Memoirs of an Ardent Particularist

Name:

Suffice it to say that I am an ardent particularist. What this means is that I like to look at the particulars (Duh!). So for example, I like the deep furrows on a withered tree trunk, the jet black curly hair of a woman walking past me, the swing of a very short skirt on the behind of a girl in front of me, the sunflower like irises in my husband's blue pupils, the soft and gentle curves of his body, the shape of a pebble that skirts off the tyres of a truck at a construction site, the toc-toc-toc of the table tennis ball on the table, the feel of a full mango fruit in the palm of your hand, a bowl of translucent, red, pomegranate seeds, the speckled sunlight on a patch of grass under a tree, the deep yearning for someone you care about and love, the deep sense of grief when you have to forget someone you love, the mixture of white steamed rice and pink oleander petals strewn on the cold dark stone tile of the temple, the smell of a decaying banana leaf, the pungent smell of a raw mango just fallen from the tree, the clang of utensils and the clamour of sundry voices and stray dogs infused with the smell of boiling tea as India wakes to life every morning, and so on...

Thursday, October 26, 2006

The Tsunami

Storm after storm after storm,
The Tsunami came and ripped through my soul and mind
Every glimpse of him wrenched out the life spirit from inside me
And now he is gone!
Now that he is gone, the tides have receded,
Leaving behind barren shores bereft of movement and life.
Now I wait for new life to spring forth in my soul.


I await the next Tsunami...


--GST

The Mango Tree- A Haiku

The Mango tree laden with mangoes.
The trunk enlaced by slender epiphytes.
Dark brown and moldy wet.
Green fruits, heavy and full like beautiful, round breasts
Swaying pendulously in the cool breeze.


--GST