notice of them and continued to swing his axe against the trunk.

It pained me. This was the sixth tree they were cutting in this week. I wanted to do something, but I felt helpless. After all, what could I have done with the stupid gift of being able to understand plants and control them? Here, I was a person who could understand their pain but unable to defend them.

I saw my grandmother step out of the house. She was going to try reason with them. Again.  My grandmother had been trying to stop them from cutting the previous six trees but they kept giving excuses. First, they said that they needed more trees to produce paper. Yesterday, they said that it was Government order and took away two of our trees.

This filled me with anger. How dare they take our silence for granted. I had to do something- something to make them leave and never come back again. Something- but what? I couldn’t just will that man to stop cutting the apple tree or the tree to run away. That would be like making soup out of sausage peg.

But I could- of course I could. I could will the apples to fall on his head. Afterall, it was my command they were waiting for. I willed the raw ones with all my might to fall on his head. And lo behold they fell on his head like a volley of arrows. He wielded his axe above his head to shield himself but a few of them still struck him.

Next, I willed the bhrami creeper nearby to place him outside our street. It first twirled itself around the person’s legs and clasped them tight. Next, he was gently lifted fifty meters into the air and placed on the pavement, just outside our street. His face was worth seeing when he was lifted up. His face was a mixture of honest surprise, shock and horror. All others who witnessed this marvel were surprised as well. My grandmother was the only one who understood the truth when she saw my mischievous round face plopping outside the window.

The man returned back; the axe lifted in a defensive position. On my bidding, the tree flung one of the beehives towards him. It landed just beside him and out sprouted a swarm of angry bees. They chased him so much that I later heard that he developed Xylophobia. When our problem was solved, I saw the leaves shedding tears of happiness. I saw the bhrami creeper bowing down to me. I think the crows and bees were saluting me.

So friends, if you have any such talents, don’t hesitate to use them to protect Nature.

First Story from Sahana Vinod which won the 3rd Prize in Eco-Fest Competition organized by Bhumi through Young World – The Hindu Newspaper

A Silver Lining….!

We are repeating today

What we did back in that day

Only due to corona virus

Our good habits are restored

Washing our hands thoroughly

Before and after a meal

Today, we spent time with family

What once in this busy world had become history

We eat healthy food

Not ordered through Swiggy or Zomato

Nor is it pizza, chocolate or burger

But traditional meals that satisfy our hunger

Had we followed these simple habits

Corona would have been fantasy today.

Who is the Owner?

Many a time I have wondered

Who is the true owner?

Of the lands, fertile or otherwise

The land we rent and buy

Who owns the water we use?

Who owns the bread we eat?

Do rivers and lakes belong to politicians?

For they frequently promise to change their course

Who owns the gold and silver?

That is considered as a privilege

Is it not nature who owns them all?

 And to whom should we be grateful

Surely to nature, we are in debt

Let’s pay our debts- not through GPAY or cash

Let’s return the favour

Let’s protect and sustain the nature.

Simple Wishes

Oh! How I wish I could

Climb up a sturdy tree of sandalwood

And brave, on the branches, stand

And swing on them with just one hand

Oh! How I wish I could make

A tree house for my own sake

With wooden walls and thatched roof

Hanging on the tree with a metal hook

Oh! How I wish I could sling

Big, green guavas that were to me calling

And have pretty butterflies flutter around me

How exquisite and heavenly would that be!

Oh! How I wish I could

Order the sun to stay put

And wait to be let

Wait for my nod to rise and set

Oh! How I wish I could say,

“The seas, the oceans and each bay

Are mine, each and every one of them”

And claim confidently that I own them

Oh! How I wish I could dig

An underground tunnel, deep and big

And one fine day, hit upon a treasure

Of endless joy and love, without measure

And share it with every living soul

Let it be a billionaire, pauper or a tiny mole

In the end of this dreamy little day

Curl into a hammock and there I want to stay

Shh! Please don’t wake me up

Treasure

There was in one village, a rich farmer

Seven years of heavy usage, and he discarded his tractor

Worn-out it was with the red paint turned brown

With so deep a rust, the farmer had a perennial frown

A sharp business man, a vehicle dealer took it in

And spent five good hours remodeling it

And sold it to wealthy Mr. Good Goon

At a price that fetched him a fortune

He next discarded wrongly printed papers

Picked up by the paper recycler, this prized addition of hers

 As she strolled to pour away excess flour into the bin

Oh! To waste so much was a sin!

Had it been in the hands of the baker next door

She would have baked a cake, cream in its core

But she threw away, on that very day

A huge, pink, wrongly baked cake

A poor man, a tramp picked it up

And drooled over it. Oh! It wouldn’t fit his wooden begging cup

He threw way the cup, blinded by his lucky moment

Unaware that another cup would he have to rent

The cup broke down and mixed with the soil

It formed the farmer’s treasure, the nutrient rich soil.

Oh! Now where is my treasure hiding?

Tiny Seed

Outside my house, on the wet ground

Was a tiny seed, brown and round

And in the seed shaking to and fro

Emerging eagerly was a baby embryo

In a few weeks the embryo became a sapling

From the regular monsoon showers, sparkling

In years the sapling grew up to a tree

Spreading its thick, rich boughs free

On it sprouted many blue flowers

They blanketed the tree like many covers

Their petals fell off to form a fruit

So gold that thieves tried to loot

When I slit the golden flesh

I found a young seed, brown and fresh

From what another day would sprout a tree

And like its predecessors, set its boughs free

From which will come a seed, brown and round

And the cycle will go round and round

I can’t imagine how great are these tiny seeds

Which contain, packed in them humongous trees with infinity other seeds

Potion of Success

Let me tell you about the ‘potion of success’

And to make it, the tedious process

Mixing the ingredients is not the trouble

But I dare you to get them (if you are able)

Three drops of fresh honey from a hive

For which you must (smartly) thrive

A handful of hair from a man, bald

(Preferably in shade of green like emerald)

Next in line, are three pieces of pure silk

T’is as easy as stealing from a baby, its milk

A pail of freshly hand pumped water you’d need

To find a working pump is the actual deed

From a tardy man a drop of sweat

Who’s not even got out of bed

From such a person you should take

Who lives near the Arctic lake

Now, mix it to get it done

Mix it such that it becomes one

Drink it and it will be in your bone

A potion of success of your own

Think back what gave you this

This success and permanent bliss

Is it just the potion on its own,

Or is it the effort, wit and patience that you bore ?